Eastern Black Sea houses
Shaped by the culture of the local people,
Eastern Black Sea houses peek out from the greenery like a
delightful surprise...
Describing the lush greens of the Eastern Black Sea region
to those who haven’t seen them isn’t easy... It’s as if
nature has used a different shade of paint in every valley,
on every ridge. As your eyes are drawn in by the colorful
palette of the steep slopes, you suddenly notice in the
distance the houses that follow you with their eyes from
between the trees. Houses of stone and timber, the homes
of the irrepressible and energetic Black Sea people,
shaped by their culture, raised and built by their
hands...
CLOSED ‘CULTURAL BASINS’
Eastern Black Sea villages nestle against the slopes of the
valleys that run
down to the sea from the mountain ranges parallel to the coast. Finding a
patch of level ground in these villages is extremely difficult, and people are
forced to climb up or downhill for all their activities. If the particular spot where you live has no view of the sea, then you won’t
find even a single horizontal line among the trees, hills and mountains on
which to rest your gaze. The road that follows a rushing stream along the
valley floor is shared by all the villages in that valley. Since such roads
only meet at the shore, the people living in one valley have virtually no
relations with the inhabitants of even the next valley. In other words, each
valley is virtually a closed ‘cultural basin. The houses of the Eastern Black Sea are so scattered
within the boundaries of their village that there is
usually not even a tiny central square. Why then are
houses built so far apart on the Black Sea? The reason
naturally is not that people want to avoid each other.
The sole explanation is the rough terrain. Consequently, any
spots suitable for building are snapped up with no
concern
for proximity to a neighbor. This insular and solitary way
of life is universally acknowledged to be responsible for
the temperamental, contentious and ruggedly independent
nature of the Black Sea peoplewhich has endowed them with
a capacity for solving their own problems without seeking
help from others. With building materials gathered and
techniques gleaned from the environment, these people have
succeeded in constructing houses that are perfectly suited
to the region's natural conditions
STONE AND TIMBER
In this region, where erosion has thinned the topsoil, houses are
built wherever a patch of cultivable land can be found. Another factor that
influences the location of houses is water, sources of which tend to be
scattered all over the village.The building traditions and house-plans of the
Eastern Black Sea take a variety of forms within the region, exhibiting yet
other
variations along the coast. In the far east, for example, in Savsat
township of Artvin province, the houses are made completely of wood. In
Yusufeli on the other hand the side and back walls are of stone.In the
township's coastal sector we begin to find walls built by the 'goz dolma'
technique.
This technique, which is widespread along the coast of
Rize, gives way to timber again as one travels inland
and upward. The minute you enter Trabzon, the 'goz dolma'
technique is replaced by the 'muskali dolma' style,
consisting of amulet-like triangles that appear to be
made of tiny cubes. (Both of the so-called 'dolma'
styles
are based on a building technique of 'filling' in
timber frames with stones or other materials.) In the
sparsely forested Arakli and Duzkoy valleys of Trabzon
province, there are houses, albeit few in number, whose
facades consist entirely of stone walls. The timber
exteriors encountered on the coast from the Georgian
border to near Trabzon do not appear again all the way
to Ordu. Meanwhile the interior dividing walls of houses
throughout the region are made exclusively of wooden
materials. All along
the coast the roofs are made of
tiles, whereas in the higher villages they are covered
with thin wood shingles known as 'hartama' or 'bedevra'.
FUNCTIONAL AND AESTHETIC
And now for the layout of the Eastern Black Sea
house. Its back to the hillside, its front overlooking the
valley, the Black Sea house's underground level is a
stable for the dairy animals. Above this is the owner's
living space. Known for their innate resourcefulness,
natives of the Eastern Black Sea build their bedrooms over
the stable to take advantage of the heat radiated by the
animals on cold winter nights. On the ground floor, in the
part of the house that rests against the hillside, they
make use of an earthen floor. This section, called the 'ashane'
(literally 'soup kitchen'), is where all the daily
activities are carried out. An open fire burns in the
center of this room, where food is cooked and consumed and
guests are entertained. There are no
windows in this area,
for protection against any possible danger that might come
from outside. It is therefore a dark space, the only light
being that coming in through the door. The bedrooms are in
the other half of the house which overlooks the valley.While
bedrooms in villages west of Trabzon open onto the kitchen,
in the eastern regions a corridor separates the two areas
in an arrangement that affords more privacy. Meanwhile, in
the coastal villages of Artvin and Rize, this corridor
becomes a large living room called a 'hayat', a light and
spacious area affording a panoramic view of the valley and
a place to pass the time on boring winter days when one is
cooped up inside. This section is heated by a stove, from
whose warmth the bedrooms benefit as well. All daytime and
nocturnal activities are carried out on the ground floor
of Eastern Black Sea houses. Besides the usual household
chores, people are constantly busy raising vegetables, tea,
hazelnuts and tobacco, procuring firewood and feeding the
animals. An upper floor would naturally increase the
burden of, and the fatigue caused by, these tasks. The
tradition of having an upstairs can be seen only in the
villages of Ardesen and Camlihemsin in Rize province. Here
the bedrooms are on the second floor, which results in a
substantial increase in living space.
A DIFFERENT BEAUTY: THE MANSIONS OF CAMLIHEMSIN
It is impossible to speak of big houses without mentioning the
veritable mansions of Camlihemsin. These large, solid and imposing
structures, built in the township's central villages in the late 19th
and early 20th century, dazzle the eye. But don't be fooled by their
ostentatious exteriors. They are not the homes of big landowners or
local governors. The owners of these homes are ordinary people who have
turned the money they earned working in Moscow, Rostov and St Petersburg
into homes. The accessories such as door handles, window grilles and
colored glass used in the Camlihemsin mansions, which number some 30 to
40 in all, were all brought from Russia. Similar mansions, albeit few in
number, can also be seen in the coastal villages of Trabzon's Surmene
and Of townships. The most famous of them is the mansion of 'Memis aga',
4 km east of Surmene on the main road.
And it’s owner really is an ‘aga’ (local landowner). Unfortunately these
lovely relics of the living culture of a period are facing extinction today.
The process of destruction began the minute the houses were left unattended
when their owners abandoned the towns and villages for economic reasons.
This year the world’s architects are meeting in Istanbul for the International
Asian Architecture Conference in June and the UIA 2005 World Congress of
Architecture, organized by the Union of International Architects, in July. A
photography exhibition featuring the rural architecture of the Eastern Black
Sea will also open at Istanbul’s Milli Reasurans Art Gallery in July. If you
can’t go to the Black Sea, then at least visit the exhibition. As we said at
the beginning, it’s difficult to describe the greenery there, or the
red-roofed houses that bedeck the hillsides...
Bron:
THY