Oriental Panorama: British Travellers in 19th Century Turkey |
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Page vi
... Turkish character ... . .......................................... .. 15.2 Virtues and vices : from essentialist to anecdotal description 234 15.3 O brave new world , that has such people in't : Turkish otherness 15.4 Ancient peoples ...
... Turkish character ... . .......................................... .. 15.2 Virtues and vices : from essentialist to anecdotal description 234 15.3 O brave new world , that has such people in't : Turkish otherness 15.4 Ancient peoples ...
Page 4
... Turkish society . Much of the new image of that earlier society is nostalgic , romanticized , fictionalizing . Those creating it draw , not surprisingly , on the romanticizing images of European travellers , and they do so uncritically ...
... Turkish society . Much of the new image of that earlier society is nostalgic , romanticized , fictionalizing . Those creating it draw , not surprisingly , on the romanticizing images of European travellers , and they do so uncritically ...
Page 54
... Turkish highlands near Erzurum : caves inhabited by country folk were romantic and picturesque objects ; primitive living conditions spoke of pristine domesticity : The houses , burrowed in the ground on the side of a hill , were ...
... Turkish highlands near Erzurum : caves inhabited by country folk were romantic and picturesque objects ; primitive living conditions spoke of pristine domesticity : The houses , burrowed in the ground on the side of a hill , were ...
Page 82
... Turkish Countryside 5.1 Divine punishment : wilderness and fallen cities It would be satisfying if British travellers had given us a consistently extensive description of the entire geography of Turkey , but their accounts do not meet ...
... Turkish Countryside 5.1 Divine punishment : wilderness and fallen cities It would be satisfying if British travellers had given us a consistently extensive description of the entire geography of Turkey , but their accounts do not meet ...
Page 88
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Contents
1 | |
35 | |
64 | |
82 | |
Travellers and their Search for Classical Antiquities | 101 |
19th Century Izmir | 111 |
19th Century Istanbul as Aesthetic Object | 135 |
Istanbul as Labyrinth | 151 |
Ottoman Outdoor Recreations | 205 |
Ottoman Meals and British Palates | 223 |
the Physical and Moral Character of the Ottoman Turks | 234 |
Images of Greeks Armenians and Jew | 265 |
The Invention of Ottoman Women | 274 |
the Sultans | 308 |
The Visibility of Ottoman Justice 324 | |
Travellers and the Critics 339 | |
the Sights of Istanbul | 175 |
Ottoman Slavery | 186 |
Manifestations of Islam | 196 |
The Careers Routes and Views of Travellers in Turkey and | |
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Common terms and phrases
19th century aesthetic Anatolia ancient architecture Armenians Arundell Asia Minor Athenaeum Auldjo bandits bazaar beauty Bosphorus Britain British travellers Byron capital Carne cemeteries Chandler character Charles Charles Vane Christian civilization contemporary critics Dallaway Davey dervishes Discoveries Asia Minor dress Edirne Ephesos ethnic European travellers eyes Fellows female foreign Frankland Galt gentlemen Greece Greek harem Hervé Hobhouse Islam Istanbul Izmir Janissaries John journey judgement Julia Pardoe Kinneir Lady Craven Lady Montagu landscape Levant London Lycia Macfarlane Macgill Madden Mahmut Mahmut II manners Monthly Review moral mosques Muslim Napier nature observers Oriental Orientalist Ottoman Empire Ottoman Turkey painting panorama Pardoe Pasha Pera picturesque political praised Records Turkey Greece reforms Residence Constantinople ruins Selim III sexual Slade slave slavery Smyrna social society Thomas Allom Thornton tourist Turkish ladies Turkish women Turks Turner Urquhart Üsküdar Victorian village visited visitors Volney Walsh William
Popular passages
Page 154 - So sweet, the sense faints picturing them! Thou For whose path the Atlantic's level powers Cleave themselves into chasms, while far below The sea-blooms and the oozy woods which wear The sapless foliage of the ocean, know Thy voice, and suddenly grow gray with fear, And tremble and despoil themselves: oh, hear!
Page 196 - The natural liberty of man is to be free from any superior power on earth, and not to be under the will or legislative authority of man, but to have only the law of nature for his rule.
Page 84 - I send you a note for the ignorant, but I really wonder at finding you among them. I don't care one lump of sugar for my poetry; but for my costume and my correctness on those points (of which I think the funeral was a proof), I will combat lustily.
Page 148 - ... the sky. At first, agglomerated in a single confused mass, the lesser parts of this immense whole seemed, as we advanced, by degrees to unfold — to disengage themselves from each other, and to grow into various groups, divided by wide chasms and deep indentures ; until at last the...
Page 93 - Those rich lands at this present remain waste and overgrown with bushes, receptacles of wild beasts, of thieves, and murderers; large territories dispeopled, or thinly inhabited ; goodly cities made desolate ; sumptuous buildings become ruins ; glorious temples either subverted or prostituted to impiety — true religion discountenanced and oppressed ; all nobility extinguished ; no light of learning permitted, nor virtue cherished ; violence and rapine insulting over all and leaving no security...
Page 75 - He was the mildest mannered man That ever scuttled ship or cut a throat ; With such true breeding of a gentleman, You never could divine his real thought...
Page 246 - As to physical causes, I am inclined to doubt altogether of their operation in this particular ; nor do I think that men owe any thing of their temper or genius to the air, food, or climate.
Page 246 - ... regions, and snow and ice follow one another in endless succession. The warm humor is lacking among them; their bodies are large, their natures gross, their manners harsh, their understanding dull, and their tongues heavy.