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Towns and Townsmen of Ottoman Anatolia book cover
Towns and Townsmen of Ottoman Anatolia
Trade, Crafts and Food Production in an Urban Setting 1520-1650
1984
First Published
4.00
Average Rating
440
Number of Pages

Günümüzün önemli araştırma konularından biri, kentleşme ve kentlere göç olgusudur. Türkiye'nin özellikle 1950'lerden bu yana yaşadığı bu olgunun tarihteki köklerine inmeye ne dersiniz? Tarihçi Suraiya Faroqhi, 15. ve 16. yüzyıllar Anadolu'su için yaptığı bu çalışmada, Anadolu kentlerini ve kentlilerini incelemekle kalmıyor, günümüz için de önemli ipuçları veriyor. Elinizdeki çalışma, nüfus yapılarında, ekonomik temellerde, göçlerde yoğunlaşıyor. Tarihi sürükleyici bir metin haline getirerek okura ulaştıran Faroqhi, kent mekanının bireyle bütünleşmesini yansıtıyor. Kitap, siyasal tarihin ötesinde olmanın özelliğiyle de bir temel kaynak olarak hak ettiği yeri alıyor.

Avg Rating
4.00
Number of Ratings
18
5 STARS
22%
4 STARS
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3 STARS
11%
2 STARS
6%
1 STARS
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Author

Suraiya Faroqhi
Suraiya Faroqhi
Author · 11 books

Suraiya Faroqhi was born in Berlin to a German mother and Indian father in 1941. She studied at Hamburg University and she came to Istanbul through a university exchange program when she was 21. At Istanbul University, she became a student of Ömer Lütfi Barkan. She completed her master's degree in Hamburg and between 1968-1970 she studied English Language Teaching at Indiana University-Bloomington. After her post-doctorate, she worked as English Lecturer at METU. She retired from METU in 1987 and from München Ludwig Maximillan Universität in 2005. A turning point in her life came in 1962-63, when she took the opportunity to go to Istanbul University on a fellowship as an exchange student. Subsequently she became a student of Ömer Lüfti Barkan, one of the founding fathers of Ottoman history and an editor of Annales. When she first read Fernand Braudel at Barkan’s insistence, she “had the feeling that’s the sort of thing I wanted to do.” She wrote her doctoral thesis at Hamburg on a set of documents that a late 16th-century vizier submitted to his sultan discussing Ottoman politics at the time.[1] She is regarded as one of the most important economic and social historians of the Ottoman Empire working today. Professor Faroqhi has written substantially on Ottoman urban history, arts and crafts, and on the hitherto underrepresented world of the ordinary people in the empire. She is well known for her distinctive approach to Ottoman everyday life and public culture. She has published numerous books and articles in the field of pre- modern Ottoman history.

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