Although a number of Ottomanists have, in recent years, integrated the Ottoman Empire successfully into discussions of European history, studies of intellectual, artistic and socio-political developments in the Renaissance, with some notable exceptions, have tended to ignore the Ottoman Empire. Alternatively, they have employed it as a counterpoint designed to foreground Christian European cultural development; approached it as a source for Western artistic development; explored it as a repository for transmitted Christian European Renaissance developments; or examined it as the subject of Western Christian humanist inquiry
'Europe' has no fixed geographical, historical, religious or cultural boundaries. Claims for the exi...
This study is a preliminary attempt to chart out the manifold ways Ottomans envisioned and imagined ...
The Habsburg takeover of Ottoman Bosnia Herzegovina (1878–1918) is conventionally considered the ent...
This volume brings together some of the latest research on the cultural, intellectual, and commercia...
This volume brings together some of the latest research on the cultural, intellectual, and commercia...
This book dedicated to Suraiya Faroqhi shows that the early modern world was not only characterized ...
This special issue of Eastern European History Review addresses the complex and intense history of C...
The study seeks to focus on cases in modem world history in which cosmopolitanism has left its impri...
This is the first major comparative study of the frontiers of the Ottoman Empire, one of the crucial...
This thematic approaches the challenges transnational studies are confronted with in three very inte...
Controlling substantial territories in the Middle East, Eastern Europe, and North Africa for several...
This article presents the points of view from which interreligious relations in the Ottoman world ha...
Edward W. Said's Orientalism has attained canonical status as the key study of the cultural politics...
In 19th-century Europe, the juridical texture of space changed entirely. The state came to dominate ...
The relationship between the Ottoman Empire and Europe has traditionally been viewed in terms of con...
'Europe' has no fixed geographical, historical, religious or cultural boundaries. Claims for the exi...
This study is a preliminary attempt to chart out the manifold ways Ottomans envisioned and imagined ...
The Habsburg takeover of Ottoman Bosnia Herzegovina (1878–1918) is conventionally considered the ent...
This volume brings together some of the latest research on the cultural, intellectual, and commercia...
This volume brings together some of the latest research on the cultural, intellectual, and commercia...
This book dedicated to Suraiya Faroqhi shows that the early modern world was not only characterized ...
This special issue of Eastern European History Review addresses the complex and intense history of C...
The study seeks to focus on cases in modem world history in which cosmopolitanism has left its impri...
This is the first major comparative study of the frontiers of the Ottoman Empire, one of the crucial...
This thematic approaches the challenges transnational studies are confronted with in three very inte...
Controlling substantial territories in the Middle East, Eastern Europe, and North Africa for several...
This article presents the points of view from which interreligious relations in the Ottoman world ha...
Edward W. Said's Orientalism has attained canonical status as the key study of the cultural politics...
In 19th-century Europe, the juridical texture of space changed entirely. The state came to dominate ...
The relationship between the Ottoman Empire and Europe has traditionally been viewed in terms of con...
'Europe' has no fixed geographical, historical, religious or cultural boundaries. Claims for the exi...
This study is a preliminary attempt to chart out the manifold ways Ottomans envisioned and imagined ...
The Habsburg takeover of Ottoman Bosnia Herzegovina (1878–1918) is conventionally considered the ent...