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Author Baer, Marc David, 1970- author.

Title The Ottomans : khans, caesars, and caliphs / Marc David Baer.

Publication Info. New York : Basic Books, 2021.

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 Bristol, Main Library - Non Fiction  956.015 BAER    Check Shelf
 Enfield, Main Library - Adult Department  956.015 BAE    Check Shelf
 Farmington, Main Library - Adult Department  956.015 BAE    Check Shelf
 Glastonbury, Welles-Turner Memorial Library - Adult Department  956.015 BAER    Check Shelf
 Manchester, Main Library - Non Fiction  956.015    Check Shelf
 New Britain, Main Library - Non Fiction  956.015 BAE    Check Shelf
 Portland Public Library - Adult Department  956.015 BAE    Check Shelf
 Windsor Locks Public Library - Adult Department  956.015 BAE    Check Shelf
Edition First edition.
Description viii, 543 pages, 16 unnumbered leaves of plates : illustrations, maps ; 25 cm
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Summary "Ever since an Ottoman army led by Mehmed II conquered Constantinople in 1453, it has been common to see the Ottoman Empire as the Islamic, Asian antithesis of the Christian, European West. But in reality the Ottoman dynasty ruled a multiethnic, multilingual, and multireligious empire that stretched across parts of Europe, Africa, and Asia. The Ottomans: Sultans, Khans, and Caesars offers a bold new history of this empire that straddled East and West for nearly five hundred years and negotiated the challenges of religious difference in ways that had a profound influence on the emergence of our modern world. As historian Marc David Baer shows, the Ottomans enjoyed a tripartite inheritance as they rose from a frontier principality to a world empire. The dynasty's origins can be traced to the tribes of Turks and Tatars pushed westward into Anatolia by Mongol expansion in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. But it was equally indebted to the Islamic scholars and Sufi sheikhs who proselytized Islam across this region and legitimated Ottoman rule. And from the Byzantine empire they supplanted, the Ottomans borrowed bureaucracy, culture, and claims to universal rule as the successors of Rome. Ottoman rulers did not only call themselves khans and sultans, but also caliphs, emperors, and caesars. The Ottomans managed their diverse empire by striking a delicate balance: amid a profoundly hierarchal society, they pioneered the principles and practices of toleration of religious minorities, even as they also freely used religious conversion to integrate conquered peoples into the imperial project. Indeed, the Ottomans were the only world empire to rely on converts to make up its ruling dynasty and to populate its military and administrative leadership. By receiving them as converts to Islam, they brought everyone from Byzantine and Serbian royalty to enslaved captives to common herdsmen into the elite fold as princesses, statesmen, and battlefield commanders. It was only in the final decades of the nineteenth century that the Ottomans began to turn away from this approach, trying to save the empire by making it into an exclusively Ottoman Muslim polity, and then into a Turkish one. The tragic consequence was ethnic cleansing and genocide, and the dynasty's demise in the wake of the First World War. For better and for worse, the Ottoman Empire was as magnificent and as horrible as any of its European contemporaries. The Ottomans reveals its history in full, showing how again and again it remade the world from the Renaissance and the Enlightenment to the dawn of a brutal century world war"-- Provided by publisher.
Subject Turkey -- History -- Ottoman Empire, 1288-1918.
Turkey. (OCoLC)fst01208963
Chronological Term 1288-1918
Genre/Form History. (OCoLC)fst01411628
History.
Other Form: ebook version : 9781473695726
ISBN 9781541673809 (hardcover)
1541673808 (hardcover)
9781473695702 (hardback)
1473695708 (hardback)
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