Providing viewers with the opportunity to witness the final years of the Ottoman Empire and the industrial, economic, political, and socio-cultural history of the Turkish Republic, the collection reveals the place Cibali Tobacco Factory holds in the labor history of Turkey with a particular focus on female participation and contribution in the workforce
Banner (2017) by Işıl ÜnalRezan Has Museum
The factory was founded in 1884 in the name of ‘Regie’. One of the architects is Alexandre Vallaury. It was transferred to the Republic in 1925. Designed much like a city with workshops, a healthcare unit, a daycare, the factory was active until 1994. The building was rented to the Kadir Has Foundation in 2001. The machinery, objects, documents, and photographs used at the Cibali Tobacco and Cigarette Factory were temporarily transferred to Rezan Has Museum in 2008.
Director Monsieur Albina and The Team (1940)Rezan Has Museum
In 1884, the sole right to collect tobacco production taxes within the Ottoman lands and to establish tobacco factories was granted to the company known as Régie, co-founded by The Ottoman Bank, Credit Anstald and the Banker Bleichroeder after the economic bankruptcy of the Ottoman State. The same year, Cibali Tobacco Factory was founded and soon become one of the largest and most important factories within the Ottoman Empire with a production capacity of 12,000 kilograms of cigarettes per day.
Video Animation, 19" (2017) by Serkan BayraktaroğluRezan Has Museum
Régie administration period is recognized as an infamously exemplary period in which a massive order of exploitation was imposed upon the entire tobacco system from cultivation, production, purchase, and sale, to farmers and workers.
This is an animation of an illustration created by a factory worker that animates the entire production process of the tobacco.
A view from the exhibition.
Cibali Tobacco Factory, Manager Desk and Office Equipments at the left.
Employee Punching Machine. Meyer.
The elimination of the Régie Administration and its monopoly over tobacco was completed in 1925. Throughout this period, “tömbeki” (Persion tobacco), “puro & sigarillos” (cigars and cigarillos), “pipo tütünü” (pipe tobacco), “enfiye” (snuff) and almost all brands of “sigara” (cigarette) production continued largely with locally produced tobacco.
Identity Card (1926)Rezan Has Museum
Cibali Tobacco Factory Cigarette Machine Operator” Identity Card, 1926-1941
Tobacco Leaves (1900's) by Ulaş TosunRezan Has Museum
Leaves of different kind were mixed together to obtain a “blend” and these leaves would be shredded by hand (and later with machines). After the blends were ready, they would either be packed into packs of tobacco or were sent to be rolled as cigarettes.
Tobacco Softening § Humidification Machine, beginning of 20th century.
Softening is the name given to the process of moistening tobacco leaves to touch, process, and transport tobacco leaves by hand after they are harvested.
Cigarette Paper Manufacturing Machine (1896)Rezan Has Museum
Before cigarette-rolling machines were invented, these devices would roll flat cigarette papers in spools to allow shredded tobacco to be filled inside. In the next process, the tobacco would be stuffed inside the rolled wrappers.
Shredding Machine (1940)Rezan Has Museum
Shredding Machine, 1940s. A shot from the production process.
Types of Local Cigarettes Manufactured by Cibali Factory, Album of Personalized Cigarette Papers from the Régie Period.
Cigarettes manufactured on special order, including ones bearing the names of Turkish and foreign state administrators, as well as those of embassy members shed light upon the political history of Turkey and the world.
"Regie"Brand. Cigarette boxes.
Seals (20th Century)Rezan Has Museum
Various seals from the Factory from Regie and Republic era.
Stencil print of 'Product of Turkey'
Exhibition. Cigar molds and Boxes in the foreground.
With the return of blenders sent to Europe for specialization, the first local cigar production began at the factory in 1933. From 1935 onwards, the cigar brands “Marmara”, “Florya”, “Moda”, Çankaya”, “Ege”, and “Toros,” and the cigarillo brand “Esmer” were produced at the factory. Case of 25 Ankara Cigars sold in a wooden box designed to preserve the humidity and flavor of the cigars were highly popular and much admired.
Wooden Press-Mold Crates.
Dried tobacco would be placed in wooden crates as part of a certain order and pressed at certain intervals.
View from the Sea (1940)Rezan Has Museum
There are several photo albums left from the factory helping us to understand better the daily life of the workers and the production process as well.
Sorting (1940)Rezan Has Museum
Cibali Tobacco Factory grew over time with more than two thousand employees, becoming the largest factory of both Istanbul and the district in which it was located. The factory also employed the largest number of female workers in a single workspace in the Ottoman production sector.
Tobacco Bales (1940)Rezan Has Museum
From highest to lowest quality, the Factory processed a wide range of tobacco types from different regions of Anatolia. Every day, bales of tobacco to be processed would be delivered from the warehouse to the factory and sorted in leaves.
Clock In (1940)Rezan Has Museum
Leaves of different kind were mixed together to obtain a “blend” and these leaves would be shredded by hand (and later with machines). After the blends were ready, they would either be packed into packs of tobacco or were sent to be rolled as cigarettes. While men carried out the blending process, female employees handled packaging.
Blending (1940)Rezan Has Museum
Workers on blending band.
The demands on working hours and conditions, paid religious holidays, and equal rights were earned with the help of protests held to obtain these rights and the defiant stance of laborers. One worker rolled an average of 5 cigarettes per day, 300 an hour, and 3000 per day; in addition to the gruesome pace of work, many of the employees were already unhealthy due to malnutrition, poor living conditions, and poverty. Tobacco, upon which their livelihood depended, consumed their health as well.
Packaging Department (1940)Rezan Has Museum
Women workers packaging manually.
Manual Packaging (1940)Rezan Has Museum
The end of their shift involved some entertainment. The young girls would walk arm in arm in the hope of seeing the young men they were fond of, exchanging glances with them, and dreamt of talking to them for the fun of it. Men, on the other hand, would think about how to make a living, where to enjoy some merriment at night, and their beloveds, more than anything else. Humanly concerns and joy almost always prevailed.
Street: Women, Young Ladies, Men in Apron. Cibali, Haliç (20th Century)Rezan Has Museum
Courtesy of the Istanbul Research Center. K112-6.
In short, the post 20th-century history of the region was written by the people who lived and worked at the factory, spread to other quarters of Istanbul after work, suffered poverty, demanded rights, laughed, and cried together. Therefore, both the Golden Horn and Cibali, which holds a unique place in it, are not merely industrial sites, but sites of labor and will thus keep this legacy alive forever.
Cibali Tobacco Factory: The Space of Labor
Coordinator Zeynep Çulha
Project Team Mehmet Ayrancı, Günşıl Öncü
Consultant: Bülent Öztürk, Gülhan Balsoy
Restoration and Conservation Team:
Mehmet Ayrancı, Gürkan Çağan, Buğra Serdaroğlu, Bülent Öztürk, Gülbin Söğütlüoğlu, Cesur Yüksek, Fatih Şahin, Ahmet Yalçın, Sadık Aydın, Osman Aktunç, Uğur Yüksek, Yavuz Aksoy
Exhibition Design: PATTU, Işıl Ünal, Cem Kozar
Video Animation: Serkan Bayraktaroğlu
Photography: Esra Özdoğan-Selim Süme
Translation: Melis Şeyhun Çalışlar