The Frontiers of the Ottoman WorldA.C.S. Peacock This is the first major comparative study of the frontiers of the Ottoman Empire, one of the crucial forces that shaped the modern world. The essays combine archaeological and historical approaches to further understanding of how this major empire approached the challenge of controlling frontiers as diverse and far-flung as Central and Eastern Europe, Anatolia, Iraq, Arabia, and the Sudan. Ranging across the 15th to early 20th centuries, essays cover frontier fortifications, administration, society, and economy and shed light on the Ottomans' interaction with their neighbours, both Muslim and Christian, through warfare, trade and diplomacy. As well as summing up the current state of knowledge they also point the way to fresh avenues of research. The Frontiers of the Ottoman World will be essential reading for historians and archaeologists of the Middle East and early modern Central and Eastern Europe. Giving a particular prominence to the nascent discipline of Ottoman archaeology, the volume will also be of particular interest to students of Islamic archaeology. |
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Page 274
... central authority in 1831 and Mosul in 1834. However , the subordination of the Kurdish amirates around Diyarbakır and Rawanduz took several years more , the Babans of Sulaymaniya submitting as late as 1850.4 In the years immediately ...
... central authority in 1831 and Mosul in 1834. However , the subordination of the Kurdish amirates around Diyarbakır and Rawanduz took several years more , the Babans of Sulaymaniya submitting as late as 1850.4 In the years immediately ...
Page 307
... Central Anatolia , 1468 SARA NUR YILDIZ Bu Karamanoğulları'nın hikayesi uzundur . ( The story of the Karamanids is a long one . ) Aşık Paşazade WHILE SURVEYING THE MEDITERRANEAN COAST OF ANATOLIA for the British Admiralty in 1811-12 ...
... Central Anatolia , 1468 SARA NUR YILDIZ Bu Karamanoğulları'nın hikayesi uzundur . ( The story of the Karamanids is a long one . ) Aşık Paşazade WHILE SURVEYING THE MEDITERRANEAN COAST OF ANATOLIA for the British Admiralty in 1811-12 ...
Page 481
... central , high point of the island , 50 metres south of the Hanafi Mosque . It formerly consisted of a two - storey house with a diwan and dihliz fronting on to a narrow laneway to the north and additional yards and ancillary buildings ...
... central , high point of the island , 50 metres south of the Hanafi Mosque . It formerly consisted of a two - storey house with a diwan and dihliz fronting on to a narrow laneway to the north and additional yards and ancillary buildings ...
Contents
Defining and Mapping the Ottoman Frontier in | 31 |
Rivers Forests | 57 |
The Ottoman Conquest of Arabia and the Syrian Hajj Route | 81 |
Copyright | |
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Aden Africa akçes Akkerman fortress Anatolia Ankara Aqaba Arab Arabia archaeology archival army Balkans Bihać Black Sea border British Academy building C.Hariciye Cambridge campaign Caroline Finkel castle centre ceramics Christian conquest construction Danube defence documents early east eastern Egypt eighteenth century European Evliya Çelebi excavations Figure fortifications forts Funj garrison governor Hapsburg Hungarian Hungary Ibid imperial İnalcık Ionian Iraq Islamic island Istanbul Iznik Janissaries Karamanid Kelefa kilometres Konya Krajina land late London Ma'an Mamluk Mediterranean Mehmed Mehmed II metres modern mosque Muslim nineteenth century northern Osmanlı Ottoman administration Ottoman Empire Ottoman frontier Ottoman period Ottoman rule palanka Pasha political population port yard pottery province region river route Rumbek Safavid sancak Seddülbahir seventeenth century Seyahatname Shi'i sixteenth century slaves soldiers Studies Suakin Sudan Süleyman Sultan Tarihi territory timar towers town trade troops Turkish University Press Vidin walls Yemen zariba