A History of Ottoman Political Thought Up to the Early Nineteenth Century
The “Golden Age” as a Political Agenda 209 a story he relates, one of the things that can destroy a powerful state is that the g ...
210 chapter 5 should not be more than four in the first telhis and in Aziz Efendi (the same idea was implied in the anonymous Hi ...
The “Golden Age” as a Political Agenda 211 solution, therefore, is simple: the timariot army must be looked after and in- crease ...
212 chapter 5 ask them what should be done with people who belong to the military but are unfit for their role or are occupied i ...
The “Golden Age” as a Political Agenda 213 throughout the seventeenth century, in what Rifaat Abou-El-Haj labelled “the tendency ...
214 chapter 5 to what they perceived as Ottoman decline had moved a step further. Instead of locating the shortcomings of the pr ...
The “Golden Age” as a Political Agenda 215 above.50 This Risâle is a kind of memorandum submitted to Sultan Ibrahim as soon as t ...
216 chapter 5 3.1 Sanctifying Janissary and Landholding Regulations: the Early Seventeenth Century This discussion began with Ko ...
The “Golden Age” as a Political Agenda 217 intruders,54 the dangers of bribery, the need for discipline, and the prohibition aga ...
218 chapter 5 and external peace that had prevailed for a number of years must have caused the increased production of “administ ...
The “Golden Age” as a Political Agenda 219 campaign; on the other, the inspections due in each campaign are not con- ducted prop ...
220 chapter 5 Ömer Efendi b. Mustafa also belonged to the bureaucracy: he was trained in the scribal service of the divan and at ...
The “Golden Age” as a Political Agenda 221 they certainly do pertain to political thought. Together with the “declinist” treatis ...
222 chapter 5 in Istanbul and served in the financial bureaucracy, being a protégé of Köprülü Fazıl Ahmed Pasha. He was a polyma ...
The “Golden Age” as a Political Agenda 223 the etymology of the name Istanbul from εις την Πόλιν: I46); the mosques, schools, ma ...
224 chapter 5 Some of Hezarfen’s comments are also very similar to advice contained in early seventeenth-century works, such as ...
The “Golden Age” as a Political Agenda 225 regulation of fixed prices. In fact, he says, this matter is a public issue (umur-ı k ...
226 chapter 5 the four-fold division of society as “people of the pen” in their own right, were now also considered part of the ...
The “Golden Age” as a Political Agenda 227 representative.80 Furthermore, the term he uses for the state, “subdivision” or, lite ...
228 chapter 5 the position of Crete in the list (Hezarfen, writing just after its final conquest, had placed the island after th ...
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