Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q6930678> ?p ?o }
- Q6930678 description "Turkish architect".
- Q6930678 description "Turkish architect".
- Q6930678 subject Q22037491.
- Q6930678 subject Q6508841.
- Q6930678 subject Q6647201.
- Q6930678 subject Q7155846.
- Q6930678 subject Q7470237.
- Q6930678 subject Q8328093.
- Q6930678 subject Q8415323.
- Q6930678 subject Q8432648.
- Q6930678 subject Q8632853.
- Q6930678 subject Q8876763.
- Q6930678 abstract "Mualla Eyüboğlu Anhegger (1919 – August 16, 2009) was one of the first female Turkish architects. She is known for her restoration work on the Topkapı Palace harem room and the Rumelihisarı in Istanbul.Eyüboğlu was born in 1919 in Aziziye, Erzurum. She was the sister of well known Turkish painter and poet, Bedri Rahmi Eyüboğlu, and Sabahattin Eyüboğlu, an author, academic and translator. Her father, Mehmet Rahmi, was the Governor of Trabzon and a member of parliament chosen by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk.Her family moved to Istanbul, where she enrolled in a regular high school, unlike many of her peers who often attended all girls colleges. After graduating from high school, Eyüboğlu was educated in fine arts at the Academy of Fine Arts in Istanbul and became an architect in 1942. She later explained her family's commitment to education, especially for women, saying, "We grew up with Atatürk's reforms. That was what Atatürk had indoctrinated in us. That we would finish school and serve our country."After the academy, she began working in the small village of Hasanoğlan, Ankara Province, where she facilitated the construction of a village institutes. The Turkish government was working to develop the small villages and communities of Anatolia at the time, and the village institutes were considered essential to educating its citizens. Eyüboğlu later said in an interview:Village institutes were an education project that targeted the whole of Anatolia. When the Turkish Republic was founded in 1923, 90 percent of the population lived in rural areas and only 3 percent of the population was literate. It was a must to educate people. So the country was divided into 21 parts and in each was built an institute that not only taught people how to read and write but also crafts like carpentry and planting.Eyüboğlu planned new institutes and schools in villages throughout rural Turkey during the 1940s. She caught malaria in 1947, which forced her to leave Anatolia and move back to Istanbul. The government also ended its support for the village institute program during the 1950s, which forced her to settle in Istanbul.She began working at the Istanbul Academy of Fine Arts once she recovered from malaria. However, she soon began traveling outside Istanbul again as an excavation architect. In 1948, she met her future husband Robert Anhegger, a German scholar in the field of Ottoman and Turkish studies. The couple married in 1958 using an ancient wedding ring. "We got married in 1958, in the 10th anniversary of our friendship. He proposed to me with a ring that was from the 4th century A.D. After my father's death, I was feeling lonely and I couldn't resist his insistence anymore."Eyüboğlu began working as a restoration architect in Istanbul following her marriage. Her most famous restoration projects included the landmark Topkapı Palace's harem section and Rumelihisarı. In 2008 she was given a special jury award for in the Achievement Award for special contribution in architecture at the Turkish National Architecture Awards in Ankara.Eyüboğlu and Anhegger bought an apartment in a legendary building in Istanbul's Galata district in 1964. She decorated her apartment with artifacts collected from throughout her travels in Anatolia. The couple remained married until Anhegger's death in 2001. She mourned the death of her husband, with whom she had been together for more than 40 years, "I couldn't accept his will to be cremated. After his cremation, I lived with his ashes in the house for a week." She continued to live at her residence following Anhegger's death. Her goal was to donate her collection to a small museum. Unfortunately her wish was not realized, as her heirs sold the entire contents of that magical apartment to the highest bidder.Mualla Eyüboğlu Anhegger died on August 16, 2009, at the age of 90. She was laid to rest at the Merkezefendi Cemetery following the religious funeral service at Teşvikiye Mosque.".
- Q6930678 almaMater Q1936057.
- Q6930678 birthDate "1919".
- Q6930678 birthName "Mualla".
- Q6930678 birthPlace Q12560.
- Q6930678 birthPlace Q793907.
- Q6930678 birthYear "1919".
- Q6930678 deathDate "2009-08-16".
- Q6930678 deathPlace Q406.
- Q6930678 deathYear "2009".
- Q6930678 education Q12271.
- Q6930678 nationality Q43.
- Q6930678 occupation Q217102.
- Q6930678 occupation Q42973.
- Q6930678 relative Q1965085.
- Q6930678 relative Q326828.
- Q6930678 restingPlace Q6819633.
- Q6930678 stateOfOrigin Q43.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q11629.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q1211427.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q12156.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q12271.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q1244031.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q12560.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q165853.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q170495.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q1936057.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q1965085.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q203605.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q207315.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q217102.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q219625.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q22037491.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q2297724.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q2719784.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q326828.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q406.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q42973.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q43.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q46847.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q482980.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q49757.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q501817.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q5152.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q51614.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q6508841.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q6647201.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q6819633.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q7155846.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q7470237.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q7553.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q777671.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q780048.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q793907.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q8328093.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q8415323.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q842096.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q8432648.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q8632853.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q8876763.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q90801.
- Q6930678 wikiPageWikiLink Q959782.
- Q6930678 almaMater Q1936057.
- Q6930678 birthDate "1919".
- Q6930678 birthName "Mualla".
- Q6930678 birthPlace Q12560.
- Q6930678 birthPlace Q793907.
- Q6930678 dateOfBirth "1919".
- Q6930678 dateOfDeath "2009-08-16".
- Q6930678 deathDate "2009-08-16".
- Q6930678 deathPlace "Istanbul, Turkey".
- Q6930678 education Q12271.
- Q6930678 name "Eyuboglu, Mualla".
- Q6930678 name "Mualla Eyüboğlu Anhegger".
- Q6930678 nationality Q43.
- Q6930678 occupation "Architect, vocational teacher, restorer".
- Q6930678 placeOfDeath "Istanbul, Turkey".
- Q6930678 relatives Q1965085.
- Q6930678 relatives Q326828.
- Q6930678 restingPlace Q6819633.
- Q6930678 shortDescription "Turkish architect".
- Q6930678 type Person.
- Q6930678 type Agent.
- Q6930678 type Person.
- Q6930678 type Agent.
- Q6930678 type NaturalPerson.
- Q6930678 type Thing.
- Q6930678 type Q215627.