Between the 1850s and World War I, about one million North Caucasian Muslims sought refuge in the Ottoman Empire.
This resettlement of Muslim refugees from Russia changed the Ottoman state.
Circassians, Chechens, Dagestanis, and others established hundreds of refugee villages throughout the Ottoman Balkans, Anatolia, and the Levant.
Most villages still exist today, including what is now the city of Amman.
Muslim refugee resettlement reinvigorated regional economies, but also intensified competition over land and, at times, precipitated sectarian tensions, setting in motion fundamental shifts in the borderlands of the Russian and Ottoman empires.
Empire of Refugees reframes late Ottoman history through mass displacement and reveals the origins of refugee resettlement in the modern Middle East.
Vladimir Hamed-Troyansky offers a historiographical corrective: the nineteenth-century Ottoman Empire created a refugee regime, predating refugee systems set up by the League of Nations and the United Nations.
Grounded in archival research in over twenty public and private archives across ten countries, this book contests the boundaries typically assumed between forced and voluntary migration, and refugees and immigrants, rewriting the history of Muslim migration in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
282.72 Lei
Vreau să citescCharlotte Booth
67.26 Lei
Peter Balakian
89.23 Lei
Christopher Hitchens
178.26 Lei
Stephen Kinzer
200.83 Lei
Dennis Ross
145.08 Lei
Gardner Thompson
67.26 Lei
Thomas F. Madden
117.18 Lei
Michael Bar-Zohar
111.55 Lei
Amunhotep Chavis El-Bey
446.40 Lei
Marc Lamont Hill
100.39 Lei
Saree Makdisi
208.90 Lei
Amanda H. Podany
265.12 Lei
Daniel C. Cohn-Sherbok
89.23 Lei