The Last Ottoman Wars: The Human Cost, 1877-1923
During the last half century of its existence, the Ottoman Empire and the lands around its borders were places of constant political turmoil and unceasing military action. The enormous costs of war were paid not only by politicians and soldiers, but by the Ottoman civilian population as well. This book examines the hardships that ordinary people, Muslim and Christian alike, endured during decades of warfare.     
 
Jeremy Salt brings to the surface previously ignored facts that disrupt the conventional narrative of an ethno-religious division between Muslim perpetrators and Christian victims of violence. Salt shows instead that all major ethno-religious groups—including Armenians, Turks, Kurds, and Greeks—were guilty of violent acts. The result is a more balanced picture of European involvement in the Ottoman Empire and the Balkans, one that highlights the destructive role of British Prime Minister David Lloyd George and other European leaders grabbing for Ottoman resources up to the end of World War I. The effects of these events are felt to the present day.
 
This extraordinary story centers not on military campaigns but on ordinary civilians whose lives were disrupted and in many cases destroyed by events over which they had no control. Disease, malnutrition, massacre and inter-communal fighting killed millions of people during the First World War alone. Until now this epic saga of human suffering has remained a story largely untold.
1132292305
The Last Ottoman Wars: The Human Cost, 1877-1923
During the last half century of its existence, the Ottoman Empire and the lands around its borders were places of constant political turmoil and unceasing military action. The enormous costs of war were paid not only by politicians and soldiers, but by the Ottoman civilian population as well. This book examines the hardships that ordinary people, Muslim and Christian alike, endured during decades of warfare.     
 
Jeremy Salt brings to the surface previously ignored facts that disrupt the conventional narrative of an ethno-religious division between Muslim perpetrators and Christian victims of violence. Salt shows instead that all major ethno-religious groups—including Armenians, Turks, Kurds, and Greeks—were guilty of violent acts. The result is a more balanced picture of European involvement in the Ottoman Empire and the Balkans, one that highlights the destructive role of British Prime Minister David Lloyd George and other European leaders grabbing for Ottoman resources up to the end of World War I. The effects of these events are felt to the present day.
 
This extraordinary story centers not on military campaigns but on ordinary civilians whose lives were disrupted and in many cases destroyed by events over which they had no control. Disease, malnutrition, massacre and inter-communal fighting killed millions of people during the First World War alone. Until now this epic saga of human suffering has remained a story largely untold.
40.0 Out Of Stock
The Last Ottoman Wars: The Human Cost, 1877-1923

The Last Ottoman Wars: The Human Cost, 1877-1923

by Jeremy Salt
The Last Ottoman Wars: The Human Cost, 1877-1923

The Last Ottoman Wars: The Human Cost, 1877-1923

by Jeremy Salt

Hardcover

$40.00 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Temporarily Out of Stock Online
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

During the last half century of its existence, the Ottoman Empire and the lands around its borders were places of constant political turmoil and unceasing military action. The enormous costs of war were paid not only by politicians and soldiers, but by the Ottoman civilian population as well. This book examines the hardships that ordinary people, Muslim and Christian alike, endured during decades of warfare.     
 
Jeremy Salt brings to the surface previously ignored facts that disrupt the conventional narrative of an ethno-religious division between Muslim perpetrators and Christian victims of violence. Salt shows instead that all major ethno-religious groups—including Armenians, Turks, Kurds, and Greeks—were guilty of violent acts. The result is a more balanced picture of European involvement in the Ottoman Empire and the Balkans, one that highlights the destructive role of British Prime Minister David Lloyd George and other European leaders grabbing for Ottoman resources up to the end of World War I. The effects of these events are felt to the present day.
 
This extraordinary story centers not on military campaigns but on ordinary civilians whose lives were disrupted and in many cases destroyed by events over which they had no control. Disease, malnutrition, massacre and inter-communal fighting killed millions of people during the First World War alone. Until now this epic saga of human suffering has remained a story largely untold.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781607817048
Publisher: University of Utah Press
Publication date: 10/25/2019
Pages: 432
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.10(h) x 1.50(d)

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments vii

Maps xi

Introduction 1

I Late Ottoman Society

1 Cash-Flow Calamities 11

2 A Difficult Land 23

3 Kurds and Armenians 34

4 The East in Flames 48

II Balkan Crusades

5 Ejecting the Muslims 79

6 The Young Turks 94

7 Italy Invades Libya 114

8 "May God Be with You" 125

9 Massacre and Flight 152

III The Last Ottoman War

10 Into the Abyss 171

11 A Land in Despair 190

12 Armenians in Arms 214

13 The "Relocation" 238

IV A Questionable Peace

14 Onward to Baku 263

15 The Road to Izmir 285

16 End of the Line 310

Epilogue 322

Notes 327

Bibliography 383

Index 403

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews