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Transforming Empire: The Ottomans from the Mediterranean to the Indian Ocean: Essays in Honor of Linda Darling: The Ottoman Empire and its Heritage, cartea 80

Serpil Atamaz, Onur İnal, Alexander Schweig
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 26 sep 2024
This book places the Ottoman Empire within the global context and provides insight into the multifaceted transimperial and transnational connections that characterized it in different periods. It focuses on the connections, interactions, exchanges, networks and flows in and around the Ottoman Empire. Contributions in the book reflect the evolving and dynamic nature of the Ottoman Empire from different angles.

Contributors are Ali Atabey, Serpil Atamaz, Lee Beaudoen, Emine Evered, Kyle Evered, Richard Eaton, Ziad Fahmy, Gülsüm Gürbüz-Küçüksarı, Onur İnal, Christine Isom-Verhaaren, Myrsini Manney-Kalogera, Claudia Römer, Alexander Schweig, Gül Şen, Baki Tezcan, Fariba Zarinebaf.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004704343
ISBN-10: 9004704345
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria The Ottoman Empire and its Heritage


Notă biografică

Serpil Atamaz, Ph.D. (2010), University of Arizona, is Associate Professor of History at California State University, Sacramento. She has published several book chapters and journal articles on women, revolution, and war in the late Ottoman Empire and on Ottoman and Iranian constitutionalists.

Onur İnal, Ph.D. (2015), University of Arizona, is an environmental historian based in the Near Eastern Studies Department of the University of Vienna. He is the author of Gateway to the Mediterranean: An Environmental History of Late Ottoman Izmir (Cambridge University Press, forthcoming), and several edited collections and articles on the Ottoman Empire and modern Turkey.

Alexander Schweig, Ph.D. (2019), University of Arizona, is a lecturer in the Department of History at the University of Arizona. His research focuses on the intersections between social, technological, medical, and environmental history. His most recent article is “Progressing into Disaster: The Railroad and the Spread of Cholera in a Provincial Ottoman Town,” published in History of Science.

Cuprins


List of Tables and Figures

Notes on Contributors

Introduction

A List of Linda Darling’s Publications

Part 1: Peoples


1 Turkish Encounters with Monuments and the Decline of Buddhism in North India
Richard Eaton

2 Our Man on the Danube: Habsburg-Ottoman Border Diplomacy as Perceived in the Report of ʿOsmān Agha
Gül Şen

3 Secularist Anxieties Meet Evangelical Ones in Modern Turkish Historiography: İbrahim Müteferrika and the Risale-i İslamiye
Baki Tezcan

4 Keeper of Secrets, Noble Highness: the Journey of the Mavrocordatos Family from a Borderland Perspective
Myrsini Manney-Kalogera

Part 2: Places


5 Rowing to the Rescue: Defending the Black Sea 1559–60
Christine Isom-Verhaaren

6 Urban Reforms in Pera and other Ottoman Ports in the Aftermath of Fires in the Nineteenth Century
Fariba Zarinebaf

7 Constructing Otherness in an Ottoman Borderland: Levantine Architecture in Izmir
Onur İnal

8 Streams of Sultanic Grace for the Grand Vizier: a Firman of Selim II on the Water Supply of Ṣoḳollu Meḥmed Pasha’s Palace (1567)
Claudia Römer

Part 3: Practices


9 Real Transformation Starts in the Family: The Public Discourse on Marriage in Late Ottoman Turkey (1908–1918)
Serpil Atamaz

10 Legal Chameleons and Jurisdictional Borderlands in Nineteenth Century Egypt
Ziad Fahmy

11 Social Worlds of Captivity: Charity and Support for Ottoman Captives in Early Modern Istanbul
Ali Atabey

12 The Oscillating Circle: Revisiting the Ottoman Fifteenth-Century Imperial Paradigm
Lee Beaudoen