Feeding People, Feeding Power: Imarets in the Ottoman Empire
Feeding People, Feeding Power: Imarets in the Ottoman Empire
  • 4 İŞ GÜNÜ
    İÇİNDE KARGODA
  • Basım Yılı
  • Sayfa Sayısı
    312
  • Kağıt Türü
    1. Hm. Kağıt
  • Ebat
    16 x 24
  • Dil
    İngilizce
  • Cilt Durumu
    Karton Kapak
  • ISBN-13
    9789756372395
Imarets have long been recognized as one signature institution of the Ottoman Empire. These public kitchens were typically located in mosque complexes or multi-structured complexes which included some or all of the following buildings: mosque medrese mekteb tomb caravansaray sufi tekke (or tekye) hospital bath market and other structures associated with the social economic and cultural life of the population usually in an urban setting.

Studying imarets is yet another way to explore the Ottoman vision of conquest empire-building and imperial rule. The imarets were part of the multiple Ottoman provisioning systems supporting the imperial palaces military campaigns cities and the annual hajj caravan to Mecca and Medina. The public kitchens operated in a society where the state and beneficent institutions held a continual and considerable role in contributing to the daily subsistence of all kinds of individuals. Ultimately the Ottoman sultan's preoccupation with food was in part an outgrowth of his political and military capacities and his general responsibility to provide for his subjects.

Although the precise dynamic of the emergence of imarets as a distinct institutional form is a process that remains to be traced it was clearly a confluence of historical practices together with the demands placed on the early Ottoman sultanate that gave rise to the particular form of the imaret. Evliya Çelebi remarked that in all his travels he saw "nothing like our enviable institution." At least one architectural historian claims that no earlier structures have been found that are analogous and certainly none are described in general books on Islamic architecture. The particular Ottoman origin of the imaret as a distinct architectural form is also attested by its presence throughout the Ottoman lands Anatolia the Balkans and the Arab provinces regions that did not necessarily share institutions in the pre-Ottoman period. Entirely unexplored remains the impact of Byzantine practices of charity on the Ottoman imarets. The daily distribution of cooked meals to large numbers of urban dwellers year-round from a special building designed for that purpose thus appears to have been an Ottoman innovation at least outside the holy cities of Mecca and Medina and of Hebron.
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