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Our project was accomplished as a result of participation by eminent Turkologists and Turkish historians from around the world. It started with the formation of a Editorial Board and an Advisory Board comprised of the foremost academic experts on Turkish history and civilization. On the basis of a draft of subjects that was set out by the Editorial Board, which acted as an international jury, orders were made for articles. Our team contacted some 3,059 academics and experts in almost all countries of the world. In Turkey, another 3,120 academics, from professors to research assistants, who are working in a variety of fields, ranging from history to literature, linguistics, philosophy, history of arts, history of science, history of law, economic history and social history were contacted. At the end of these contacts, our project began to emerge with 2,320 academics and experts from 48 countries (589 from outside of Turkey and the remaining 1,721 from Turkey) agreeing to contribute their valuable works. Of the participants, 721 are professors; 377 are associate professors; 538 are assistant professors; 385 are doctors and 289 are experts and researchers. The number of articles that are published in our work is 1,623, of which 1,248 are from Turkey and 375 from other countries. Most of the articles that were omitted were scientific works; but some editorial criteria, such as avoiding repetition, inconformity with format rules and failure of authors to send them in time were factors behind the Publication Committee's decision to discard them.

Originality was one of the most important criteria in accepting an article, as our Publication Committee gave utmost care to publish only those articles that had never been published in any language in the past. In the meantime, the work also contained a few articles (4 percent of the entire work) by now deceased authors as a show of respect and fidelity to them. Archeological findings and archives of world countries that related to Turks were scanned while doing this research.

Our work is a collection of three parts that are made up of 37 volumes and 35.000 pages. The main part, Türkler, consists of 21 volumes, one of which was the index, and 20.500 pages; The Turks, which was prepared as a summary of the work in English, is the most comprehensive work in a foreign language and comprises six volumes and 6.500 pages. The last part is the ten-volume Genel Türk Tarihi, which is a general evaluation of the main articles on a chronological basis and consisting of a total of 8.000 pages. Some 30.000 pieces of visual materials (pictures, photographs, maps, paintings and miniatures, etc.) were used throughout the work.

467 articles in 6 volumes / 6000 pages
20 x 28 x 40 cm (8 x 12 x 15 inches)
*includes more than 8.000 visual materials
ISBN 975-6782-55-2, Hardcover, in English





 

Introduction Preface Table of Contents Sample Articles Reviews Media and Us


1. Index of Authors

1
1. Khazar-Byzantine Relations
Kevin Alan Brook
2. The Turks, Slavs and the Origin of the Bulgarians
Prof. Dr. Plamen S. Tzvetkov
3. Avar Settlements: A Challenge to Archaeological Research
Dr. Raimar W. Kory
4. Notes on the Qipchaq Tribes: Kimeks and Yemeks
Prof. Dr. Peter B. Golden

2
1. Political Crisis and Muslim Bureaucrats in the Heyday of the Seljuks: The Genesis of Sultan Malik Shah’s Power
Dr. Lik Arifin Mansurnoor
2. Notes on Architecture and Patronage in Beylik Anatolia (1300-1450)
Prof. Dr. Howard Crane
3. Western Views on Strangers from the East Latin Europe and its Contacts with Nomadic People in the Middle Ages
Matthias Heiduk
4. The Golden Horde
Prof. Dr. Uli Schamiloglu
5. Ruling Class Structures of the Kazan Khanate
Dr. Donald Ostrowski
6. Turkic in Babur Empire
Prof. Dr. Peri Benedek

3
1. Periods in Ottoman History
Prof. Dr. Halil İnalcık
2. Understandings of History: Political and Economic Crisis in the Beginning of the New Age
Prof. Dr. Suraiya Faroqhi
3. The Invisible Ottomans: The Missing Part of Mediterranean History in the Late Medieval and Early Modern Period
Prof. Dr. Kate Fleet
4. A Re-examination of the Terms Evlâd-i Arab and Rum Oglani in Ottoman Egypt
Prof. Dr. Jane Hathaway
5. The Growth of Turkish Literature Hagiographical Literature within the Halvetî Order in the 16th and 17th centuries.
Dr. John Cury
6. The Ottoman House in the Turkish Imagination: Monumentalizing the Quotidian
Prof. Dr. Carel Bertram

4
1. The Transition from Traditionalistic to Modern Reform in the Ottoman Empire: The Reigns of Sultan Selim III (1789-1807) and Sultan Mahmud II (1808-1839)
Prof. Dr. Stanford J. Shaw
2. The Ottoman Empire and the Origin of the Crimean War: Sources and Strategies
David M. Goldfrank
3. The Last Universal Empire and Abdülhamid II
Prof. Dr. İlber Ortaylı
4. The Image of the Turk at Gallipoli: Turkish Soldier in 1915 in Australian Literature and Historiography
Dr. Michael Tyquin
5. Wellington House and the Turks
Prof. Dr. Justin McCarthy
6. From Mondros to Samsun: The Birth of the Turkish Independence Struggle
Prof. Dr. Salahi R. Sonyel

5
1. Turkey and the Second World War: “Non-Belligerent but not Neutral”
Assoc.Prof. Dr. Wayne Bowen
2. Turkey and the Contemporary Middle East: The Search for National Security
Prof. Dr. Lenore G. Martin
3. Expansion and Interaction: Russia’s Turkic Frontiers (1552-1936)
Dr. Robert F. Baumann
4. Russian-English Rivalry in Central Asia
Assoc.Prof. Dr. Steven Sabol
5. The Emergence of Fergana Basmacis
Dr. Reinhard Eisener
6. Mirsaid Sultan Galiev and National Communism
Assoc.Prof. Dr. Ayşe Azade Rorlich
7. The 1924 National Delimitation in Central Asia: Historical Dimensions of the Contamporary Border Relations
Prof. Dr. Gregory Gleason

6
1. A Political-Historical Overview of the Kyrgyz
Gregory R. Koldys
2. Getting Together, Getting Apart: Migration and Demographic Changes in Independent Uzbekistan
Dr. Rafis Abazov
3. Conflicting Identities Down on the Farm: The Case of Post-Soviet Uzbekistan
Russel Zanca
4. Agrarian Reform in Uzbekistan and Other Central Asian Countries
Peter C. Bloch
5. The Azerbaijani Turks in Iran
Dr. Brenda Shaffer
6. The Turks and the Afghan War (1979-2001)
Conrad Schetter




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