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Empire and power in the reign of Süleyman [Texte imprimé] : narrating the sixteenth-century Ottoman world / Kaya Şahin, Indiana University

بواسطة:نوع المادة : نصنصالسلاسل:Cambridge studies in Islamic civilization (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge)تفاصيل النشر:Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2013وصف:1 vol. (XVIII-290 p.) : ill., cartes ; 24 cmتدمك:
  • 9781107034426
الموضوع:تصنيف DDC:
  • 956.083 23A
تصنيفات أخرى:
  • 956.09
المحتويات:
Introduction: Revisiting Celalzade Mustafa -- Part One. Celalzade Mustafa and the New Ottoman Empire in Early Modern Eurasia -- The Formative Years (1490-1523) -- The Secretary's Progress (1523-1534) -- The Empire and Its Chancellor (1534-1553) -- Towards the End (1553-1567) -- Part Two. Narrating, Imagining, and Managing the Empire -- Narrating the Empire : History-Writing between Imperial Advocacy and Personal Testimony -- Imagining the Empire : The Sultan, the Realm, the Enemies -- Managing the Empire : Institutionalization and Bureaucratic Consciousness -- Conclusion: Beyond Ottoman and European exceptionalism: empire and power in sixteenth-century Eurasia
ملخص:"On a torrid August day in 2009, I visited Celalzade Mustafa's final resting place in Istanbul's Eyüp district, in a neighborhood called Nisanca. The chancellor (nisanci) is buried in the cemetery adjoining the small mosque built for him by Sinan, the chief imperial architect. His brother Salih, a teacher, judge and religious scholar, is buried nearby, but the sepulchres of poets who received plots from this patron of poetry have disappeared. The mosque, adorned with glazed tiles, has changed significantly since the mid-sixteenth century. It was damaged in a fire in 1729, and was rebuilt following a more devastating fire in 1780. The mansion where Mustafa composed his works, welcomed fellow literati, and provided advice to young and aspiring secretaries is long gone, probably destroyed in the fire of 1780, if not before"-- Provided by publisher
نوع المادة:
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"On a torrid August day in 2009, I visited Celalzade Mustafa's final resting place in Istanbul's Eyüp district, in a neighborhood called Nisanca. The chancellor (nisanci) is buried in the cemetery adjoining the small mosque built for him by Sinan, the chief imperial architect. His brother Salih, a teacher, judge and religious scholar, is buried nearby, but the sepulchres of poets who received plots from this patron of poetry have disappeared. The mosque, adorned with glazed tiles, has changed significantly since the mid-sixteenth century. It was damaged in a fire in 1729, and was rebuilt following a more devastating fire in 1780. The mansion where Mustafa composed his works, welcomed fellow literati, and provided advice to young and aspiring secretaries is long gone, probably destroyed in the fire of 1780, if not before"-- Provided by publisher

Bibliogr. p. 253-280

Introduction: Revisiting Celalzade Mustafa -- Part One. Celalzade Mustafa and the New Ottoman Empire in Early Modern Eurasia -- The Formative Years (1490-1523) -- The Secretary's Progress (1523-1534) -- The Empire and Its Chancellor (1534-1553) -- Towards the End (1553-1567) -- Part Two. Narrating, Imagining, and Managing the Empire -- Narrating the Empire : History-Writing between Imperial Advocacy and Personal Testimony -- Imagining the Empire : The Sultan, the Realm, the Enemies -- Managing the Empire : Institutionalization and Bureaucratic Consciousness -- Conclusion: Beyond Ottoman and European exceptionalism: empire and power in sixteenth-century Eurasia

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