Living in the Ottoman Realm. Empire and Identity, 13th to 20th Centuries

(Grace) #1
Wilkins|149

. Other notable merchant families appearing in the court records include that of Ibn al-
Bajaqji (see SMS, 2:463; Ibn al-Hanbali, Durr al-habab, 2:520) and Ibn Abi Asbaɇ (see SMS, 1:155;
Ibn al-Hanbali, Durr al-habab, 2:612).
. For examples of each of these arrangements, see SMS, 1:59, 1:226, 1:285, 3:134, and 4:88.
.SMS, 3:87.
. See, for example, Sahillioğlu, “Slaves in the Social and Economic Life of Bursa,” 74.
.SMS, 1:262 (translation mine).
. For more on this kind of fabric, see Establet and Pascual, Des tissus et des hommes,
133–136.
.SMS, 1:18.
.SMS, 1:178.
. See SMS, 1:59, 1:63, 1:178, 1:244, 1:265, 1:302, 1:324, 1:329, 3:71, 3:135, 4:93, 4:100, and 4:624.
. Masters, Origins of Western Economic Dominance, 11–18.
. Doumani, Rediscovering Palestine, 135–136; Johansen, “Contract for Delivery with
Prepayment (Salam) in Islamic Law.”
.SMS, 1:124, 1:304, 3:87.
. Inalcik, Economic and Social History, 1:218–255.
.SMS, 1:82, 1:347.
.SMS, 1:187, 1:245.
.SMS, 4:398, 4:411, 4:412, 4:624.
. See, for example, SMS, 1:82, 1:178, 1:187, and 1:245.
. See, for example, SMS, 1:226, 3:76, 3:135, and 4:93.
. Masters, “Patterns of Migration.”

Free download pdf