Death and Life in the Ottoman Palace : Revelations of the Sultan Abdlhamid I Tomb - Douglas Scott Brookes

Death and Life in the Ottoman Palace

Revelations of the Sultan Abdlhamid I Tomb

By: Douglas Scott Brookes

Paperback | 11 March 2025

At a Glance

Paperback


$76.25

or 4 interest-free payments of $19.06 with

 or 

Available: 11th March 2025

Preorder. Will ship when available.

This book reveals multiple aspects of life in the Ottoman palace, in both its public space (the chancery) and private space (the royal household and the harem). It does so by exploring the Sultan Abd?lhamid I Tomb in Istanbul, investigating the paths that open to us through the graves of the royalty in the mausoleum and those of the courtiers, eunuchs, concubines and female harem managers in the garden graveyard around it. The treasure of information at this graveyard allows us to piece together a wide spectrum of details that illuminate the court funerary culture of the era, from architecture and calligraphy to funerals and epitaphs to turbans and fezzes and poetry, as we come to an understanding of the role of royal cemeteries in strengthening the bonds between the reigning House and the populace and enhancing the legitimacy of the dynasty's rule.
The book first introduces the tomb complex to the reader, interpreting its architecture, art and poetry, before exploring the lives and careers of 65 of the 86 people interred here between the first burial, in 1780, and the last, in 1863. Along the way, it reveals intriguing stories - from that of Sultan Abdulhamid's daughter Zeyneb, born (against the dynasty's rules) when he was a prince and raised in secrecy outside the palace until he came to the throne, to that of Prince Murad, exhumed and reburied late one night in 1812. By exploring the history revealed through these life stories, the book sheds light on Ottoman palace life and culture in an era that witnessed the most wrenching changes of modern Ottoman history seen until then - the reforms forcibly introduced by Sultan Mahmud II after 1826 - and uncovers manifestations of these changes in this graveyard.

Industry Reviews

Douglas Brookes's meticulous study zooms in on a small graveyard in Istanbul which has been the resting place for several members of the Ottoman dynasty as well as other officials of the imperial court who expired from the 1780s to 1860s. The book can rightly be regarded as a micro-history that takes this cemetery as its starting point. Readers not only learn the building's history, its architectural and physical features but in a more detailed fashion about the people buried here. The author narrates these people's lives and informs us of the circumstances in which they died, their illnesses, their pedigree. This approach brings about an unusual and gratifying peek into some of the dynamics of the Ottoman court in the later eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.

--Hakan Karateke, Professor of Ottoman & Turkish Culture, Language & Literature, University of Chicago

More in Middle Eastern History

Cactus Pear For My Beloved : A Family Story from Gaza - Samah Sabawi
World History : From the Ancient World to the Information Age - DK
HAMAS : The Quest for Power - Beverley Milton-Edwards
Political Violence in Turkey, 1975-1980 : The State at Stake - Benjamin Gourisse
Night of Power : The Betrayal of the Middle East - Robert Fisk

RRP $45.00

$37.25

17%
OFF
Ten Myths About Israel - Ilan Pappe

RRP $22.99

$21.90

Generation Kill - Evan Wright

$33.90

I Shall Not Hate - Izzeldin Abuelaish

RRP $22.99

$22.90

If I Must Die : Poetry and Prose - Refaat Alareer

RRP $44.99

$44.40

Twilight Cities : Lost Capitals of the Mediterranean - Katherine Pangonis
My Life as a Jew - Michael Gawenda

RRP $35.00

$31.75