Ottoman Notables and Participatory Politics

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A01=John Bragg
Abdullah Efendi
Ahmed Efendi
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Author_John Bragg
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Category=NHG
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District Administrative Council
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Fi Ve
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inventories
local elite power structures
Mehmet Efendi
Middle Eastern legal reforms
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Miri Lands
multiconfessional communities
Muslim Notables
Mustafa Efendi
nineteenth-century Anatolia
Non-Muslim Leaders
non-Muslim Millets
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Ottoman provincial governance
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participatory politics in Ottoman provinces
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Provincial Administrative Council
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Selim III
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social network analysis
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Tanzimat Period
Tanzimat Reforms
Tokat District
Tokat's Notables
tokats
Tokat’s Notables

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367867539
  • Weight: 560g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Dec 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Focussing on events in the Anatolian town of Tokat during the final two decades of the great Ottoman legal and administrative reforms known as the Tanzimat (1839-76), this book applies elements of social networking theory to analyze and assess the establishment of local governments across the Middle East.

The author’s key finding is that the state’s efforts to centralize authority succeeded only when and where locals acted as the primary agents of change. Independent notables, such as the military a‘yân, demanded wealth and state offices in exchange for meting out reform measures according to local idioms of power. Newly created administrative bodies also offered greater social mobility to a growing multiconfessional middle-class in small towns like Tokat. The state was desparate to reform, but opportunistic provincials were eager to have it only on their own terms.

Challenging false assumptions about the limited scope of participatory politics in the Middle East during the nineteenth century, Ottoman Notables and Participatory Politics will be of interest to students and scholars of Political Economy, History and Middle East Studies.

Dr. John K. Bragg is an assistant professor of History and Education at New Jersey City University. His research interests include political economy, handicraft industry, provincial studies, folklore, and Islamic family law. He has published a peer-reviewed chapter on Fuzuli’s Leyla and Majnun and has delivered conference papers on the nineteenth-century resettlement of Circassian refugees in Anatolia and non-Muslim legal tactics before the şer‘î courts.

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