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Mutiny and Rebellion in the Ottoman Empire

Editat de Jane Hathaway
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 20 aug 2003
    In the course of its more that six-hundred-year history, the Ottoman Empire weathered rebellions and threats of rebellion from every quarter, both within the imperial capital and in its far-flung provinces. Mutinies and threats of mutiny were likewise not infrequent occurrences. This collection of essays is the first collaborative volume devoted to the subject of rebellions, and more particularly, mutiny, in the Ottoman Empire.
    Regionalism and ethnic diversity were key contributing factors to mutiny and rebellion in the middle period, both within the Empire and without.  A mutiny or rebellion provides a moment of social stress in which underlying societal tensions, and the state’s ability to cope with them, stand out with unusual clarity.  This exercise in comparing intra-Ottoman mutinies leads to broader comparisons between Ottoman and other societies, helping to break down the historiographical and cultural barriers that sometimes keep us from seeing that, beneath the outward trappings, one mutiny is often much like another.

Originally published by the International Journal of Turkish Studies
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780299199746
ISBN-10: 0299199746
Pagini: 162
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 10 mm
Greutate: 0.25 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: University of Wisconsin Press
Colecția University of Wisconsin Press

Notă biografică

Jane Hathaway is Associate Professor of History at Ohio State University. She is author of A Tale of Two Factions and The Politics of Households in Ottoman Egypt.

Descriere

    In the course of its more that six-hundred-year history, the Ottoman Empire weathered rebellions and threats of rebellion from every quarter, both within the imperial capital and in its far-flung provinces. Mutinies and threats of mutiny were likewise not infrequent occurrences. This collection of essays is the first collaborative volume devoted to the subject of rebellions, and more particularly, mutiny, in the Ottoman Empire.
    Regionalism and ethnic diversity were key contributing factors to mutiny and rebellion in the middle period, both within the Empire and without.  A mutiny or rebellion provides a moment of social stress in which underlying societal tensions, and the state’s ability to cope with them, stand out with unusual clarity.  This exercise in comparing intra-Ottoman mutinies leads to broader comparisons between Ottoman and other societies, helping to break down the historiographical and cultural barriers that sometimes keep us from seeing that, beneath the outward trappings, one mutiny is often much like another.

Originally published by the International Journal of Turkish Studies