CONVERTING AYASOYFA INTO A MUSEUM IN THE CONTEXT OF TURKEY'S 1930S BLOCK AND PACT POLICY
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.31567/ssd.323Keywords:
Hagia sophia, Turkish foreign policy, conjuncture, block policy, pact policyAbstract
Hagia Sophia is one of the monumental structures of the Islamic and Christian beliefs, which has
had the status of a church, a mosque, a museum and later a mosque until today. After the conquest
of Istanbul in 1453, it was converted from a church into a mosque and in time it became the symbol
of "chosen victory" for the Turkish-Islamic world and "chosen trauma" for the Christian-West
world. In 1934, conversion from mosque to museum by the Decree of the Executive Deputies
Delegation was seen as “chosen victory” for the withdrawal in terms of conservative-islamistnationalist fractions in Turkey. With this study, the foreign policy dimension of converting Hagia
Sophia, which has intense symbolic meanings, into a museum is discussed. The following theses are
defended in the study: First, Turkish foreign policy makers has used Hagia Sophia as one of the
psycho-political insrument of participating in the UK-led Western alliance system at a point where
the international status quo began to crumble. Second, the compelling factor of transforming Hagia Sophia into a museum is Turkey's border security and political sovereignty that threatens the 1930s
conjuncture.