Atatürk was born in Salonika in 1881.
Atatürk was born in this historical house, spent his
childhood and part of his youth. And in this house,
with his friends, he planned and decided for an independent
country
with a free governing regime. This
historical house, after being restored and arranged
as a museum, opened to visit under the name of “Atatürk
House”. The Atatürk House is located at 75,Apostolu
Pavlu Avenue,
Aya Dimitria district in Salonika.
The Turkish Consulate is situated next to the house.
According to the old records, “Atatürk House” in Salonika
was situated on Islahane Caddesi, Kazim Pasha district
in Salonika. The house is a three-storey building with
a courtyard and a basement floor. Salonika archive records
show that the Atatürk House, now a museum, was built
before 1870 by a teacher Hadji Mehmed
from Rhodes and it was first sold
to someone named Ibrahim Zühdü and than again to another
people of Salonika, Abdullah Aga and his wife Ummü Gülsüm.
According to this information the house did not belong
to Atatürk's father Ali Riza Efendi but rented from
its owners. Atatürk’s father Ali Riza Efendi had for
a while been an employee of Salonika Pious Foundation
and then worked as a Customs Officer. In 1876 he joined
the Salonika National Forces battalion as a first lieutenant
and later on he continued as a private business man.
Ali Riza Efendi, after marrying the
daughter of Feyzullah Aga from a well known family Sarigüllü
Haci Sofu’s Zübeyde Hanim in about 1878, left his father
Ahmet Efendi's, known as Kirmizi Hafiz, family home
in the Subasi district and settled in this house with
his wife in the Hoca Hanim Pasha district by renting
it from its owners. The house, then surrounded by high
walls with “harem” and “selamlik” sections, was a three-storey
classical building.
The external
facade plastered and pink painted with iron latticed
windows on the ground and timber latticed windows on
the upper floor. In 1881 Atatürk was born in the upper
floor at the left side room that had a fireplace. After
Ali Riza Efendi’s death in 1888, his young widow Zübeyde
Hanim mostly for financial reasons moved out of this
house, with her son young Mustafa (Atatürk) and daughters
Naciye and Makbule, to a smaller house next to this
house. Zübeyde Hanim, who, time to time visited her
brother Hüseyin Aga in his farm with her children, met
with Ragip Bey and married again, with a very kind gentleman,
as Atatürk expressed with his own words. They continued
to live in this small house. Atatürk had started his
education at the Semsi Efendi District School before
his father’s death while they were living in this Pink
House. After the death of his father, he first enrolled
in Salonika Civil Servants Junior High School and then
transferred to Salonika Military Junior High School
in 1893. In 1896 he entered to the Monastir Military
Junior High School and than, in 1899, to the Military
Academy in Istanbul. During his holidays he visited
his mother and sisters in Salonika who used to live
in this small house.
Atatürk graduated from the Military
Academy in 1902 and enrolled to the Staff Officers School
and became an Army Staff Captain in the early 1905.
Between this date and the declaration of the II. Constitutional
Monarchy in 1908, Atatürk and a few of his friends secretly
founded a political society named “Country and Freedom”
in 1906, while he was stationed in Damascus and continued
its activity. But, actually, he wanted to activate this
society in Macedonia.
Therefore,
he secretly travelled to Salonika and, again with a
few of friends, established a branch of this society
in Salonika. A year before the declaration of the II.
Constitutional Monarchy (1907) Atatürk was appointed
to Salonika and had stayed in this small house with
his family. Many secret political meetings took place
in this house. Later on, after the start of the wars
in Tripoli, Libya and in the Balkans, Atatürk left Salonika
and spent his whole life with the struggle for his country.
After the Balkan war Atatürk's mother
Zübeyde Hanim also did not stay in Salonika and moved
to Istanbul with her daughter Makbule (Atadan), as most
of the Turkish families did, and settled in a house
in Besiktas, Akaretler district. Later on, during the
National Struggle years she moved to Ankara. After the
Victory, because of Ankara’s climate was not suitable
for her health conditions, she moved to Izmir and there,
passed away in 1923.
After Balkan War
Salonika became a Greek city and the possession of the
house, where Zübeyde Hanim lived, transferred to Greek
Government by the Lausanne Agreement and later on the
Greek Government sold the house to a Greek family.
On the occasion of the 10. Anniversary
of the Turkish Republic (29 October 1933), Salonika
Municipality Council, in memory of Turkish - Greek Friendship
and the Balkan Conference, placed a marble plate on
the right side of the double door of the house where
Atatürk was born. The following words are inscribed
on this plate in Turkish, Greek and French:
“The great founder
of Turkish Nation and the pillar of the Balkan Entente,
GAZI MUSTAFA KEMAL was born here. This plate is placed
on the occasion of the 10. Anniversary of the Turkish
Republic. Salonika, 29 October 1933.”
The plate was put in its place with
a ceremony on 4 November 1933 with the participation
of Turkish Ambassador in Athens and the embassy staff,
The General Governor of Macedonia, Mayor of Salonika
and the Greek officials. Later on, Salonika Municipality
Council decided to buy the house from its Greek owner
and present it to Atatürk. The house was evacuated on
19 February 1937 and its keys handed over to the Turkish
Consulate in Salonika. After that,
the “Atatürk House” cared by the Turkish Consulate in
Salonika. The ground floor shops, which had been opened
by the late owner, removed and the house restored to
its original state. Also, its yellow paint was replaced
by its original pink colour and the roof repaired.
In 1950 the house
had more substantial restoration and the Foreign Ministry
and the National Education Ministry started works to
convert “Atatürk House” to a museum.
The National Education Ministry, after
having experts advice in order to make new arrangements
for a museum, brought in to “Atatürk House” some necessary
furniture and items selected from Istanbul Dolmabahce
and Topkapi Palaces. That is how the rooms in the House
rearranged and restored to its original plan and opened
to public display on 10 November 1953 after an official
ceremony. Salonika Atatürk House, which is open to public
as a museum today, is located in the corner of the garden
where the Salonika Turkish Consulate also situated,
surrounded by a fence wall facing the main boulevard.
This three-storey old Turkish style house has a tiled
roof and is cantilevered above the ground floor. First
and second floors have rectangular and latticed windows.
Entrance is through double doors opening to the boulevard.
Ground Floor:
Through the door you enter a brick tiled hall. First
room on the right is the cellar and the second is the
kitchen. In the cellar, kitchen utensils (Copper bowls,
large earthenware jars, jugs, pitchers, an axe, pestles
and chests) are displayed. There are cupboards and shelves
in the kitchen. First room on the left is maids room
and second is the stair hall where you go up to the
first floor.
First Floor: You can come up to this
floor from an open stone stair from the garden as well
as from the stair hall on the ground floor. In the entry,
there is a large sofa with a timber ceiling. The sofa
has a large divan with pillows and embroidered covers
in front of the triple windows facing the garden with
satin curtains. In the middle of the sofa there is a
round wooden table. On the right, from the garden entry
to the sofa, there is a guest room and through it a
storage room. Guest room is furnished with velvet-covered
couches and armchairs, satin curtains, mirrored dresser,
copper brazier and coffee tables. A silk-threaded inscription
and a clock are on the walls. First small room on the
left is the kitchen. There are various kitchen utensils
and a stove oven in here. Second room is the bedroom.
At one corner there is a double iron bedstead and on
the wall at the bedside, a
Koran with silver
lapel and red satin book cover, and an inscription plate
are hung. First verse of the Conquest Sura (chapter)
is inscribed on this plate. In front of the bedstead
there are a brass brazier and a large divan all along
the windows facing the street with heavy satin curtains.
Second Floor: You can reach this floor
through the stair hall next to the storage room on the
first floor. The sofa with divans on this floor is similar
to the sofa on the first floor only smaller. Right-hand
side room from entry has a decorated gypsum ceiling
and is the study room. There is a bronze bust of Atatürk,
a desk, a brass brazier and armchairs in this room in
which Atatürk was born. Ceramic dishes and inscriptions
related to Atatürk are hung on the wall. The bedroom
at the right was arranged as the Atatürk Museum. Wearing
apparel and personal effects used by Atatürk can be
seen in the cabinets with the glass fronts. There is
also a bookshelf displaying the photographs of Atatürk,
documents from his schooling and some of his books.
There is a terrace
with wooden railings next to the bedroom. The last restoration,
arrangements and preparations for display of the Atatürk
House in Salonika were made in 1981.