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Academic literature on the topic 'Empire ottoman – 1829-1878'
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Journal articles on the topic "Empire ottoman – 1829-1878"
Spînu, Alin. "Romanians and Bulgarians – Incidents at the Danube River Border (1890-1901)." Romanian Military Thinking 2024, no. 1 (March 30, 2024): 230–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.55535/rmt.2024.1.14.
Full textNicolae, Daniel Silviu. "Romanians and Bulgarians – Incidents at the Danube River Border (1890-1901)." Gândirea Militară Românească 2024, no. 1 (March 30, 2024): 246–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.55535/gmr.2024.1.15.
Full textNicolae, Daniel Silviu. "Romanians and Bulgarians – Incidents at the Danube River Border (1890-1901)." Gândirea Militară Românească 2024, no. 1 (March 30, 2024): 246–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.55535/rmt.2024.1.15.
Full textVarshanidze, Nadim, and Emzar Kakhidze. "SOME ISSUES ON NATIONAL IDENTITY OF GEORGIAN MUSLIMS." Pro Georgia, no. 32/2022 (January 1, 2022): 247–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.32690/1230-1604/pg32/varshanidze/kakhidze.
Full textShevchenko, Andrii. "INTERNATIONAL SETTLEMENT OF COMMERCIAL SHIPPING ON THE LOWER DANUBE IN THE XIX – EARLY XX CENTURIES." European Historical Studies, no. 21 (2022): 127–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.17721/2524-048x.2022.21.9.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Empire ottoman – 1829-1878"
Bouquet, Olivier. "Les pachas du sultan : essai prosopographique sur les agents supérieurs de l'Etat ottoman (1839-1909)." Paris, EHESS, 2004. http://www.theses.fr/2004EHES0151.
Full textThe Ottoman pashas were registered as high ranking civil and military officials in the personnel recordds created during Abdülhamid II's rule (1876-1909). The serial examination of a sample of nearly three hundred biographies attempts to establish a prosopography along three tracks : first, an analysis of the main features of the pashas delineating more or less a status group ; second, a study of ottoman socialization adressing individuals as created by a social, educational and linguistic environment; third, a reconstruction of successive stages of their lives, through administrative procedures and career patterns. It emerges from the investigation that the pashas contributed both to perserving the ethic of the Ottoman institutions as the Sultan's servants and to reform as imperial administrators
Tanik, Meric. "Y a-t-il une science ottomane ? Circulation des savoirs et fabrique des disciplines agronomique, forestière et vétérinaire (1840-1940)." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Paris, EHESS, 2024. http://www.theses.fr/2024EHES0054.
Full textThis thesis investigates scientific knowledge on the move. I examine the transnational construction of agronomy, forestry, and veterinary medicine in the late Ottoman Empire and early Republican Turkey (1840-1940) with knowledge imported from other countries, notably from France. The study aims to answer two questions: why and how did knowledge in these emerging fields circulate, and what happened to this knowledge in its new context?My research establishes that the highly indebted Ottoman government invested in these then-nascent disciplines and financed the mobility of persons and objects – students, experts, instruments – mainly because the Empire’s vast natural resources were perceived as capable of alleviating economic distress by generating financial gains. The Ottomans’ focus on the primary sector suited the European powers, as they wanted to import such goods and export industrial products to the Empire. Scholarly mobilities were also encouraged because France, locked in a competition with its neighbors in its quest for scientific supremacy, sought to raise the profile of “French science” around the world. My micro-level approach makes it possible to identify the impact of ordinary personal ambitions. French experts willingly sailed off for the Empire as they occupied coveted positions that paid three to four times more than in France. It was also an opportunity to conduct research in a new geo-climatic zone and publish original works. For Ottoman students, a foreign degree represented a means of gaining access to better employment in the Empire, not to mention the symbolic functions of studying in Europe, which conferred on them the legitimacy of the status of cultured men.My thesis demonstrates that there is no such thing as an identical copy. Contrary to previous works that tend to reduce Ottoman scientists to mere imitators, the sources I draw on reveal that agronomic, forestry, and veterinary knowledge was necessarily reinvented, as fauna and flora, pedoclimatic conditions, and endemic diseases vary from one location to another. Ottoman scientists emphasized the need to adapt foreign knowledge to local needs, and even invented neologisms to describe this creative process – memleketleştirme. They also produced new knowledge and exported the research they carried out abroad, mainly through articles published in European journals.This work has broader implications for Ottoman studies and history of science. In relation to Ottoman studies, it demonstrates the ineffectiveness of the category of Westernization, which imposes an unneeded civilizational paradigm and renders scientific encounters abnormal. Without references to colonies or metropolises, this thesis exposes the modus operandi of routine scientific circulations between spaces traditionally understood to be “Western” and “non-Western”
Hamdi, Wafa. "Les muftis ottomans face aux changements du XIXe siècle : crises, mutations et réformes à Istanbul et à Tunis pendant les Tanzimat (1839-1876)." Paris, INALCO, 2011. http://www.theses.fr/2011INAL0010.
Full textApplied under the European influence, aiming at the westernization of the systems of the state and promising of legal equality between the Muslims and the non-Muslims, the said reforms Tanzimat looks very polemical in the XIXth century. The idea of equality between the confessional communities makes its road. In the Regency of Tunis, a reforming movement similar to that of the Ottoman capital begins to bloom. Therefore, all these changes made during this period transform the religion into a political stake. Consequently, the big religious dignitaries see each other strongly sought by the politicians in Tunis and in Istanbul. The rule of the sultans and the beys must be put in accordance with God's law, quite as the Moslem society had to follow the divine outlaws. Supposing that it is the case, our study concerns the role played by the heads of the ulemas in Tunis and in Istanbul, namely the Seyhs ül-Islam of Istanbul and the big muftis of Tunis, in this process of reform
KOÇUNYAN, Aylin. "Negotiating the Ottoman Constitution : 1856-1876." Doctoral thesis, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/1814/27180.
Full textExamining Board: Professor Anthony Molho, European University Institute (Supervisor) Professor Edhem Eldem, Boğaziçi University (External Supervisor) Professor Antonella Romano, European University Institute Professor Gilles Pécout, Ecole Normale Supérieure
PDF of thesis uploaded from the Library digital archive of EUI PhD theses
The dissertation is about the genesis of the Ottoman Constitution, which was promulgated on December 23, 1876. The main objective is to reconstruct the nineteenth-century Ottoman constitutional movement in relation to Europe and international politics without neglecting the internal administrative developments that affected the process. The dissertation traces the transcultural and transnational dimension of the internal process of the genesis of the Ottoman Constitution and shows that the Ottoman constitutional movement developed beyond the control of Ottoman bureaucracy and state apparatus, through a web of relations that exceeded the boundaries of the Ottoman territory. The movement incorporated, from domestic authorities to foreign powers, a plurality of formal and informal agents of different ethno-religious, cultural and ideological backgrounds and of different legal norms. The dissertation investigates how Ottoman reformers synthesised different legal traditions, imported from the West to the Ottoman context through various human channels, and how the Ottomans' constitutional thought was shaped and negotiated by the encounter of European models with the imperial political culture as well as by the encounter of foreign actors with domestic draftsmen.