Regulating Non-Muslim Communities in the Seventeenth-Century Ottoman Empire

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A01=Radu Dipratu
Ahmed III
archival primary sources
Author_Radu Dipratu
Capitulations
Category=NH
Category=NHD
Catholic Clerics
Catholic communities
Catholic privileges under Ottoman law
Catholicism
Dar Al Harb
De La Croix
early modern diplomacy
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
European-Ottoman treaties
French capitulations
Grand Vizier
Holy Roman Empire
Holy Sepulchre
interfaith relations
Ivan III
Mehmed II
Mehmed IV
Murad III
Murad IV
Noble Jerusalem
Osman II
Ottoman Empire
Ottoman Hungary
Ottoman legal history
Patrona Halil
Religious Article
religious minorities governance
Religious Privileges
Religious Provisions
Savary De
Selim II
Sultan Mehmed IV
Unmentioned Faith
Venetian Bailo

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367355517
  • Weight: 590g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 02 Sep 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This volume investigates how the peace and trade agreements, better known as capitulations, regulated Catholics in the Ottoman Empire.

As one of the many non-Muslim groups that made up Ottoman society, Catholic communities were scattered around the Empire, from the Hungarian plains to the Aegean Islands and Palestine. Besides the more famous cases of the French capitulations of 1604 and 1673, this work explores the evolution of often ignored religious privileges granted by the Ottoman sultans to the Catholic rulers of Venice, the Holy Roman Empire, and Poland-Lithuania, as well as to the Protestant Dutch Republic and Orthodox Russia. While focused on the seventeenth century, precedents of the fifteenth century and later developments in the eighteenth century are also considered. This volume shows that capitulations essentially addressed the presence and religious activities of Catholic laymen and clerics and the status of churches. Furthermore, it demonstrates that European translations, the primary sources of previous scholarly works, offered a flawed perspective over the status of Catholics under Muslim rule.

By drawing heavily on both original Ottoman-Turkish texts and previously unpublished archival material, this volume is an ideal resource for all scholars interested in the history of Catholicism in the seventeenth-century Ottoman Empire.

Radu Dipratu is a historian at the Institute for South-East European Studies of the Romanian Academy in Bucharest. His main research topics are Ottoman diplomatics and Catholics in the Ottoman Empire in the early modern age, on which he has written several articles such as ‘Visiting the Noble Jerusalem: Catholic Pilgrims in the Ottoman Capitulations of the Seventeenth Century’ (2018) and ‘The Valona Affair (1638), its Ensuing Anti-Piracy nişan and the Development of Ottoman-Venetian Peace Agreements’ (2020).

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