Biography of an Ottoman Provincial Town
Place-Making in Mezre
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Edinburgh University Press
Publishing:31st Oct '26
£85.00
This title is due to be published on 31st October, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

This book presents a 150-year biography of a provincial town. It details the emergence of Mezre as a frontier garrison town next to ancient Harput in the Ottoman East; Mezre-Harput’s subsequent dual-city life until the end of the nineteenth century; and the eventual transformation of Mezre and Harput into the unified Elazığ in Republican Turkey. From the rise and fall of Mezre during the Tanzimat period to the nation-state-making of the early twentieth century, the book investigates periods of negligence as well as those of state intervention. In doing so, it scrutinises the concept of a 'provincial town' as a distinct zone where the imperial and the rural intersect, clash and coalesce. Through in-depth research on both Ottoman and Republican-period primary sources, this book provides a comprehensive account of urban transformation, town politics and spatial nationalisation. Moreover, it invites the Ottoman historiography to consider 'place-making' as an alternative analytical lens to state-centred accounts.
Historically triangulated by Armenian, Kurdish, and Turkish narratives, this excellent analysis of the town of Mezre in the eastern provinces of first the Ottoman Empire and then the modern Turkish Republic cogently reveals how place and place-making unfolds. Bourgeois suburbanisation intersects with governmental bureaucratisation to generate the Mezre-Harput duality, with Mezre eventually replacing Harput and transforming it into the current national city of Elazığ. A must read for those interested in global capitalist urbanisation. -- Fatma Müge Göçek, University of Michigan
Where does history happen? By focusing on Mezre – a government seat, an elite enclave, and eventually the city now known as Elazığ – Ali Sipahi offers a new way to write a geographically attuned history. Reading across disciplines, archives, languages, and sites, Sipahi helps us rethink the spatial categories that underpin social and historical analysis. -- Timur W. Hammond, Syracuse University
ISBN: 9781399555296
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
176 pages