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This is the first volume of Jan Schmidt's collection of essays on Ottoman history, literature and historiography.
Matthias Kappler writes in this collection of essays on language contacts and multilingual spaces as they existed in Istanbul, the Balkans and Greece.
This volume is a collection of essays by Huri Islamoglu which argue that Ottoman history must be read as a part of world history.
A Quest for Belonging collects Hans-Lukas Kieser's works on identities and nationalities in late-Ottoman Anatolia and how their destruction during the First World War continues to resonate today.
This volume is a collection of essays written in honor of Professor John C. Alexander on the topic of the Ottoman Balkans and the Ottoman Greek community.
This collection of Isa Blumi's essays comprises one historian's attempts at understanding the late Ottoman Empire through a series of studies of Ottoman Albania and Yemen.
This book studies the Great Power rivalries of the twentieth century concerning Soviet access to the Turkish Straits and the impact they had on the relations with Turkey.
This work is a study of the city of Salonica in the nineteenth century, a period during which the Tanzimat reforms were being introduced across the Ottoman Empire.
Erol Haker recounts the history of the Sephardic Jewish Adoto family, which originally hails from the town of Kirklareli. This is one of the few books to describe the Jewish population of Turkish Thrace.
F. W. Hasluck was a British traveller and scholar of the early twentieth century. This two-volume collection of essays looks at Hasluck and his archaeological and anthropological studies in the Balkans and Anatolia.
F. W. Hasluck was a British traveller and scholar of the early twentieth century. This two-volume collection of essays looks at Hasluck and his archaeological and anthropological studies in the Balkans and Anatolia.
Arabs and Ottomans is an anthology of articles by Professor Caesar Farah on Ottoman Syria and Yemen in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
This work is a study of Dimitrie Cantemir (1673-1723), a Romanian prince who lived some 20 years in Istanbul and wrote a history of the Ottoman Empire.
This books is a study of relative clause constructs in Gagauz, a Turkic language spoken in the former Soviet republic of Moldova.
This volume is a history of the Khoens del de Campavias, a Sephardic Jewish family in the Ottoman Empire. The book chronicles the lives of family members from the 1830s through to the Second World War.
This collection of papers in honour of Professor V. L. Menage contains articles written by many leading Ottoman historians from around the world in English, French and Italian.
This rich collection of articles illustrates the range of Stanford J. Shaw's more than forty years of research. Topics covered include the nineteenth-century Tanzimat reforms, Turkey in the World Wars, and the Ottoman archives.
This collection of papers by various scholars discusses a wide range of practices and beliefs relating to saints in Islam. The studies also demonstrate the influence of sainthood on political structures in many societies.
This book studies a mission by Augustinians of the Assumption in Eskisehir from 1891-1924. It also offers an overview of the characteristics of the Christian missions in the Ottoman Empire.
This book is the first publication of the unfinished memoir by the Portuguese Jew Jacques Jose Abravanel (1906-1993). For almost sixty years he was Portugal's honorary consul in Istanbul and an active defender of ladino language.
This book investigates the relationship between Turks and Jews in the Turkish Republic. A variety of sources, from popular literature to Islamist writings, are included in this unique study.
This collection of selected articles by Ottoman historian Evangelia Balta discusses a variety of subjects within Ottoman social and economic history, all based on meticulous archival research.
This book collects six studies on the interactions between Ottomans and Safavids in the early sixteenth century. It presents a number of interesting documents in original, transcription and translation.
This collection of articles concentrates on the medieval history of the Turks, Seljuks, Turkmen and Ottomans. It emphasizes the multiple currents of influence linking the late Byzantine Empire, the early Ottoman Empire and humanist Europe.
This book offers a comprehensive study of the many points of contact, influence and exchange between Byzantines and Ottomans in medieval times, from linguistic exchange to philosophical encounters.
This collection of more than 200 Turkish nursing rhymes from all regions of Anatolia is the first of its kind. It constitutes a rich source for those interested in Turkish folklore and oral traditions.
This collection of papers by scholars from universities in France, Germany and Switzerland explores the complexity of Ottoman identity. By studying families and individuals with marginal backgrounds, it nuances the image of the Homo Ottomanicus.
This collection of articles offers a comprehensive study of the roots of Socialism in the Ottoman Empire. It emphasizes the heterogeneous character of leftist movements in Turkey as well as their multi-ethnic history.
This collection of articles concentrates on the Karamanli people and the Karamanlidika Press of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. It presents and discusses formerly unknown material from the Ottoman archives.
A collection of case studies examining the demography, life and work of the Greek minority in the Ottoman Empire. The research draws on a variety of Ottoman archival sources, from tax registers to newspapers.
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