The Ottoman Turks: An Introductory History to 1923Longman, 1997 - 406 pages Justin McCarthy's introductory survey traces the whole history of the Ottoman Turks from their obscure beginnings in central Asia, through the establishment and rise of the Ottoman Empire to its collapse after World War One under the pressures of nationalism. Vividly illustrated with many maps, this introductory overview is designed for non-specialists but is written with great authority and with access to original sources. It fills an important gap for an authoritative but accessible account of the rise of one of the world's great civilizations. |
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Page 8
... accepted by most Muslims . The major- ity community , the Sunni Muslims , was made up of those who , with slight variations , agreed on the structure of the Holy Law and accepted each other as orthodox . The leaders of the Sunni can be ...
... accepted by most Muslims . The major- ity community , the Sunni Muslims , was made up of those who , with slight variations , agreed on the structure of the Holy Law and accepted each other as orthodox . The leaders of the Sunni can be ...
Page 30
... accepted the Islamic rules against forced conversion . They also accepted the Islamic tradition of wholly accepting new members into their community if the newcomers accepted Islam . As practised by the Turkish nomads , Islam was an ...
... accepted the Islamic rules against forced conversion . They also accepted the Islamic tradition of wholly accepting new members into their community if the newcomers accepted Islam . As practised by the Turkish nomads , Islam was an ...
Page 318
... accepted the changes so easily . Of these , reactionary Muslims ( by no means Muslims as a whole ) and traditional ... accepted their actions which , after all , could mean a return of some of his own authority . The sultan did not so ...
... accepted the changes so easily . Of these , reactionary Muslims ( by no means Muslims as a whole ) and traditional ... accepted their actions which , after all , could mean a return of some of his own authority . The sultan did not so ...
Contents
Origins of the Turks to 1281 | 3 |
Mongol rule in Anatolia | 30 |
Turkish Anatolia | 36 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
Abdülaziz Abdülhamit administration Allies Arab areas Armenian Asia Balkans Bayezit became began Black Sea Bosphorus British Bulgaria bureaucrats Byzantine capital Celali Christian conquest Constantinople Crimea defeated devşirme Diyarbakır eastern Anatolia economic Edirne Egypt enemies European fighting governors Grand Vezir Greek groups guilds houses imperial Iran Iraq Islamic Istanbul İzmir Janissaries Konya land leaders lived Mahmud makers Mamluk Mehmet Mehmet II merchants Middle East Middle Eastern military millet modern mosques Murat Murat IV Muslim Mustafa nationalism nationalist needed nineteenth century officials Osman Ottoman army Ottoman Empire Ottoman Europe Ottoman government Ottoman system palace Paşa peasants political population provinces rebels reform refugees region reign religion religious revolt rule rulers Rum Seljuks Russians Safavids schools Selim Serbia slaves soldiers Süleyman sultan Syria Tanzimat Tatars taxes territory threat timars took trade traditional troops Turkish Turkish nomads Turkish notables Turks ulema vakıfs villages Western women