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OTTOMAN OFFICIALS (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   124471


Naked anxiety: bathhouses, nudity, and the Dhimm? woman in 18th-century Aleppo / Semerdjian, Elyse   Journal Article
Semerdjian, Elyse Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract In the 18th century, non-Muslims and women crossed social boundaries during a period of increased global consumption, prompting intervention on the part of Ottoman officials. On the imperial level, the sultan promulgated edicts to restrict such crossings, following the path of earlier laws that had regulated public spaces including bathhouses. In Aleppo, a local reflection of these 18th-century trends was increased monitoring of nudity and of contact between Muslims and non-Muslims within the city's bathhouses. Regulations required that bathkeepers provide separate bath sundries for Muslims and non-Muslims and prohibited co-confessional bathing for women in particular. With the assistance of guilds-and to a lesser extent millet representatives-complex bathing schedules for Muslim and non-Muslim women were registered at court to support segregation policies. Jurists discussing modesty requirements for Muslim women declared that non-Muslim (dhimm?) women were to be treated as unrelated men in that they were forbidden to gaze upon a naked Muslim woman. Shari?a court rulings were constructed along similar lines, indicating that the dhimm? woman was an unstable, liminal social category because in some circumstances her gaze was gendered male. Muslim male elites and local guilds ultimately instituted segregated bathing schedules to protect the purity of Muslim women from the danger posed by the dhimm? female figure.
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2
ID:   128219


Understanding life in the Ottoman-Montenegrin borderlands of no: catholic Mirdite tribes, missionaries and ottoman officials / Maggiolini, Paolo   Journal Article
Maggiolini, Paolo Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract The paper reconsiders the development of decentralization/centralization dynamics during the Ottoman Empire, focusing on the Ottoman-Montenegrin borderlands of Northern Albania with particular reference to the Mirdite territory inhabited by Catholic tribes. First, the paper describes the local socio-political system and balance of power in Mirdite territory before the enactment of the Gulhane decree. Secondly, the paper focuses on the developments and changes occurring in this land during the Tanzimat. Interaction, intertwining and overlapping between different strategies and policies are analysed in regard to the relationship between Catholic tribes, missionaries and Ottoman officials. Because of them, the changes and developments in the local administrative system occurring in both the religious and the political dimensions during the last part of the nineteenth century were expressions of the process of decentralization/centralization triggered by Istanbul from the third decade of the nineteenth century on.
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