LEADER 01107nam1-2200385---450 001 990002406910203316 005 20181213113054.0 010 $a88-04-37947-2 035 $a000240691 035 $aUSA01000240691 035 $a(ALEPH)000240691USA01 035 $a000240691 100 $a20050311d1994----km-y0itay0103----ba 101 $aita 102 $aIT 105 $a||||||||001yy 200 1 $aScrittori italiani di aforismi$ei classici$fa cura di Gino Ruozzi 210 $aMilano$cA. 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Nomads and tribes in the Ottoman empire: Resat Kasaba; 2. The Ottoman economy in the early imperial age: Rhoads Murphey; 3. The law of the land: Colin Imber; 4. A kadi court in the Balkans: Sofia in the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries: Rossitsa Gradeva; 5. Imarets: Amy Singer 327 $a6. Sufis in the age of state-building and Confessionalization: Derin TerziogluPart II: Ottomans and Others; 7. Royal and other households: Metin Kunt; 8. 'On the tranquillity and repose of the sultan': the construction of a topos: Hakan T. Karateke; 9. Of translation and empire: sixteenth-century Ottoman imperial interpreters as Renaissance go-betweens: Tijana Krstic; 10. Ottoman languages: Christine Woodhead; 11. Ethnicity, race, religion and social class: Ottoman markers of difference: Baki Tezcan; 12. The Kizilbas of Syria and Ottoman Shiism: Stefan Winter 327 $a13. The reign of violence: the celalis c.1550-1700: Oktay O?zelPart III: The Wider Empire; 14. Between universalistic claims and reality: Ottoman frontiers in the early modern period: Dariusz Kotodziejczyk; 15. Defending and administering the frontier: the case of Ottoman Hungary: Ga?bor A?goston; 16. The Ottoman frontier in Kurdistan in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries: Nelida Fuccaro; 17. Conquest, urbanization and plague networks in the Ottoman empire, 1453-1600: Nu?khet Varlik; 18. The peripheralization of the Ottoman Algerian elite: Tal Shuval 327 $a19. On the edges of an Ottoman world: non-Muslim Ottoman merchants in Amsterdam: Ismail Hakki KadiPart IV: Ordinary People; 20. Masters, servants and slaves: household formation among the urban notables of early Ottoman Aleppo: Charles L. Wilkins; 21. Subject to the sultan's approval: seventeenth- and eighteenth-century artisans negotiating guild agreements in Istanbul: Suraiya Faroqhi; 22. Literacy among artisans and tradesmen in Ottoman Cairo: Nelly Hanna; 23. 'Guided by the Almighty': the journey of Stephan Schultz in the Ottoman empire, 1752-6: Jan Schmidt 327 $a24. The right to choice: Ottoman, ecclesiastical and communal justice in Ottoman Greece: Eugenia Kermeli25. Ottoman women as legal and marital subjects: Basak Tug; 26. Forms and forums of expression: Istanbul and beyond, 1600-1800: Tu?lay Artan; Part V: Later Ottomans; 27. The old regime and the Ottoman Middle East: Ariel Salzmann; 28. The transformation of the Ottoman fiscal regime c.1600-1850: Michael Ursinus; 29. Provincial power-holders and the empire in the late Ottoman world: conflict or partnership?: Ali Yaycioglu 327 $a30. The Arabic-speaking world in the Ottoman period: a socio-political analysis: Ehud R. Toledano 330 $aThe Ottoman empire as a political entity comprised most of the present Middle East (with the principal exception of Iran), north Africa and south-eastern Europe. For over 500 years, until its disintegration during World War I, it encompassed a diverse range of ethnic, religious and linguistic communities with varying political and cultural backgrounds. Yet, was there such a thing as an 'Ottoman world' beyond the principle of sultanic rule from Istanbul? Ottoman authority might have been established largely by military conquest, but how was it maintained for so long, over such distanc 410 0$aRoutledge worlds. 606 $aHistory$y1288-1918 607 $aTurkey$xHistory$yOttoman Empire, 1288-1918 607 $aTurkey$xCivilization$y1288-1918 615 0$aHistory 676 $a956.015 676 $a956/.015 701 $aWoodhead$b Christine$f1952-$01881426 801 0$bMiAaPQ 801 1$bMiAaPQ 801 2$bMiAaPQ 906 $aBOOK 912 $a9910957452203321 996 $aThe Ottoman world$94495998 997 $aUNINA