Results 81 to 90 of about 142 (118)
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Sufism and Governmentality in the Late Ottoman Empire
Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East, 2009This article examines transformations in Sufi orders and in the status of Sufis in the late Ottoman Empire and argues that their increasing bureaucratization was an extension of increased rationalization of Ottoman administration and the normalization of the objects of governance into the Islamic sphere.
Brian Silverstein
exaly +2 more sources
Could Sufism Have Been a Means of Spreading Ibn Taymiyya's Thought in the Ottoman Empire?
Muslim World, The, 2022AbstractCurrent studies on Ibn Taymiyya's influence on the intellectual life of the Ottoman Empire focus on the mid‐sixteenth and the early seventeenth centuries. In this paper, I argue that Ibn Taymiyya's influence on some aspects of Ottoman intellectual life can be traced, indirectly, to the beginning of the fifteenth century.
exaly +2 more sources
2014
In August 1516 the Ottoman Sultan Selim I defeated the Mamluks on the plain of Marj Dabiq, near Aleppo, and quickly conquered Syria. In January of the next year, the Ottomans conquered Egypt, thus completing the destruction of the Mamluk Sultanate, and annexed Egypt and Syria as provinces.
exaly +2 more sources
In August 1516 the Ottoman Sultan Selim I defeated the Mamluks on the plain of Marj Dabiq, near Aleppo, and quickly conquered Syria. In January of the next year, the Ottomans conquered Egypt, thus completing the destruction of the Mamluk Sultanate, and annexed Egypt and Syria as provinces.
exaly +2 more sources
Greek Philosophy and Sufism in Mecdi’s Ottoman Turkish Gardens of Peonies
2022exaly +2 more sources
The Dervish Lodge: Architecture, Art, and Sufism in Ottoman Turkey Raymond Lifchez
Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, 1993exaly +2 more sources

