From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Turkish Springs in Stari Ledinci
General information
StatusCultural
Type water spring
Architectural style Ottoman architecture
Location Stari Ledinci

Turkish Springs in Stari Ledinci are one of the last traces of the Ottoman Empire period architecture in the northern Serbian region of Vojvodina. The areas north of Sava and Danube river, which at the time were part of Ottoman Hungary, were reconquered by the Habsburg monarchy already at the end of the Great Turkish War and the signing of the 1699 Treaty of Karlowitz, significantly before the independence of the Principality of Serbia, which led to preservation of significantly lesser number of artefacts from the Ottoman period in the region. [1] Springs still standing in the village were reconstructed in 1842 and another one in 1885. [2] Today, both springs are protected cultural monuments. [3]

Systematic demolition of all symbols of Islam happened in the late 17th century after the region of southern Ottoman Hungary was reconquered by the Habsburg monarchy with the practice less all encompassing at future stages of what some called the Balkan Reconquista. [4] [5]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Priče iz Muzeja Vojvodine: Selo Ledinci – Česme kao arhitektonsko nasleđe turske vladavine". Novosadske vesti. 13 May 2021. Retrieved 25 December 2022.
  2. ^ "ТУРСКЕ ЧЕСМЕ". Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts. n.d. Retrieved 25 December 2022.
  3. ^ Nikolić, Mily (2013). Klasteri i mreža muzeja u Srbiji: Vojvodina. University of Novi Sad. p. 99.
  4. ^ "Tursko-islamska arhitektura u Hrvatskoj". Hrvatsko-tursko društvo - Rijeka. 2012. Retrieved 24 December 2022.
  5. ^ William H. Holt (2019). Balkan Reconquista and the End of Turkey-in-Europe: Massacre and Migration, Memory and Forgetting, 1877-1878. University of Utah Press. ISBN  9781607816966.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Turkish Springs in Stari Ledinci
General information
StatusCultural
Type water spring
Architectural style Ottoman architecture
Location Stari Ledinci

Turkish Springs in Stari Ledinci are one of the last traces of the Ottoman Empire period architecture in the northern Serbian region of Vojvodina. The areas north of Sava and Danube river, which at the time were part of Ottoman Hungary, were reconquered by the Habsburg monarchy already at the end of the Great Turkish War and the signing of the 1699 Treaty of Karlowitz, significantly before the independence of the Principality of Serbia, which led to preservation of significantly lesser number of artefacts from the Ottoman period in the region. [1] Springs still standing in the village were reconstructed in 1842 and another one in 1885. [2] Today, both springs are protected cultural monuments. [3]

Systematic demolition of all symbols of Islam happened in the late 17th century after the region of southern Ottoman Hungary was reconquered by the Habsburg monarchy with the practice less all encompassing at future stages of what some called the Balkan Reconquista. [4] [5]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Priče iz Muzeja Vojvodine: Selo Ledinci – Česme kao arhitektonsko nasleđe turske vladavine". Novosadske vesti. 13 May 2021. Retrieved 25 December 2022.
  2. ^ "ТУРСКЕ ЧЕСМЕ". Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts. n.d. Retrieved 25 December 2022.
  3. ^ Nikolić, Mily (2013). Klasteri i mreža muzeja u Srbiji: Vojvodina. University of Novi Sad. p. 99.
  4. ^ "Tursko-islamska arhitektura u Hrvatskoj". Hrvatsko-tursko društvo - Rijeka. 2012. Retrieved 24 December 2022.
  5. ^ William H. Holt (2019). Balkan Reconquista and the End of Turkey-in-Europe: Massacre and Migration, Memory and Forgetting, 1877-1878. University of Utah Press. ISBN  9781607816966.


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