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Titre : Imperialism, evangelism, and the Ottoman Armenians, 1878-1896 Titre original : [L'impérialisme, l'évangélisation et les Arméniens ottomans, 1878-1896] Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Jeremy Salt, Auteur Editeur : London, England : F. Cass Année de publication : 1993 Importance : 188 p. Présentation : Illustrations, cartes en noir Format : 24 cm ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-0-7146-3448-7 Note générale : Bibliographie, index, notes Langues : Anglais (eng) Mots-clés : Arméniens Empire ottoman Question arménienne Impérialisme Index. décimale : 1070 Serdema hevdem ("Sedsala 19ê ya dirêj): 1800 - 1914 | Période contemporaine ("Long 19e siècle"): 1800 - 1914 | Contemporary period ("Long 19th century"): 1800 - 1914 | سەردەمی هاوچەرخ (سەدەی ١٩هەم) : ١٨٠٠ - ١٩١٤ Note de contenu : The focus of this work is the unfolding of the Armenian Question from the Congress of Berlin in 1878 to the breakdown of communal relations among Armenians, Turks and Kurds in the eastern provinces of the Ottoman Empire in the mid-1890s. The author takes as his starting point the inherited attitudes towards the Ottoman state, Islam and the Turks which outside observers brought to their understanding of Ottoman affairs. He discusses the role of American missionaries in the Ottoman state as they strove to introduce the Armenians to a 'higher' form of Christianity and proselytised among the Muslims. By the time the European diplomats met at Berlin in 1878, the interests of European governments in the Ottoman state, foreign religious interests in the affairs of Ottoman Christians and the claims of these communities themselves were converging in a single stream.
The result was the attempt - with Britain taking the lead - to establish a 'European' protectorate over the Armenians living in the eastern provinces. Although this attempt failed, the European governments continued their campaign for reforms. The hope that they could be induced to intervene more directly was an element in the calculations of the Armenian revolutionaries, and with uprisings and reprisals spreading across eastern Anatolia in the 1890s the British government led a final attempt to impose 'reforms' on the sultan. This was followed by an unprecedented surge of violence across the east and in Istanbul itself. (...)Permalink : https://pmb.institutkurde.org/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=3604 Imperialism, evangelism, and the Ottoman Armenians, 1878-1896 = [L'impérialisme, l'évangélisation et les Arméniens ottomans, 1878-1896] [texte imprimé] / Jeremy Salt, Auteur . - London, England : F. Cass, 1993 . - 188 p. : Illustrations, cartes en noir ; 24 cm.
ISBN : 978-0-7146-3448-7
Bibliographie, index, notes
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Mots-clés : Arméniens Empire ottoman Question arménienne Impérialisme Index. décimale : 1070 Serdema hevdem ("Sedsala 19ê ya dirêj): 1800 - 1914 | Période contemporaine ("Long 19e siècle"): 1800 - 1914 | Contemporary period ("Long 19th century"): 1800 - 1914 | سەردەمی هاوچەرخ (سەدەی ١٩هەم) : ١٨٠٠ - ١٩١٤ Note de contenu : The focus of this work is the unfolding of the Armenian Question from the Congress of Berlin in 1878 to the breakdown of communal relations among Armenians, Turks and Kurds in the eastern provinces of the Ottoman Empire in the mid-1890s. The author takes as his starting point the inherited attitudes towards the Ottoman state, Islam and the Turks which outside observers brought to their understanding of Ottoman affairs. He discusses the role of American missionaries in the Ottoman state as they strove to introduce the Armenians to a 'higher' form of Christianity and proselytised among the Muslims. By the time the European diplomats met at Berlin in 1878, the interests of European governments in the Ottoman state, foreign religious interests in the affairs of Ottoman Christians and the claims of these communities themselves were converging in a single stream.
The result was the attempt - with Britain taking the lead - to establish a 'European' protectorate over the Armenians living in the eastern provinces. Although this attempt failed, the European governments continued their campaign for reforms. The hope that they could be induced to intervene more directly was an element in the calculations of the Armenian revolutionaries, and with uprisings and reprisals spreading across eastern Anatolia in the 1890s the British government led a final attempt to impose 'reforms' on the sultan. This was followed by an unprecedented surge of violence across the east and in Istanbul itself. (...)Permalink : https://pmb.institutkurde.org/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=3604



