Servet-i Fünun

Servet-i Fünun
Issue dated 24 December 1908
CategoriesLiterary magazine
FrequencyWeekly
CountryOttoman Empire
Based inIstanbul
LanguageOttoman Turkish (earlier issues)
Turkish (later issues)
French for the French supplements)
OCLC183347868

Servet-i Fünun (Ottoman Turkish: ثروت فنون, romanized: S̱ervet-i Funûn, lit.'The Wealth of the Arts/Sciences'; French: Servetifunoun) was an avant-garde journal published in the Ottoman Empire and later in Turkey. Halit Ziya (Uşaklıgil) and the other writers of the "New Literature" (Ottoman Turkish: Edebiyat-i Jedide) movement published it to inform their readers about European, particularly French, cultural and intellectual movements. In operation from 1891 until 1944, it was for its first year a supplement of the newspaper Servet, but became an independent publication from 1892.

Its offices were in Stamboul, the central part of Constantinople (now known in English as Istanbul). Today the region is known as the Fatih district.

Evangelia Balta and Ayșe Kavak state that during the late Ottoman Empire it was "[t]he most influential literary journal" which had "a significant role in the intellectual life" of the country. Other titles of the magazine were Uyanış, Resimli Uyaniş, and Terwet-i fünūn.