Murder in Salonika; 1876: A Tale of Apostasy and International Crisis

Stok Kodu:
9786054326525
Boyut:
135-215-0
Sayfa Sayısı:
136
Basım Yeri:
İstanbul
Baskı:
1
Basım Tarihi:
2012-04-13
Kapak Türü:
Karton
Kağıt Türü:
2.Hamur
Dili:
İngilizce
Kategori:
%8 indirimli
2.000,00TL
1.840,00TL
Havale/EFT ile: 1.803,20TL
KARGO BEDAVA
9786054326525
393575
Murder in Salonika; 1876: A Tale of Apostasy and International Crisis
Murder in Salonika; 1876: A Tale of Apostasy and International Crisis
1840.00
It all happened in 1876, during the Year of the Three Sultans when a Bulgarian girl named Stephana made a journey to Salonika to convert to Islam and was subsequently abducted by a group of Christians. This event stoked tensions, and stirred outrage within the Muslim community. Public protests ensued, culminating in the murder of the French and German consuls by a Muslim mob on May 6, 1876. This Salonika Incident would consequently trigger a wave of hysteria throughout the West and among the Christian populations of the Ottoman Empire. There was fear of an impending massacre of the Christians which would never take place. A diplomatic war of words between the Sublime Porte and the Great Powers, which held the former accountable for this double crime, directly followed the incident. Through a detailed and meticulous account of this neglected episode of Ottoman-Balkan history, this book aims to cast light on an often distorted and highly misunderstood event which is a manifestation of Western attitudes toward the Ottoman Empire during the climactic years of the Eastern Question.
It all happened in 1876, during the Year of the Three Sultans when a Bulgarian girl named Stephana made a journey to Salonika to convert to Islam and was subsequently abducted by a group of Christians. This event stoked tensions, and stirred outrage within the Muslim community. Public protests ensued, culminating in the murder of the French and German consuls by a Muslim mob on May 6, 1876. This Salonika Incident would consequently trigger a wave of hysteria throughout the West and among the Christian populations of the Ottoman Empire. There was fear of an impending massacre of the Christians which would never take place. A diplomatic war of words between the Sublime Porte and the Great Powers, which held the former accountable for this double crime, directly followed the incident. Through a detailed and meticulous account of this neglected episode of Ottoman-Balkan history, this book aims to cast light on an often distorted and highly misunderstood event which is a manifestation of Western attitudes toward the Ottoman Empire during the climactic years of the Eastern Question.
Yorum yaz
Bu kitabı henüz kimse eleştirmemiş.
Kapat