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ANATOLIA (5) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   168970


Azerbaijan between Two Empires: a Contested Borderland in the Early Modern Period (Sixteenth‒Eighteenth Centuries) / Zarinebaf, Fariba   Journal Article
Zarinebaf, Fariba Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The first part of the paper examines the evolution and transformation of Safavid ideology in the context of confessional changes and the role of Turkoman tribes in the Safavid social movement in the Ottoman‒Iranian borderland. The second part examines the impact of Ottoman‒Safavid wars and religious rivalry on the society and economy of Azerbaijan from the sixteenth to the eighteenth centuries.
Key Words Azerbaijan  Social Movements  Sufism  Ottoman  Anatolia  Qizilbash 
Safavid  Empires and Borderlands 
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2
ID:   088348


Periphery theorising for a truly internationalised discipline: spinning IR theory out of Anatolia / Aydinli, Ersel; Mathews, Julie   Journal Article
Aydinli, Ersel Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract Concerns over inequalities that have been located between the roles of the core and periphery within the development of the IR discipline have led to questions of whether it is possible to build up theoretical concepts in IR based on national differences. There have not yet been studies however providing an in-depth look at how IR theorising has been developing within a periphery country or region, and exploring both the local and core level factors inhibiting the development of original theoretical paradigms from within that context. By looking at the Turkish experience, the article postulates that homegrown theorising may be the only means for periphery IR to be respectfully acknowledged by the core IR discipline.
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3
ID:   126470


Rise of Alexander / Wahab, Ghazala   Journal Article
Wahab, Ghazala Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract In our last episode we saw Alexander succeed Philip II as king of Macedonia. In this episode we will trail him on his campaign against the Persians, then the largest empire on earth From his first regnal year till he breathed his last, Alexander unleashed an unrelenting spate of campaigns that would see him overrun all Asia till the doors of India. His conquests included, from west to east, the Balkans (former Yugoslavia), Anatolia (Turkey), Egypt, Gaza, Phoenicia (Lebanon), Judea (Israel and Jordan), the Levant (Syria), Mesopotamia and Babylonia (Iraq), Persia (Iran) and Bactria (Afghanistan). His empire extended as far as the Hindukush mountains.
Key Words Turkey  Middle East  Balkans  Europe  Macedonia  Yugoslavia 
Egypt  Asia  Gaza  Anatolia  Arab Spring  Alexander 
Western Asia  Phoenicia - Lebanon  Judea - Israel and Jordan  Levant - Syria  Babylonia - Iraq  Persia - Iran 
Bactria - Afghanistan  History 
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4
ID:   124474


Sultan and the rebel: Sa?dun al-mansur's revolt in the muntafiq, c. 1891-1911 / Fattah, Hala; Badem, Candan   Journal Article
Fattah, Hala Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract From 1891 to 1911, a disenfranchised shaykh of the Muntafiq tribe, Sa?dun al-Mansur, led a large uprising against Ottoman rule in southern Iraq. Feeling that he had been disinherited from properties that were his birthright, he fought battle after battle against rival family claimants, shaykhs in Arabia and the Gulf, and reformist Ottoman governors in Baghdad and Basra. This article analyzes Sa?dun's insurgency both within the context of his life and against the background of shifting socioeconomic and political events in Iraq, Arabia, and the Gulf at the turn of the 20th century. One of the last rebellions against Ottoman central authority in southern Iraq, the insurgency was also notable for the indirect but intriguing links between the rebel shaykh and his nominal overlord Sultan ?Abd al-Hamid II, who paid special attention to the rebel's fate.
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5
ID:   192271


Unionist presence in the Asiatic provinces of the Ottoman Empire, 1908–1912 / Zürcher, Erik Jan   Journal Article
Zürcher, Erik Jan Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article investigates the way the Young Turk Committee of Union and Progress, which was essentially an organisation with roots in the European provinces of the Ottoman Empire and in the Western Anatolian province of Aydın, established itself in the provincial centres of Eastern Anatolia and the Arab provinces after the revolution of July 1908. It then seeks out the patterns that can be discerned in the composition of the local branches, and in the relationships of these branches with the committee’s centre (first in Salonica, then in Constantinople) on the one hand, and with the local Muslim elites and non-Muslim communities on the other.
Key Words Iraq  Kurdistan  Ottoman Empire  Constitutional Revolution  Anatolia  Young Turks 
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