The Ottoman Turks: An Introductory History to 1923Longman, 1997 - 406 pages This is an introductory survey of Ottoman history from earliest times to the end of the Empire, written for both students and non-specialists. Although it offers a broad account of events, it is not primarily a political narrative of the Ottoman territories; rather, it investigates the world of the Ottoman Turks themselves, exploring their political, social and economic systems, and examining the lives and customs of ordinary people, as well as of the ruling classes. |
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Page 134
... produce very large profits - an ideal financial situation . Tax on silk alone might produce 1 to 2 per cent of Ottoman state income . The spice trade provided similar profits . The goods were once again produced in the East , but ...
... produce very large profits - an ideal financial situation . Tax on silk alone might produce 1 to 2 per cent of Ottoman state income . The spice trade provided similar profits . The goods were once again produced in the East , but ...
Page 155
... produce enough for traditional levels of consumption , little more . In times of civil disorder , they produced less , as will be seen below . By contrast , western Europe in the eighteenth century was beginning to undergo the economic ...
... produce enough for traditional levels of consumption , little more . In times of civil disorder , they produced less , as will be seen below . By contrast , western Europe in the eighteenth century was beginning to undergo the economic ...
Page 267
... produce a son . Sons were greatly desired and needed for financial security , to carry on the family and support the ... producing sons . Thus a man without sons might try another wife . Popular feeling held that it was morally better ...
... produce a son . Sons were greatly desired and needed for financial security , to carry on the family and support the ... producing sons . Thus a man without sons might try another wife . Popular feeling held that it was morally better ...
Contents
Origins of the Turks to 1281 | 1 |
The First Ottomans 12811446 | 33 |
The Ottoman Classical Age 14461566 | 65 |
Copyright | |
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Abdülaziz Abdülhamit administration Allies Arab areas Armenian Asia ayans Balkan Wars Balkans Bayezit began Black Sea Bosphorus British Bulgaria bureaucrats Byzantine capital Celali central Anatolia Christian conquest Constantinople Crimea defeated devşirme Diyarbakır eastern Anatolia economic Edirne Egypt enemies European fighting governors Grand Vezir Greek groups guilds houses Iran Iraq Islamic Istanbul İzmir Janissaries Konya land leaders lived Mahmud major makers Mamluk marriage Mehmet Mehmet II merchants Middle East Middle Eastern military 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 Thrace timar took trade traditional troops Turkish Turkish nomads Turks villages wars Western women