Abstract
This study aims to examine the way in which European writers of the 16th, 17th, and 18th
centuries represented Ottoman government. The Ottoman Empire had a special place in European
experience and thought. The Ottomans were geographically close to Western Europe, yet they
were quite apart in culture and religion, a combination that triggered interest in Turkish affairs.1 Particularly important were political affairs. The Ottoman government inspired a variety of opinions among European travelers and thinkers. During the 18th century, the Ottomans lost their image as formidable and eventually ceased to provoke curiosity in the
European public. They were no longer dreaded as the “public calamity”; nor were
they greatly respected as the “most modern government” on earth. Rather, they
were regarded as a dull and backward sort of people. From the 16th century to the 19th century,
the European observers employed two similar, yet different, concepts to characterize the
government of the Ottoman Empire. The concept of tyranny was widely used during the 16th and
17th centuries, whereas the concept of despotism was used to depict the regime of the Ottomans
in the 18th century. The transition from the term “tyranny” to that of
“despotism” in the 18th century indicates a radical change in the European images
of the Ottoman Empire. Although both of these terms designate corrupt and perverse regimes in
Western political thought, a distinction was made between tyranny and despotism, and it mattered
crucially which term was applied to the Ottoman state. European observers of the empire gave
special meanings to these key concepts over time. “Tyranny” allowed for both
positive and negative features, whereas “despotism” had no redeeming features.
Early modern Europeans emphasized both admirable and frightening aspects of Ottoman
greatness. On the other hand, the concept of despotism was redefined as inherently Oriental in the
18th century and employed to depict the corruption and backwardness of the Ottoman
government. This transformation was profoundly reflected in the beliefs of Europeans about the
East. That is, 18th century thought on Ottoman politics contains a Eurocentric analysis of Oriental
despotism that is absent from the discussions of Ottoman tyranny in earlier centuries.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,History,Geography, Planning and Development,Sociology and Political Science,History,Geography, Planning and Development
Cited by
73 articles.
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