Hüsamettin Yivlik Geleneksel Türk Sanatları Vocational and Technical Anatolian High School

Audio Narration:

Construction Year:

1884

Location:

Fatih, İstanbul

Ordered By:

Sultan Abdulhamid II

Architect:

Unknown

Changes After Construction:
  • In 1883, construction began in Cağaloğlu on the Arif Pasha plot, which at the time belonged to the Ministry of Education.
  • As indicated by the tughra of Sultan Abdulhamid II above the entrance, it was completed in 1884 (Hijri 1302) as a two-story masonry structure.
  • The school was originally established to teach languages to clerks working at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Bab-ı Ali Foreign Affairs Bureau) and was converted into a Law School in 1892.
  • The building was subsequently used for educational purposes as the Darülfünun Physics-Chemistry Laboratory, Teacher School, and School of Fine Arts, and it is recognized as a first-degree historical monument.
Prominent Features:
  • The historical roots of the school date back to the Bab-ı Ali Translation Office in 1821 and the first Language School (Lisan Mektebi) opened in 1866.
  • The “Lisan Mektebi” building, currently used as Hüsamettin Yivlik Vocational and Technical Anatolian High School of Traditional Turkish Arts, is defined by its two-story masonry structure and Neoclassical façade.
  • The ground floor features round-arched windows, while the upper floor has flat-arched window arrangements.
  • Among the school’s alumni are notable figures such as Mahmut Cüda and Elif Naci, and painter İbrahim Çallı, an important name in Turkish art history, taught at the school.