"[T]his volume?s great strength is its many original contributions to the study of the long sixteenth century. Those looking for the freshest new work on the classical age, along with a wonderful essay on nineteenth-century Ottoman historiography, will find this book a rich read." ?Journal of Arabic Literature
"The cliché 'a gem of a book' holds true for this volume, as it is the crystallized form of seven Ottoman specialists' groundbreaking, extensive research." ?international Journal of Turkish Studies
"[T]his edited book is highly recommended to scholars who are interested in early modern and modern Ottoman history writing." ?The Muslim World
"Collectively, the essays in the volume merit recognition in their effort to recover the lesser-heard voices of Ottoman historiography while engaging with the question of how history writing was used in constructing, questioning, and negotiating what constituted 'Ottomanness' at certain critical historical moments. In so doing, the volume contributes to a wider understanding of the contexts of textual and visual production, reading, and using history that extend beyond the confines of the Ottoman Empire." ?Journal of World History
"Each article has the potential to spark lively academic discussion and offer alternative vistas in Ottoman historiography... Such ground-breaking edited volumes will set the intellectual agenda for future studies as long as they adopt a rigorous methodological approach, as this volume clearly does." ?Journal of Ottoman Studies
"[These essays] make a significant contribution to a relatively new strand of Ottoman research that takes as its subject Ottoman reading communities, literacy practices, and the roles that particular texts played in Ottoman society." ?SHARPNews
H. Erdem Çipa is Assistant Professor of Ottoman History in the Departments of History and Near Eastern Studies, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
Emine Fetvac is Assistant Professor of Islamic Art at Boston University and author of Picturing History at the Ottoman Court (IUP, 2012).
"The cliché 'a gem of a book' holds true for this volume, as it is the crystallized form of seven Ottoman specialists' groundbreaking, extensive research.... Ottoman specialists already familiar with the doctoral theses and publications of the contributors will still find fascinating new material in it. Students of Ottoman history must be encouraged to use this volume as a starting point for thinking about their sources. Non-specialists wondering where to start for contextual insight into Ottoman historiography need not look any further." ?Questia
"[T]he rich and nuanced exposition of the wide range of texts and images explored... that constitutes [the] valuable contributions to scholarship." ?Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies
"Brings together in a single volume a treatment of the diversity present in Ottoman historiography with coverage of prose, verse, panegyric, and court chronicles, as well as cartography and book illustration."" ?Rhodes Murphey, University of Birmingham 1. The Historical Epic Ahvl-i Sultn Mehemmed (The Tales of Sultan Mehmed) in the Context of Early Ottoman Historiography \ Dimitris Kastritsis Bibliography
Note on Transliteration
Acknowledgments
2. The Memory of the Mongols in Early Ottoman Historiography \ Baki Tezcan
3. Imperialism, Bureaucratic Consciousness, and the Historian's Craft: A Reading of Cellzde Mustaf's Tabaktü'l-Memlik ve Derectü'l-Meslik \ Kaya ahin
4. Conversion and Converts to Islam in Ottoman Historiography of the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries \ Tijana Krsti
5. Seeing the Past: Maps and Ottoman Historical Consciousness \ Giancarlo Casale
6. From Adam to Süleyman: Visual Representations of Authority in 'rif's Shhnma-yi l-i 'Osmn \ Fatma Sinem Erylmaz
7. The Challenge of Periodization: New Patterns in Nineteenth-Century Ottoman Historiography \ Hakan T. Karateke
Contributors
Index