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Revenue-Raising and Legitimacy

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This study examines for the first time the finance procedures and documents of the post-classical Ottoman Empire. It provides an overview of institutional and monetary history and a detailed descri...
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  • 01 February 1996
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This study examines for the first time the finance procedures and documents of the post-classical Ottoman Empire. It provides an overview of institutional and monetary history and a detailed description of assessment and collection processes for Cizye, Avariz and Iltizam-collected taxes, the documents produced by these processes, and the information they contain. The finance department's detailed record-keeping, procedural continuity, and provision of economic justice made it a bulwark of stability in a period of turmoil.
For specialists, this book introduces a multitude of sources on the economic and social history of the post-classical age, while for comparativists it places the empire in its seventeenth-century context. It links Ottoman administrative change with early modern state formation and reformulates the seventeenth century as a period of consolidation, not decline.
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Price: $331.00
Pages: 368
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Publication Date: 01 February 1996
ISBN: 9789004102897
Format: Other
REVIEWS Icon
'...zeigt das Buch von Darling die Komplexität der Problematik deutlich auf und bietet nicht nur die Darstellung des vorhandenen Wissens über einige Aspekte des damaligen Finanzsystems, sondern stellt auch zahlreiche bislang ungenügend behandelte Fragestellungen für künftige Forschungen zusammen.'
Ariba Romovic, Súdost-Forschungen, 1998.
'...a book that sillfully details and maps the labyrinth of Ottoman revenu-raising system. The author's command of archival material is intelligently supported by a reading of a wide-ranging secondary source base.'
Faruk Tabak, New Perspectives on Turkey, 1996.
'...the contribution of Linda Darling to a better knowledge of Ottoman history is impressive and will have to be taken into account by all further research.'
Bogdan Murgescu, Journal of South-East European Studies, 1997.
Linda T. Darling, Ph.D. (1990) in History, University of Chicago, is Assistant Professor of History at the University of Arizona. She has published articles on the Ottoman fiscal system and finance documents.