Marriage, another of the turning points of life, is
both individual since it brings together the lives of a man and a
woman, and social, since it establishes family and kinship ties. The
wedding ceremony takes place as a “festival”, especially
in small village communities, since it is an activity covering the
whole village. While some of the ceremonies held during different
stages of the wedding can be considered as a feast and entertainment,
others resemble an “elegy”.
The stages of customs and ceremonies covering the whole wedding
procedure can be listed as:
A. Before the wedding
I. Matchmaking and asking for the hand of a daughter
II. a. Verbal agreement to betrothal
b. Sherbet
c. Engagement
III. Koran-accompanied wedding gift announcement
IV. Sending and exhibiting the trousseau
V. Bridal bath
B. Wedding
I. Henna night
a. Bride henna
b. Groom henna
II. Receiving the bride
III. Marriage
IV. Bridal Chamber
V. After the Bridal Chamber
C. Practices after the wedding
After the decision that a young man is to marry has been taken,
the journey begins with looking for a potential bride. In traditional
parts of society in particular, families which wanted to marry off
a son used to take a leading role in the search for a bride. It
may be observed that this situation has started to change recently.
Young people themselves choose the people whom they will marry after
dating them, or the decision is taken together with the family.
In the form of marriage that is initiated by “viewing visits”,
the mother of the boy and women close to the family visit the home
of the girl and inspect her. If they like the girl, she is then
shown to the groom. If he also likes her, the family decides to
officially ask her family for her hand.
Visiting the home of the girl and asking her father for her hand
is called “dünürlük” (task of father
and mother-in-law), “dünürlüge gitme”
(visiting as father and mother-in-law), and “elçilige
gitme” (visiting as an envoy) and similar names. The prominent
women and men from the family visit the girl’s family to ask
for her hand according to the command of God and the word of the
Prophet at a previously determined sacred date (Thursdays and Sundays
are generally considered days of good omen). Yet since the girl’s
home is expected to be a place of modesty, the girl’s family
does not give its consent on the first visit. A few visits to ask
for the girl’s hand are made, giving the family of the girl
enough time to think about it. If the family gives its consent,
a verbal agreement to betrothal is made. In accordance with the
request of the two sides, the bride and groom may put on their engagement
rings on the same day, and this is sometimes done at an engagement
ceremony held separately. After verbal agreement to betrothal has
been made, the guests and the hosts drink sherbet to provide a sweet
harmony between the families, which is a widespread custom. Drinking
sherbet means that the family of the girl consents to the marriage
and that it will go ahead. The families also discuss issues such
as the dates of the engagement and wedding ceremonies, the household
goods to be purchased or the amount of bride price as they make
their verbal agreement to the betrothal.
After both sides have completed their preparations, an engagement
ceremony is held at the girl’s home, generally with the women
in attendance. The man’s family hands over the jewelry and
other gifts purchased for the girl; in return, her family also gives
presents. The ceremony can include an engagement feast if the sides
so wish. This joyous event is at the same time celebrated with entertainments.
Engagement means both a step towards marriage and the start of the
period determined for the wedding and an opportunity for the two
for the sides to get to know each other and maintain a harmonious
relationship. In the event of disagreement between the sides, the
engagement can be broken off, although this is almost always a last
resort.
The next stage after the engagement is the wedding. First of all,
the people around should be invited to the wedding. Another custom
that is fading nowadays is distributing “recited” food
or gifts to the people in the village. (The Koran is recited as
the gifts or food to be distributed are prepared, hence the name.)
In one sense, a wedding invitation can even be “recited”.
One individual is charged with distributing the ‘recited’
gifts to the village. These can be a piece of cloth, a handkerchief,
a hand-painted kerchief, or food such as sugar and pastries. As
these are distributed the guests are also invited to the wedding.
Although fairy tales mention wedding ceremonies lasting forty days
and forty nights, they generally usually last for three days in
Anatolia. Nowadays, two-day ceremonies held on weekends are preferred
economically and socially.
The wedding ceremony, the basis of marriage, consists of two main
parts:
a. Henna night
b. Receiving the bride
The ceremony held one day before the wedding in the home of bride
and groom is called the henna night. It generally takes place at
the girl’s home and among women, although either side can
elect to host it.
A flag is planted on the roof of the man’s home at an early
hour on the day henna night will be held. This is done by a specially
chosen standard-bearer in the company of a large crowd, who celebrate
the occasion amid great festivities. In some places, a meal called
flag bread is handed out to the crowd. Flag-planting means the wedding
has officially started.
On the day the henna night is to be held, or a few days earlier,
the trousseau is taken from the girl’s home and brought to
the man’s, and the bridal chamber is prepared. The trousseau
is sometimes exhibited to the guests for a few days in the girl’s
home before the wedding, and in the man’s home during and
after it. It is a widespread tradition that someone sits on the
trousseau chest, asking for a tip as it is taken from the girl’s
home. In addition, in the early hours of the day the henna night
is to be held, a group of women from the bridegroom’s family
take the henna that will be placed on the bride’s hands and
feet, her clothes and the food that will be offered to the guests
to the girl’s home, again to the accompaniment of great festivities.
The women who gather in the girl’s home on the henna night
have fun for a while, but later try to make her cry by singing sad
songs. Henna that has earlier kneaded with water is brought in on
a tray surrounded by candles and placed in the middle of the room.
In some places, the henna is first put on the hands of the bride
and then distributed to the guests; in other areas the henna is
first distributed to the guests, and only after everybody has left
is it placed on the bride’s hands. If the woman so wishes,
henna can also be placed on her feet and hair. Considerable attention
is paid to charging a woman with a happy marriage, called the “basi
bütün” (meaning “whose head is complete”,
In a sense, this describes her as someone who has a complete family
with husband and children and whose marriage is whole, not separated
by divorce) to knead and distribute the henna and apply it to the
girl’s hand. The woman places the henna on one of the bride’s
hands, and a young girl places it on the other. Before the henna
is applied, coins or gold are also placed in her hands.
The day after the henna night is the day for receiving the bride
and of the main wedding ceremony. Both sides to the wedding offer
food to the guests, usually entertaining them to the accompaniment
of drums and reeds. In the early hours of the morning, ceremonies
known as the bridegroom shave, preparing the bridegroom and such
are held at the man’s home. The bride is readied in her own
parent’s home. Professional women who work at all wedding
ceremonies and prepare the wedding feasts are generally employed
for this. On that day, the guests in the man’s home go to
the girl’s house to receive the bride. As the bride leaves
her father’s home, a red belt, also called a belt of perseverance,
is tied around her waist by her brother or uncle. After the bride
has said farewell to her family, she is taken out of her father’s
home to the accompaniment of prayers, sometimes to hymns, and sometimes
with festivities accompanied by reed and drum. As the bride leaves
her home, she does things at home so that her single friends may
also marry. These include unraveling an unfinished stocking before
she leaves so that her friends can marry one after the other in
rapid succession, like the unraveled stocking. Some religious and
magical rites are performed to provide the couple with happiness,
for a smooth marriage as the bride is leaving her father’s
home and as she steps into the man’s home. These include a
mirror being held behind the bride as she leaves her father’s
home, expressing the wish for her to have a bright life. In the
same way, as she is passing through the threshold of the man’s
home, butter, honey and similar things are spread on the threshold
and the door jamb with the aim of providing a sweet harmony between
the bride and the people in her new home.
People throw sugar, coin, dried fruit and nuts over the head of
the bride, an expression of a wish for abundance.
The night of the wedding, a small feast is given to the remaining
few guests in the house of the groom’s family, and then a
religious ceremony is held to marry the couple, presided over by
the imam. In earlier times, the official wedding could be held any
time after the ceremony; but recently, great care has been taken
that the official wedding should be held before the wedding ceremony.
The official wedding is usually held when the families of the bride
and groom come together to go shopping for the ceremony.
After the religious ceremony, the couple come together in their
own room. Meanwhile, a series of religious rites and spells are
performed to provide a harmonious relationship between bride and
groom. These include thrusting a knife into the door of the room,
or opening a lock in front of the door. In addition, the people
there are asked not to cross their hands and arms. Food specially
prepared earlier for that night by the bride and placed in her trousseau
chest, together with a food tray with other meals, are left in the
room. In some places, a single spoon, a single fork and a single
glass are put on the tray to oblige the bride and groom to share
them. It is believed that they will get used to each other much
quicker that way. Then follows the custom of inspecting the bed
sheet that is the symbol of the bride’s innocence and chastity.
The aunt or cook who is responsible for organizing the wedding is
informed of the situation of the bride, and then conveys this news
back to the families. Sometimes, if the bride proves not to be a
virgin, she may be sent back to her father’s home.
The day after the wedding, other festivities called the bridal
veil day, face revealing or head covering are held. These are much
simpler than what has gone before and involve only the women. In
earlier times, the bride would be taken to the village fountain
and asked to fetch water during these festivities. The bride also
used to knead dough and cook pastry. This was the result of a belief
that such things would bring abundance to the new home. These things
have all been forgotten, however. Bridal veil day festivities are
not held in many places either any more.