Global Information Lookup Global Information

Ottoman decline thesis information


In 1683 the Ottoman Empire reached its maximum territorial extent in Europe, during the period formerly labelled as one of stagnation and decline.

The Ottoman decline thesis or Ottoman decline paradigm (Turkish: Osmanlı Gerileme Tezi) is an obsolete[1] historical narrative which once played a dominant role in the study of the history of the Ottoman Empire. According to the decline thesis, following a golden age associated with the reign of Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent (r. 1520–1566), the empire gradually entered into a period of all-encompassing stagnation and decline from which it was never able to recover, lasting until the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire in 1923.[2] This thesis was used throughout most of the twentieth century as the basis of both Western and Republican Turkish[3] understanding of Ottoman history. However, by 1978, historians had begun to reexamine the fundamental assumptions of the decline thesis.[4]

After the publication of numerous new studies throughout the 1980s, 1990s, and 2000s, and the reexamination of Ottoman history through the use of previously untapped sources and methodologies, academic historians of the Ottoman Empire achieved a consensus that the entire notion of Ottoman decline was a myth – that in fact, the Ottoman Empire remained a vigorous and dynamic state long after the death of Suleiman the Magnificent.[1] The decline thesis has been criticized as "teleological", "regressive", "orientalist", "simplistic", and "one-dimensional",[5] and described as "a concept which has no place in historical analysis".[6] Scholars have thus "learned better than to discuss [it]."[7]

Despite this dramatic paradigm shift among professional historians, the decline thesis continues to maintain a strong presence in popular history, as well as academic history written by scholars who are not specialists on the Ottoman Empire. In some cases this is due to the continued reliance by non-specialists on outdated and debunked works,[8] and in others to certain political interests benefiting from the continued perpetuation of the decline narrative.[9]

  1. ^ a b Hathaway, Jane (2008). The Arab Lands under Ottoman Rule, 1516–1800. Pearson Education Ltd. pp. 7–8. ISBN 978-0-582-41899-8. One of the most momentous changes to have occurred in Ottoman studies since the publication of Egypt and the Fertile Crescent [1966] is the deconstruction of the so-called 'Ottoman decline thesis' – that is, the notion that toward the end of the sixteenth century, following the reign of Sultan Suleyman I (1520–66), the empire entered a lengthy decline from which it never truly recovered, despite heroic attempts at westernizing reforms in the nineteenth century. Over the last twenty years or so, as Chapter 4 will point out, historians of the Ottoman Empire have rejected the narrative of decline in favour of one of crisis and adaptation
    • Kunt, Metin (1995). "Introduction to Part I". In Kunt, Metin; Christine Woodhead (eds.). Süleyman the Magnificent and His Age: the Ottoman Empire in the Early Modern World. London and New York: Longman. pp. 37–38. students of Ottoman history have learned better than to discuss a "decline" which supposedly began during the reigns of Süleyman's "ineffectual" successors and then continued for centuries.
    • Tezcan, Baki (2010). The Second Ottoman Empire: Political and Social Transformation in the Early Modern Period. Cambridge University Press. p. 9. ISBN 978-1-107-41144-9. Ottomanist historians have produced several works in the last decades, revising the traditional understanding of this period from various angles, some of which were not even considered as topics of historical inquiry in the mid-twentieth century. Thanks to these works, the conventional narrative of Ottoman history – that in the late sixteenth century the Ottoman Empire entered a prolonged period of decline marked by steadily increasing military decay and institutional corruption – has been discarded.
    • Woodhead, Christine (2011). "Introduction". In Christine Woodhead (ed.). The Ottoman World. p. 5. ISBN 978-0-415-44492-7. Ottomanist historians have largely jettisoned the notion of a post-1600 'decline'
    • Ehud Toledano (2011). "The Arabic-speaking world in the Ottoman period: A socio-political analysis". In Woodhead, Christine (ed.). The Ottoman World. Routledge. p. 457. ISBN 978-0-415-44492-7. In the scholarly literature produced by Ottomanists since the mid-1970s, the hitherto prevailing view of Ottoman decline has been effectively debunked.
    • Leslie Peirce, "Changing Perceptions of the Ottoman Empire: the Early Centuries," Mediterranean Historical Review 19/1 (2004): 22.
    • Cemal Kafadar, "The Question of Ottoman Decline," Harvard Middle Eastern and Islamic Review 4/1–2 (1997–98), pp. 30–75.
    • M. Fatih Çalışır, "Decline of a 'Myth': Perspectives on the Ottoman 'Decline'," The History School 9 (2011): 37–60.
    • Donald Quataert, "Ottoman History Writing and Changing Attitudes towards the Notion of 'Decline,'" History Compass 1 (2003)
  2. ^ Linda Darling, Revenue Raising and Legitimacy: Tax Collection and Finance Administration in the Ottoman Empire, 1560–1660 (Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1996), [1].
    • Günhan Börekçi, "Factions and Favorites at the Courts of Sultan Ahmed I (r. 1603–1617) and His Immediate Predecessors," PhD dissertation (The Ohio State University, 2010), 5.
  3. ^ Suraiya Faroqhi, The Ottoman Empire and the World Around It (I. B. Tauris, 2004; 2011), pp. 42–43.
    • Virginia Aksan, "Ottoman to Turk: Continuity and Change," International Journal 61 (Winter 2005/6): 19–38.
  4. ^ Howard, Douglas A. "Genre and myth in the Ottoman advice for kings literature," in Aksan, Virginia H. and Daniel Goffman eds. The Early Modern Ottomans: Remapping the Empire (Cambridge University Press, 2007; 2009), 143.
  5. ^ Darling, Revenue-Raising and Legitimacy, 4.
    • Abou-El-Haj, Formation of the Modern State, pp. 3–4.
    • Karen Barkey, Bandits and Bureaucrats: The Ottoman Route to State Centralization, (Cornell University Press, 1994), ix.
  6. ^ Finkel, Caroline (1988). The Administration of Warfare: The Ottoman Military Campaigns in Hungary, 1593–1606. Vienna: VWGÖ. p. 143. ISBN 3-85369-708-9.
  7. ^ Kunt, Metin (1995). "Introduction to Part I". In Kunt, Metin; Christine Woodhead (eds.). Süleyman the Magnificent and His Age: the Ottoman Empire in the Early Modern World. London and New York: Longman. pp. 37–38. students of Ottoman history have learned better than to discuss a "decline" which supposedly began during the reigns of Süleyman's "ineffectual" successors and then continued for centuries.
  8. ^ Ehud Toledano (2011). "The Arabic-speaking world in the Ottoman period: A socio-political analysis". In Woodhead, Christine (ed.). The Ottoman World. Routledge. p. 457. ISBN 978-0-415-44492-7. In the scholarly literature produced by Ottomanists since the mid-1970s, the hitherto prevailing view of Ottoman decline has been effectively debunked. However, only too often, the results of painstaking research and innovative revisions offered in that literature have not yet percolated down to scholars working outside Ottoman studies. Historians in adjacent fields have tended to rely on earlier classics and later uninformed surveys which perpetuate older, now deconstructed, views.
  9. ^ Dana Sajdi refers on the one hand to nationalists in post-Ottoman regions of the world, and on the other, to the supporters of imperialistic intervention in the Middle East among some politicians in the West. Sajdi, Dana (2007). "Decline, its Discontents, and Ottoman Cultural History: By Way of Introduction". In Sajdi, Dana (ed.). Ottoman Tulips, Ottoman Coffee: Leisure and Lifestyle in the Eighteenth Century. London: I.B. Taurus. pp. 38–9.

and 26 Related for: Ottoman decline thesis information

Request time (Page generated in 0.8289 seconds.)

Ottoman decline thesis

Last Update:

The Ottoman decline thesis or Ottoman decline paradigm (Turkish: Osmanlı Gerileme Tezi) is an obsolete historical narrative which once played a dominant...

Word Count : 8348

Decline

Last Update:

(disambiguation) Declinism Decline and Fall (disambiguation) Decline of the Roman Empire Decline of Detroit Ottoman decline thesis The Decline of the West by Oswald...

Word Count : 127

Historiography of the Ottoman Empire

Last Update:

Empire (such as Ottoman decline thesis) has attracted scholars of the histories of the Middle East (such as Partition of the Ottoman Empire), and Greece...

Word Count : 1705

Ghaza thesis

Last Update:

The Ghaza or Ghazi thesis (from Ottoman Turkish: غزا, ġazā, "holy war", or simply "raid") is a historical paradigm first formulated by Paul Wittek which...

Word Count : 2472

History of the Ottoman Empire

Last Update:

north. According to the Ottoman decline thesis, Suleiman's reign was the zenith of the Ottoman classical period, during which Ottoman culture, arts, and political...

Word Count : 11543

Ottoman Old Regime

Last Update:

to believe that the Ottoman Empire was in decline during this period, part of the larger and now debunked Ottoman Decline Thesis, but it is now recognized...

Word Count : 4405

Ottoman Empire

Last Update:

ISBN 978-0-688-08093-8. popular history espouses old "decline" thesis Kuban, Doğan (2010). Ottoman Architecture. Translated by Mill, Adair. Antique Collectors'...

Word Count : 27749

Outline of the Ottoman Empire

Last Update:

Constitutional Era Ottoman Decline Thesis Ghaza thesis Renegade thesis Historiography of the fall of the Ottoman Empire Economic history of the Ottoman Empire State...

Word Count : 1596

Economic history of the Ottoman Empire

Last Update:

the Ottoman Empire covers the period 1299–1923. Trade, agriculture, transportation, and religion make up the Ottoman Empire's economy. The Ottomans saw...

Word Count : 6498

Transformation of the Ottoman Empire

Last Update:

was once characterized as a period of decline for the Ottomans, but since the 1980s historians of the Ottoman Empire have increasingly rejected that...

Word Count : 15418

Abolition of the Ottoman sultanate

Last Update:

Bulgarian and Serb subjects left the empire during the decline and modernization of the Ottoman Empire (1828–1908), while the Albanian and Armenian (Armenian...

Word Count : 1190

Sick man of Europe

Last Update:

also referred to the decline of the Ottoman Empire in terms of the balance of power in Europe. After the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire in the early...

Word Count : 3178

Janissary

Last Update:

Empire Saqaliba Genízaro Ottoman decline thesis The Auspicious Incident Agha, a civilian and military title in the Ottoman Empire Malassay, elite infantry...

Word Count : 6067

Socioeconomics of the Ottoman enlargement era

Last Update:

however, remained effective and efficient in conducting foreign policy, gains in Europe being evidence for this. History of Turkey Ottoman Decline Thesis...

Word Count : 278

Frontier Thesis

Last Update:

The Frontier Thesis, also known as Turner's Thesis or American frontierism, is the argument advanced by historian Frederick Jackson Turner in 1893 that...

Word Count : 5229

Rise of the Ottoman Empire

Last Update:

covered the whole world.” This is known as the Gaza Thesis, a now largely-criticised theory of early Ottoman expansion. After the Battle of Manzikert (1071)...

Word Count : 10289

Continuity thesis

Last Update:

In the history of ideas, the continuity thesis is the hypothesis that there was no radical discontinuity between the intellectual development of the Middle...

Word Count : 2467

Abdulaziz

Last Update:

Abdulaziz (Ottoman Turkish: عبد العزيز, romanized: ʿAbdü'l-ʿAzîz; Turkish: Abdülaziz; 8 February 1830 – 4 June 1876) was the sultan of the Ottoman Empire...

Word Count : 3818

Tanzimat

Last Update:

1847 Decline and modernization of the Ottoman Empire Ottoman military reforms Edict of Gülhane or Tanzimât (تنظيمات) Fermânı (3 November 1839) Ottoman Reform...

Word Count : 3712

Phanariots

Last Update:

Greek ascendancy can be traced to the Ottoman need for skilled, educated negotiators as their empire declined and they relied on treaties rather than...

Word Count : 3840

Military of the Ottoman Empire

Last Update:

and decline period covers the years between 1861 (enthronement of Sultan Abdülaziz) and 1918 (Armistice of Mudros).[citation needed] The Ottoman army...

Word Count : 4434

Ottoman Empire in World War I

Last Update:

The Ottoman Empire came into World War I as one of the Central Powers. The Ottoman Empire entered the war by carrying out a small surprise attack on the...

Word Count : 7102

Late Ottoman genocides

Last Update:

The late Ottoman genocides is a historiographical theory which sees the concurrent Armenian, Greek, and Assyrian genocides that occurred during the 1910s–1920s...

Word Count : 777

Culture of the Ottoman Empire

Last Update:

The culture of the Ottoman Empire evolved over several centuries as the ruling administration of the Turks absorbed, adapted and modified the various...

Word Count : 3886

Ibn Saud

Last Update:

Diriyah, the First Saudi State, until its destruction by an Ottoman army in the Ottoman–Wahhabi War in the early nineteenth century. Abdulaziz bin Abdul...

Word Count : 7612

Ottoman entry into World War I

Last Update:

20th century, the Ottoman Empire had a reputation as the "sick man of Europe" after a century of slow relative decline. The Ottomans were weakened by political...

Word Count : 7598

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net