Publication: On the shores of empire
Program
KU-Authors
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Hadjikyriacou, Antonis
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Compiler & Affiliation
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Other Contributor
Date
Language
Type
Embargo Status
Yes
Journal Title
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Abstract
Much has been written on whether the Ottoman Empire was a terrestrial or a maritime one. Lost in this binary is what lies in between, namely the terraqueous dimensions of imperial rule. Enquiring into the interaction between land and water, the chapter transcends this divide and explores the ecological and economic continuum of the seas, continents, coastlines, islands, rivers, and lakes that compose the Ottoman world. Neither completely terrestrial nor simply aquatic, they are best conceived as hybrid spaces where land and water interact. We posit three Ottoman terraqueous zones defined by four rivers and four seas: the Danube, the Black Sea, the Aegean Sea, and the Adriatic Sea in the north domains of the empire; the Nile, the Eastern Mediterranean, and the Red Sea in the south; and Mesopotamia, from eastern Anatolia to the Persian Gulf in the east.
Source
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Subject
Ottoman maritime and terraqueous space, Ottoman geography, Seas and coasts of the Ottoman Empire
Citation
Has Part
Source
The Cambridge Companion to Ottoman History
Book Series Title
Edition
DOI
10.1017/9781009086202.025
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Copyrighted
