Honored by the Glory of Islam. Conversion and Conquest in Ottoman Europe

(Dana P.) #1

  1. Gabrielle M. Spiegel, The Past as Text: The Theory and Practice of Medieval His-
    toriography (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1 997), 43, 44–56.

  2. Julie Scott Meisami, Persian Historiography: To the End of the Twelfth Century
    (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1 999), 6.

  3. According to Piterberg, An Ottoman Tragedy. But see Gottfried Hagen’s review
    of Piterberg, http://www.h-net.org/~turk/ (accessed March 2006).

  4. Paul Strohm, England’s Empty Throne, Usurpation and the Language of Legitima-
    tion, 1399–1422 (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1 998), xi.

  5. Meisami, Persian Historiography, 11 – 1 2.

  6. ‘Îsâ-zâde, ‘Îsâ-zâde Târîhi, quoted by Naima, Tarih-i Naima, 6:362; Karaçelebi-
    zade, Ravzatü’l-ebrâr zeyli, 227, 244, 267.

  7. See Cornell Fleischer, Bureaucrat and Intellectual in the Ottoman Empire: The
    Historian Mustafa Âli (1541–1600) (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1 986).
    1 0. See Bernard Lewis, “Ottoman Observers of Ottoman Decline,” Islamic Stud-
    ies 1 , no. 1 ( 1 962): 7 1 –87; Pál Fodor, “State and Society, Crisis and Reform, in 1 5th– 1 7th
    Century Ottoman Mirror for Princes,” in Fodor, In Quest of the Golden Apple, 23–44;
    Cornell Fleischer, “From Şehzade Korkud to Mustafa Âli: Cultural Origins of the Otto-
    man Nasihatname,” in Proceedings, 3rd Congress on the Social and Economic History of
    Turkey, Princeton University, August 24–26, 1 983, ed. Heath Lowry and Ralph S. Hat-
    tox (Istanbul: Isis Press, 1 989), 67–77; Goffman, The Ottoman Empire and Early Modern
    Europe, 11 2–27.

  8. Itzkowitz, Ottoman Empire and Islamic Tradition, 90–9 1.
    1 2. Halil Inalcik, “Military and Fiscal Transformation in the Ottoman Empire,
    1 600– 1 700,” Archivum Ottomanicum 6 ( 1 980): 283–337.
    1 3. Oktay Özel, “Population Changes in Ottoman Anatolia during the 1 6th and


1 7th Centuries: The ‘Demographic Crisis’ Reconsidered,” International Journal of Middle
East Studies 36 (2004): 1 88, 1 94–95.


1 4. The similar transformation that occurred in the Ottoman, Safavid, and Mughal
empires is synthesized in C. A. Bayly, Imperial Meridian: The British Empire and the


World, 1780–1830 (London: Longman, 1 989), 1 6–34.
1 5. Daniel Goffman, “Izmir: From Village to Colonial Port City,” in The Ottoman


City between East and West: Aleppo, Izmir, and Istanbul, ed. Edhem Eldem, Daniel Goff-
man, and Bruce Masters (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1 999), 79– 1 34.


1 6. Karaçelebizade, Ravzatü’l-ebrâr zeyli, 2 1 6, 223.
1 7. Ibid., 249.


1 8. Cemal Kafadar, “The Myth of the Golden Age: Ottoman Historical Conscious-
ness in the Post Süleymânic Era,” in Süleymân the Second and His Time, ed. Halil İnalcik


and Cemal Kafadar (Istanbul: Isis Press, 1 993), 37–48.
1 9. Katip Çelebi, Fezleke, 2:36 1.




  1. V. J. Parry, “The Period of Murād IV, 161 7–48,” in Cook, A History of the Otto-
    man Empire to 1730, 1 39.




  2. Ahmed Dede, Jami’ al-Duwal, fol. 773b.




  3. Katip Çelebi, Fezleke, 2:369.




  4. Solakzade, Tarih-i Al-i Osman, fol. 474a; Naima, Tarih-i Naima, 5:73.




266 notes to pages 41–45
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