Activities - Summaries
Europe and the Ottoman Empire in mid 19th Century
Çaglar Keyder
The parallels between the globalisation of the nineteenth
century and that of the present period are intriguing. The
principal difference is that, hundred and fifty years ago,
the Ottoman Empire was undertaking reforms toward modern statehood.
A 'modern state' would necessarily seek to govern a territory
and establish uniform rule over it. The forces of economic
integration, however, worked in the direction of differentiation.
The heterogeneity of empire engendered centrifugal tendencies
based on unequal development, often correlating with ethnicity.
The degree to which these tendencies could be contained within
the framework of a modernising state determined the cohesion
and allegiance of various groups in the Empire to the project,
and the eventual success of the effort.
The dialectic between the forces of economic integration
and those of political modernisation can not be reduced to
an external-internal tension. Both internal and external actors
entertained various scenarios, thus projecting the struggle
to the European arena. This paper will describe the possible
alternative trajectories determined by the field of forces
and will seek to point to the crucial moments of decision
when some of the options became unavailable.
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