A comparative social history between the two great world empires of the Ottomans and the Mughals
Suraiya Faroqhi is a professor of history at Ibn Haldun University, Istanbul, Turkey. Her focus is on Ottoman social history of the early modern period, especially women, artisan production, the use of objects as historical sources, as well as urban life and cross-cultural linkages, her most recent publications are, A Cultural History of the Ottomans: The Imperial Elite and its Artefacts ( I. B. Tauris, 2016), and The Ottoman and Mughal Empires: Social History in the Early Modern World (I.B. Tauris, 2019).
This is a carefully wrought and unexpected combination of detailed
social study, global systems analysis, critical historiography, and
comparative history. An indispensable read for specialists in the
field. Summing Up: Essential. Upper-division undergraduates through
faculty.
*CHOICE*
An extraordinary work of meticulous scholarship and unreservedly
recommended for community, college, and university library
collections.
*Midwest Book Review*
An authoritative and meticulously researched comparison of the
early modern world's two most successful 'Islamic' empires.
Scholars have been waiting a long time for a book like this, which
is not only the first to bring together Ottoman and Mughal history
in a systematic way, but does so with a remarkable attentiveness to
the concerns of 'history from below'. In short, this book sets the
standard for a new kind of comparative, trans-imperial history of
early modern Islamic societies.
*Professor Giancarlo Casale, University of Minnesota*
This book presents a valuable head-to-head comparison of the two
largest and longest-lasting Sunni Muslim empires in world history,
which were also contemporaries and, arguably, “frenemies.” Never
content with battles-and-great-men accounts of history, Suraiya
Faroqhi offers a top-to-bottom comparison of the full range of
features of Ottoman and Mughal society, from court life to crafts
to agriculture to slavery, never forgetting that all these elements
changed from the sixteenth through the eighteenth century. Her
prose is always lively and engaging, and her familiarity with the
latest scholarship on both empires is astonishing.
*Jane Hathaway, Arts and Sciences Distinguished Professor, Ohio
State University, and author of The Chief Eunuch of the Ottoman
Empire: From African Slave to Power-Broker*
What new does Faroqhi’s work offer? The answer lies is its focus.
Until now, the bulk of the comparative scholarship on these two
empires mainly studied the world of the dynasties, statecraft, and
aristocracy; in other words, the elite. Faroqhi’s book is the first
work that foregrounds the analysis of the lives and social
conditions of the subject population instead... And this she has
achieved brilliantly.
*The Medieval History Journal*
An excellent starting point for those who wish to compare aspects
of the socio-economic history of the two empires.
*International Review of Social History*
If scholars of the early modern Islamic world were asked for a
single adjective to describe Suraiya Faroqhi, most might opt for
‘indefatigable’.
*Journal of Islamic Studies*
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