Sites of modern rural life: agricultural complexes of the Early Republic in Antalya
Abstract
After the First World War, rural policies to include villages in the modernization process were adopted
in many countries including the young Republican Turkey where the largest part of the population was
living in rural lands. Adopting the rural-agricultural identity of the country and developing it not just in
economics but also in cultural and social means as a part of the modernization project was one of the
main policies of the era in Turkey. While the importance given to villages was being increased, research
and development on agricultural facilities was another dominant policy of the early Republican period
by considering the potentials of the country and observing the scientific developments in the world.
Farms and institutes were established as the tools of modernization within this perspective. The main
aims of the agricultural institutions were to determine the regional agricultural technics, to promote the
use of agricultural machines, and to educate the society in the agricultural field. Institutions were
established to analyse the regional differences in the country and to develop agricultural development
plans. During the 1923-1938 period, Agricultural Schools were founded, many Seed Breeding and
Experimental Stations (Tohum Islah ve Deneme İstasyonu) and farms were established around Turkey.
In parallel, the Mediterranean coast of the country was chosen as the land for citrus production due to
its climatic conditions. In Antalya, where agriculture had always been an important component in
economic life, farms such as Bileydi Farm, Tugayoğlu Farm, and Waqf Farm; institutions such as Citrus
Tree Station (Narenciye Fidanlığı) (1926) and Hot Climate Botanic Experimental Station (Sıcak İklim
Nebatları Teksir ve Islah İstasyonu) (1937) had an active role in agricultural production and to guide
local farmers with contemporary techniques. International developments in the agricultural field were
followed, researches on tropical and subtropical plants were started. Besides citrus, various other
agricultural products from wheat to banana, from rice plant to cotton were also analysed and introduced,
and the possibility to produce these items in Antalya lands was discussed during the early Republican
period. Agricultural projects of the early Republican period had the importance of being the spaces of
mass education besides their productive and economic contribution to the new regime. On the other side,
these complexes displayed the rational and functional characteristics of modern life while sustaining the
agricultural tradition of the region. By creating multifunctional environments, the “new” life practices
were experienced by the workers and their families which would also affect urban development
afterwards. From this perspective, the paper aims to discuss the impacts of central policies on the local
identity of Antalya by analysing the agricultural complexes as the interface between modernism and
locality. Architectural features of the agricultural complexes built in Antalya in the early Republican
period will be analysed, the impacts of agricultural complexes on the urban morphology and identity via
site selection, construction and production processes and local responses to the newly introduced
lifestyle will be discussed within the paper.