Did you know that many of the greatest and most colourful Ottoman statesmen and literary figures from the 15th to the early 20th century considered plague as a grave threat to their empire? And did you know that many Ottomans applauded the establishment of a quarantine against the disease in 1838 as a tool to resist British and French political and commercial penetration? Or that later Ottoman sanitation effort to prevent urban outbreaks would help engender the Arab revolt against the empire in 1916? Birsen Bulmus explores these facts in an engaging study of Ottoman plague treatise writers throughout their almost 600-year struggle with this epidemic disease. Along the way, she addresses the political, economic and social consequences of the...
The third pandemic of plague (in its bubonic and pneumonic clinical forms) struck the globe between ...
The article examines the relationship between quarantine practices and Western European medical noti...
The article examines the relationship between quarantine practices and Western European medical noti...
Did you know that many of the greatest and most colourful Ottoman statesmen and literary figures fro...
"This is the first systematic scholarly study of the Ottoman experience of plague during the Black D...
Abstract Plague and cholera were the primary epidemics causing huge numbers of deaths until the 19t...
Starting with the adoption of sedentary life epidemic diseases became a part of life. As a result o...
Drawing on a range of recent studies and original sources, this article calls for a revision of the...
Drawing on a range of recent studies and original sources, this article calls for a revision of the...
Drawing on a range of recent studies and original sources, this article calls for a revision of the...
This article examines the question of Qajar modernity – a term that definitively seems to have repla...
This paper examines the transformation of public health institutions in the Ottoman Empire and Egypt...
From 1347 onwards, new literature emerged in the Islamic and Western worlds: the Ṭā‘ūn [Plague] Trea...
This paper discusses the medical response to the Black Death in both Europe and the Middle East. The...
abstract: The essay conducts a wide review of the existing modern scholarship on plague, caused by Y...
The third pandemic of plague (in its bubonic and pneumonic clinical forms) struck the globe between ...
The article examines the relationship between quarantine practices and Western European medical noti...
The article examines the relationship between quarantine practices and Western European medical noti...
Did you know that many of the greatest and most colourful Ottoman statesmen and literary figures fro...
"This is the first systematic scholarly study of the Ottoman experience of plague during the Black D...
Abstract Plague and cholera were the primary epidemics causing huge numbers of deaths until the 19t...
Starting with the adoption of sedentary life epidemic diseases became a part of life. As a result o...
Drawing on a range of recent studies and original sources, this article calls for a revision of the...
Drawing on a range of recent studies and original sources, this article calls for a revision of the...
Drawing on a range of recent studies and original sources, this article calls for a revision of the...
This article examines the question of Qajar modernity – a term that definitively seems to have repla...
This paper examines the transformation of public health institutions in the Ottoman Empire and Egypt...
From 1347 onwards, new literature emerged in the Islamic and Western worlds: the Ṭā‘ūn [Plague] Trea...
This paper discusses the medical response to the Black Death in both Europe and the Middle East. The...
abstract: The essay conducts a wide review of the existing modern scholarship on plague, caused by Y...
The third pandemic of plague (in its bubonic and pneumonic clinical forms) struck the globe between ...
The article examines the relationship between quarantine practices and Western European medical noti...
The article examines the relationship between quarantine practices and Western European medical noti...