Chardak Explained
A chardak (Bulgarian, Macedonian and sr|чардак|italics=no, čardak) is an old typical house in the Balkans. It is derived from the word çardak, which is a component of Ottoman Turkish house design.[1] This term, which is also called sofa, denotes an open hall of a house's upper living floor.[2]
Description
A chardak is timber-framed and usually include a hayat.[3] The design has been described as "Greek-Oriental," Southern European," and "Mediterranean". It has a fortified ground floor and a wooden upper floor. This dwelling was used as a protective small fort.
Chardak can also refer to the space – a part of the central hall area – that connects the rooms of the house.
References
- Милан Крухек: Крајишке утврде хрватског краљевства тијеком 16. стољећа, Институт за сувремену повијест - Библиотека хрватска повјесница. Загреб, 1995.
44.8556°N 21.0947°W
Notes and References
- Book: Couroucli, Maria. Balkan Heritages: Negotiating History and Culture. Marinov. Tchavdar. 2017. Taylor & Francis. 9781472467249. Oxon. 96.
- Book: Architectural Elements of Traditional Settlements. International Association for the Study of Traditional Environments. 2008. 7.
- Book: Daskalov, Roumen Dontchev. Entangled Histories of the Balkans - Volume Four: Concepts, Approaches, and (Self-)Representations. Mishkova. Diana. Marinov. Tchavdar. Vezenkov. Alexander. 2017. BRILL. 978-90-04-33781-7. Leiden. 550.