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Ottoman Historical Documents
The Institutions of an Empire
Taschenbuch von V. L. Menage
Sprache: Englisch

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Beschreibung
Ottoman documents in English translation, from the period of the empire's rise to greatness

This collection of translated primary sources for Ottoman history - edited with notes and commentary - shows how the major institutions of Ottoman government developed, and how they functioned in practice. Each chapter covers a key topic and includes a brief introduction to provide context for the documents which follow:

¿ Legitimation and titulature
¿ Princes
¿ Recruitment into the Sultan's service
¿ The vizierate
¿ Provincial administration and the timar system
¿ The religio-legal institution
¿ ¿anunnames (legal codes)
¿ Taxation and finance
¿ Waqfs (endowments)
¿ Treaties and foreign relations

Annotations and a glossary explaining technical terminology and problems of interpretation within each item are also included.

Key Features
¿ A systematic collection of source materials for students of Ottoman history
¿ Fluent translations with technical vocabulary explained in the notes and glossary, making the documents accessible to teachers and students
¿ A succinct introduction to each chapter placing the documents in context
¿ Translations from Ottoman Turkish, Greek, Arabic, Persian, Latin and Italian, showcasing the different types of source material encountered in historical research
¿ Provides valuable comparative material for historians of the late mediaeval and early modern Mediterranean and Middle East.

V. L. Ménage (1920-2015) was Professor of Turkish at SOAS, University of London. Colin Imber was Reader in Turkish at the University of Manchester. He is author of The Ottoman Empire (1300-1650) (3rd edition, 2019), The Crusade of Vama (2006) and Ebu's-su'ud: The Islamic Legal Tradition (1997).
Ottoman documents in English translation, from the period of the empire's rise to greatness

This collection of translated primary sources for Ottoman history - edited with notes and commentary - shows how the major institutions of Ottoman government developed, and how they functioned in practice. Each chapter covers a key topic and includes a brief introduction to provide context for the documents which follow:

¿ Legitimation and titulature
¿ Princes
¿ Recruitment into the Sultan's service
¿ The vizierate
¿ Provincial administration and the timar system
¿ The religio-legal institution
¿ ¿anunnames (legal codes)
¿ Taxation and finance
¿ Waqfs (endowments)
¿ Treaties and foreign relations

Annotations and a glossary explaining technical terminology and problems of interpretation within each item are also included.

Key Features
¿ A systematic collection of source materials for students of Ottoman history
¿ Fluent translations with technical vocabulary explained in the notes and glossary, making the documents accessible to teachers and students
¿ A succinct introduction to each chapter placing the documents in context
¿ Translations from Ottoman Turkish, Greek, Arabic, Persian, Latin and Italian, showcasing the different types of source material encountered in historical research
¿ Provides valuable comparative material for historians of the late mediaeval and early modern Mediterranean and Middle East.

V. L. Ménage (1920-2015) was Professor of Turkish at SOAS, University of London. Colin Imber was Reader in Turkish at the University of Manchester. He is author of The Ottoman Empire (1300-1650) (3rd edition, 2019), The Crusade of Vama (2006) and Ebu's-su'ud: The Islamic Legal Tradition (1997).
Über den Autor

V. L. Ménage (1920-2015) was Professor of Turkish at SOAS, London.

Colin Imber was formerly a Reader in Turkish at the University of Manchester.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

The Islamic Months
The Ottoman Sultans, c1300-1687
List of Illustrations
Preface
Maps
Figures

Chapter I: The Dynasty: Legitimation and Titulature

Section 1: The Assertions of the Chroniclers

  1. The voice of the dervishes: the dream of Ertogrul
    a. From the Anonymous Chronicles
    b. From the Tevarikh-i Al-i ¿O¿man
  2. The voice of the gazis: how ¿Osman became an independent ruler
  3. The voice of the ¿ulema: how ¿Osman became an independent ruler
    a. Kitab-i Cihan-nüma about why ¿Osman is called gazi
    b. Kitab-i Cihan-nüma about how drum and standard came to ¿Osman
  4. Pagan Turkish tradition: the genealogy of the Ottoman sultans
    a. Yazicioglu 'Ali on the line of ¿Osman
    b. Sükrullah on the line of ¿Osman
  5. Conflation in the Oxford Anonymous Chronicle

Section 2: Titulature: Caliphal Claims

  1. Inscription of Kay¿osrev II (1236-46) on the sea walls at Antalya
  2. Inscription on the tomb of the Aydin-oglu Mu¿ammad (d. 1334) at Birgi
  3. Inscription of 1337. from the Sehadet Mosque in Bursa
  4. Inscription from a bridge in Ankara, dated 1375
  5. Other inscriptions referring to Murad I
  6. Dedicatory notice in a Qur¿an preserved in the mausoleum of Murad I
  7. Inscription on the tomb of Bayezid I, dated 809/1406-7
  8. Title-page of an almanac (in Persian), dated 824. (1421)
  9. A reference in ¿ursun Beg's History of Me¿med II
  10. A reference in Celalzade's History of Süleyman I
  11. Ebu¿s-Su¿ud's proemium to his statement on 'state lands'
  12. The second deposition of Mu¿¿afa I, 1623
  13. Fatwas on the Ghalzay Ashraf, 1726
  14. Süleyman I to Archduke Ferdinand of Austria, 1554

Sources

Chapter II: The Dynasty: Princes

Section 1: The Appointment of Princes in the Early Fourteenth Century

  1. ¿Osman's sons
  2. Or¿an's sons
  3. Or¿an's sons, after the conquest of Nicaea

Section 2: Princely Governorships

  1. Prince ¿orkud leaves Istanbul for his governorship
  2. A letter from Prince ¿Alemsah's mother Gülru¿ to Bayezid II
  3. A decree of Prince A¿med to the yaya yoldaslar
  4. A decree of Prince Selim [II]
  5. A decree of Prince Me¿med [III]

Section 3: Fratricide

  1. Statement of the former Byzantine Emperor John VI Kantakouzenos
  2. The accession of Bayezid I, 1389
    a. From the Anonymous Chronicles
  3. The civil war (1402-13)
  4. The accession of Murad II, 1421
  5. The accession of Bayezid II, 1481
  6. The first accession of Me¿med II, 1444
  7. The second accession of Me¿med II, 1451
    a. From Michael Doukas's Historia Turco-Byzantina
    b. From Ibn Kemal's Tevârih-i Âl-i Osmân
  8. Popular criticism of fratricide: the story of the abdication of ¿Ali Pasha
  9. The accession of Me¿med III, 1595
  10. The accession of A¿med I, 1603

Sources

Chapter III: The Dynasty: Recruitment into the Sultan's Service

Section 1: Pencik and Devsirme

  1. A decree regulating the pencik
  2. Tolls to be levied on slaves taken across the Bosphorus
  3. A template decree for levying boys for the devsirme
  4. A Janissary lobbies the sultan on behalf of his family
  5. Escaping the devsirme
  6. The recovery of a captured novice

Section 2: Promotion to the Sultan's Service

  1. Command to the aga of the Janissaries, 1562/3
  2. Command to the aga of the Janissaries, 1567/8
  3. Command to the aga of the Janissaries, 1560/1
  4. Command to the aga of the Janissaries, 1573/4
  5. Command to the aga of the Janissaries, 1583
  6. The pay of palace servants: an account register from 1478

Section 3: Berats

  1. The appointment of a preacher in Bursa
  2. The appointment of a beglerbegi
  3. The appointment of a ¿a¿i
  4. The appointment of a metropolitan
  5. The appointment of mountain guards

Sources

Chapter IV: The Vizierate and the Divan

  1. The A¿af-name of Lu¿fi Pasa
  2. The divan: a Venetian account
  3. Submissions to the sultan
    a. Submission of the vizier Yemisçi ¿asan Pasa
    b. Submission of the vizier Yemisçi ¿asan Pasa
    c. Submission of the vizier Yemisçi ¿asan Pasa
    d. Submission of the vizier Yemisçi ¿asan Pasa
    e. Submission of Yemisçi ¿asan Pasa
    f. Submission of the grand vizier Me¿med Pasa
  4. The sultan's written instructions
  5. Death of a grand vizier: report of Henry Lello

Sources

Chapter V: The Provincial Administration and the Timar System

  1. From the report of Iacopo de Promontorio, c1475-80
  2. An entry in a timar-register, with marginal notes
    a. Timar of Inebegi and ¿üseyn, sons of ser¿asker ¿asan
    b. [Possibly relating to the village of Yilinça]
    c. [possibly relating to the village of Pirvol]
  3. Two entries from the detailed register of Amid, 1518
    a. Timar of Yemini the Kurd, a sipahi of the sanca¿ of Amid
    b. Timar of Sa¿du¿llah the ya¿avul, a sipahi of the sanca¿ of Amid
  4. Sundry marginal notes in a summary-register of c1445, Thessaloniki etc.
  5. Marginal notes in a similar register of 1455, Skopje
    a. Timar of Musa, retainer (¿idmetkar) of ¿Isa Beg
    b. Timar of Yusuf, kinsman of the mir-a¿ur ¿amza Beg
  6. Two timar grants
    a. Thessaloniki: the timar of Me¿med
    b. Yala¿abad [in the sanca¿ of] ¿ocaeli
  7. Conversion of privately-owned revenue to a ¿a¿¿-estate
  8. A call for volunteers before the Moldavian campaign, 1484
  9. Submissions by and to the sanca¿ begi of Bosnia, c1512-14
    a. The sanca¿ begi of Iskodra to Yunus Pasa of Bosnia
    b. The sancak begi of Zvornik to Yunus
    c. The sanca¿begi of Bosnia to the na¿ib of Visoka
    d. The sanca¿ begi of Bosnia to the Porte
    e. The sanca¿begi of Bosnia to the Porte
    f. The sanca¿begi of Bosnia to the Porte
    g. The sanca¿begi of Bosnia to the Pasa
    h. The sanca¿begi of Bosnia to the Pasa
  10. 'The good old days'

Sources

Chapter VI: The Religio-Legal Institution

Section 1: Law and Religious Practice

  1. Passages on the law of sale from ¿anafi legal texts
    a. From al-Matn of al-Quduri (d. 1037)
    b. From al-Ikhtiyar fi ta¿lil al-Mukhtar of al-Mu¿ili (d. 1284)
    c. From al-Fatawa of Qa¿ikhan (d. 1195)
  2. A fatwa on the application of Shafi¿i doctrine
  3. A fatwa on acquiring land for a new mosque construction
  4. A fatwa on taxing land occupied by descendants of the Prophet
  5. A fatwa on a ¿a¿i granting unauthorised tax exemptions
  6. A fatwa on Rumelian ¿a¿is issuing ¿üccets
  7. A fatwa on sipahis taking a tithe
  8. A fatwa on Muslim villagers neglecting prayer
  9. A fatwa on money fines for neglecting prayer
  10. A fatwa on executing a repentant heretic sey¿
  11. Command to the sanca¿begi of Amasya
  12. Command to the sanca¿begi of Amasya, Ilyas beg
  13. To the sanca¿begi of Kastamonu and the ¿a¿i of Küre
  14. To the ¿a¿i of Niksar

Section 2: The Administration of Law

  1. A ¿üccet on repairs to a monastery on Mount Athos
  2. A ¿üccet on returning a defective slave-girl to the vendor
  3. A sicill-entry on the sale of a vacant site by a Muslim to a dhimmi
  4. A sicill-entry on a debt owed by a dhimmi to a Muslim
  5. A sicill-entry on a money loan
  6. A sicill-entry on the daughter of a recent convert
  7. A sicill-entry on divorce and the legality of the wife's second marriage
  8. A sicill-entry on cloth measuring short
  9. A sicill-entry on unsatisfactory goods
  10. A sicill-entry on a complaint by the weavers' guild
  11. A sicill-entry on a smith not receiving his dues
  12. A sicill-entry on the payment of tax on a slave girl
  13. A sicill-entry on the ownership of sheep
  14. A sicill-entry on a burglary
  15. A sicill-entry on a violent argument between father and son
  16. A sicill-entry of a command to the sanca¿begis and ¿a¿is of Ana¿oli
  17. A sicill-entry of a command to the ¿a¿i and the inspector of mu¿a¿a¿as
  18. A fatwa on contracting marriage between minors
  19. A fatwa on the validity of contracting marriage without the ¿a¿i
  20. A fatwa on re-marrying without intermediate marriage
  21. A fatwa on giving customs money as zakat
  22. A fatwa on giving alms
  23. A fatwa on a preacher's statement about a ¿a¿i
  24. A fatwa on the testimony of foreign merchants (¿arbi) against a dhimmi
  25. A fatwa on a Christian woman's charitable endowment
  26. A fatwa on the Ottoman conquest of Istanbul and its surroundings
  27. A fatwa on slaves purchasing slaves of their own
  28. A fatwa on the sultan's slaves contracting marriages
  29. A fatwa on a ¿a¿i acting outside his jurisdiction
  30. A fatwa on the dismissal of a debauched ¿a¿i
  31. A fatwa on the death of a falsely accused person after wrongful torture
  32. A fatwa on extortionate loan transactions
  33. A fatwa on tax income for sipahis
  34. A fatwa on tax income, including in kind, for sipahis
  35. A fatwa on bennak tax
  36. A fatwa on capitation tax (ispençe), grape tithe and taxes on pigs
  37. A fatwa on a rebellious son of the sultan
  38. A fatwa on those who lead the sultan astray
  39. A fatwa on deposing a sultan who disturbs order by accepting bribery
  40. A fatwa on the legality of killing fomenters of corruption
  41. A fatwa on punishment for a thief stealing from the imperial treasury

Sources

Chapter VII: ¿anunnames

  1. The 'Kraelitz text'
  2. The ¿anunname of ¿üdavendgar, 1487
  3. Extracts from the 'general' ¿anunname, c1500
  4. The ¿anunname of Siverek,...
Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2021
Fachbereich: Allgemeines
Genre: Geschichte, Importe
Rubrik: Geisteswissenschaften
Thema: Lexika
Medium: Taschenbuch
Inhalt: Kartoniert / Broschiert
ISBN-13: 9781474479370
ISBN-10: 1474479375
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Kartoniert / Broschiert
Autor: Menage, V. L.
Redaktion: Imber, Colin
Hersteller: Edinburgh University Press
Verantwortliche Person für die EU: preigu, Ansas Meyer, Lengericher Landstr. 19, D-49078 Osnabrück, mail@preigu.de
Maße: 244 x 173 x 17 mm
Von/Mit: V. L. Menage
Erscheinungsdatum: 31.01.2021
Gewicht: 0,477 kg
Artikel-ID: 118358240
Über den Autor

V. L. Ménage (1920-2015) was Professor of Turkish at SOAS, London.

Colin Imber was formerly a Reader in Turkish at the University of Manchester.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

The Islamic Months
The Ottoman Sultans, c1300-1687
List of Illustrations
Preface
Maps
Figures

Chapter I: The Dynasty: Legitimation and Titulature

Section 1: The Assertions of the Chroniclers

  1. The voice of the dervishes: the dream of Ertogrul
    a. From the Anonymous Chronicles
    b. From the Tevarikh-i Al-i ¿O¿man
  2. The voice of the gazis: how ¿Osman became an independent ruler
  3. The voice of the ¿ulema: how ¿Osman became an independent ruler
    a. Kitab-i Cihan-nüma about why ¿Osman is called gazi
    b. Kitab-i Cihan-nüma about how drum and standard came to ¿Osman
  4. Pagan Turkish tradition: the genealogy of the Ottoman sultans
    a. Yazicioglu 'Ali on the line of ¿Osman
    b. Sükrullah on the line of ¿Osman
  5. Conflation in the Oxford Anonymous Chronicle

Section 2: Titulature: Caliphal Claims

  1. Inscription of Kay¿osrev II (1236-46) on the sea walls at Antalya
  2. Inscription on the tomb of the Aydin-oglu Mu¿ammad (d. 1334) at Birgi
  3. Inscription of 1337. from the Sehadet Mosque in Bursa
  4. Inscription from a bridge in Ankara, dated 1375
  5. Other inscriptions referring to Murad I
  6. Dedicatory notice in a Qur¿an preserved in the mausoleum of Murad I
  7. Inscription on the tomb of Bayezid I, dated 809/1406-7
  8. Title-page of an almanac (in Persian), dated 824. (1421)
  9. A reference in ¿ursun Beg's History of Me¿med II
  10. A reference in Celalzade's History of Süleyman I
  11. Ebu¿s-Su¿ud's proemium to his statement on 'state lands'
  12. The second deposition of Mu¿¿afa I, 1623
  13. Fatwas on the Ghalzay Ashraf, 1726
  14. Süleyman I to Archduke Ferdinand of Austria, 1554

Sources

Chapter II: The Dynasty: Princes

Section 1: The Appointment of Princes in the Early Fourteenth Century

  1. ¿Osman's sons
  2. Or¿an's sons
  3. Or¿an's sons, after the conquest of Nicaea

Section 2: Princely Governorships

  1. Prince ¿orkud leaves Istanbul for his governorship
  2. A letter from Prince ¿Alemsah's mother Gülru¿ to Bayezid II
  3. A decree of Prince A¿med to the yaya yoldaslar
  4. A decree of Prince Selim [II]
  5. A decree of Prince Me¿med [III]

Section 3: Fratricide

  1. Statement of the former Byzantine Emperor John VI Kantakouzenos
  2. The accession of Bayezid I, 1389
    a. From the Anonymous Chronicles
  3. The civil war (1402-13)
  4. The accession of Murad II, 1421
  5. The accession of Bayezid II, 1481
  6. The first accession of Me¿med II, 1444
  7. The second accession of Me¿med II, 1451
    a. From Michael Doukas's Historia Turco-Byzantina
    b. From Ibn Kemal's Tevârih-i Âl-i Osmân
  8. Popular criticism of fratricide: the story of the abdication of ¿Ali Pasha
  9. The accession of Me¿med III, 1595
  10. The accession of A¿med I, 1603

Sources

Chapter III: The Dynasty: Recruitment into the Sultan's Service

Section 1: Pencik and Devsirme

  1. A decree regulating the pencik
  2. Tolls to be levied on slaves taken across the Bosphorus
  3. A template decree for levying boys for the devsirme
  4. A Janissary lobbies the sultan on behalf of his family
  5. Escaping the devsirme
  6. The recovery of a captured novice

Section 2: Promotion to the Sultan's Service

  1. Command to the aga of the Janissaries, 1562/3
  2. Command to the aga of the Janissaries, 1567/8
  3. Command to the aga of the Janissaries, 1560/1
  4. Command to the aga of the Janissaries, 1573/4
  5. Command to the aga of the Janissaries, 1583
  6. The pay of palace servants: an account register from 1478

Section 3: Berats

  1. The appointment of a preacher in Bursa
  2. The appointment of a beglerbegi
  3. The appointment of a ¿a¿i
  4. The appointment of a metropolitan
  5. The appointment of mountain guards

Sources

Chapter IV: The Vizierate and the Divan

  1. The A¿af-name of Lu¿fi Pasa
  2. The divan: a Venetian account
  3. Submissions to the sultan
    a. Submission of the vizier Yemisçi ¿asan Pasa
    b. Submission of the vizier Yemisçi ¿asan Pasa
    c. Submission of the vizier Yemisçi ¿asan Pasa
    d. Submission of the vizier Yemisçi ¿asan Pasa
    e. Submission of Yemisçi ¿asan Pasa
    f. Submission of the grand vizier Me¿med Pasa
  4. The sultan's written instructions
  5. Death of a grand vizier: report of Henry Lello

Sources

Chapter V: The Provincial Administration and the Timar System

  1. From the report of Iacopo de Promontorio, c1475-80
  2. An entry in a timar-register, with marginal notes
    a. Timar of Inebegi and ¿üseyn, sons of ser¿asker ¿asan
    b. [Possibly relating to the village of Yilinça]
    c. [possibly relating to the village of Pirvol]
  3. Two entries from the detailed register of Amid, 1518
    a. Timar of Yemini the Kurd, a sipahi of the sanca¿ of Amid
    b. Timar of Sa¿du¿llah the ya¿avul, a sipahi of the sanca¿ of Amid
  4. Sundry marginal notes in a summary-register of c1445, Thessaloniki etc.
  5. Marginal notes in a similar register of 1455, Skopje
    a. Timar of Musa, retainer (¿idmetkar) of ¿Isa Beg
    b. Timar of Yusuf, kinsman of the mir-a¿ur ¿amza Beg
  6. Two timar grants
    a. Thessaloniki: the timar of Me¿med
    b. Yala¿abad [in the sanca¿ of] ¿ocaeli
  7. Conversion of privately-owned revenue to a ¿a¿¿-estate
  8. A call for volunteers before the Moldavian campaign, 1484
  9. Submissions by and to the sanca¿ begi of Bosnia, c1512-14
    a. The sanca¿ begi of Iskodra to Yunus Pasa of Bosnia
    b. The sancak begi of Zvornik to Yunus
    c. The sanca¿begi of Bosnia to the na¿ib of Visoka
    d. The sanca¿ begi of Bosnia to the Porte
    e. The sanca¿begi of Bosnia to the Porte
    f. The sanca¿begi of Bosnia to the Porte
    g. The sanca¿begi of Bosnia to the Pasa
    h. The sanca¿begi of Bosnia to the Pasa
  10. 'The good old days'

Sources

Chapter VI: The Religio-Legal Institution

Section 1: Law and Religious Practice

  1. Passages on the law of sale from ¿anafi legal texts
    a. From al-Matn of al-Quduri (d. 1037)
    b. From al-Ikhtiyar fi ta¿lil al-Mukhtar of al-Mu¿ili (d. 1284)
    c. From al-Fatawa of Qa¿ikhan (d. 1195)
  2. A fatwa on the application of Shafi¿i doctrine
  3. A fatwa on acquiring land for a new mosque construction
  4. A fatwa on taxing land occupied by descendants of the Prophet
  5. A fatwa on a ¿a¿i granting unauthorised tax exemptions
  6. A fatwa on Rumelian ¿a¿is issuing ¿üccets
  7. A fatwa on sipahis taking a tithe
  8. A fatwa on Muslim villagers neglecting prayer
  9. A fatwa on money fines for neglecting prayer
  10. A fatwa on executing a repentant heretic sey¿
  11. Command to the sanca¿begi of Amasya
  12. Command to the sanca¿begi of Amasya, Ilyas beg
  13. To the sanca¿begi of Kastamonu and the ¿a¿i of Küre
  14. To the ¿a¿i of Niksar

Section 2: The Administration of Law

  1. A ¿üccet on repairs to a monastery on Mount Athos
  2. A ¿üccet on returning a defective slave-girl to the vendor
  3. A sicill-entry on the sale of a vacant site by a Muslim to a dhimmi
  4. A sicill-entry on a debt owed by a dhimmi to a Muslim
  5. A sicill-entry on a money loan
  6. A sicill-entry on the daughter of a recent convert
  7. A sicill-entry on divorce and the legality of the wife's second marriage
  8. A sicill-entry on cloth measuring short
  9. A sicill-entry on unsatisfactory goods
  10. A sicill-entry on a complaint by the weavers' guild
  11. A sicill-entry on a smith not receiving his dues
  12. A sicill-entry on the payment of tax on a slave girl
  13. A sicill-entry on the ownership of sheep
  14. A sicill-entry on a burglary
  15. A sicill-entry on a violent argument between father and son
  16. A sicill-entry of a command to the sanca¿begis and ¿a¿is of Ana¿oli
  17. A sicill-entry of a command to the ¿a¿i and the inspector of mu¿a¿a¿as
  18. A fatwa on contracting marriage between minors
  19. A fatwa on the validity of contracting marriage without the ¿a¿i
  20. A fatwa on re-marrying without intermediate marriage
  21. A fatwa on giving customs money as zakat
  22. A fatwa on giving alms
  23. A fatwa on a preacher's statement about a ¿a¿i
  24. A fatwa on the testimony of foreign merchants (¿arbi) against a dhimmi
  25. A fatwa on a Christian woman's charitable endowment
  26. A fatwa on the Ottoman conquest of Istanbul and its surroundings
  27. A fatwa on slaves purchasing slaves of their own
  28. A fatwa on the sultan's slaves contracting marriages
  29. A fatwa on a ¿a¿i acting outside his jurisdiction
  30. A fatwa on the dismissal of a debauched ¿a¿i
  31. A fatwa on the death of a falsely accused person after wrongful torture
  32. A fatwa on extortionate loan transactions
  33. A fatwa on tax income for sipahis
  34. A fatwa on tax income, including in kind, for sipahis
  35. A fatwa on bennak tax
  36. A fatwa on capitation tax (ispençe), grape tithe and taxes on pigs
  37. A fatwa on a rebellious son of the sultan
  38. A fatwa on those who lead the sultan astray
  39. A fatwa on deposing a sultan who disturbs order by accepting bribery
  40. A fatwa on the legality of killing fomenters of corruption
  41. A fatwa on punishment for a thief stealing from the imperial treasury

Sources

Chapter VII: ¿anunnames

  1. The 'Kraelitz text'
  2. The ¿anunname of ¿üdavendgar, 1487
  3. Extracts from the 'general' ¿anunname, c1500
  4. The ¿anunname of Siverek,...
Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2021
Fachbereich: Allgemeines
Genre: Geschichte, Importe
Rubrik: Geisteswissenschaften
Thema: Lexika
Medium: Taschenbuch
Inhalt: Kartoniert / Broschiert
ISBN-13: 9781474479370
ISBN-10: 1474479375
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Kartoniert / Broschiert
Autor: Menage, V. L.
Redaktion: Imber, Colin
Hersteller: Edinburgh University Press
Verantwortliche Person für die EU: preigu, Ansas Meyer, Lengericher Landstr. 19, D-49078 Osnabrück, mail@preigu.de
Maße: 244 x 173 x 17 mm
Von/Mit: V. L. Menage
Erscheinungsdatum: 31.01.2021
Gewicht: 0,477 kg
Artikel-ID: 118358240
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