Essays illuminate the lives of ordinary people who lived in the
Ottoman era.
Drawing from centuries-old court records, The Other Faces of Empire
traces the lives of "outstage" people in vast empire lands. Each essay
in the collection tells the story of an ordinary person navigating the
Ottoman Empire. On this journey, we meet colorful and quite
extraordinary figures: Deli Şaban, "naughty and haramzade" with his
unsuccessful suicide attempts; Divane Hamza, who harassed the people in
the village of Evciler in Bursa; Mâryem of Konya, who killed her
husbands and buried them in the floor of a room of her house; Alaeddin
from Skopje, who was captured by pirates; Nicolò Algarotti, a Venetian
broker; and many others.
The volume's micro-historical perspective strengthens its place in
historiography, and moreover, it updates the historical record by
sharing the overlooked stories of "ordinary" people and recording their
names in the Ottoman historical literature one by one.