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Download PDF | Approaching Ottoman History, An Introduction to the Sources, Cambridge University Press (1999).

Download PDF | Approaching Ottoman History, An Introduction to the Sources, SURAIYA FAROQHI , Ludwig Maximilians Universitat,  Cambridge University Press (1999).

274 Pages 




Approaching Ottoman History An Introduction to the Sources.

Suratya Faroghi is one of the most important economic and social historians of the pre-modern Ottoman empire writing today. Her scholarly contribution to the field has been prodigious. Her latest book, Approaching Ottoman History: An Introduction to the Sources, represents a summation of that scholarship, an introduction to the state-of-the-art in Ottoman history, or as the author herself describes it, ‘a sharing’ of her own fascination with the field. In a compelling and lucid exploration of the ways that primary and secondary sources can be used to interpret history, the author reaches out to students and researchers in the field and in related disciplines to help familiarise them with these documents. By considering both archival and narrative sources, she explains to what ends they were prepared, encouraging her readers to adopt a critical approach to their findings, and disabusing them of the notion that everything recorded in official documents is necessarily accurate or even true. Her critique of the handbook treatments of Ottoman history, quite often the sources students rely on most frequently during their undergraduate years, provides insights into the broader historical context. While the book is essentially a guide to a rich and complex discipline for those about to embark upon their research, the experienced Ottomanist can expect to find much that is new and provocative in this candid and sophisticated interpretation of the field.


SURAIYA FAROQHI is Professor of Ottoman Studies in the Department of Near Eastern Studies at Ludwig Maximilians Universitat in Munich. Her many publications include Pilgrims and Sultans (1994) and Kultur and Alltag im Osmanischen Reich (1995). She is a contributor to Halil Inalcik (with Donald Quataert), An Economic and Social History of the Ottoman Empire, 1300-1914 (1994).











ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS


Every scholar accumulates debts to his/her colleagues. This applies more specially to the present book, which is so largely dependent upon secondary literature. I am grateful to my friends and colleagues Marigold Acland, Virginia Aksan, Arzu Batmaz, Halil Berktay, Palmira Brummett, Eleni Gara, Erica Greber, Huricihan Islamoglu, Barbara Kellner-Heinkele, Markus Koller, Sabine Prator, Donald Quataert, Richard Saumarez Smith and Maria Todorova for the time they have taken to improve the finished product. Some of them have read chapters and commented on them, others have provided bibliographical references and much appreciated moral support. Special thanks are due to Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu, who allowed me to reproduce the photograph of the Siileymaniye by B. Kargopulo, from the IRSICA collection. The four anonymous readers of Cambridge University Press have caused much soul-searching, which hopefully has improved the quality of the final product. Special thanks are due to Christoph Neumann, who not only read the whole manuscript but even put up with different drafts, and to Christ! Catanzaro, whose attention, patience and skill with the computer made life a great deal easier than it would otherwise have been.


If I had been able to follow the guidance so generously given to me, this book would have been much closer to perfection. As things stand, it would be churlish in the extreme to make my friends responsible for the many imperfections which doubtlessly remain.


NOTE ON TRANSLITERATION


Modern Turkish spelling has been used whenever the place, institution or person in question belonged to the Ottoman realm or pre-Ottoman Anatolia, albeit in a marginal way. Only when dealing with Arab or Iranian contexts has the EI’s transliteration been adopted; this concerns primarily the names of modern archives and sections of archives. The Turkish letter (I) has been retained, except in personal names and geographic terms occurring in isolation, (thus: Inalcik, Izmir). The titles of journals contain the (I) where appropriate.


















INTRODUCTION


In this book I hope to share with my readers the fascination with Ottoman sources, both archival and literary in the wider sense of the word, which have become accessible in growing numbers during the last decade or so. The cataloguing of the Prime Minister’s Archives in Istanbul advances rapidly, and various instructive library catalogues have appeared, both in Turkey and abroad. On the basis of this source material it has become possible to question, thoroughly revise, and at times totally abandon, the conventional images of Ottoman history which populated the secondary literature as little as thirty years ago. We no longer regard Ottoman officials as incapable of appreciating the complexities of urban economies, nor do we assume that Ottoman peasants lived merely by bartering essential services and without contact to the money economy. We have come to realise that European trade in the Ottoman Empire, while not insignificant both from an economic and a political point of view, was yet dwarfed by interregional and local commerce, to say nothing of the importation of spices, drugs and fine cottons from India.


Not that our methodological sophistication has at all times corresponded to the promises held out by these new sources, far from it. But some stimulating novelties are visible, such as the growing interface between art history and political history of the Ottoman realm, and an awakening interest in comparative projects shared with Indianists or Europeanists. Many Ottomanist historians now seem less parochially frxated on their particular speciality and willing to share the results of their research with representatives of other fields. Paradoxically, the recent growth in the number of available sources has led to a decline in the previously rather notable tendency of Ottomanists to identify with ‘their’ texts and the points of view incorporated in them. Many of us indeed have become aware of the dangers of ‘document fetishism’. By this exotic-sounding term we mean the tendency to reproduce more or less verbatim the statements of our primary sources and the associated unwillingness to use logic and/or experience of the relevant milieu to interpret them (Berktay, 1991). More Ottomanist scholars appear to follow research going on in related disciplines — even though we still have a long way to go before Ottoman history becomes a branch of world history 4 part entiére.


In certain instances, Europeanists or Indianists have responded to these developments by showing a degree of interest in Ottoman society. International projects treating trade guilds, the business of war or the movements of gold and silver will now often include an Ottomanist historian, even if the latter may still play the role of the odd man/woman out. Collective volumes treating European economic history will not rarely contain contributions by Ottomanist historians, while until quite recently, chapters on the pre- and/or post-Ottoman histories of certain Balkan territories would have been considered sufficient. Hopefully, the present volume will increase this kind of give and take between Ottomanists and historians of Europe, India or even China, by emphasising some of the methodologically most interesting approaches to Ottoman history.


PRIMARY AND SECONDARY SOURCES


The present book deals with the archival and narrative sources available to the Ottomanist historian, and to a degree, with the historiography which scholars have constructed on the basis of this material. Primary sources constitute the first priority, a choice which is obviously open to challenge. For while the available primary sources condition the kinds of questions an historian may usefully ask, it is also true that we read secondary sources, including non-scholarly ones such as newspapers and magazines, long before we ever embark on specialised training. One might therefore argue, with some justification, that our view of the primary sources is conditioned by the secondary material we have read, often without even being conscious of the fact. As a result, it has taken European historians studying Ottoman—Habsburg or Ottoman—Polish relations a long time to get away from the glorification of the Austro-Hungarian Empire or Poland as antemurale Christianitatis, and there are some who have not managed this act of distancing down to the recent past (Barker, 1967). Conversely the celebration of sefer ve zafer (campaigns and victories) for a long time has been part of Turkish historiography, and scholars who attempt to demolish this paradigm are not having an easy time either. Less obviously, our knowledge of the secondary literature will often condition the primary sources we seek and find. Materials that nobody believed to exist even a decade or two ago have been located, once an overriding historiographical concern has caused scholars to look for them. As a recent example, we might mention the case of Ottoman women’s history, even though the documents unearthed to date still leave many important questions unanswered. !


A case could thus be made for discussing current and not so current secondary studies before embarking on a discussion of primary sources. This would also involve a recapitulation of the ‘basic features’ of Ottoman state and society, on a level of abstraction more or less acceptable to social scientists. Or else one might decide to integrate an introduction to primary sources into a discussion of secondary research. Stephen Humphreys’ work on Middle Eastern history of the pre-Ottoman period constitutes a particularly successful example of this approach (Humphreys, revised edn 1995). But in the present book the opposite approach has been taken, namely to proceed from primary to secondary sources. As long as we do not pretend that we approach our primary material ‘without preconceptions’, it seems equally reasonable to start research into Ottoman history by examining chronicles and sultans’ orders, coins and accounts of pious foundations. And since the explosion of available sources during the last few decades has constituted one of the main reasons for writing this book at all, primary sources will form the starting point of our quest.


There is also a subjective reason for thus stressing archival records and chronicles. Throughout my work in the archives, I have been fascinated by the unexpected documents that will crop up, either suggesting new answers to old questions, or more likely, leading the researcher on to a new track altogether. This is particularly true of the eighteenth century, but any period will offer its own lot of surprises. As a corollary, carefully elaborated dissertation proposals may turn out to be unworkable in the archives; but usually the researcher will find documents suggesting new approaches, not envisaged when the proposal was written. Under such conditions, the historian may stick to the old plan against increased odds, or else abandon him/herself to the drift of the sources. But for the sake of mental stability, it is good to expect the unexpected, and to regard the unpredictable as part of our common human destiny.


From a postmodernist viewpoint, the approach taken in this book will be considered very conservative. In Europeanist historiography, the last twenty years or so have seen a lively debate on the very foundations of historical research. It has been proposed that the personal, social or political bias of any writer trying to recover what happened in the past is overwhelmingly strong. Thus it is impossible to relate the divergent stories about any historical event to things ‘as they really happened’. As a background for this claim, the historian of historiography may propose a number of factors: as a new generation of scholars has emerged, economic and social history, which formed the cutting edge of historical research in the 1960s and 1970s, was bound to come under attack sooner or later. Moreover while social and economic history certainly is not practised only by Marxists, this field has traditionally attracted socialists, social-democrats and left liberals. As a result, the revival of the Cold War in the early 1980s, economic deregulation and globalisation, in addition to the collapse of ‘bureaucratic socialism’ in the past decade have left this branch of study wide open to attack. And while certain representatives of the postmodernist paradigm, such as Michel Foucault, have shown a profound interest in history and a social concern for the rights of deviants and handicapped people, many postmodernists were and are specialists of literature with little interest in social phenomena. These scholars are inclined to enlarge the field of their studies by claiming that social conflict and stratification are of scant importance, while annexing both primary and secondary historical sources to the mass of literary material already within their purview. In the perspective of the more extreme postmodernists, the distinction between primary and secondary sources is in itself an illusion. All that remains is a corpus of texts which can refer to each other but never to a reality outside of them (on this debate, see Evans, 1997).


However in the Ottomanist context, this fundamental debate about the legitimacy of history has not so far left any traces. Whether this situation should be taken as yet another sign of the immaturity of our discipline 1s open to debate. If any Ottomanist historian were to claim that we should limit ourselves to ‘stories’ without concerning ourselves overmuch with the degree of truth they contain, doubtlessly this approach would be decried on moral and political grounds. Let us consider an example from a different field: extreme historical relativism makes it impossible for Europeanist historians to counter the claims of those who, for instance, propound that the crimes of the Nazis were invented by the latter’s opponents (Evans, 1997, pp. 241-2). In a very similar vein, many Ottomanist historians, and that includes the present author, would be very much dismayed by the notion that one cannot argue against the different varieties of nationalist and other mythmaking which all too often beset our discipline. Maybe the immaturity of our field has some hidden virtues after all . 


















SCANNING THE HORIZON: OTTOMAN AND


EUROPEAN HISTORY


The undertakings of both Ottomans and Ottomanists only make sense when we relate them to the wider world. We will therefore begin our tour d’horizon with the histories of different regions in which the Ottomans were active, both inside and outside the Empire, or which seem especially instructive for comparative purposes. Many students of Ottoman history outside of Turkey have to some extent been trained in European history. Some non-Turkish Ottomanists may first have turned to Ottoman materials in order to obtain a better understanding of historical problems encountered when studying the history of Spain, Russia or the Netherlands. Thus a researcher dealing with sixteenth-century Dutch history may observe that the Spanish armies attempting to conquer the country after its several rebellions (1565-68, 1569-76, 1576-81) behaved in a rather strange manner. Although they were victorious many times, Spanish commanders typically did not follow up their victories but withdrew, and in the end, the Spanish king lost the war. One eminent specialist has tried to explain this enigmatic behaviour by the Spanish crown’s Mediterranean wars with the Ottomans (Parker, 1979, pp. 22-35). Whenever the Spanish conquest of the Netherlands appeared imminent, the Ottoman sultans, who were not particularly anxious to see all the resources of the Spanish Empire deployed against them, stepped up the war in the Mediterranean. The Spanish crown, whose supplies of bullion were great but not inexhaustible, saw no alternative but to draw off some of its resources from the Netherlands. As a result, the Dutch rebels were able to maintain themselves. We may feel intrigued enough by this thesis to explore the relations between the Ottoman and Spanish world empires. Remarkably enough, not many scholars have done so, and the ‘forgotten frontier’ which separated the two empires still largely remains a terra incognita (Hess, 1978).


Another example of Ottoman history’s allowing us to place European developments into perspective concerns the question of royal absolutism in the sixteenth century through to the early nineteenth. Conventional wisdom has it that sultanic rule was different in kind from European absolutism, if only because in the Ottoman Empire there existed no private property in agricultural lands and no nobility controlling the countryside, which rulers needed to subdue and pacify (Anderson. 1979, pp. 365-366). But recent research has cast doubt on this clear-cut opposition. We have come to understand that particularly seventeenth- and eighteenth-century sultans operated within the constraints of a high-level bureaucracy whose members possessed well-entrenched households. In spite of their apparent power, these sultans were not nearly as free in their decisions as official ideology postulated (Abou-El-Haj, 1991, p. 44). Remarkably enough, sultanic absolutism really reached its apogee in the nineteenth century, when several sultans sought out the support of European powers to strengthen their rule against rebellious subjects in the capital and provinces (Akarh, 1988). Under these circumstances, the old question of how early modern European absolutism and sultanic rule compared to one another can be viewed in a new light.


At first, students with a background in European history thus may feel challenged by questions concerning the relations between the Ottoman Empire and the European world. But in time, emphasis may shift. Earlier historians who studied the rich documentation of the English Levant Company or the Marseilles Chamber of Commerce were concerned with European establishments in Syria, Izmir or Egypt. But more recent work has concentrated on the way in which the masses of numerical data provided by European commercial records can be used to shed light upon the surrounding Ottoman society. Daniel Panzac has thus employed the documentation on ships arriving in Marseilles from the Levant (Panzac, 1985). In the eighteenth century such vessels were permitted to enter this port only after presenting a certificate from the French consul resident in the locality from which the voyage had originated. This certificate informed the authorities of the presence or absence of plague in Izmir, Istanbul or Sayda. Asa result, a mass of data has come together in Marseilles from all the major ports of the eastern Mediterranean, and Panzac has used this documentation to reconstruct the course of plague epidemics.


But not only epidemic disease in the Ottoman Empire can be studied by a close analysis of French archival records. By examining the many shipping contracts which have survived in the archives of the former French consulate of Alexandria (Egypt), Panzac has demonstrated that by the middle of the eighteenth century, Muslim merchants still constituted the vast majority of all traders freighting French ships in this port. Older historians had believed that by this late date, Muslim merchants had long since vanished from the scene, allowing Christians to take their places (Panzac, 1992). Tunisian historians equally have made good use of the Marseilles records to reconstruct the commercial history of their country, which in the eighteenth century was still an Ottoman province (Sadok, 1987).


In a sense this use of European archives to elucidate Ottoman history is more demanding than the conventional studies of European—Ottoman relations, since one needs to know a great deal about Ottoman state and society in order to ask the right questions of Levant Company or Chambre de Commerce records. But the results are rewarding, as these kinds of studies allow new insights often unsuspected until quite recently. And once the indispensable background knowledge of Ottoman history is acquired, some students may feel that they might as well specialise in Ottoman history pure and simple.


THE BYZANTINE-OTTOMAN TRANSITION


Western European history apart, one of the fields most closely connected to Ottoman history is its Byzantine conterpart. The special status of this field is in part due to the fact that Byzantine history has benefited from the centuries-old traditions of classicism, so that a large number of the extant sources are available in high-quality editions. Ottoman historians used to working from manuscripts or less than reliable editions will often regard this situation with more than a bit of envy. On the other hand, Byzantine history in the narrow sense of the word came to an end in the fifteenth century, while Ottoman history continued into the twentieth. As a result Ottoman documentation, in which archival materials play a prominent role, can be considered as a variant of early modern and modern recording practices. By contrast Byzantine documentation, which requires the historian to deal with large chunks of narrative history and small archives, fits well into the ‘medieval’ pattern.


But the difficulties Ottomanists and Byzantinists have experienced in relating to one another stem less from the differences in source bases than from the fact that the relevant fields have been ‘adopted’ by Turkish and Greek nationalist historiography respectively. There is nothing inevitable in this. I remember the pipedreams of a Turkish archaeologist working on Anatolia, who once wished that Turkish republican ideology had decided to regard Byzantine civilisation as one of the many ‘autochthonous’ civilisations which had flourished in the Anatolian homeland before the immigration of the Turks. For if that had been the case, money for Byzantinist excavations would have been much more abundant . . . European philhellenism, with its tendency to search for Byzantine ‘influence’ everywhere, has further complicated matters. For as a defensive reaction, ever since Fuat KO6priilii’s article of 1931, Turkish historians and, in their wake, foreign Ottomanists have tended to play down links between Byzantines and Ottomans (K6priilti, 1931, reprint 1981).


It is only during the past twenty years or so that a certain number of scholars have made serious efforts to circumnavigate these particular shoals. It may not be entirely due to chance that many of the people involved have at one time or another been linked to institutions on ‘neutral’ ground, namely the Dumbarton Oaks Center in Washington DC and the Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman and Modern Greek Studies in Birmingham, England. One means of “defusing’ the conflict at least on the linguistic level has been the ample use of Venetian and Genoese sources. Neither Byzantine nor Ottoman, notarial records and commercial correspondences provide information on economic matters, not amply covered by either the Ottoman or the Byzantine documentation of the fifteenth century. A separate field of ‘transition studies’ has thus come into existence, with its own conferences and edited volumes (Bryer, Lowry, 1986; concerning the historiography, an important article by Klaus-Peter Matschke to be expected soon, hopefully). A major scholar such as Elizabeth Zachariadou has even devoted her life’s work to this topic (Zachariadou, 1985).


SCANNING THE HORIZON: OTTOMAN AND ASIAN


HISTORY


The study of Ottoman involvement with its Asian neighbours, as well as comparative research into the major Asian empires, constitute relatively new branches of historical endeavour, and researchers concerned with them are still trying to find their feet. As long ago as 1948, Halil Inalcik drew attention to the sixteenth-century attempts of Ottoman governments to maintain liaison with the Central Asian khanates and impose themselves as protectors of the Sunni pilgrims to Mecca originating from that particular region (Inalcik, 1948). For the sixteenth century, Inalcik assumed that Ottoman sultans and their advisers had systematically designed a ‘northern policy’. This suggestion did not find favour with the French Central Asianists Alexandre Benningsen and Chantal Lemercier-Quelquejay, who preferred to think in terms of ad hoc reactions to specific challenges (Benningsen and Lemercier—Quelquejay, 1976). On the other hand, the idea that sixteenth-century Ottoman sultans developed a coherent ‘southern policy’ has been adopted by many more scholars. From Cengiz Orhonlu to N. R. Farooqi and Palmira Brummett, historians have pointed out that the Ottoman struggle against the Portuguese in the Indian Ocean, the conquest of the Mamluk sultanate, the establishment of bases on the African coasts of the Red Sea as well as the Indian Ocean and last not least, the control of the Hijaz and Yemen were closely linked as part of a political ‘grand design’ (Orhonlu, 1974; Faroogi, 1986; Brummett, 1994). Under Siileyman the Magnificent (1520-66) the Ottoman state was apparently poised for the conquest of the coastlands of the Indian Ocean. However naval units sent against the Portuguese were lost and it proved difficult to secure long-term control of Yemen and the coasts of western India. Ottoman statesmen then retreated from the Indian Ocean, concentrating instead on aims closer at hand, such as the conquest of Cyprus and the struggle against the Habsburgs. This set of priorities was to involve the Ottomans in the political struggles of southeastern Europe, while the ‘grand design’ of controlling both the Mediterranean and the Indian Ocean receded into the background (Ozbaran, 1994).


But more modest links between the Ottoman Empire and India endured none the less. In this context, evidence on the important trade between India and the Ottoman provinces of Syria and Egypt has attracted historiographical attention. André Raymond, K.N. Chaudhun, Halil Inalcik, Halil Sahillioglu and Katsumi Fukazawa have highlighted the importation of cotton textiles, rice and spices, and the imitation of Indian fabrics by local producers unwilling to relinquish their accustomed market shares (Raymond, 1973-74; Chaudhuri, 1985; Inalcik, 1960a and b; Sahillioglu, 1985b; Fukazawa, 1987). These studies have also shown that even in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the Indian Ocean trade was by no means a monopoly of the Dutch and English, but that Arab-Ottoman and Indian merchants continued to maintain direct contacts.


A long frontier was shared by the Ottomans and their rivals the Safavid rulers of Iran, which in spite of many wars and conquests, in its northern section corresponds roughly to the present-day frontier between Iran and Turkey. Yet even though Persian was a recognised medium of literary expression at the Ottoman court, and Turkish-speaking tribes played a major role in sixteenth-century Iran, studies of Ottoman—Iranian interactions have remained quite limited in number and scope. A major difficulty stems from the fact that the archives of the Iranian dynasties have for the most part been destroyed, so that it is much easier to reconstruct Ottoman views of Iran than Iranian views of the Ottoman Empire. Many scholars who have approached the topic therefore have studied Ottoman-Iranian relations within the Ottoman context. Bekir Kuttikoglu has discussed the wars and diplomatic crises of the later sixteenth century (Kuttikoglu, 1962). Cornell Fleischer has included an interesting discussion of Iranian immigrants in his path-breaking study of Mustafa Ali (Fleischer, 1986, p. 154). In a fascinating study of the inscriptions of the Stileymaniye, Gilru Necipoglu has demonstrated how Stileyman the Magnificent had himself depicted as champion of Sunni Islam against Shr’ism (Necipoglu, 1989). One of the few instances in which historians working on early modern Iran have branched out into the Ottoman Empire concerns the trade of the Armenians, whose far-flung network included Istanbul and Aleppo (Ferrier, 1973).


Even less is known about Ottoman links to China, which for the debates concerning larger issues of historiography originally outside of the Ottomanist field, but in which Ottomanists have become involved. Occasionally we will encounter economists, social anthropologists and sociologists developing an interest in Ottoman history. This is not so common now as it was a decade or two ago, since presently the social sciences are less interested in regional peculiarities than they used to be, and the American tradition of area studies is under massive attack.


Among the generation of scholars active in Turkey today, many distinguished historians have a background in economics, sociology or regional planning. Students and scholars with a social science background will usually want to know about the processes which formed modern Turkish society, and Sevket Pamuk has published a book which attempts to answer these queries (Pamuk, 1988). Rural property relations, craftsmen inside and outside the guilds, monetary flows or the role of religion in politics will be of special interest to historians with a competence in development economics, business administration or sociology. The studies of Huri Islamoglu, Murat Cizak¢a and Serif Mardin constitute notable examples of this tendency, and [ber Ortayli’s lively and sometimes sarcastic studies of Istanbul’s urban history probably have been informed by this author’s background in urban planning (Islamoglu, 1994; Cizak¢a, 1996; Mardin, 1962; Ortayli, 1986).


Social anthropologists doing fieldwork on villages and small towns of present-day Turkey will have somewhat different priorities. Rather than trying to make sense of Ottoman history from a social science point of view, they will be looking for historical background information on the places they study. Something similar applies to architectural historians, particularly those working on vernacular architecture. Anthropologists and architectural historians will often find that there are very few ‘academic’ studies on the places they are dealing with. They are therefore obliged to make extensive use of monographs written in the 1930s and 1940s by historical amateurs. Social anthropologists and architectural historians in this situation may turn to an Ottomanist in order to find out something about the reliability of such studies, and the possibility of locating hard-to-find primary sources. These questions are potentially enriching to the Ottomanist historian, who otherwise is in constant danger of losing him-/herself in the parochial concerns of our discipline.


Viewed from another angle, social anthropologists, whose primary concern is with the present and the recent past, are often charmed by the idea that the history of this or that village can be traced back all the way to the fifteenth or sixteenth century. Some of them have tried to mine oral history for accounts of nineteenth-century settlement processes. Or else the realisation that famous local specialities such as the fruit of Malatya or the hazelnuts of the eastern Black Sea coast have been cultivated in these places for several centuries may help to give field studies a sense of historical depth. Now that few social scientists would claim that ‘history is bunk’, there exists a real possibility of cooperation between Ottomanists and field anthropologists, which the former will ignore at their own peril (Benedict, 1974, pp. 74-90).


OTTOMAN STATE, OTTOMAN SOCIETY


In the 1980s, Europeanist historians and historical sociologists began to react against the historiography of the previous twenty years, during which economic and social history had held pride of place, by Bringing the State Back In (see Tilly, 1985). Ottomanists in due course also became interested in this historiographical current. Only in their case, the situation was somewhat paradoxical, as Ottomanist historiography had always been strongly state-centred, and at first glance, there seemed to be little reason for bringing ‘in’ what had never been ‘out’ in the first place. But here appearances are misleading, as ‘traditional’ Ottomanist state-centredness was overdetermined by the example of new-style Marxian historiography on the one hand, and non-Marxist theories of state formation on the other. Comparativists such as Perry Anderson emphasised that the locus of decisive class struggles was always the state (Anderson, 2nd edn 1979, p.11). For Ottomanist historians who, in Anderson’s wake, grappled with the question of state structure in a Marxian sense, a major concern was the degree to whicha given state bureaucracy was able to operate independently from the surrounding society (Haldon, 1993, pp. 140 ff). In the European context, this question often had been phrased differently, namely the issue had been to what extent the state bureaucracy was independent from a landholding or mercantile ruling class.2 Only in the Ottoman context landholding was closely controlled by the state, so that there existed no ruling class outside of the state apparatus, and this required a rephrasing of the problématique. Factionalism within the Ottoman bureaucracy being highly developed, one might usefully debate to what extent the state apparatus was independent of or else controlled by such factions within the ruling class (Kunt, 1974; Fleischer, 1986 pp. 159-161 and elsewhere).


Among Ottomanist historians outside the Marxian tradition and interested in state formation, the work of Charles Tilly has held special attraction (Tilly, 1992). This is in part due to his lively polemical style and his stress on the conflict between ordinary people and the states/ruling classes lording it over them. For scholars striving for a new understanding of the role of war in Ottoman politics, the major advantage is that Tilly has placed war-making along with capital accumulation at the centre of his theory of state formation. Moreover this historical sociologist has done concrete work on early modern France. As a large-scale kingdom with a ruling class strongly oriented toward the exploitation of rural society, France before 1789 also has exerted a special attraction on Ottomanists interested in comparative perspectives. Unfortunately, Tilly does not seem particularly interested in the Ottoman case, emphasising as he does urban capitalism as a variable determining the level of coercion exercised by a given state. This concern has led him to concentrate upon intra-European history, and where the present is concerned, on military régimes and US politics in the Third World.


NATIONALIST HISTORIOGRAPHY


Tilly’s ‘national state’ is an organisation controlling a multiplicity of cities and regions, and possessing a strong bureaucratic armature with a degree of autonomy from the society governed (Tilly, 1992, pp. 2-3). It is thus not coterminous with the nation-state, which Tilly regards as a state whose people share a ‘strong religious, linguistic and symbolic identity’ (p. 3). According to this definition, France, Germany or England never could count as nation-states, even though it is likely that at least many French historians would disagree with Tilly’s claim. The difficulty lies in the fact that the ruling classes of most states which are no nation states in Tilly’s sense, still claim to govern a nation state, and a large part of the population tends to agree with them.


Most of the Ottoman successor states are certainly defined in their respective national ideologies as nation states, and have produced national historiographies in which the Ottoman period has been accommodated, often with a good deal of difficulty. Many studies could be written about the image of the Ottoman period in the scholarly and popular historiography of this or that present-day state. Yet reflection on different possibilities of conceptualising the Ottoman impact is a fairly new phenomenon. In part, this questioning is due to disillusion. Several rival ideologies and agendas have come to address the fact that in many instances, the establishment of national states and (would-be) nation states has not made life any easier for the populations involved. This challenge has encouraged reflection on the merits of the nation-state per se. In Turkey and the Arab states, some version of Islam has served as a common ground from which historians may question the ‘national enmities’ which seem to be an indispensable concomitant of the nation-state. Among secularists, the fate of national minorities at the hands of a would-be nation-state often has led to a degree of disillusionment with nationalist ideals, and the civil war in former Yugoslavia has strengthened this feeling.


On the positive side, historians disillusioned with the nation state model have discovered the advantages of plural societies. For a long time, the limited amount of interaction between different ethno-religious communities, or even just populations sharing the same urban space, was considered an irremediable defect of Ottoman society. But this evaluation has now changed. On the one hand, recent research has shown that intra-urban interaction was often more intensive than had been assumed earlier (Faroqhi, 1987, pp. 157 ff). More importantly, the willingness with which empires such as the Ottoman down to the eighteenth century accommodated separate and unequal communities has gained in respectability. Or at least this is true when compared to the murderous attempts at ‘national unification’ which have been undertaken throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.


In the Turkish context, historians critical of nationalist historiography have often aimed their darts at the presumed uniqueness of Ottoman society, for which Turkish possesses the pretty formulation biz bize benzeriz.? Of course the claim to the uniqueness of a ‘pre-existing national essence’ is common enough among nationalists the world around. Many of the various state formation theories recently developed, for all their obvious differences, aim at demonstrating the fallacy of nationalist essentialism, by showing the contingency both of national boundaries and of the consciousness associated with them (B. Anderson, 1983). Ottomanists attacking the nationalist notion of uniqueness often do so in the name of making Ottoman history accessible to international comparison (Berktay, 1991). For only when we acknowledge that an empire such as the Ottoman shared significant features with its neighbours, can we make sense of certain peculiarities which no one would wish to deny. The existence of a peasant base, consisting of individual peasant households running their own enterprises (as opposed to rural labourers working landholdings managed by outsiders) onstitutes the basic feature. All comparative work involving Ottoman society must begin from this point (Inalcik, 1994; Berktay, 1992).


THE ORIENTALIST TRAP


Apart from the dubious claims resulting from nationalism, orientalism constitutes the major trap into which, given prevailing cultural assumptions, many Ottomanist historians are likely to fall. The pervasiveness of orientalist assumptions in secondary studies down to the present day has been shown to us by the critical work of Edward Said and his students. Orientalism involves a persistent tendency to define the Islamic world as the eternal ‘other’ and an unwillingness to concede that Middle Eastern societies have a history and dynamic of their own. In some instances, such a dynamic may be conceded, but then it is assumed that Middle Eastern history is something sui generis and not amenable to historical comparison. It has often been claimed that ‘original observation’ as opposed to reliance on authority characterised European high culture since the Renaissance. Yet orientalism also involves an excessive reliance on literary sources from long bygone times, so that ancient prejudices get carried over from one generation to the next without much regard for historical realities (Said, 1978, pp. 202 ff). When discussing the European sources on Ottoman history, this problem must never be left out of sight.


Many elements of the later orientalist world view were originally formulated by seventeenth and eighteenth-century travellers, among whom Jean-Baptiste Tavernier is probably one of the best known (Tavernier, ed. Yérasimos, 1981). This was an enormously enterprising merchant and jeweller, who traversed the Ottoman Empire several times on his way to India.* His travelogue contains a rather dubious account of what he considered ‘oriental despotism’, a concept which ever since has continued to bedevil European political thought. But his work is still indispensible, for he has produced an extensive account of life on the seventeenth-century Ottoman roads which complements the work of his Ottoman contemporary and fellow traveller Evliya Celebi (Evliya Celebi, 1896 to 1938).


Political conceptions apart, a further problem posed by European travellers of the period is the fact that they normally had read their predecessors’ work. In some instances, maybe when they had lost their own notes, they might even piece together their accounts out of unacknowledged quotes. This way of proceeding may cause the modern user some disagreeable surprises: when working on Eriwan (Revan), in the seventeenth century an Ottoman-Iranian border town, it took me a while to find out that Joseph Pitton de Tournefort, a highly respected French botanist who visited Anatolia and the Caucasus around 1700, had bodily ‘lifted’ his account from the works of Jean Chardin and Tavernier. To be sure, Pitton de Tournefort mentions the work of these authors; but there is no indication that practically all his statements on Revan were derived from his predecessors (Tournefort, ed. Yérasimos, 1982, vol. 1, pp. 221-4; Tavernier, ed. Yérasimos, 1981, vol. 1, pp. 82-6; Chardin, 1711, vol. 1, p. 218ff). This tendency to copy ‘ancient authorities’ is far from dead today, even though today’s scholars are more careful about acknowledging their sources. Of course the inclination to accept travellers’ claims at face value reinforces the ahistorical tendency of much European writing on the Middle East, which Edward Said has justly attacked. Given these circumstances, it is tempting to disregard the testimony of European travellers altogether. But since many kinds of information that we urgently need have been preserved only by these authors, we will have to learn to use their work, albeit with a great deal of caution.


As we have seen, there exists a degree of continuity between the travellers of the seventeenth, eighteenth and nineteenth centuries on the one hand, and the nineteenth-century orientalists on the other. Certain scholars, such the Prussian A. J. Mordtmann Sen. (1811-1879) or later the Czech Alois Musil (1868-1944) were in fact both academics and travellers (Mordtmann, ed. Babinger, 1925). Some of these people might combine scholarly and diplomatic roles, the latter of which in some cases shaded off into espionage activity. Thus the famous Dutch Islamicist Christian Snouck Hurgronje at the end of the nineteenth century, even managed to stay in Mecca for a while as the guest of the reigning Sherif. He had been sent by his government to unearth information about the Javanese and other Dutch subjects of present-day Indonesia who went on pilgrimage to Mecca in increasing numbers at the end of the nineteenth century. It was assumed that there they might become imbued with Pan-islamic sentiments, and upon their return, constitute a danger to the Dutch administration of the islands (Snouck Hurgonje, 1931, pp. 290-2). Obviously it is not possible in a short introductory volume to discuss the political ramifications of the work of all Ottomanists of the recent past. But the examples mentioned here and there should at least make us sensitive to the issue.


MODES OF PRODUCTION AND WORLD SYSTEMS


THEORY


Paradigms of present-day scholarship are even more difficult to fairly describe than those of the past; as the owl of Minerva flies in the dark, the main lines of a paradigm usually become visible only when it is already on the way out. However we will at least briefly refer to the role of Ottoman studies in the discussion concerning the “Asian Mode of Production’ (AMP). This Marxian concept, which in the 1960s regained relevance particularly among French anthropologists, also found adherents among Turkish economists and social scientists (Divitcioglu, 1967). At the same time, another group of political intellectuals explored the possibilities of the concept of ‘feudalism’. Certain Ottoman economic historians, some of whom had also used the AMP as a framework for their research, equally involved themselves with the ‘world systems’ paradigm put forward by Immanuel Wallerstein and his school (Islamoglu-Inan, 1987).


The debate concerning the relative merits of the ‘Asian Mode of Production’ and ‘feudalism’ has been marred by numerous complications and misunderstandings. Extraneous considerations of left-wing political strategy tended to get mixed up in the debate to the great disadvantage of its intellectual content. Apart from that, the fate of AMP in international discussion, outside the Ottoman context, has also caused difficulties for Ottomanists. The concept had originally gained favour as a means of counteracting a notion of history which assumed that all societies necessarily would have to pass through the same sequence of ‘stages’. This idea of historical stages had been widespread in nineteenth and early twentiethcentury social theory, both within Marxism and outside of it. By assuming that certain societies were neither ‘primitive’, ‘feudal’ nor ‘capitalist’, social theory ofa Marxian bent regained a degree of flexibility which had been lost during the Stalinist period. However after about 1980, the AMP was sharply attacked by many scholars as eurocentric, and as a result, most Turkish adherents of AMP gave up or at least strongly modified their views.°


As to the ‘feudalism’ side of the debate, many participants have been unaware that two different meanings can be attached to this particular term. One of them is inapplicable to Ottoman history because it involves things such as vassalage and feudal homage, which never existed in the Ottoman world. But the other usage simply refers to a society of peasants managing their own farms, and thus having direct access to their means of livelihood. Such peasants, who can directly reproduce themselves with the products of their own labour, can be made to hand over part of their produce only by non-economic coercion (Berktay, 1985). This broad use of the term ‘feudal’ is applicable to a great many human societies of the pre-industrial age.















Debate therefore has centred upon the question whether peasants yielding part of their produce to a central state in the shape of taxes, and not as rent to a feudal lord, can properly be included in the ‘feudal’ category. For the specialist Ottomanist historian, the main advantage of this debate is probably the stimulus it has given to comparative history.


While the ‘feudalism debate’ has during the last few years lost many of its political implications, this does not apply to the discussion connected with the concept of a world system, associated primarily with the name of Immanuel Wallerstein (Wallerstein, 1974, 1980, 1989). The manner in which the Ottoman Empire was ‘incorporated’ into a world system, dominated by a capitalist Europe and later by the United States, continues to be of political relevance. As a result, this linkage of Ottoman history with the debate on world systems theory as an explanatory model continues to make many historians uncomfortable. But from a professional point of view, the links of certain Ottomanist historians to the Wallersteinian school also have had very positive consequences. While Ottoman history in the past few decades was often an arcane endeavour of little interest to anybody but its practitioners, the debate on world systems theory has made it much easier for Ottomanists to enter a broader historical discussion. And that should be an appreciable advantage to students now entering the field.°


DESIGNING RESEARCH IN OTTOMAN HISTORY:


SOME PRELIMINARY REFLECTIONS


As has become apparent from the preceding paragraphs, working as an historian implies questioning our own motives. This is easier said than done, for usually we need a certain distance before motivations, our own or those of our predecessors, will become visible to us. Political changes in the world we inhabit are often a precondition for changes of scholarly orientation; but these changes constitute merely a necessary and not a sufficient condition. Only the anticolonial struggles of the post-World War II period have made it possible for us to question the views of many European and American practitioners of orientalism in the nineteenth century and early twentieth. It has taken quite some time and intellectual effort to acknowledge the simple fact that many of these people were either colonial administrators themselves or else trained such officials, and that these political concerns had an impact on their scholarship (Said, 1978). Obviously the generation presently active in Ottoman history has its own political agendas, and will in its turn be questioned by its successors, in all likelihood with unflattering results. But an even worse thing is also ‘on the cards’ — our work may be considered too insignificant to be worth demolishing . . .


Reflection on our activities as historians will start where the student planning a paper or thesis normally begins. During the first stage of his/ her work, the prospective author may have only a very vague notion of the topic to be covered. Certain people will be fascinated with a given primary source and decide to make it the basis of their study. Thus the correspondence of a vizier or sultan’s mother, or else the diary ofa dervish, may become the basis for a combined historical and philological examination. The text is edited, translated, or if that is not feasible, summarised and annotated. At a later stage, this explicated text will serve as a means of understanding processes of communication within the Ottoman Palace, the prerogatives of royal women, or the process of education within a dervish convent. This type of study is perfectly legitimate; however it involves a good deal of philology, and many ambitious researchers prefer to look for something ‘more theoretical’. This will generally involve a problématique derived from current research as reflected in the secondary literature, both Ottomanist and nonOttomanist. A student may recognise that Ottoman notables of the eighteenth century, even though they wished to govern the localities they controlled with as little outside interference as possible, for the most part did not attempt to set up independent states. Starting from this observation, he/she may launch an inquiry into the mechanisms, such as tax-farming, which integrated provincial notables into the fabric of the Ottoman state (Salzmann, 1993). Moreover a student may first familiarise him/herself with the problem-oriented historiography practised by the more respected representatives of the profession today. But as a second step, he/she may decide to return to the interpretation of a given primary source with questions derived from sophisticated problématiques. Cemal Kafadar’s work on Ottoman diaries and letters springs to mind in this context (Kafadar, 1989, 1992).


TIME, SPACE AND TOPICS


As an introductory volume, the present text makes no claim to comprehensiveness. Even less do I aim to recreate the all-knowing impartiality and invisibility so typical of narrators in certain nineteenth-century novels. My own competences, and even more, blind spots, have had a visible impact upon the composition of this book. Many more examples come from the sixteenth, seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries than from the periods before and afterward. For in my own work I have concentrated upon this particular period, which we will often call ‘early modern’. Where the nineteenth century is concerned, more is said about the Tanzimat than about the Hamidian period, and more about the latter than about the early twentieth century. I apologise to the reader on this account. But given the enormous amounts of material which have become available on especially the latest periods of Ottoman history, this topic should be dealt with by a specialist on Abdiilhamid I and the Young Turks.


Less of an apology is due, I think, for the focus on Istanbul and Anatolia, and for concentration upon the Muslim rather than the nonMuslim section of the Ottoman population. To begin with, the documentation available in Istanbul and Ankara does accord pride of place to these groups; and I have decided to follow the drift of the sources. Yet in spite of an abundance of source material, it would seem that Anatolia constitutes one of the former Ottoman provinces most neglected by historians, and I hope to contribute toward correcting this imbalance. Moreover there exists a flourishing secondary literature on the former Arab, Greek, Serbian, Bosnian and Bulgarian provinces of the Ottoman Empire in the languages of the relevant modern nations. Unfortunately I do not read any of these, and my discussion remains confined to works in Ottoman and modern Turkish, English, French and German. As to the historiographical discussion in Syria, Egypt or Greece, it can be accessed only imperfectly through the more or less rapid summaries available in western languages. After writing brief overviews over these discussions for an earlier version of this book, I have become aware of all the aspects closed to me because of my linguistic limitations. I have therefore consigned my drafts to the wastepaper-basket without too much regret.


In certain chapters or sections of chapters, a more or less limited topic will be covered by way of example, such as rural history in chapter 4. Hopefully, current methodological discussion of particular kinds of sources thereby will become accessible to the non-specialist. However in chapters 2, 3 and 6 this arrangement, when first attempted, resulted in a rather artificial text, and these chapters have been rewritten as ordinary surveys. Topics have been selected according to my own interests and areas of competence, and I must stress once again that there is no claim to exhaustiveness. Political nd military history have been downplayed, obviously not because they lack importance. But personal competence apart, I have tried to provide a counterweight to the still rather widespread notion of the Ottoman Empire as a perfect war machine governed by an upper class totally uninterested in economic problems. This aim can probably not be pursued without weighting the balance in the opposite direction. In any case, the rediscovery of Ottoman political history is well underway (Har-El 1995, Hickok 1997), and it will not be difficult for the reader to fill in the gaps of this rather selective account.


Two kinds of users have been envisaged for the present book. On the one hand, there are the students of Ottoman history, and on the other, beginning researchers or specialists in other historical disciplines who need information on the use of a particular source category. These readers will hopefully use the present book as a kind of map, which indicates opportunities for further research, and also, on occasion, dead ends and road blocks best avoided. Moreover it is hoped that people involved in Middle East survey courses, either as teachers or as students, will find some supplementary readings here. The needs of these different categories of readers overlap only toa limited degree, and some sections will seem elementary to one type of reader and rather complicated to another. Writing two separate books for beginning and advanced audiences would have resulted in a more unified text in both instances. But given the relatively small number of students and teachers concerned by our discipline, this solution would not have been feasible from a practical point of view. Yet most chapters can stand on their own to some extent; it is therefore possible to select individual chapters according to current needs. In addition, the reading lists at the end of each chapter will hopefully make life easier for the beginner. Given their brevity, these lists cannot avoid being highly subjective, and the comments in parentheses even more so. I trust, their usefulness to the reader will outweigh the critical asperities which the author will doubtlessly suffer on their account.


THE SCOPE OF THIS BOOK: SEARCHING FOR


PRIMARY SOURCES


As it is one of the aims of this book to help students newly entering the field, the next chapter (chapter 2) will contain information which mature researchers may decide to skip. The section ‘Works of Reference’ at the end of this book will introduce the major dictionaries and bibliographies. Chapter 3 is devoted to libraries and archives, along with the publications which give the researcher an idea of the holdings of these institutions. Building on this information, Chapter 4 introduces a few frequently consulted document types, and also discusses the uses to which these sources can be put. As an example, we will survey the documents which can provide information on Ottoman rural society, a choice motivated by two considerations. On the one hand, the vast majority of Ottoman subjects were peasants and nomads. We tend to forget this basic fact of life in our absorption with the documents, in which members of the ruling groups and townsmen in general are vastly overrepresented. On the other hand, this discussion will allow us to introduce the fifteenth- and sixteenthcentury tax registers (tahrir), arguably the best known and most intensively studied among Ottoman primary sources.


THE SCOPE OF THIS BOOK: PROBLEMS OF GENRE


Both primary and secondary sources are not products of nature but were written by people. In order to critically evaluate them, we must know something about the manner in which they were composed. Most insidious, because most easily overlooked, are the conventions of genre. Everything we say or write, and everything that was said or written in the past, belongs either to an established genre or to a ‘mixed’ type combining the properties of several genres. Every genre has its own rules, and the impact of such rules on historical writing will be examined for the European context in chapter 5, and for the Ottomanist context in chapter 6.


In the European context we will pay special attention to travel accounts. For apart from a very few histories and archival documents, travelogues constitute the main genre in which Europeans of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries expressed their views of the Middle East. The most widespread type was the pilgrimage account, which recorded a visit to Jerusalem and other biblical sites in Palestine. Unfortunately, the ‘genre rules’ of the pilgrimage account did not include individual observations made on the trip. With a few exceptions proving the rule and which we will discuss, the historian of the Middle East will find this genre singularly unrewarding. Among other travel accounts, one must mention the reports on diplomatic missions, which were composed according to their own well-established rules. As we have already seen, using travel accounts of any kind means coming to terms with the inclination of many writers to copy their predecessors. It is therefore necessary to form some notion of what claims to authorial originality meant in practice, when made by different authors of the sixteenth, seventeenth or eighteenth century.


On the Ottoman side, genre conventions equally constrained what a given author might be able to say. Thus many Ottoman chroniclers used the reigns of sultans as a means of organising their material, a preference more or less comparable to our use of the concept of ‘century’, and of course equally arbitrary. When a chronicler for one reason or another departed from this format, we are confronted with a major change in style of thinking, and we have to investigate the reasons which may have prompted this decision (Neumann, 1994, pp. 53f). Moreover, even the authors of archival documents had to cope with the literary conventions of their genre. An Ottoman petitioner normally began his missive with a variation of ‘it is the submission of this slave that . . .. and ended with the phrase ‘and it is my lord’s prerogative to command.’ Or to mention a less straightforward example, it was common for sixteenth-century sultans’ commands to include what looked like verbatim statements on the part of complainant or accused, people whose activities had originally motivated state officials to lay down the law in the name of the Sultan. These ‘quotations’ were couched in a non-literary language, probably close to actual speech. It is tempting to regard these phrases as actual quotations, and some of them may have been just that. But it is equally probable that these so-called quotations were included primarily for stylistic reasons, to provide a contrast between the rough language of mercenaries or robbers and the more or less polished writing of the bureaucrats composing the documents. As a result, it would be incautious to take these ‘quotations’ at face value (Veinstein, 1996).


Historical writing such as it is practised today, equally constitutes a ‘literary’ genre of its own, even though the literary talents of many historians may be quite limited. This means that when we read secondary literature, we also have to look for conventions of style, which limit what can legitimately be said in a history text ofa given period. When I started to read historical secondary literature as a teenager in the late 1950s and early 1960s, I used to think how strange it was that family relations, which in my own experience constituted the determining factor of life, were never treated in the history books I encountered. This was of course quite correct as an observation; the studies I had access to at the time did not allow for the treatment of the ‘private’ lives of ordinary people. Family studies of the kind which are being written today, even by some Ottomanist historians, could only be accommodated by the genre of ‘history writing’ after the rules of this genre had been ‘bent’ somewhat (Duben, Behar, 1991). Or to give another example of the constraining force of genre conventions, present-day publishing practices, as well as the rules of academic promotion, often oblige the author of a manuscript presented for publication to comply with specifications made by anonymous readers. In order to get their books published, authors may well find themselves making statements which they may personally endorse only to a limited degree. Our critique of our contemporaries’ output must therefore include an appreciation of the more or less rapid change, or else the stubborn inflexibility, of genre conventions. 














TOWARD ANEW STYLEIN OTTOMANIST


HISTORY-WRITING


Ottoman history presently finds itself in a situation in which basic assumptions, which had been accepted more or less tranquilly for several decades, are being questioned (Abou-El-Haj, 1991; Berktay, 1991). Therefore it is appropriate to include a short history of Ottomanist historiography (chapter 7). This is really a topic for a separate study. Chapter 7 will therefore limit itself to the syntheses which students normally encounter during their studies, and from which researchers gather their first impressions of Ottomanist research.


This procedure may be considered somewhat unfair to the field, because here as anywhere else, manuals tend to lag behind scholarly discussions. Articles forty or fifty years old are consulted only by specialists, with due regard for the fact that further research has been undertaken in the meantime. But manuals seventy years old and older, such as Lybyer’s account of Ottoman administration in the age of Siileyman the Magnificent (Lybyer, 1913), will often be used by non-specialists as if they reflected the state of the art. On the other hand, a chapter focusing on manuals as opposed to monographs or articles may warn the reader against their uncritical use.


Manuals are intended to convey information, both on ‘the facts of the case’ and, in the more sophisticated works, on conceptual developments as well. The sheer accumulation of information which has taken place in the past years probably forms a necessary though not a sufficient precondition for the questioning of problématiques we are presently experiencing. People who wish to challenge the ruling paradigms now can obtain the data with which to do this, which was not usually true even twenty years ago. More importantly, changes in political climate have permitted some scholars to doubt the national state as a suitable yardstick by which to measure the performance of non-national empires, including the Ottoman. Current scepticism toward notions implying any kind of ‘progress’ also has contributed toward current revisions of Ottoman history. For it has become meaningless to claim that the Ottoman state and others of its kind were somehow inferior because ‘not modern’.’ Hopefully, the ongoing revisions of social and political concepts will make possible a different kind of Ottoman history, which a growing number of scholars are now trying to achieve.












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