
Elites And Religion
| Marka | : Timas Publishing | 
| Kitaplık | : Timas Adult | 
| Diziler | : History | 
| Sayfa / Ebat | : 288s. / 13,5x21 | 
| İlk ve Son Baskı | : Haziran’10 / Mart’12 | 
| Baskı Sayısı | : 3 | 
| Kapak Tasarım | : | 
| ISBN | : 978-605-114-122-0 | 
| Barkod | : 9786051141220 | 
| Üst Başlık | : From Ottomans To Turkish Republic | 
| Dil | : İngilizce | 
KDV Dahil Fiyat
Arka kapak
Professor Karpat, one of the most prominent names in the field of  Political History, explores the social structure of Ottoman Empire  through different eras and looks at Turkey’s multi-party democracy  culture from a historical perspective. His articles interpret the  Ottoman history for broader audience and lay a vivid picture of events  of recent history in front of our eyes.
Professor Karpat’s remarkable articles take us back to 18th century  Ottoman days and examine change and modernization on those days, his  work also looks into the independence and interaction of various social  groups within a muslim state. The Ottoman social structure produced a  unique way of practicing “secularism” where spiritual issues regarding  faith and administrative issues regarding everyday state politics were  kept completely independent from each other; one was dealing with  earthly matters of day to day life of subjects of the Ottoman sultan,  the other was to aid the followers of specific faith in their practice  of religion and to prepare for after-life.
Ottomans, despite having a highly complex social structure accommodating  a number of ethnic groups and various religious orders, had  successfully sustained freedom of faith by adopting the ‘millet’ system.  Every non-muslim community represented by its leader was regarded as a  ‘millet’ and enjoyed an absolute autonomy and freedom within its own  faith and community in terms of practice of religion, language, social  relations.    
During the Tanzimat era a new generation of religious leaders; who were  relatively free from state regulations emerged among Ulema and unlike  their predecessors they were not dignitaries. The social status of this  newly emerging group from within well- established Ulema which was  preoccupied at times to legitimise social and political change from an  Islamic perspective or at other times tried to maintain status-quo  siding with government, overlapped with the social image of the Ottoman  middle-class. The fact that the new generation Ulema had common  characteristics with ordinary middle-class people had a profound impact  on Ottoman-Turkish political history. Consequently, the road map of  ‘modernity and secularism’ set in Republican Turkey was identified by  both the state represented by military and civilian bureaucrats and by  people represented by local notables.






























