Publication: Coercion and mediation: centralization and sedentarization of tribes in the Ottoman Empire
Program
KU-Authors
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Publication Date
Language
Type
Embargo Status
No
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Alternative Title
Abstract
Known as the Tanzimat reforms, reorganization of provincial administration
included the sedentarization of semi-nomadic tribes in various regions of the
Ottoman Empire. In the province of Ankara, religiously and ethnically diverse tribes were sedentarized between 1839 and 1869. The cases in this article show that top down and bottom up state strategies can be employed together depending on the transformative process of state–social/tribal group interactions.2 The earlier statetribe interactions led to the recognition of the internal dynamics of tribes in reformulating centralization policies. The essay studies four tribes which varied in geographical concentration and hierarchical organization. Findings show that geographically bounded and hierarchical tribes were sedentarized by mediating with tribal authorities. In contrast, geographically scattered and non-hierarchical tribes confronted coercion, use of security forces and military troops.
Source
Publisher
Taylor and Francis
Subject
History
Citation
Has Part
Source
Mİddle Eastern Studies
Book Series Title
Edition
DOI
10.1080/00263200600601171
item.page.datauri
Link
Rights
Editöryel Kontrolde bakılacak (Bu alan ilgili koleksiyona geçirilirken boşaltılıp öyle atılacak drop-down menü sonrasında ilgili koleksiyonda gelerek doğru alan seçilecek.)
Copyrights Note
Creative Commons license
Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Editöryel Kontrolde bakılacak (Bu alan ilgili koleksiyona geçirilirken boşaltılıp öyle atılacak drop-down menü sonrasında ilgili koleksiyonda gelerek doğru alan seçilecek.)
