The Edinburgh history of the Greeks, 1453 to 1768 : the Ottoman Empire

Author(s)

Bibliographic Information

The Edinburgh history of the Greeks, 1453 to 1768 : the Ottoman Empire

Molly Greene

(The Edinburgh history of the Greeks)

Edinburgh University Press, c2015

  • : pbk
  • : hardback

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [218]-232) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

: hardback ISBN 9780748639274

Description

The Edinburgh History of the Greeks is a 10-volume series covering the history of Greece and the Greeks, over the last 3,500 years, from antiquity to the present. Each volume combines political history with social and cultural history to tell the story of the Greek people in an exciting, novel and innovatory way.
Volume

: pbk ISBN 9780748693993

Description

Provides a nuanced picture of the Greek experience in the Ottoman empire. The period of Ottoman rule in Greek history has undergone a dramatic reassessment in recent years. Long reviled as four hundred years of unrelieved slavery and barbarity ('the Turkish yoke'), a new generation of scholars, based mainly but not exclusively in Greece, is rejecting this view in favor of a more nuanced picture of the Greek experience in the Ottoman Empire. This volume considers this new scholarship, most of it in Greek, and makes it accessible for the first time to a wider audience. Molly Greene also discusses the changing views of the Ottoman Empire more generally and assesses what this changing historiography can tell us about this period in Greek history. The book begins with the conventional date of 1453, the fall of Constantinople, and includes debates over the extent to which 1453 represented a real break with the past. The volume ends with the Russo Ottoman War of 1768 - 1774, which brought to an end the relative peace and stability of the Ottoman eighteenth century and helped to usher in the nationalist movements in the region. It covers the period from the fall of Constantinople to the Russo Ottoman War; It assesses new scholarship on the period and synthesises this for the reader; the fate of the 1,000 year Byzantine heritage; the millet system and Ottoman society; the connections between the Greek population and other members of Ottoman society and the Greeks in a European context.

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