(Created page with "== Abstract == The city of Travnik, located in central Bosnia, served as an administrative center of the Ottoman province between 1699 and 1851, with only short interruptions...") |
m (Scipediacontent moved page Draft Content 711727941 to Jaeger-Klein et al 2021a) |
(No difference)
|
The city of Travnik, located in central Bosnia, served as an administrative center of the Ottoman province between 1699 and 1851, with only short interruptions. In 1878, the Congress of Berlin awarded the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy rights of occupation for this Ottoman province. The following year, the new administration already faced its first big fire, which wiped out a major part of downtown Sarajevo. A new building code, which tried to minimize future hazard risks and was soon valid for all of Bosnia, was established in 1880. In September 1903, two major fires hit Travnik. The Ottoman administrative building used by the new officials was already fire-improved, so it survived the fires without sustaining any serious dam age. The same cannot be said for the traditional residential neighborhoods at the foot of Travnik castle, which burnt down to their foundations. The mosques in Travnik that were constructed mostly of wood were damaged severely. Austro-Hungarian administration officials identified the traditional way of building as a serious risk for all of Bosnia and tried to counterbalance by implementing the new regulations rigidly in their post-fire reconstruction program. They seem to have developed a more secure ‘mosque building model type’, which they implemented in the re-erection of the Lončarica, Zulići, Kahvica and Šumećka mosques. While rebuilding the Varoška and Lukačka mosques, the distinct ‘official’ style of Habsburg-Bosnia [1], a blend of various architectural ele ments associated with ‘the Orient’ that the literature tends to name ‘pseudo-Moorish’, was used.
[1] Hartmuth, M., Amtssprache Maurisch? Zum Problem der Interpretation des orientalisierende Baustils im habsburgischen Bosnien-Herzegowina. In: Bosnien-Herzegowina und Österreich Ungarn, 1878–1918: Annäherungen an eine Kolonie. Eds. Clemens Ruthner & Tamara Scheer. Tübingen 2018, p.251-268.
[2] Hauptresultate der Volkszählung in Bosnien und der Hercegovina vom 22. April 1895, Sarajevo 1896, p.XCIV.
[3] Donia, R. J., Islam under the Double Eagle: The Muslims of Bosnia and the Hercegovina, 1878-1914, Boulder, New York (1981), p.11.
[4] Donia, R. J., Islam under the Double Eagle: The Muslims of Bosnia and the Hercegovina, 1878-1914, Boulder, New York (1981), p.14.
[5] Enzersdorfer, A., Gebäude versus Paragraf, unpublished diploma-thesis Vienna University of Technology (2018), p.13.
[6] Enzersdorfer, A., Gebäude versus Paragraf, unpublished diploma-thesis Vienna University of Technology (2018), p.17.
[7] Circulare der k.k. Landesregierung im Erzherzogthume Oesterreich unter der Enns. Wien 1829, reprint Vienna (1840), p.1.
[8] Bertram, C., Ottoman Sarajevo. The Urban History of Sarajevo in the Ottoman Period and Into the Period of the Dual Monarchy: http://www.friends-partners.org/bosnia/cb1.html.
[9] Prstojević, M., Forgotten Sarajevo, Wien (2010), p.67.
[10] Österreichische Nationalbibliothek, ALEX – Historische Rechts- und Gesetzestexte online, Sammlung der Gesetze und Verordnungen für Bosnien und Hercegovina 1878-1880, p.180-283: http://alex.onb.ac.at/tab_lbh.htm.
[11] Österreichische Nationalbibliothek, ALEX – Historische Rechts- und Gesetzestexte online, Sammlung der Gesetze und Verordnungen für Bosnien und Hercegovina, Bauordnung für die Landeshauptstadt Sarajevo 1893, p.410-435: http://alex.onb.ac.at/tab_lbh.htm.
[12] Schmid, F., Bosnien und die Herzegovina unter der Verwaltung Österreich-Ungarns, Leipzi (1914), p. 525.
[13] Stix, E., Das Bauwesen in Bosnien und der Hercegovina von Beginn der Occupation durch die österr.-ung. Monarchie bis in das Jahr 1887. Wien (1887), p.103.
[14] Österreichische Nationalbibliothek, ALEX – Historische Rechts- und Gesetzestexte online, Sammlung der Gesetze und Verordnungen für Bosnien und Hercegovina 1878-1880, p.271f..; http://alex.onb.ac.at/tab_lbh.htm.
[15] Schmid, F., Bosnien und die Herzegovina unter der Verwaltung Österreich-Ungarns, 1914 p.525f.
[16] Hodnik, Z., Maslić, F., Travnik Vezir Konaği Maketi, Travnik (2012), p.16.
[17] Sujoldžic, E., Sjećanje na Travnik, Travnik (2019), p.132-136.
[18] Sujoldžic, E., Džamije Travnika, Travnik (2013), p.17-19.
[19] Sujoldžic, E., Džamije Travnika, Travnik (2013), p.18.
[20] Sujoldžic, E., Džamije Travnika, Travnik (2013), p.48.
[21] Sujoldžic, E., Džamije Travnika, Travnik (2013), p.47-53.
[22] Stix, E., Das Bauwesen in Bosnien und der Hercegovina von Beginn der Occupation durch die österr.-ung. Monarchie bis in das Jahr 1887. Wien (1887), p.103.
[23] Sujoldžic, E., Sjećanje na Travnik, Travnik (2019), p.88.
Published on 30/11/21
Submitted on 30/11/21
Volume Resilience of historic areas to climate change and hazard events, 2021
DOI: 10.23967/sahc.2021.112
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA license
Are you one of the authors of this document?