This lucid and accessible book examines Ottoman relations with Europe in Early Modern times. The Ottoman Empire has consistently been regarded a place apart, divided from the West by culture and religion. This new study argues the Ottoman Empire slowly became part of Europe physically, institutionally and psychologically as well.
This lucid and accessible book examines Ottoman relations with Europe in Early Modern times. The Ottoman Empire has consistently been regarded a place apart, divided from the West by culture and religion. This new study argues the Ottoman Empire slowly became part of Europe physically, institutionally and psychologically as well.
Daniel Goffman is Professor of History at Ball State University, Indiana. His publications include Izmir and the Levantine World, 1550-1650 (1990), Britons in the Ottoman Empire, 1642-1660 (1998) and The Ottoman City between East and West: Istanbul, Izmir and Aleppo, with Edhem Eldem and Bruce Masters (1999). He is currently editor of the Middle East Studies Association Bulletin.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Introduction: Ottomancentrism and the West 2. Fabricating the Ottoman State 3. A seasoned polity 4. Factionalism and insurrection 5. The Ottoman-Venetian Association 6. Commerce and diasporas 7. A changing station in Europe 8. Conclusion: the greater western world.
1. Introduction: Ottomancentrism and the West 2. Fabricating the Ottoman State 3. A seasoned polity 4. Factionalism and insurrection 5. The Ottoman-Venetian Association 6. Commerce and diasporas 7. A changing station in Europe 8. Conclusion: the greater western world.
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