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ID155940
Title ProperOttoman quagmire:
Other Title Information malaria, swamps, and settlement in the late ottoman mediterranean
LanguageENG
AuthorGratien, Chris
Summary / Abstract (Note)During the late Ottoman period, a large influx of migrants and the expansion of cultivation created opportunities for new settlements in the countryside of Anatolia, Greater Syria, and Iraq. However, settlement often brought misery to newcomers in the form of malaria, especially when it occurred in the lowlands of the Mediterranean. This article traces the contours of the encounter with malaria that arose out of settlement, offering an overview of how Ottoman state and society confronted the conundrum of the swamp and examining the impact of this confrontation on local political economies. It demonstrates that swamps and malaria were a significant concern for late Ottoman state and society, and that policies adopted to address malaria sometimes facilitated the creation of large estates in the countryside of the Mediterranean littoral.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Journal of Middle East Studies Vol. 49, No.4; Nov 2017: p.583-604
Journal SourceInternational Journal of Middle East Studies 2017-12 49, 4
Key WordsDisplacement ;  Disease ;  Tanzimat ;  Environmen ;  tOttoman Empire