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From Anatolia to Aceh
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Table of Contents

1: A.C.S. Peacock and Annabel Teh Gallop: Introduction. Islam, Trade and Politics Across the Indian Ocean: Imagination and Reality
2: Anthony Reid, Rum and Jawa: The Vicissitudes of Documenting a Long-distance Relationship
The political and economic relationship from the sixteenth to nineteenth centuries
3: Jorge Santos Alves: From Istanbul with Love: Rumours, Conspiracies and Commercial Competition in Aceh-Ottoman Relations (1550s to 1570s)
4: A.C.S. Peacock: The Economic Relationship between the Ottoman Empire and Southeast Asia in the Seventeenth Century
5: Jeyamalar Kathirithamby-Wells: Hadhrami Mediators of Ottoman Influence in Southeast Asia
6: Isaac Donoso: The Ottoman Caliphate and Muslims of the Philippine Archipelago during the Early Modern Era
Interactions in the Colonial Era
7: Ismail Hakki Kadi: The Ottomans and Southeast Asia Prior to the Hamidian Era: A Critique of Colonial Perceptions of Ottoman-Southeast Asian Interaction
8: Ismail Hakki Goksoy: Acehnese Appeals for Ottoman Protection in the Late Nineteenth Century
9: William Clarence-Smith: Middle Eastern States and the Philippines under Early American Rule, 1898-1919
10: Amrita Malhi: "We Hope to Raise the Bendera Stambul": British Forward Movement and the Caliphate on the Malay Peninsula
11: Chiara Formichi: Indonesian Readings of Turkish History (1890s-1940s)
Cultural and intellectual influences
12: Vladimir Braginsky: Representation of the Turkic-Turkish Theme in Traditional Malay Literature, with Special Reference to the Works of the Fourteenth to Mid-Seventeenth Centuries
13: Oman Fathurahman: New Textual Evidence for Intellectual and Religious Connections between the Ottomans and Aceh
14: Ali Akbar: The Influence of Ottoman Qur'ans in Southeast Asia through the Ages

About the Author

Andrew Peacock is at University of St Andrews.

Annabel Teh Gallop is at The British Library.

Reviews

The editors have done a remarkable job here in bringing together the work of historians and philologists to produce a volume of studies tightly focused along clearly defined axes of interaction between the two regions. Their efforts have produced a book that makes significant and meaningful contributions to our understandings of these trans-regional dynamics in the history of Southeast-Asia ... this fine volume will certainly serve as an important resource for work on this and other aspects of connection between the two regions in the future.
*R. Michael Feener, Southeast Asian Studies*

The study of Ottoman influences on Muslim Southeast Asia has long been a dauntingly specialized field. In light of its linguistic, archival, and historiographic complexity, the field is likely to remain specialized and dauntingly multidisciplinary for some time to come. But it is precisely this complexity that makes this book's synthesis and depth such a welcome achievement, and a work important for all scholars intrigued by the history of Ottoman connections to Muslim Southeast Asia.
*Robert W. Hefner, Indonesia journal*

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