Department of History2024-11-0920170026-320610.1080/00263206.2016.12655122-s2.0-85006928728http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00263206.2016.1265512https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14288/7512By comparing the decisions of various meetings of the General Councils of Edirne and Ankara provinces from 1283 to 1288 (1867-1872 AD), this study analyses social and economic dynamics of both provinces, the state vocabulary for handling local demands, and the boundaries of responsibility for the state and the local actors in provincial administration. Instead of reading the Tanzimat as a top-down imposition, this article defines General Councils as sites of negotiations between state and local actors and instruments for local development. This article challenges the conventional view of provincial councils as weak and unable to implement various policies. It contributes to a new generation of studies that challenges the separation between state and social forces and looks at how both interacted in provincial administration.Area studiesLocal demands and state policies: general councils (Meclis-i Umumi) in the Edirne and Ankara provinces (1867-1872)Journal Article1743-7881394524800009Q34907