Cahit Sıtkı Tarancı Museum
Europe, Turkey
1 / 3Museum Information
Opening Hours
08:30 – 16:30
Open Days
About Cahit Sıtkı Tarancı Museum
Cahit Sıtkı Tarancı House
– Cultural Museum
The house where the renowned Turkish poet Cahit Sıtkı
Tarancı was born and spent his childhood was built in 1733 and later passed
into the possession of the Tarancı family. Reflecting all the characteristic
features of traditional Diyarbakır domestic architecture, the residence
consists of four wings arranged around a central courtyard and is constructed
entirely from black basalt stone. The building, with a ground floor and an
upper floor, was designed in harmony with the region’s climate and includes summer,
winter, spring, and autumn sections.
Originally planned as harem and selamlık quarters, the
selamlık section was lost over time, and only the harem section has survived.
The house is accessed through a narrow street via a single-leaf wooden door,
while a second entrance with double wooden wings opens to the kitchen on the
northern side. The kitchen, arranged as an eyvan, is located in the northeast
corner, and a small hamam occupies the southwest corner. Decorative elements
known locally as “cıs/cas”, used on the courtyard-facing façades, soften the
austere appearance of basalt stone and add aesthetic vibrancy to the structure.
Cahit Sıtkı Tarancı was born in this house on 2 October
1910, and he spent his childhood and youth here. The building was purchased by
the Ministry of Culture and Tourism in 1973, restored, and opened as the Cahit
Sıtkı Tarancı House Cultural Museum on 19 October 1973, coinciding with the
50th anniversary of the Republic of Türkiye.
The museum displays several personal belongings of the
poet, including his pen, comb, comb case, cufflinks, and passport.
The residence contains 14 rooms of various sizes, along
with a kitchen, storage room, and lavatory. The most notable part of the house
is the two-storey summer section, whose upper floor features a spacious main
room—known as the “başoda” or mabeyn room”—preceded by a double-arched eyvan.
This is the very room where Cahit Sıtkı Tarancı was born.