Currency as an Imprint of the Nation-State: Monetary Conditions in the Ottoman Empire at the Beginning of the Nineteenth Century and the Transition from Ottoman Currencies to the Phoenix of the Hellenic State (1828)
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Published:2023-10
Issue:2
Volume:41
Page:213-236
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ISSN:1086-3265
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Container-title:Journal of Modern Greek Studies
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language:en
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Short-container-title:mgs
Author:
Brégianni Catherine
Abstract
Abstract: The economic decline of the Ottoman Empire was fundamental in various ways to the outbreak and progress of the Greek Revolution. The first attempts to create a national currency during the Greek Revolution reflect efforts to craft a modern state, and the eventual introduction of the phoenix by the first governor of the Hellenic State, Ioannis Capodistrias, underscores the shift to a newborn nation-state. The contradictions of Capodistrias’s monetary policy, however, reflected social antagonisms within Greece.
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,History,Cultural Studies