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Russian-Ottoman Relations, Part 4

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The End of the Empires, 1857-1914

Printed Works in Western Languages.

The position of the Ottoman Empire continued to decline during the second half of the nineteenth century. Succumbing to foreign pressure, the sultan had decreed far-reaching reforms in favor of his non-Muslim subjects in 1856. Less than two decades later the Ottoman Empire went bankrupt and had to allow foreign bankers to supervise its finances. The Ottomans found themselves increasingly marginalized in the debate on the Eastern Question of whether the Ottoman Empire should be preserved in some form or divided.

The material in the final part of this IDC series is again highly diverse and multi-faceted. Some works focus on trade, while others portray individual Ottoman or Russian statesmen. Some are personal accounts, whereas others are polemical or propagandistic. The collection is a veritable treasure trove of original sources, personal views, military analyses and national(istic) policy statements, which have never before been published together.

Release Fall 2008

This collection is also available online in IDC's Primary Sources Online. For more information please contact sales@brill.nl or cs@brillusa.com for the Americas.


Number of titles263
Number of microfiches    1,042
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Russian-Ottoman Relations, Part 4