Byzantium’s Other Empire: Trebizond @ Koç University RCAC

Koç University’s Research Center for Anatolian Civilizations will host “Byzantium’s Other Empire: Trebizond” from Friday 24 June through Sunday 18 September.

BYZANTIUM'S OTHER EMPIRE: TREBIZOND

From the organizer:

Byzantium’s Other Empire: Trebizond introduces the extraordinary monuments of the now largely forgotten empire of Trebizond, whose capital was in the city of Trabzon on the Black Sea coast. It particularly focuses on the 13th century church of Hagia Sophia in Trabzon, Turkey, the best preserved monument in the city, famed for its unusual architecture, unique sculptural decoration and extraordinary Byzantine wall paintings.

Curated by Prof. Dr. Antony Eastmond, dean of the Courtauld Institute-University of London, the exhibition draws extensively on the photography and drawing archives of David and June Winfield. The Winfields restored the church from 1959-63 in a project masterminded by David Talbot Rice, and the exhibition also includes Talbot Rice’s photographs from 1929, as well as those of other early scholars who visited Trabzon, notably the French scholar Gabriel Millet in 1893 and the Russian Fyodor Uspenskii in 1917. Between them, these scholars recorded the city, its palaces, churches and monasteries. Their archives provide glimpses of a lost empire and of the city of Trabzon which has been transformed in the decades since their visits.

The exhibition also includes a 3D model of Hagia Sophia in 1/72 scale. Further, the first book ever published on Trabzon, Byzantian Painting in Trabzon and two rare books are on display. Hagia Sophia in Trabzon is considered to be the greatest surviving imperial Byzantine monument of the 13th century in Turkey. It offers a glimpse into both the later stages of the Empire and a unique artistic style which combined elements from Byzantium with the Turkish and Caucasian societies present elsewhere in Anatolia at the time.

The Courtauld Institute and the Research Center for Anatolian Civilizations (ANAMED) are proud to join together to display these remarkable records collected over the last 115 years that bring this lost empire back to life.The exhibition is accompanied by a scholarly book entitled Byzantium’s Other Empire: Trebizond and will be open until 18 September 2016.


For more information, visit the official exhibition page.

Admission is free.

Tuesday – Saturday: 10:00 – 18:30 / Sunday: 12:00 – 18:30
The exhibition is closed on Mondays.

+90 212 393 61 14

Featured Image Source: Press Release

İstiklal Cad. No: 181 Merkez Han – Beyoğlu, 34433
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