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Orthodox Christians in the Late Ottoman Empire

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Orthodox Christians in the Late Ottoman Empire Synopsis

Orthodox Christians, as well as other non-Muslims of the Ottoman Empire, have long been treated as insular and homogenous entities, distinctly different and separate from the rest of the Ottoman world. Despite this view prevailing in mainstream historiography, some scholars have suggested recently that non-Muslim life was not as monolithic and rigid as is often supposed. In an endeavour to understand the ties among Christians within the administrative, social and economic structures of the imperial and Orthodox Christian worlds, Ayse Ozil engages in a rarely undertaken comparative analysis of Ottoman, Greek and European archival sources. Using the hitherto under-explored region of Hüdavendigar in the heartland of the empire as a case study, she questions commonplace assumptions about the meaning of ethno-religious community within a Middle Eastern imperial framework. Offering a more nuanced investigation of Ottoman Christians by connecting Ottoman and Greek history, which are often treated in isolation from one another, this work sheds new light on communal existence.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9781138108073
Publication date:
Author: Ayse Ozil
Publisher: Routledge an imprint of Taylor & Francis
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 208 pages
Series: SOAS/Routledge Studies on the Middle East
Genres: Middle Eastern history
Colonialism and imperialism
History of religion
Regional / International studies

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