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Books on the Ottoman Empire (2020)

Scraped from fivebooks.com (2020-09-15).

Source: fivebooks.com

Louis de Bernières · Buy on Amazon
"Set in an idyllic village in southern Turkey, where Muslims and Christians live as neighbours before World War One rips them apart, this is a surprisingly moving novel about love, war and the nature of patriotism. It is also an excellent insight into the social fabric of the late Ottoman Empire, the Battle of Gallipoli from the Turkish perspective and the life of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the founder of Turkey. Possibly my favourite novel of all time."
Mark Mazower · Buy on Amazon
"This is an evocative history of one of the most vibrant cities of the Ottoman Empire; Salonica was the Jewish capital of the empire (its lingua franca until the early 20th century was Ladino, the native tongue of the Sephardic Jews) and by far the most important and cosmopolitan city in Greece for hundreds of years under Ottoman rule. An excellent city-biography."
Mary Montagu & Robert Halsband (editor) · Buy on Amazon
"These private letters of the wife of the British Ambassador to Constantinople (1716-1718), written to her friends in England, are the best insight into the 18th century Ottoman Empire written in English. Lady Mary Montegu learned Turkish, infiltrated the Sultan’s harem to learn about political machinations and discovered the practice of vaccination from Ottoman doctors among her many adventures. Her descriptions of the sweaty hamams, high fashion and religious customs of18th century Constantinople are also unexpectedly funny – I laughed a lot at this maverick lady adventurer."
Bruce Clark · Buy on Amazon
"This is the story of a nation-building disaster – the forced population exchange between Greece and the newly formed Republic of Turkey in 1923. Full of interviewers with the last surviving participants in the exchange, this is about the heartache and human cost of moving millions of people from their homes for political ends. An incredibly detailed examination of the importance of language, religion and geography, and what it means to belong."
Cover of The Bridge on the Drina
Ivo Andrić · Buy on Amazon
"Written in 1943 by the Bosnian Nobel Laureate Ivo Andric, this is a novel about the darker side of the Ottoman Empire – the enforced labour of local Christian subjects in modern day Bosnia. Commissioned in 1572 by the Grand Vizier Mehmed Pasha, the famous bridge (which still stands today) is the epicentre of a community that experienced all the turbulence of the Balkan region throughout the last few centuries of Ottoman rule. This is a 20th century classic."

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