Salih Necati Bey graduated from the
Department of Pharmacology of the Imperial
School of Medicine in 1906. He opened his
first pharmacy that same year in the Koca
Mustafa Pasha neighborhood of İstanbul, and
then moved to Üsküdar on the Asian side of
the city in 1908. Many early twentieth-century
photographs show his establishment, “Eczane
Salih Necati,” at the foot of Doğancılar Hill;
it was an early manifestation of a tradition
that would span several generations. Before
long, trade directories that listed the principal
commercial enterprises of the capital city
began to include its name; its address in 1911
was given as Uncular Avenue, Üsküdar.
There was a growing awareness at the time of
the importance for Turkey to have a domestic
pharmaceutical industry, and Salih Necati
Bey soon became much more than a simple
retailer of medicines. He first converted
part of his pharmacy into an eyewear
store, thus starting what would become an
area of specialization for himself, his son,
and his grandson. But what made Salih
Necati a household name were the medical
preparations he produced. Over the years, the
Üsküdar pharmacy became a laboratory and a
manufacturer of medicinal drugs. These were
not, furthermore, simple mixtures of powders
or liquids; Salih Necati produced modernday
pills in what he called his laboratory’s
“komprime evi” (tablet house).
By the 1920s, Salih Necati Bey was a
well-respected pharmacist, optician, and
pharmaceutical manufacturer; it was time
for him to move towards Eminönü, İstanbul’s
principal business center. He kept his store
in Üsküdar and opened another in Bahçekapı
in 1921. Given that the commercial yearbook
Annuaire Oriental for 1922 still listed his
address as No. 7, Uncular Avenue, that location
must have remained operational for some
time. By law, a licensed pharmacist was not
allowed to have more than one pharmacy, so
that until 1926, the Salih Necati Eczahanesi
(Pharmacy) was officially in Bahçekapı, and
the “tablet house” in Üsküdar.
In time, the firm’s product line grew to contain
several items known by Salih Necati’s own
name. An advertisement published in Türk
Eczacı Âlemi in 1927 listed Necati syrup,
Necati tooth powder and solution, Necati bath powder, and Turan eau de cologne. Also, “for
the little ones,” the firm sold such products
as Necati phosphatine, Necati laxative pills,
and Necati cough drops. The pharmacy also
introduced several new medications including
charcoal acidol in 1933, quinine chlorhidrate
in 1937, and Aspirol in 1940, as well as
producing the painkiller tablets haskalmin
from 1935 on. In addition, the firm produced
several medicines under license, including
baryomin, fevrosin tablets, and wild radish
syrup with iodine glycerophosphate. The
license obtained from Bayer Pharmaceuticals
to produce Necati Aspirol became a symbol
of high standards and product quality, and a
photograph of the Bayer factory was printed
on the tablet boxes.
A change of address took place in 1929, the
new location being across the street from
the Ertuğrul Store, at No 33-35, Bahçekapı
Avenue. In 1934, the pharmacy moved
again, this time to a space purchased from
the famous confectioners Ali Muhiddin Hacı
Bekir, at the corner opposite them. The
1930s were a key period in the development
of the Salih Necati brand, as Aspirol Necati
became more and more popular as “the
definitive cure for influenza, colds, headaches,
and toothaches.” In 1937, the firm added Asri
hair dyes to their product range. Meanwhile
Salih Necati Bey had increased the volume
and regularity of newspaper advertisements.
The major papers of the 1930s, from Zaman
to Cumhuriyet and Akşam, frequently carried
advertisements for the Salih Necati pharmacy. Care was taken to advertise eyewear and pharmaceutical products separately.
The year 1934 brought a major change to
Salih Necati Bey, as it did to all citizens of
Turkey: a surname. In tune with republican
ideology, he decided to take a family name
in “pure Turkish” and chose “Emgen,” a word
that means “healing” and represented well
his profession. This name was also chosen
by the Turkish Pharmacologists Club and
the Pharmacists Club when they merged
in 1935. The new society kept this name
until 1937, when it changed it to the Union
of Pharmacists of Turkey. The Union of
Pharmacology Students at the School of
Pharmacology also changed its name in 1936,
using not one neologism but two: “Emgen
İrdemen Birliği.”
The pharmacy continued to be called “Bahçe
Kapu Salih Necati Eczahanesi” (the Salih
Necati Pharmacy at Bahçekapı) for a while
longer, but after its founder’s death in 1948,
it became better known by his surname.
Although Salih Necati Bey’s son Rahmi
Emgen was educated as a pharmacist, he
focused on the eyewear business and opened
a store on İstiklâl Avenue in Beyoğlu; founded
in 1948, it is still in business. The building
in which it is currently located, Emgen
Apartmanı, was home to the entire family
since the 1930s, which is why Salih Necati
Bey’s memorial service in January 1949 was
held in the neighborhood. The address of the
new location, “No, 67 above the Lale cinema,”
was often emphasized in the advertisements
published in subsequent years. One of
the advertisements that appeared in 1949
showed all the characteristics of the tradition
passed on from father to son: “At the Emgen
Optical Company in Beyoğlu above the Lale
cinema, the well-known pharmacist Salih
Necati continues to be true to its principle of providing, at low cost, a wide variety of
scientific eyeglasses, scientific sunglasses,
and watches.” Indeed, some interesting
products appeared among the merchandise
offered for sale at the store during this period,
including not only eyewear and watches
but also barometers, thermometers, and
hygrometers.
Until the 1950s, Salih Necati Emgen had
obtained licenses for eleven medical
preparations. Mert Sandalcı, a historian of
the Turkish pharmaceutical industry, has
described the firm as the first in Turkey to
combine the two professions of optician
and pharmacist. Rahmi Emgen upheld his
father’s innovative traditions and took them
further, introducing many novelties into
the Turkish market. From the 1950s on, he
represented the British American Optical
Company, and later also took on the agency of Zeiss. In 1966, he imported equipment
from the United States that would allow the
more precise adjustment of eyeglass lenses.
Another firm that supplied Emgen with lenses
during the 1960s was Swarovski, for which
Rahmi Bey was a reseller until they quit the
business.
Rahmi Emgen was a founding member and
president of the “Tüm Gözlükçüler Derneği”
(General Opticians’ Association, now “Türkiye
Optik ve Optimetrik Meslekler Derneği” or
Optical and Optometrical Association of
Turkey). He was the first to produce optical
glass in Turkey. During the years 1955-1968, he
was an instructor in the courses for opticians
organized by the Ministry of Health, thus
showing his mastery of the field as well as
contributing the the education of many
professionals. In fact, among opticians, the
term “Emgen workmanship” has come to
mean near perfection in the cutting and fitting
of eyeglass lenses.
The name Rahmi Emgen was also well known
and much respected in artistic circles during
the 1950s. He contributed significantly to
the Dormen Theater, founded in 1957, in
recognition of which he was for many years
invited to every premiere. Not only the
Dormens but also other public figures, from
Zeki Müren to Hülya Koçyiğit and from
Bülent Ersoy to Hülya Avşar, chose Emgen as
their optician.
From the 1950s to the 1980s, Emgen Optik
established a warm rapport with its clientele
through the rather colorful language of its
advertisements in which it addressed potential
customers as if having a conversation with
them: “Do you need eyeglasses?” “Emgen
says...” “Are you fastidious in your choice
of eyewear?” “Elegant ladies get their
eyeglasses at Emgen.” In 1962 and 1968, it
warned customers to beware of imitations.
Rahmi Emgen’s son Çetin graduated from the
Austrian High School in İstanbul, and then
studied business administration in Vienna.
With his return to Turkey in 1978, the third
generation of the family became part of the
firm. Çetin Bey supplemented what he had
learned from his father with formal education
in optometry and opened a new Emgen Optik
store in the neighborhood of Nişantaşı.
More than a mere optician, he is heir to a
commercial tradition and a legacy of quality,
and carries the burden of serving customers
accustomed to years of superior service from
Emgen. The firm is equally concerned with
aesthetics and eyesight. After working at
shops in various neighborhoods including
Etiler, he has returned to the store in Beyoğlu,
a “family heirloom” as he calls it, and is
continuing to give personalized service in the
finest tradition of the Emgen family.