Turbe Hazar Baba - Travel with LightCaptured

in Worldmappin6 days ago

One lovely warm day with a good weather forecast and here we are, on our way to explore some place mystical and medieval that appeared to be at a relatively short driving distance...

The Turbe of Hazar Baba

It wasn't a love at first sight with this ancient building but I was definitely intrigued and puzzled as it was both beautiful and... looked abandoned.

IMG_7559.jpg

It features some amazing architecture, considering it was built around the XVth century!

IMG_7560.jpg

IMG_7561.jpg

IMG_7562.jpg

First thing first, you may ask, what is a "turbe"?

The general Wiki page at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T%C3%BCrbe explains it as:

"Türbe refers to a Muslim mausoleum, tomb or grave often in the Turkish-speaking areas and for the mausolea of Ottoman sultans, nobles and notables. A typical türbe is located in the grounds of a mosque or complex, often endowed by the deceased. However, some are more closely integrated into surrounding buildings."

However, here comes the most interesting part as this Muslim building has been used as a Christian temple for some time.

It took me some time to find, what appears, an unique article, written by Father Maxim, and I will translate some parts of it for you that I find really interesting.

Let's enjoy the beauty of this, unfortunately abandoned, place of faith...

IMG_7563.jpg

IMG_7564.jpg

I could tell it had been built very carefully and the mason was a true master!

IMG_7565.jpg

The signs of time, "eating" the stone blocks...

IMG_7566.jpg

One window with a panoramic view...

IMG_7567.jpg

Lichen and moss on many spots at the Western and Norths sides of it.

IMG_7568.jpg

Well, I couldn't stop myself from taking a couple of my favorite sun diffraction effect pictures!

IMG_7569.jpg

IMG_7570.jpg

Ceilings in pretty nasty condition.

IMG_7571.jpg

Now, I think, is the best time to translate some of the parts of that article I mentioned.
Here is its Bulgarian version: https://sakarnews.info/%D1%85%D1%80%D0%B8%D1%81%D1%82%D0%B8%D1%8F%D0%BD%D1%81%D0%BA%D0%B8%D1%8F%D1%82-%D1%85%D1%80%D0%B0%D0%BC-%D1%82%D0%B5%D0%BA%D0%B5%D1%82%D0%BE-%D0%B2-%D1%81-%D0%B1%D0%BE%D0%B3%D0%BE%D0%BC%D0%B8%D0%BB/

(yup, that happens with the websites put Cyrillic letters in the URL, LMAO)

You will understand why all those Christian symbols and signs are on the walls of a Muslim place of pilgrimage...

"Текето е построено през 1541 г. от самия Хазър баба, местен големец, за да го погребат, като почине.
Тюрбето представлява голяма осемстенна каменна сграда /въпреки, че традицията повелява този вид постройки да са седмостенни/, покрита с полусферичен купол. Височината му е приблизително 10 метра, а входът се намира на източната стена. Пред него има почти квадратно преддверие с полусферичен купол. Около свода на входа в миналото е имало надписи на османо-турски. Плочата на входа липсва, но въпреки разрухата на времето, личи красотата и майсторското напасване на двата вида мрамор при входа."

The turbe was built in 1541. from Hazer Baba himself, a local magnate, to bury him when he died.
The turbe is a large eight-walled stone building /although tradition dictates that this type of building should be seven-walled/, covered with a hemispherical dome. Its height is approximately 10 meters and the entrance is located on the eastern wall. In front of it is an almost square vestibule with a hemispherical dome. In the past, there were inscriptions in Ottoman Turkish around the arch of the entrance. The slab at the entrance is missing, but despite the ravages of time, the beauty and masterful fitting of the two types of marble at the entrance is evident.

IMG_7572.jpg

"Интересното е, че след Освобождението текето е превърнато в християнски храм, който работи като такъв до края на 50-те години. За целта, преддверието му е затворено и превърнато в апсида, а един от ажурните прозорци е бил превърнат във врата. Пода е с плочи. По стените и днес личат стенописи и кръстове. След като текето е върнато към предишното му състояние след 1959 г., църковните книги и утвар били прибрани от местните хора и не могат да бъдат открити."

Interestingly, after the Liberation, the turbe was converted into a Christian temple, which operated as such until the end of the 1950s. For this purpose, its vestibule was closed and turned into an apse, and one of the openwork windows was turned into a door. The floor is tiled. Murals and crosses can be seen on the walls even today. After the tekke was restored to its former state after 1959, the church books and utensils were taken away by local people and cannot be found.

IMG_7573.jpg

"Интересен факт е, че в градежа на сградата са използвани строителни материали, останали от римско време или дори от античността, като например мраморните колони на вратата, камъни и тухли, които са дебели около 4 – 5 см, и в градежа са свързвани с дебел пласт бял хоросан. Много е възможно или на самото място или някъде близо да е имало античен градеж като се има предвид, че наблизо, през местността Гюрджика, е минавал античен път. В землището на селището живот е имало още от тракийската епоха – на височината Теке баир (Текелията), между Богомил и Овчарово, е имало късноантични крепости и селища от ранножелязната епоха (XII-VI век пр.н.е.), тракийската и римската епохи. Там е открита и гръцка червенофигурна керамика, което подсказва за интензивни търговски отношения с древните гръцки градове по Егейския бряг."

An interesting fact is that the construction of the building used building materials left over from Roman times or even from antiquity, such as the marble columns of the door, stones and bricks, which are about 4-5 cm thick, and were connected in the construction with a thick layer of white mortar. It is very possible that there was an ancient building either on the site itself or somewhere nearby, considering that an ancient road passed nearby, through the area of ​​Gyurjika. There has been life in the land of the settlement since the Thracian era - on the Teke Bair (Tekelia) hill, between Bogomil and Ovcharovo, there were late antique fortresses and settlements from the Early Iron Age (XII-VI century BC), Thracian and Roman eras. Greek red-figure pottery was also discovered there, which suggests intensive trade relations with the ancient Greek cities along the Aegean coast.

IMG_7574.jpg

Now, something even more interesting!

"Жителите на селото са участвали в правенето през есента на курбан на „Курбан мост“, край новата винарна. В случаи на засушаване хората са излизали в м. Кекебаир, за да правят молебен за дъжд, а в празнични дни се събирали на Хорището, където ставали празничните хора."

The residents of the village took part in making a Kurban in the autumn on "Kurban Most", near the new winery. In cases of drought, people went out to the town of Kekebair to pray for rain, and on holidays they gathered at Horishteto, where the festive people got up.

IMG_7575.jpg

An eye opener, as I would say.

So all these signs and symbols, they are not just decoration.

IMG_7576.jpg

They are an integral part of the rituals and as I found traces of candles, matches, true, covered by dust, but not too much, that all means some people still believe this place has a power and come to light a candle, put a little prayer, or who knows what more.

IMG_7577.jpg

Too bad this all has been left to the elements.

Insects doing their part here, obviously...

IMG_7578.jpg

What happened in year 1994? It will remain a mystery, I guess!

IMG_7579.jpg

The light inside was beautiful, allowing me to "freeze" all that wall art, that, I am pretty much sure, will be gone in a few years.

IMG_7580.jpg

IMG_7581.jpg

Another ritual corner.

IMG_7582.jpg

IMG_7583.jpg

I really hope there is someone who could read that. I know 7 is a divine number and those probably visualizes something important. A cross and a ground /probably/ line over those seven items...

IMG_7584.jpg

Or could this be a... treasure map? Nooo, I highly doubt that but let the child in me speak for a bit, right? ;)

IMG_7585.jpg

Someone even started a small fire here.

IMG_7586.jpg

IMG_7587.jpg

IMG_7588.jpg

The combination of stone blocks with marble blocks with different colors... must have taken ages to cut those building blocks back then in 15th century!

IMG_7589.jpg

IMG_7590.jpg

The sunlight always tempts me to create such pictures...
I really can't help myself! :)))

IMG_7592.jpg

Now, I am pretty sure what this "modern" building purpose is, but for the sake of the positive experience, I will omit this information :)

IMG_7593.jpg

Time to see the turbe from another two angles outside and say goodbye!

IMG_7594.jpg

It felt really good to see and explore this location and really bad at the same time as I know it deserves to be preserved. Historic buildings should not be left to decay as we like them or not, they are evidences of our unwritten past.

IMG_7595.jpg

Buy my stock photos at Alamy: https://www.alamy.com/portfolio/112427.html

Buy my 1/1 exclusive NFTs on OpenSea: https://opensea.io/LightCaptured

Buy my stock photos at Adobe Stock: https://stock.adobe.com/contributor/206416265/lightcaptured

Follow me on Mastodon: https://mastodon.social/@lightcaptured (Decentralized social network for my insta-type selected photographs and short posts)

Copyright: LightCaptured
All the photographs, digital art and text in my posts, unless specified otherwise, are my own property and created by me.
If you wish to use any of my works, please drop me a line!

Have a great day!

Here is an uncomplete list of some of my equipment I use on a regular basis:

CamerasCanon EOS 5D Mark III
Canon EOS M5
Canon EOS 550D
LensesCanon EF 16-35mm f/2.8L II USM
Canon EF 135mm f/2L USM
Canon EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II USM
Canon EF 50mm f/1.4 USM
Canon EF-M 15-45mm f/3.5-6.3 IS STM
Canon EF-M 22mm f/2 STM
Tokina 11-16mm f/2.8
7artisans 35mm f/1.2
StrobesDynaphos Speedster
FlashesMetz
Tripods and Mono-podsManfrotto
Benro

The divider I use in my posts I have created in Adobe Express.

Sort:  

Interesting place with even more interesting history, thanks 👍🙏

Thank you for your witness vote!
Have a !BEER on me!
To Opt-Out of my witness beer program just comment STOP below


Hey @adrianhadjii, here is a little bit of BEER from @isnochys for you. Enjoy it!

Did you know that <a href='https://dcity.io/cityyou can use BEER at dCity game to buy cards to rule the world.

Great, these old buildings look really great! Thank you for sharing.

They are really something, aren't they...
Thank you!

Congratulations, your post has been added to The WorldMapPin Map! 🎉



You can check out this post and your own profile on the map. Be part of the Worldmappin Community and join our Discord Channel to get in touch with other travelers, ask questions or just be updated on our latest features.

Thanks for adding my photo-exploration post to the map, have a great day! :)

Hey @lightcaptured you are welcome.
Thanks for using @worldmappin 😘

Congratulations, your post has been added to the TravelFeed Map! 🎉🥳🌴

Did you know you have your own profile map?
And every post has their own map too!

Want to have your post on the map too?

  • Go to TravelFeed Map
  • Click the create pin button
  • Drag the marker to where your post should be. Zoom in if needed or use the search bar (top right).
  • Copy and paste the generated code in your post (any Hive frontend)
  • Or login with Hive Keychain or Hivesigner and click "create post" to post to Hive directly from TravelFeed
  • Congrats, your post is now on the map!
PS: You can import your previous Pinmapple posts to the TravelFeed map.
map
Opt Out

Thank you, TravelFeed team! I have your day is great! :)

!BEER


Hey @lightcaptured, here is a little bit of BEER from @pixresteemer for you. Enjoy it!

Learn how to earn FREE BEER each day by staking your BEER.

Hiya, @lauramica here, just swinging by to let you know that this post made it into our Top 3 in Travel Digest #2385.

Your post has been manually curated by the @worldmappin team. If you like what we're doing, please drop by to check out all the rest of today's great posts and consider supporting other authors like yourself and us so we can keep the project going!

Become part of our travel community:

Thanks so much, Laura! I am glad you liked my story about this spiritual place from the other side of the world ;)

You are very welcome @lightcaptured! it was well deserved. ☀️
Keep up the great work 💪

Congratulations @lightcaptured! You received the biggest smile and some love from TravelFeed! Keep up the amazing blog. 😍 Your post was also chosen as top pick of the day and is now featured on the TravelFeed front page.

Thanks for using TravelFeed!
@for91days (TravelFeed team)

PS: Did you know that we have our own Hive frontend at TravelFeed.com? For your next travel post, log in to TravelFeed with Hive Keychain or Hivesigner and take advantage of our exclusive features for travel bloggers.

Oh, wow, that's such a pleasant surprise, thank you so much! :)
All the best to the team!

is the winner in the Artistic point of view !!

Hehehe, thank you so much! :)

sure !

How wonderful! 🌟 The story you tell about this place is fascinating, every corner of this structure seems to breathe the passage of time.

So true! It is "sunk" in time, if I could say that...
Thank you! :)