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Transforming Empire: The Ottomans from the Mediterranean to the Indian Ocean

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This book places the Ottoman Empire within the global context and provides insight into the multifaceted transimperial and transnational connections that characterized it in different periods. It f...
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  • 26 September 2024
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This book places the Ottoman Empire within the global context and provides insight into the multifaceted transimperial and transnational connections that characterized it in different periods. It focuses on the connections, interactions, exchanges, networks and flows in and around the Ottoman Empire. Contributions in the book reflect the evolving and dynamic nature of the Ottoman Empire from different angles.

Contributors are Ali Atabey, Serpil Atamaz, Lee Beaudoen, Emine Evered, Kyle Evered, Richard Eaton, Ziad Fahmy, Gülsüm Gürbüz-Küçüksarı, Onur İnal, Christine Isom-Verhaaren, Myrsini Manney-Kalogera, Claudia Römer, Alexander Schweig, Gül Şen, Baki Tezcan, Fariba Zarinebaf.
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Price: $114.00
Pages: 318
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Publication Date: 26 September 2024
ISBN: 9789004704343
Format: Hardcover
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Serpil Atamaz, Ph.D. (2010), University of Arizona, is Associate Professor of History at California State University, Sacramento. She has published several book chapters and journal articles on women, revolution, and war in the late Ottoman Empire and on Ottoman and Iranian constitutionalists.

Onur İnal, Ph.D. (2015), University of Arizona, is an environmental historian based in the Near Eastern Studies Department of the University of Vienna. He is the author of Gateway to the Mediterranean: An Environmental History of Late Ottoman Izmir (Cambridge University Press, forthcoming), and several edited collections and articles on the Ottoman Empire and modern Turkey.

Alexander Schweig, Ph.D. (2019), University of Arizona, is a lecturer in the Department of History at the University of Arizona. His research focuses on the intersections between social, technological, medical, and environmental history. His most recent article is “Progressing into Disaster: The Railroad and the Spread of Cholera in a Provincial Ottoman Town,” published in History of Science.