CitedEvidence
User Settings
Article

Was the Turk really so 'terrible'?

Claire Norton-2006-01-01-St Mary's University Repository (St Mary's University Twickenham London)
0

TL;DRAbstract

The Ottoman empire, from its inception until the present day, has frequently been portrayed as oppressive towards its non-Muslim subjects and bent on the destruction of Christendom through the prosecution of cihad or holy war: it was, according to various sixteenth century Turkenbuchlein writers, the 'scourge of God' and 'a Hereditary Foe of all Christians'. Simultaneously however, a parallel, but opposite discourse has stressed Ottoman religious tolerance towards, and co-existence with, its non-Muslim subjects and non-Muslim foreigners resident in the empire. So, was the Ottoman Empire an early modern embodiment of multi-culturalism or did it constitute a 'yoke of oppression' for its Christian and Jewish subjects?

Chat with Paper

AI Agents for this Paper

The Ottoman empire, from its inception until the present day, has frequently been portrayed as oppressive towards its non-Muslim subjects and bent on the destruction of Christendom through the prosecution of cihad or holy war: it was, according to various sixteenth century Turkenbuchlein writers, the 'scourge of God' and 'a Hereditary Foe of all Christians'. Simultaneously however, a parallel, but opposite discourse has stressed Ottoman religious tolerance towards, and co-existence with, its non-Muslim subjects and non-Muslim foreigners resident in the empire. So, was the Ottoman Empire an early modern embodiment of multi-culturalism or did it constitute a 'yoke of oppression' for its Christian and Jewish subjects?

Keywords

OppressionEmpireOttoman empireYoke (aeronautics)JudaismHistoryAncient historyCulturalism

Chat

Click to start Chat