Ottomans, Turks and the Balkans: Empire Lost, Relations Altered
By (Author) Ebru Boyar
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
I.B. Tauris
29th June 2007
Annotated edition
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
956
Hardback
256
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
The loss of the Balkans was not merely a physical but also a psychological disaster for the Ottoman Empire. In this frank assessment, Ebru Boyar charts the creation of modern Turkish self-perception during the transition period from the late Ottoman Empire to the Turkish Republic. The Balkans played a key role in identity construction during this period; humiliated by defeat, the Ottomans were stung by what they saw as a betrayal and ingratitude of the peoples of the region to whom they had brought peace and order for centuries and whom they had defended at the cost of much Turkish blood. It induced a sense of isolation and encapsulated the destruction of the Ottoman Empire's military machine and sense of self-esteem by the Great Powers. This victim mentality was sustained by late Ottoman history-writing and by the historians of the early Republic, for whom history was an essential tool in the creation of the new Turkish national identity for the new Turkish Republic of the 20th century.
'an original approach to the period of transition between the end of the Ottoman empire and the beginning of the new Turkish Republic' 'essential reading for anyone wishing to understand the period of the end of the empire and rthe rise of the Republic, and to see the Ottoman-Turkish worlds in more subtle terms than those in which it has hitherto tended to be presented.' Dr Kate Fleet, Newton Trust Lecturer in Ottoman History, University of Cambridge
Ebru Boyar completed her PhD at Cambridge University and is currently Assistant Professor in the International Relations Department at the Middle East Technical University, Ankara.