Guided by the accounts of such female travelers as Lady Montagu Julia Pardoe and Lucy Garnett all of whom lived in Ottoman lands for significant periods of time this beautifully illustrated book explores and hopes to overturn the 19th-century stereotypes of Ottoman women. Both Eastern and Western accounts of Turkish society during that time made much of the harem with Orientalist writers describing Turkish women as exotic indolent and depraved while some Europeans usually described them as noble and elegant. Then with the advent of the first women's movement in the West the harem began to be criticized as an institution that trapped women and enforced their submission to men. All of these ideas were refuted by Montagu Pardoe and Garnett who argued that Ottoman women were perhaps the freest in the world; this book backs up that claim with historical research showing that women frequently prevailed in cases against their husbands and other male relatives in the Ottoman courts.