This article explores the remarkable shift toward new literate uses of vernacular languages in the early modern Ottoman empire. It argues that this vernacularization occurred independently of Western European (and, more specifically, German romantic) influences. It explores, first, how vernacular languages like modern Greek, Armenian, Serbian, Bulgarian, Turkish, Kurdish, and Albanian acquired a new status as a medium of high literature and learning; second, it argues that this process was accompanied by the equally novel phenomenon of writing vernacular grammars, which promoted vernaculars as both an object of knowledge and an object of governmental concern. Thus, the early modern Ottoman empire sees both a vernacularization and the govern...
The study of language change is a necessary correlate of historical semantics, if not a precondition...
AbstractThe education in the Ottoman Empire as a public work had been realized since the Ottoman Tan...
Karamanlidika texts (Turkish texts in Greek characters), because of their syncretistic nature, besid...
The scope of the paper is to examine the role of Greek as a conduit for the flow of cultural models ...
The scope of the paper is to examine the role of Greek as a conduit for the flow of cultural models ...
This article discusses the uses of conceptual history and historical semantics for Ottoman studies. ...
This dissertation integrates the eastern borderland region of Van into the history of Ottoman modern...
This thesis represents an attempt to understand the present direction of Turkish Society in terms of...
This dissertation integrates the eastern borderland region of Van into the history of Ottoman modern...
This dissertation examines processes of translation (in the broad sense) in an earlier moment of glo...
The scope of the paper is to examine the role of Greek as a conduit for the flow of cultural models ...
This article considers late nineteenth-century Ottoman literature, concentrating specifically on the...
The Ottoman Empire, an imperial power that existed from 1299 to 1923, was one of the largest empires...
Language is the spirit of nations; the cement of the culture mosaic. Its education has a critical ro...
Although not a reflection of liberal ideals, the Ottoman Empire had no official language policy or p...
The study of language change is a necessary correlate of historical semantics, if not a precondition...
AbstractThe education in the Ottoman Empire as a public work had been realized since the Ottoman Tan...
Karamanlidika texts (Turkish texts in Greek characters), because of their syncretistic nature, besid...
The scope of the paper is to examine the role of Greek as a conduit for the flow of cultural models ...
The scope of the paper is to examine the role of Greek as a conduit for the flow of cultural models ...
This article discusses the uses of conceptual history and historical semantics for Ottoman studies. ...
This dissertation integrates the eastern borderland region of Van into the history of Ottoman modern...
This thesis represents an attempt to understand the present direction of Turkish Society in terms of...
This dissertation integrates the eastern borderland region of Van into the history of Ottoman modern...
This dissertation examines processes of translation (in the broad sense) in an earlier moment of glo...
The scope of the paper is to examine the role of Greek as a conduit for the flow of cultural models ...
This article considers late nineteenth-century Ottoman literature, concentrating specifically on the...
The Ottoman Empire, an imperial power that existed from 1299 to 1923, was one of the largest empires...
Language is the spirit of nations; the cement of the culture mosaic. Its education has a critical ro...
Although not a reflection of liberal ideals, the Ottoman Empire had no official language policy or p...
The study of language change is a necessary correlate of historical semantics, if not a precondition...
AbstractThe education in the Ottoman Empire as a public work had been realized since the Ottoman Tan...
Karamanlidika texts (Turkish texts in Greek characters), because of their syncretistic nature, besid...