Introduction a l’Histoire Urbaine de la Syrie Ottomane (XVIe-XVIIIe siecle).

Abdel Nour, Antoine.

Book ID: 34469

£65.00

ADD TO BASKET
8vo. xviii, 422 pp., maps, tables, publisher’s original wrappers, title in red and black ink, title in Arabic & French, cover in French lightly creased, otherwise copy clean and in very good condition, Publications de l’Universite Libanaise, Section des Etudes Historique XXV, Librairie Orientale, Beyrouth, 1982.

Synopsis

A body of work on the social history of Ottoman Syria has developed in the years since 1980, written largely from the perspective of the region’s cities. Material from the interior towns of Aleppo, Damascus, Hama, Nablus and Jerusalem all has contributed to the literature. This article highlights major issues broached in the international scholarship. Topics include social bases of political factionalism, histories of elites and commoners, families and gender roles in various aspects of urban life, marginalized populations including prostitutes and slaves, and relationships between Muslims and non-Muslims in Ottoman Syrian towns. Although Ottoman provincial histories are sometimes criticized as being anachronistically proto-nationalist, the literature under review largely avoids this characterization. Its authors aim to explain the past, and sometimes to relate the past to the Middle East’s national present, but they do so within the historical context of the Ottoman sultanate.

© 2024 Folios limited. All rights reserved.