Well-Preserved Boundaries: Faith and Co-Existence in the Late Ottoman Empire

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Cappadocia was a place of co-habitation of Christians and Muslims, until the Greco-Turkish Population Exchange (1923) terminated the Christian presence in the region. Using an interdisciplinary approach drawing on history, political science and anthropology, this study investigates the relationship between tolerance, co-habitation, and nationalism. Concentrating particularly on Orthodox-Muslim and Orthodox-Protestant practices of living together in Cappadocia during the last fifty years of the Ottoman Empire, it responds to the prevailing romanticism about the Ottoman way of handling diversity. The study also analyses the transformation of the social identity of Cappadocian Orthodox Christians from Christians to Greeks, through various mechanisms including the endeavour of the elite to utilise education and the press, and through nationalist antagonism during the long war of 1912 to 1922.

Author(s): Gülen Göktürk
Series: Birmingham Byzantine and Ottoman Studies
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2020

Language: English
Pages: 186
City: London

Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Table of Contents
List of figures
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Ottoman tolerance reconsidered
2. Maintaining boundaries: Faith and co-existence in late Ottoman Cappadocia
3. The path toward nationalism
4. Halasane ta pragmata (Things spoiled)
5. Tolerating the heretics
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index