Seraglio

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A hall in the Seraglio (Topkapı Palace), Istanbul
Sultan Selim III holding an audience in front of the Gate of Felicity, by Konstantin Kapıdağlı, Topkapı Palace
Ottoman officers in front of the Al-Karak Saray in 1910, following the Karak revolt.

A seraglio,Template:Efn serail,Template:Efn seray or saray (from Template:Langx, via Turkish, Italian and French) is a castle, palace or government building which was considered to have particular administrative importance in various parts of the former Ottoman Empire.

"The Seraglio" may refer specifically to the Topkapı Palace, the residence of the former Ottoman sultans in Istanbul (known as Constantinople in English at the time of Ottoman rule).<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The term can also refer to other traditional Turkish palaces (every imperial prince had his own) and other grand houses built around courtyards.

Etymology

The term seraglio, from Italian,<ref name=Etym-TFD/><ref name=Etym-OED/><ref name=Etym-Treccani2/> has been used in English since 1581.<ref name=Kahf/> The Italian Treccani dictionary gives two derivations:<ref name=Etym-Treccani2/><ref name=Etym-Treccani1/>

  1. one via Template:Langx or Template:Lang<ref name=Etym-TFD/><ref name=Etym-DRC/> (with the variants seraya or saraya), which comes from Template:Langx<ref name=Etym-OED/> or, per derivation, the enclosed court for the wives and concubines of the harem of a house or palace (see Template:§l);
  2. the other — in the sense of enclosureTemplate:Efn — from Late/Template:Langx, derived from Classical Latin Template:Lang, Template:Lit, which comes from Template:Lang, Template:Lit.<ref name=Latin/><ref name=Macdonald/>

The term may also be spelt serail, via French influence, based on the Italian term.<ref name=Etym-OED/>

Harem

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Tiled room inside the harem, Topkapı Palace
An illustration of the women's quarters in a seraglio, by John Frederick Lewis

Since the Topkapı Palace's harem (commonly known as "The Seraglio harem"<ref name=Harem/>) grew in prominence and fame, the term saray/serail/seraglio began also being commonly used as a synonym of harem, the sequestered living quarters used by wives and concubines in an Ottoman household.Template:Efn<ref name=Harem/>

In Ottoman culture

The Grand Serail of Beirut, Lebanon
The Grand Serail of Aleppo, Syria
The Red Serail of Tripoli, Libya

Besides the Topkapı Palace ("The Seraglio"), the most famous seray is the Grand Serail of Beirut (Template:Langx) in Lebanon, which is the headquarters of the prime minister. It is situated atop a hill in downtown Beirut a few blocks away from the Lebanese Parliament. The hill was the site of an Ottoman army base from the 1840s, which was built up, fortified, and expanded in the 1850s. At first it was known as al quishla, from the Turkish word kışla, meaning barracks.

Other examples include:

Seventeen saraya were established in Palestine during Ottoman rule; most were established by regional officials and their families such as the Ridwan dynasty and Zahir al-Umar and his family.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

In Italy

In modern Italian the word is spelled Template:Lang. It may refer to a wall or structure, either for defence — such as the Serraglio of Villafranca di Verona, a defensive wall built by the Scaligeri — or for containment, for example of caged wild animals.Template:Efn<ref name=Etym-Treccani1/> The ghettoes established in many Italian cities following the promulgation by Pope Paul IV in 1555 of the papal bull Cum nimis absurdum were initially called Template:Lang, Template:Lit.<ref>Debenedetti-Stow, Sandra (1992). "The Etymology of "Ghetto": New Evidence from Rome". Jewish History 6 (1/2), The Frank Talmage Memorial Volume: 79–85 Template:Subscription required</ref>

Seraglio is also the name of the artificial island on which Mantua is located.

In literature and the arts

In the context of the Template:Lang fashion, the seraglio became the subject of works of art, the most famous perhaps being Mozart's 1782 Singspiel, Template:Lang (The Abduction from the Seraglio), based on Christoph Friedrich Bretzner's 1781 Template:Lang Template:Lang (Belmonte and Konstanze, or The Abduction from the Seraglio). In Montesquieu's 1721 Persian Letters, one of the main characters, a Persian from the city of Isfahan, is described as an occupant of a seraglio.

Homophones

Saraya is also used as a military unit title in the Arab world. In this case the Arabic is Template:Lang, a different word from "saraya" (Template:Lang) as in a building. The etymology is also different from the building: Template:Lang is from Arabic and communicates the idea of a "private group". However the plural is Template:Lang (saraya), indistinguishable from the term "saraya" which is a variant (in the singular) of saray (the building).

The normal translation for Template:Lang is company (military unit), but in the case of the Lebanese Resistance Saraya the term is often arbitrarily translated as brigades.

Another example is the Syrian Defense Saraya.

See also

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Notes and references

Notes

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References

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Bibliography

ar:سراي