Ottoman ruling elite in the sanjak of semendire during the eighteenth century
The Transitional period in the Ottoman Empire (17th-18th century) brought about changes in the organization of government that were felt deeply at the imperial periphery. The process of decentralization in the Ottoman Balkans was most prominent during the 18th century. Traditional roles of...
Main Author: | |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Institute of Ethnography, SASA, Belgrade
2020-01-01
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Series: | Glasnik Etnografskog Instituta SANU |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://www.doiserbia.nb.rs/img/doi/0350-0861/2020/0350-08612003661P.pdf |
Summary: | The Transitional period in the Ottoman Empire (17th-18th century) brought
about changes in the organization of government that were felt deeply at the
imperial periphery. The process of decentralization in the Ottoman Balkans
was most prominent during the 18th century. Traditional roles of political
and social agents in towns became ever more unstable and the shifts of
ruling elites were ever more pronounced. The ruling, Muslim elite had
gradually joined together by forming political alliances in order to gain
influence and money. Political struggles became constant. Belonging to the
elite through acquiring the status of asker - either by enlisting into
janissaries or by getting a timar and the status of spahi - did not
guarantee a political influence or wealth. The new elite got their positions
thanks to the political connections with either local or central government.
The financial power was a factor that mostly determined a person’s status in
the 18th century, and it did not depend on the legitimacy of economic
undertakings. The capital was accumulated through trade, tax farming and tax
collecting. The close relations with the representatives of government
secured path towards an elite status. The rise of the new local governing
elite and the ways of its social and political promotion were not identical
processes even in the neighboring provinces. The role of mütesellim, voyvoda
or kapudan, depended on the character of the Ottoman administration in the
province (sanjak), which is why case studies contribute to the overall
knowledge about the organization of Ottoman local authorities. |
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ISSN: | 0350-0861 2334-8259 |