From Caliphate to Secular State: Power Struggle in the Early Turkish Republic
By (Author) Hakan zoglu
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
24th June 2011
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
956.1023
Hardback
232
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
539g
This insightful analysis looks at the power struggles of 19201926, a time during which the Ottoman Empire was replaced by a secular and modernist Turkish nationalist regime. Covering a short but eventful period in Ottoman/Turkish history From Caliphate to Secular State: Power Struggle in the Early Turkish Republic focuses on three major political and judicial maneuvers to demonstrate how opposition to and within the emerging Turkish regime was addressed during those pivotal years, and how the resulting power struggle contributed to the form of the new state that arose. The analysis begins in 1918 when the Ottoman Empire, having lost World War I, was waiting for its fate to be determined by the Allied Powers. The book examines the original intentions and vision of Mustafa Kemal (later known as Mustafa Kemal Atatrk), as well as the effects of the Kurdish uprising in 1925, which helped the new regime silence its critics. The ongoing power struggles and their consequences are examined through 1927, after which the new regime quashed any and all opposition, enabling the new Turkish Republic to emerge as a staunchly secular, modernizing Western state.
Hakan zoglu is associate professor of history at the University of Central Florida, Orlando, FL.