Göktürk Dönemi İnsan Figürlü Taş Anıtlar

dc.contributor.authorİskenderzade, Lale Avşar
dc.date.accessioned2023-03-02T21:03:57Z
dc.date.available2023-03-02T21:03:57Z
dc.date.issued2010en_US
dc.departmentSelçuk Üniversitesien_US
dc.description.abstractOrta Asya’nın geniş coğrafyasında 6-8.yy. arasında imparatorluk kuran Göktürkler politik ve kültürel anlamda aynı bölgede yaşamış olan Hunların devamcıları olarak kabul edilmektedir. Hun çağında Orta Asya coğrafyasında başlayan ortak kültür ve sanat oluşma gelişimleri Göktürk Dönemi özellikle Güney Sibirya, Altaylar, Moğolistan, Kazakistan ve Kırgızistan topraklarında devam etmiş ve daha da pekişmiştir. Bu coğrafyada Göktürk Dönemine ait çok sayıda bulunan dikili taşlar arasında insan tasvirli örnekler özellikle dikkati çekmektedir. Atalar kültü ile bağlı olan bu geleneğinin kökleri ilkel çağ yapıları olan mengirlere kadar uzanmaktadır. Dikili taş anıtların bir kısmı bağımsız alanlarda, büyük çoğunluğu ise özel anma törenleri için ayrılmış olan alanın içinde veya dışında belli bir şemaya dayanarak dizilmiştir. “Geyikli taşlar”, heykeller ve balballar olarak gruplandırılan bu taş anıtlar arasında heykeller daha ayrıntılı tasvir ve detaylı işleyiş tarzı ile seçilmektedir. Ayakta duran ve oturan insan betimlemeleri olarak ayrıştırılan bu heykellerin aslında hep oturur durumda figürleri canlandırmış olması düşüncesi daha yakın dönemde ortaya atılan bir varsayımdır. Bir başka gruplandırma ise bu figürlerin ellerinde tuttukları nesnelere göre yapılabilir. Günümüze ulaşan taş anıtlar arasında elinde içki kabı, müzik enstrümanı, kesilmiş insan kafaları ve kuş tutan figürler bulunmaktadır. Tüm bu nesnelerin kendine özgü sembolik anlamları Göktürklerdeki gömme ve anma törenleri ile bağlantılıdır. Bu makalede Göktürk Dönemine ait insan tasvirli taş anıtlar ortak ikonografi ile seçilen üç gurup halinde ele alınacak ve bunların simgesel anlamları, sanatsal ve stilistik özellikleri değerlendirilecektir.en_US
dc.description.abstractGokturks, who established an empire in the wide geography of Middle Asia, between the 6th-8th centuries, are politically and culturally accepted as the continuation of the Huns, who lived in the same region. Having started in the Middle Asian geography during the era of the Huns, the developments of building up common culture and art continued and further strengthened during Gokturk period, especially in the lands of Southern Siberia, Altai region, Mongolia, Kazakhstan, Kirgizstan. In terms of the development of Pre-Islamic Turkish art, the importance of the Gokturk period depends on the spreading, establishment and entrenchment of common art and culture. In this area, among the examples of quite a few epigraphs that belong to the Gokturk Period, particularly those with human descriptions attract attention. The roots of this tradition which is linked by ancestors’ cult are traced back to mengirs, the structures of the primitive age. According to a more popular idea, such practices that emerged in line with the custom of burial face us in Central Asia and Southern Siberia in the Late Bronze Period. Beginning with Scythian period, such arrangements had been made not only around graves, but also in the sites where ceremonies and commemorations were performed. We recognize that the custom of sculpture with human figures further developed during the Gokturk period and that such items had become an indispensable element of the temples that were built for commemorations. It is possible to divide the epigraphs and sculptures into three groups: “Stones with deer,” stone monuments of the Tashtik culture and Gokturk balbals. The epigraphs in the form of human figures known as Gokturk balbals can internally be classified as tombstones in the form of humans, and original balbals. The monuments that have been dated back to the Gokturk period were made of stones of granite, basalt, breccia and rarely of marble. Based on a certain shape, some of the epigraphic monuments were arranged in the independent area, and the majority of them were arranged within or outside the area reserved for special memorial ceremonies. Among these stone monuments, which are classified as “Stones with deer,” statues, and balbals, it is statues that are recognized by more detailed descriptions and processing style. It is accepted that these depicted the deceased person himself and they were built to immortalise his memory. The Gokturk period statues that will be dealt with in this compilation are limited to the geography of Siberia and Mongolia that are closer to Altai region. A lately proposed hypothesis is the idea that these monuments, distinguished as descriptions of human beings sitting and standing, in fact, characterise figures that are always in sitting position. Another grouping can be done based on the objects these figures are holding in their hands. Among the stone monuments that have reached today are figures that hold a rhyton, musical instrument, severed human heads and figures holding birds. Unique symbolic meanings of all these objects are connected with the concept of death, burial and memorial ceremonies of Gokturks. Among the Gokturk period sculptures in the form of human figures that have reached today are more abstractly and plainly constructed ones besides those with a realistic style. These monuments built in various sizes and shapes generally exist in cult centres and around tombs. Because of the deer descriptions on the epigraphs that are frequently seen in the lands of Altai, Tuva region, Lake Baikal and neighbouring environment of the Ural river, Kirgizstan, Kazakhstan, and Mongolia, these monuments are called “stones with deer”. Mountain goat pictogram, which was the symbol of Gokturk rulers, is also interpreted as the symbol of immortality. In most of the “stones with deer” only the figures of living beings were depicted; it attracts attention that few samples were attempted to resemble human figures. “Stones with deer” of the Gokturk period are round or square in shape in the view from the horizontal section. Human face depictions on these stones are seen on the upper parts which are diagonally cut towards the back. In the Gokturk period, it was customary to erect balbals in cult centres and the tomb complexes built for the high level rulers of the society. These balbals were erected outside square courtyards, their face towards east. In some constructions, the number of balbals reaches 170. Unlike Gokturk sculptures, the surfaces of these epigraphs were slightly smoothened and they were roughly shaped in the form of human figures. As it was the case for the sculptures, various hypotheses concerning the semantic meaning of these monuments have been put forward. For some, these stones were a part of traditional ceremonies and they represent the crucial figures of the Gokturk society, while for others these stones functioned as posts which horses called serge were tied to. The idea that these stones signified the dead person’s enemies whom he killed in life is accepted by most scientists. According to this idea, the people whose balbals were erected are readily available around the tomb of the dead person to serve him in the afterlife. Gokturk art, which forms one of the most important components of Turkish art, is quite significant in terms of the entrenchment of common language for culture and art and the identification of the outlines of Turkish art. The art of sculpture that experienced a bright future in this period, on the one hand, is the documentary witness of that culture. On the other hand, it is one of the indispensable resources of the art of modern sculpture. Through both their location and the style of construction as well as their common iconography and many details on them, these sculptures having innumerable examples in the land of Central Asia, which is accepted as the land of our ancestors, enables us to get comprehensive information about the Gokturk period. In this article, stone monuments with human descriptions belonging to the Gokturk Period will be handled in the form of three groups chosen by shared iconography and symbolic meaning, and artistic and stylistic features will be evaluateden_US
dc.identifier.citationİskenderzade, L. A., (2010). Göktürk Dönemi İnsan Figürlü Taş Anıtlar. Selçuk Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü Dergisi, 24, 255-269.en_US
dc.identifier.endpage269en_US
dc.identifier.issn2667-4750en_US
dc.identifier.issue24en_US
dc.identifier.startpage255en_US
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12395/45538
dc.institutionauthorİskenderzade, Lale Avşar
dc.language.isotren_US
dc.publisherSelçuk Üniversitesien_US
dc.relation.ispartofSelçuk Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü Dergisien_US
dc.relation.publicationcategoryMakale - Uluslararası Hakemli Dergi - Kurum Öğretim Elemanıen_US
dc.rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessen_US
dc.selcuk20240510_oaigen_US
dc.subjectGöktürk sanatıen_US
dc.subjectinsan tasvirli heykelleren_US
dc.subject“Geyikli taşlar”en_US
dc.subjectbalballaren_US
dc.subjectthe Gokturk arten_US
dc.subjectstatues with human descriptionsen_US
dc.subject“Stones with deer”en_US
dc.subjectbalbalsen_US
dc.titleGöktürk Dönemi İnsan Figürlü Taş Anıtlaren_US
dc.title.alternativeThe Human Figure Statues of Gokturk Perioden_US
dc.typeArticleen_US

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