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Empire of Refugees: North Caucasian Muslims and the Late Ottoman State

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"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

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£133.00
Product Details
Stanford University Press
1503637751 / 9781503637757
eBook (EPUB)
20/02/2024
360 pages
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