KIRŞEHİR MUSEUM

History of Kırşehir
The recearch and excavations of the recent years have shown
that human settlements in Kırşehir started in 3000 B.C.
Ceramic pieces from that period are found in the tumuluses
of Kırşehir. The archaeological excavations undertaken at
Hashöyük, a village of the central district of Kırşehir,
in 1930 by Turkish and Italian archaeologists has revealed
pieces of pottery from 3000 B.C.
In 2000 B.C we see the start of Assyrian Trade Colonies
period and the Hittite period. Two altars with cow head
protoms from Old Hittite Period brought to the Hirfanlı
Dam Operations from the shores of the Kızılırmak River,
Malkayası with hieroglyph inscriptions and known as Hitite
road inscription located between the villages of Sevdiğin
and Kale, also the seals, ceramic kitchen utensils, public
buildings with walls etc found at Kaman Kale Tumulus are
important traces of the Hittite period.
Current archaeological excavations and surface investigations
also reveal that, after the Old and Late Hittite Periods,
the Old and Late Phrygian Periods were also lived in a most
dense fashion. In 550 B.C, Anatolia was completely under
Persian dominance. Within this period, Kırşehir was part
of the Central Anatolia history, a region which became well
known as Cappadocia (Beautiful Horses). As Persians sufficed
with only military invasion of Anatolia , significant ruins
or remains cannot be found in Kırşehir, but Persian seals
were found at excavations of the Kaman Kale tumulus. Persian
dominance came to end in 334 BC when the armies of Alexander
the Great came to Anatolia and defeated the Persians. Kırşehir
and environs experienced severe pressures due to lack of
authority during the period of the Cappadocia Kingdom which
was established in 333 BC. In the year 18, Roman Emperor
Tiberius officially annexed Cappadocia to the Roman Empire
and converted it into a provincial status.
Roman period was a period of strong paganism as well as
a period where Christianity was fast expanding. About 15
underground cities of varying size are known to exist from
that period in Kırşehir, which were built as places of worship
and sanctuary for the Christians.
Historical research shows that Kırşehir was for a while
an important political center during the Roman period and
even functioned as the provincial capital.
There is not much information about the Byzantine period
of this area, but ruins and remains indicate that a Byzantine
period did exist. Üç Ayak church from the 10th century at
Taburoğlu village of the provincial center, which is one
of the first big village churces in Anatolia, was a church
where Protestants and Catholics worshipped together, and
the church ruins at Fakıl village and Temirli are interesting.
Seljuk period is significant for Kırşehir as it is for
Anatolian Turkish history as a whole, and worth investigating.
Urbanization of Kırşehir during the Seljuk period started
in the early years of 13th century. Kırşehir was given to
one of the Emirs of the Mengücük dynasty, Melik Muzaffererüddin
Muhammed as a fief, who was defeated in battle by Seljuks
at Erzincan, for his outstanding performance. During his
stay in Kırşehir, Melik Muzaffererüddin Muhammed built the
Melik Gazi Medrese (old theological school) in 1230.
Mongolians which invaded whole of Anatolia in 1240 after
the Kösedağ defeat converted Kırşehir into a rest stop for
winter (kışlak) and a summer place in the plateau (yaylak).
The long lasting military presence of Mongolians in Kırşehir
turned it into an important political and military center.
Nureddin Cibril Bin Cacabey, who was appointed as Emir
to Kırşehir in 1260's, started the first significant construction
activites of the Turrkish period, thanks to the good relations
he established with the Mongolians. Cacabey Medrese which
was one of the first schools of astronomy and Cacabey Inn
near Kızılırmak as well as numerous big and small buildings
were all realized during his times.
In the 13th century, Ahi Evran which organized the Anatolian
Turkish union in general and the organization and unification
of the trade and craftsmen in partcular, came to Kırşehir
after Denizli, Konya and Kayseri and carried out his mission
there, turning Kırşehir into the center of the Ahi movement.
After the leader Ahi Evran, Kırşehir sustained its position
as the center of the Ahi. The decisions taken at the lodge
in Kırşehir were influential from Azerbaijan to Bosnia-Herzagovina.
In 1293, Mevalan's son Sultan Veled sent ambassadors to
certain centers in Anatolia, with the aim of spreading the
Mevlevi belief. The person assigned to Kırşehir was Şeyh
Süleyman Türkmani. Süleyman Türkmani established a lodge
in Kırşehir and spread Mevlevi belief from this base. His
close relationship to Mevlana and Mevlana's appreciation
of him are apparent from his letters.
It is also known that Mevlana's son Alaaddin fled to Kırşehir
after his name got involved in the case of Şemsi Tebrizi
murder in Konya. All this show that Kırşehir was one of
the important centers of the Mevlevis in Anatolia.
Hacı Bektaş-ı Veli, who came to Suluca Karahöyük, recieved
a great number of people there, who had a leaning towards
his ideas.
Kırşehir continued to be one of the most important political,
social and cultural centers of Anatolia from 13th
to the middle of the 15th century.
In the beginning of the 14th century, Famous
Sufi Aşık Pasha who was one of the prominant people which
brought progresto Anatolia wrote his "Garibname" of 12 thousand
couplets. After Karamanoğlu Mehmet Bey who wanted to establish
Turkish as the official language, Aşık Pasha became the
most important advocate of the Turkish culture and brought
it into the language of literature in the most successful
way.
Great Sufi scholar Ahmet Gülşehri who translated "Mantık-ut
Tayr" by Ferideddin Attar who lived in Kırşehir into Turkish,
is known as the greatest poet after Yunus Emre.
In addition to all these, it is also speculated that Yunus
Emre had lived in Kırşehir, died there and his grave is
on the Ziyaret (Visit) Hill in the Ulupınar District of
Kırşehir.
Kırşehir
Museum
The initial studies for the establishment of the Kırşehir
Museum started in 1936. This was the period of Post - Republic
Turkey when initiatives for new museums were strong. In
Kırşehir a museum storage was formed by collecting certain
stone works and ethnographic pieces at Alaaddin Mosqoe situated
on what people a mound at the city center called the "castle"
by the people. This initiative was soon forgatten until
the establishment of a Commission for Historical Heritage
by the Governor in 1975 and the Kırşehir Museum Directorate
was established in 1980. The first listing of the coins
was undertaken in 1981 and field work was started for the
listing of in situ items of the future collection.
In 1985, the material collected so far was put on display
in a 100 m² space at the premises of the Provincial
Culture and Tourism Directorate and a storage of 20 m²
was arranged. With the start of the Kaman Kale tumulus archaeological
excavations, the gowth of the museum accelerated and in
the same year first listing of the archeeological items
was started.
In 1993 the material of the museum were put into storage
at the Kırşehir Cultural center.
The work aimed at opening the musum to public accelerated
in 1996. Kırşehir Museum which is now open to visits has
more than 3300 items consisting of coins and ethnographic
and archaeological materials.
Furthermore, the field work carried out by Kırşehir Museum
Directorate has revealed 136 items of immobile cultural
heritage and these were registered and taken under protection
Museum Display
The lower floor of what formerly was Fine Arts Gallery within
the Cultural Center was opened to visits in 1997 as Archaeological
Museum and a large section of the upper floor as the Ethnography
Museum.
The major part of the archaelogical material are from
the excavations and surface invstigations carried out in
the region and from Kaman - Kale Tumulus and Malkaya in
particular. In the archeology section the findings of the
Kaman Kale Tumulus excavations are exhibited, which cover
a period range in chronological order from the period of
Assyrian Trade Colonies to the Ottomans period.
In one corner of the hall, marble works from Roman period
are grouped. Islam period which starts with sarcophagus
of children and grave stones, goes up to the Ottoman period
with coin window displays.
The major part of the second floor is arrranged as an
ethnography museum. There are three display windows devoted
to the Ahi institution which emerged from Kırşehir and various
items related to Ahis or about them, including a head gear
which is claimed to belong to Ali Evran, the Ahi flag and
various official documents and registers are displayed in
them.
There is a rug loom in a corner, representing the rug
making tradition in Kırşehir and a mannequin with local
costumes weaving in front of the loom. In another corner
there is an exhibition of daily life at a typical Kırşehir
house.
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