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History of the Ottoman Turks: from the beginning of their empire ..., Volume 2

 By Sir Edward Shepherd Creasy

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Full view - Item notes: v. 2 - 1856 - History


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JSTOR: History of the Ottoman Turks
History of the Ottoman Turks. Norman Itzkowitz. Journal of the American Oriental Society, Vol. 83, No. 1, 125-126. Jan. - Mar., 1963. ...
links.jstor.org/ sici?sici=0003-0279(196301%2F03)83%3A1%3C125%3AHOTOT%3E2.0.CO%3B2-U

Book Meme: The History of the Ottoman Turks « Saifuddin
The Meme: History of the Ottoman Turks - From the Beginning of Their Empire To the Present Time, by Sir Edward S. Creasy ma (1878) ...
wasalaam.wordpress.com/ 2008/ 02/ 19/ book-meme-the-history-of-the-ottoman-turks/

NEW PUBLICATIONS.
Sir Edward Creasy, late Chief-Justice of Ceylon, Emeritus Professor of History in University College, London, and the author of several books of value, ...
query.nytimes.com/ gst/ abstract.html?res=F00B16FC3C5A127B93C4A8178AD95F438784F9

The Baldwin Project: Greatest Nations: Vol X—Turkey by Charles F ...
Founding of the Kingdom of Osman from Greatest Nations: Vol X—Turkey by Charles F. Horne
www.mainlesson.com/ display.php?author=horne& book=turkey& story=osman

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100 - 200 YTL, 3 Taksit. 201 - 400 YTL, 4 Taksit. 401 - 600 YTL, 5 Taksit. 601-1000 YTL, 6 Taksit. 1001 YTL ve üstü, 8 Taksit ...
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(Microsoft Word - 42. slaytt\334RK\335YE \335LE \335LG\335L\335 ...
History of the Ottoman Turks; from the beginning of their empire to the present time,. by Sir Edward S. Creasy. 1st American ed. from the new rev. ...
www.fbf2008turkey.com/ tr/ dosyagoster.aspx?DIL=1& BELGEANAH=159033& DOSYAISIM=39.pdf

北沢書店-洋古書販売と和洋古書買取の専門店- 在庫目録
History of the Ottoman Turks: from the beginning of their empireto the present time, chiefly founded on von Hammer. In 2 Vols.:413548pp., 7 maps and plates. ...
www.kitazawa.co.jp/ bunya28.html

New Englander and Yale review. / Volume 37, Note on Digital Production
Creation of machine-readable edition. Cornell University Library 864 page images in volume Cornell University Library Ithaca, NY 1999 ABQ0722-0037 ...
lcweb2.loc.gov/ ndlpcoop/ nicmoas/ nwng/ nwng0037.sgm

KARA MAHMUD PASHE BUSHATI
KARA MAHMUD PASHĖ BUSHATI. BUALLI I SHKODRĖS[1]. (1776 – 1796 ER / 1190 – 1211 AH)[2]. Olsi Jazexhi. 1.1 KONTEKSTI HISTORIK ...
www.geocities.com/ olsi.rm/ bushati.htm

Places mentioned in this book  Maps  KML

Bucharest - Page 369
Indeed the war which began at the close of 1806, and was terminated by the treaty of Bucharest in 1812, is, of all the struggles between Turkey and ...
more pages: 147 221 236 241 243 244 366 388 394 415
Orsova - Page 197
Marshal Wallis intended to commence the campaign by the siege of Orsova, and he had positive orders from the Emperor to fight a pitched battle with ...
more pages: 191 192 297
Belgrade - Page 56
The Turkish army proceeded along the western side of the Danube from Belgrade, and reached Vienna without experiencing any.
more pages: 91 145 148 198 199 200 217 286 348 362
Algiers - Page 491
and Algiers, the Sublime Porte engages to employ its power and influence in order to accomplish the views of the above-named court in this respect, ...
more pages: 65 66 268 298 534
Vienna - Page 71
through the weakness of Sultan Mahomet IV. and the misconduct of his favourite Vizier Kara Mustapha, the originator of the fatal march upon Vienna. ...
more pages: 36 54 56 60 94 95 114 205 224 280
Kartal - Page 231
Khalil Pacha came in presence of the enemy near Kartal. The Vizier had led and rallied a force of about 30000 effective troops : with these he ...
more pages: 538
Cairo - Page 392
32,) of the massacre of the Mamelukes, was written by an English gentleman who was at Cairo at the time : — " Nothing can be imagined more dreadful ...
more pages: 161 270 317 337 544
Venice - Page 150
Like Spain, Venice had been illustrious as a defender of Christendom against the Ottomans, when the power of Turkey was at its.
more pages: 24 25 48 64 79 102 132 133 134 149
Taganrog - Page 199
Russia was to be at liberty to erect a fortress on the Kuban, but Taganrog was not to be rebuilt. It was expressly provided by the third article of ...
more pages: 217
Cantemir - Page 132
one powerful cause of the facility with which the Porte acceded to the treaty of Carlowitz ; aud Cantemir relates an anecdote of the Reis Effendi, ...
Athens - Page 400
He termed it the Society (or Hetaeria) of the PhilikoiiJ and, by engrafting it on a Literary Society, which was flourishing at Athens, he obtained the ...
more pages: 406
Tripoli - Page 66
Tunis and Tripoli had their fleets and their slaves, though on a smaller scale. Our Admiral Blake tamed the savage pride of these barbarians in 1655. ...
more pages: 502 511
Jerusalem - Page 108
The ninth related to the exchange of prisoners ; the tenth to the freedom of commerce ; the twelfth stipulated protection for pilgrims to Jerusalem ...
more pages: 28 67 260 470 490
Moscow - Page 380
Thus wrangled they over the ideal proceeds of an uncommitted crime, little thinking that Moscow was soon to blaze, with French invaders for her ...
more pages: 21 22 117
Tunis - Page 502
de Tunis et de Tripoli, la Porte s'engage de rembourser de sou propre tiesor lesdites sommes dans le délai de deux mois ou plutot s'il est possible, ...
more pages: 511 538 543
Tepelene - Page 402
His ancestors had, for several generations, been hereditary chiefs of the little fortified village of Tepelene, where Aliwas born about the year 1750. ...
Kherson - Page 283
that, when Catherine and Joseph passed through the southern gate of her new city of Kherson, a pompous inscription, in the Greek language, was set up, ...
Warsaw - Page 209
Stanislaus Poniatowski, as king, was forced upon the Poles ; and against the dictatorship which the Russian general Repnin exercised at Warsaw. ...
more pages: 544
Adana - Page 439
the Porte confirmed Mehemet Ali in his governments of Crete and Egypt, and added to them those of Jerusalem, Tripoli, Aleppo, Damascus, and Adana. ...
Berlin - Page 309
Petersburg and those of London and Berlin, made her waver for a time, and almost resolve to brave England and Prussia, and place her grandson on the ...
more pages: 240 333
Erfurt - Page 378
Afterwards, Napoleon, in the negociations of his ministers with Alexander, and in their subsequent interviews at Erfurt, sought to effect a ...
London - Page 306
One design which she communicated to the Courts of Berlin and London, was a project for erecting the provinces of Moldavia, Wallachia, and Bessarabia ...
more pages: 309 421 433 445 447 519
Rouen - Page 821
German baron on the Rhine, or as the messengers of Charles the Simple would have received, if they had carried threat or mandate to Brittany or Rouen. ...
Amiens - Page 345
By a treaty between France and Turkey (negotiated concurrently with the peace of Amiens between France and England), Napoleon, then Chief Consul, ...
Modena - Page 36
He was born at Modena, of a noble family of that duchy in 1608. He entered into the Austrian service ; and acquired distinction in the latter part of ...
Turin - Page 280
same selfish indifference to prevail both at the court of Turin and in that of Vienna.* It was, indeed, well known that Austria was conspiring with ...
Damascus - Page 230
with the Egyptian insurgent, who at one time was not only master of Egypt and part of Arabia, but occupied Gaza, Jaffa, Jerusalem, and Damascus. ...
Hamadan - Page 152
traced out by a line drawn from the junction of the Araxes and the Kur, and passing along by Erdebil, Tabriz, and Hamadan, and thence to Kcrmanschai. ...
Paris - Page 380
little thinking that Moscow was soon to blaze, with French invaders for her occupants, and that Paris, in a few more years, was to yield to Russian ...
more pages: 8
Madrid - Page 409
It is said that when he heard of the manner in which Murat, in 1808, used cannon to clear the streets of Madrid of the insurgent populace, ...
Rome - Page 820
the corrupt state of public feeling in Rome, shielded to a great extent the sordid arts by which they defrauded both the state and its subjects," &c. ...
Amsterdam - Page 67
flocked together at his bidding, not only from Constantinople, Smyrna, and other Turkish cities, but from Germany, Leghorn, Venice, and Amsterdam. ...
Sivas - Page 536
Ertoghrul, Prince, son of Bajazet I., killed at Sivas, i. 74. Erzerum, ii. 427. Eskischeer, celebrated in the history of the crusades under the name ...
Tabriz - Page 544
219; Ottoman army advances upon Tabriz, i. 220 ; tumult of the Janissaries, i. 221 ; engagement with the Persian army, i. 222-224 ; victory of Selim, ...
Tekeli - Page 103
The Dutch ambassador observed oii this, that the Turks could not make a serious matter about giving up Tekeli, now that they had themselves treated ...
more pages: 84 85
Livonia - Page 117
It was not till near the close of the year 1710, that Peter completed his conquest of Livonia and was at liberty to draw troops from the scene of his ...

Popular passages

The Sublime Porte promises to protect constantly the Christian religion and its churches, and it also allows the ministers of the Imperial Court of Russia to make, upon all occasions, representations, as well in favour of the new church at Constantinople, of which mention will be made in Article XIV., as on behalf of its officiating ministers...Page 480
The enactments thus made being a complete renovation and alteration in ancient usages, this Imperial rescript will be published at Constantinople and in all the towns of our Empire, and will be officially communicated to all the ambassadors of friendly Powers residing in Constantinople...Page 445
After the manner of the other powers, permission is given to the High Court of Russia, in addition to the chapel built in the minister's residence, to erect in one of the quarters of Galata, in the street called Bey Oglu, a public church, in which Christians may worship according to the Greek ritual, which shall always be under the protection of the ministers of that empire, and secure from all coercion and outrage.Page 256
... the one of you is from the other. They therefore who have left their country, and have been turned out of their houses, and have suffered for my sake, and have been slain in battle; verily I will expiate their evil deeds from them, and I will surely bring them into gardens watered by rivers; a reward from GOD: and with GOD is the most excellent reward. Let not the prosperous dealing of the unbelievers in the land deceive thee: it is but a slender provision; and then their receptacle shall be...Page 139
Principalities are, he said, in fact, an independent State under my protection, this might so continue, Servia might receive the same form of government, so again with Bulgaria, there seems to be no reason why this province should not form an independent State. As to Egypt, I quite understand the importance to England of that territory. I can then only say that if, in the event of a distribution of the Ottoman succession upon the fall of the Empire...Page 457
March, 1829, extending the northern frontier of Greece up to a line drawn from the Gulf of Arta to the Gulf of Volo. Greece, according to this Protocol, was still to remain under the Sultan's suzerainty: its ruler was to be a hereditary prince belonging to one of the reigning European families, but not to any of the three allied Courts.* The mediation of Great Britain was now offered to the Porte upon the terms thus...Page 425
Europe, than the success of the arms and the ambitious projects of Russia. Far from seeking, on such a supposition, the alliance and the friendship of the Empress, it would become their most essential interest to unite to diminish her strength and destroy her preponderance. If the balance of power, that unmeaning word, invented by William...Page 209
God is not disposed to leave the faithful in the condition which ye are now in, until he sever the wicked from the good ; nor is God disposed to make you acquainted with what is a hidden secret ; but God chooseth such of his apostles as he pleaseth, to reveal his mind unto : believe therefore in God, and his apostles : and if ye believe, and fear God, ye shall receive a great reward.Page 137
For this reason, in future, the cause of every accused party will be tried publicly, in conformity with our divine law; and until a regular sentence has been pronounced, no one can put another to death, secretly or publicly, by poison, or any other form of punishment.Page 444
Ottoman yoke, .and reviving the classical glories of the Hellenic name. As in the preceding war, Russia now used every available method by which she might make the Greek population of the Turkish Empire fight her battles against the Sultan. Before hostilities commenced in 1787, Catherine had...Page 292

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