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E-raamat: Honor and Belonging: Post-Harem Lives of Ottoman Palace Women

  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-Apr-2026
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040888148
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
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This book explores the post-harem lives of Ottoman palace women who, unlike valide sultans, mothers of princes (ehzades), or imperial princesses (hanm sultans), lost their formal prominence after the death of the reigning sultan and have remained largely overlooked in imperial historiography. These women, often without surviving children or powerful networks, have been relegated to the background of dynastic narratives and treated as peripheral figures in mainstream history writing. Focusing on the consorts of Sultan Abdülhamid I (r. 17741789), this volume examines how these women sustained their social status, financial stability, and symbolic ties to the dynasty in the aftermath of palace life. Drawing upon a wide range of Ottoman archival materials, including rental agreements, vakfiye (waqf deeds), household expense records, and posthumous inventories, it reveals the economic strategies, spatial transitions, and charitable activities through which these women rebuilt a sense of belonging and dynastic visibility outside the palace walls. The book demonstrates that although these women did not enjoy fixed entitlements from the central treasury, they succeeded in securing stable and long-term income sources through investments in rental properties, eshâm bonds, and agricultural estates. Their engagement with the imperial revenue system, distinct from that of valide sultans and hanm sultans, shows an alternative but equally structured model of female economic agency. By tracing these overlooked trajectories, the book offers a fresh lens on gender, space, and power in the Ottoman Empire and fills a critical gap in the literature on dynastic wealth, representation, and imperial femininity. The book will be of great interest to students, researchers, and educators working in the fields of Ottoman history, gender studies, Middle Eastern economic history, cultural anthropology, and sociology.
Introduction

Chapter 1 Women in the Ottoman Harem

Chapter 2 The Spatial Construction of Post-Harem Life

Chapter 3 Economic Sustainability: Income Sources and Financial Strategies of
the Ottoman Dynasty Women

Chapter 4 Waqf Patronage, Charitable Practices, and the Public Visibility of
Ottoman Dynasty Women

Chapter 5 Everyday Life and Consumption of Ottoman Dynasty Women

Chapter 6 Constructing Dynastic Belonging Through Death: Funeral Rituals and
the Dispositions of Wealth
Özlem Baarr is an Associate Professor of Ottoman History at Inonu University, Türkiye. Her research centers on the fiscal and administrative structures of the Ottoman Empire, with a particular emphasis on the transformation of provincial governance, financial practices, and the visibility of women in economic life. She specializes in the study of eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century Ottoman provincial administration, exploring how mechanisms of taxation, property management, and local authority reflected broader shifts in imperial order. Her publications examine topics such as the reorganization of provincial fiscal systems, the management of mukataa and iltizam revenues, and the role of voivodas, defterdars, and sarrafs in the empires evolving bureaucratic hierarchy. She is also the author of Ottoman Dynastic Daughters and Their Incomes (The Eighteenth Century and the First Quarter of the Nineteenth Century) (in Turkish), Kriter, 2018, which investigates the financial networks and property portfolios of Ottoman imperial women. Her current work continues to analyze the intersections of gender, economy, and governance, highlighting the ways in which Ottoman women contributed to the fiscal and symbolic reproduction of dynastic power.