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  • They say that if walls could talk each building would have a story to tell,

  • but few would tell so many fascinating stories in so many different voices

  • as the Hagia Sophia, or holy wisdom.

  • Perched at the crossroads of continents and cultures,

  • it has seen massive changes from the name of the city where it stands,

  • to its own structure and purpose.

  • And today, the elements from each era stand

  • ready to tell their tales to any visitor who will listen.

  • Even before you arrive at the Hagia Sophia, the ancient fortifications

  • hint at the strategic importance of the surrounding city,

  • founded as Byzantium by Greek colonists in 657 BCE.

  • And successfully renamed as Augusta Antonia, New Rome and Constantinople

  • as it was conquered, reconquered, destroyed and rebuilt

  • by various Greek, Persian and Roman rulers over the following centuries.

  • And it was within these walls that the first Megale Ekklesia, or great church,

  • was built in the fourth century.

  • Though it was soon burned to the ground in riots,

  • it established the location for the region's main religious structure

  • for centuries to come.

  • Near the entrance, the marble stones with reliefs

  • are the last reminders of the second church.

  • Built in 415 CE, it was destroyed during the Nika Riots of 532

  • when angry crowds at a chariot race

  • nearly overthrew the emperor, Justinian the First.

  • Having barely managed to retain power,

  • he resolved to rebuild the church on a grander scale,

  • and five years later, the edifice you see before you was completed.

  • As you step inside, the stones of the foundation and walls

  • murmur tales from their homelands of Egypt and Syria,

  • while columns taken from the Temple of Artemis recall a more ancient past.

  • Runic inscriptions carved by the vikings of the emperor's elite guard

  • carry the lore of distant northern lands.

  • But your attention is caught by the grand dome, representing the heavens.

  • Reaching over 50 meters high and over 30 meters in diameter

  • and ringed by windows around its base,

  • the golden dome appears suspended from heaven,

  • light reflecting through its interior.

  • Beneath its grandiose symbolism, the sturdy reinforcing Corinthian columns,

  • brought from Lebanon after the original dome was partially destroyed

  • by an earthquake in 558 CE,

  • quietly remind you of its fragility

  • and the engineering skills such a marvel requires.

  • If a picture is worth a thousand words,

  • the mosaics from the next several centuries have the most to say

  • not only about their Biblical themes,

  • but also the Byzantine emperors who commissioned them,

  • often depicted along with Christ.

  • But beneath their loud and clear voices,

  • one hears the haunting echoes of the damaged and missing mosaics and icons,

  • desecrated and looted during the Latin Occupation in the Fourth Crusade.

  • Within the floor, the tomb inscription of Enrico Dandolo,

  • the Venetian ruler who commanded the campaign,

  • is a stark reminder of those 57 years that Hagia Sophia spent as a Roman Catholic church

  • before returning to its orthodox roots upon the Byzantine Reconquest.

  • But it would not remain a church for long.

  • Weakened by the Crusades, Constantinople fell to the Ottomans in 1453

  • and would be known as Istanbul thereafter.

  • After allowing his soldiers three days of pillage,

  • Sultan Mehmed the Second entered the building.

  • Though heavily damaged, its grandeur was not lost

  • on the young sultan who immediately rededicated it to Allah,

  • proclaiming that it would be the new imperial mosque.

  • The four minarets built over the next century

  • are the most obvious sign of this era,

  • serving as architectural supports in addition to their religious purpose.

  • But there are many others.

  • Ornate candle holders relate Suleiman's conquest of Hungary,

  • while giant caligraphy discs hung from the ceiling

  • remind visitors for the first four caliphs who followed Muhammad.

  • Though the building you see today still looks like a mosque, it is now a museum,

  • a decision made in 1935 by Kemal Ataturk,

  • the modernizing first president of Turkey

  • following the Ottoman Empire's collapse.

  • It was this secularization that allowed for removal

  • of the carpets hiding the marble floor decorations

  • and the plaster covering the Christian mosaics.

  • Ongoing restoration work has allowed the multiplicity of voices

  • in Hagia Sophia's long history

  • to be heard again after centuries of silence.

  • But conflict remains.

  • Hidden mosaics cry out from beneath Islamic calligraphy,

  • valuable pieces of history that cannot be uncovered without destroying others.

  • Meanwhile, calls sound from both Muslim and Christian communities

  • to return the building to its former religious purposes.

  • The story of the divine wisdom may be far from over,

  • but one can only hope that the many voices residing there

  • will be able to tell their part for years to come.

They say that if walls could talk each building would have a story to tell,

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TED-ED】教会です。モスクです。アヤソフィアです- ケリーウォール (【TED-Ed】It's a church. It's a mosque. It's Hagia Sophia. - Kelly Wall)

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    稲葉白兎 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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