This sub-project explores the role of translation in the formation and early stages of the Ottoman-Turkic literary corpus, by juxtaposing this with its role in the development of the Mamluk-Turkic ...
An Osaka Metropolitan University historian has found that the Ottoman Empire’s seeming religious tolerance stemmed from ...
Mamluk soldiers developed a code of chivalry similar to that of the knights of the Western world and, as the Empire declined and the power of Ottoman Turkey grew, they often found themselves at a ...
The Ottomans weren’t the first empire to use slaves in their administrative systems. The Mamluk Sultanate (13th-16th c.), a ...
In B.J. Walker. Reflections of Empire: Archaeological and Ethnographic Studies on the Pottery of the Ottoman Levant (AASOR 64). Boston. Pp. 7-14. Avissar M. and Stern E.J. 2005. Pottery of the ...
'Atiqot / עתיקות כרך 107, התשפ"ב / 2022 Ottoman Tobacco Pipes from Khan et-Tujja... Aviam M. 2004. Jews, Pagans and Christians in the Galilee: 25 Years of Archaeological Excavations and Surveys; ...
but also within the Ottoman Empire, the Levant, Mesopotamia and as far away as India. Mahmoud said: "The present-day Mamluk Academy is headquartered in Ankara, Turkey, with multiple other clubs ...
Khalil is a PhD candidate interested in the Arabic-speaking Eastern Mediterranean during the Mamluk and Ottoman periods. In 2021, he graduated from the American University of Beirut after completing ...
Population surveillance. The carrying of identification while traveling. Add to that the public presence of diverse religions ...