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The Rise of Modern Turkey, c. 1906-1939 |
Kontakt/Bestellung |
Hrsg. v. Penelope Tuson |
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Online |
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Inhalt :: Content Online-Service mit Zugang zu einer Sammlung von Primärquellen aus dem India Office Political and Secret Files und Confidential Print der britischen Regierung, die die letzten Jahre des Osmanischen Reichs, den Ersten Weltkrieg und die Entstehung der modernen Türkischen Republik bis zum Tod Mustafa Kemal Atatürks dokumentieren. Zu den abgedeckten Themenbereichen gehören u.a. inenpolitische Entwicklungen wie die Jungtürken-Revolution (1908/09) und deren Folgen, Geheimakten und Handbücher zu Provinzen, Militär, Wirtschaft und Bildung im Ersten Weltkrieg, die Friedensverhandlungen nach 1918 und die Auflösung des Osmanischen Reichs, der Vertrag von Lausanne (1923) sowie Grenz- und Minderheitenfragen bis 1939. Die Quellenmaterialien beinhalten u.a. vertrauliche Korrespondenzen, Lageberichte und Geheimdienstinformationen. |
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Verlag :: Publisher Brill Academic Publishers |
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Preis :: Price Preise auf Anfrage / Prices on request |
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Das Angebot richtet sich nicht an Verbraucher i. S. d. § 13 BGB und Letztverbraucher i. S. d. PAngV. |
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ISBN/ISSN 2950-4988 Bestellnummer bei digento :: digento order number 10883301 |
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Verlagsinformation :: Publisher's information On the death of Kemal Atatürk, in 1938, the British Ambassador to Turkey, Sir Percy Loraine, commented in his annual report to the Foreign Office on the “vast strides in moral, material and political progress” accomplished in “the brief span of fifteen years under the dynamic impulse of this remarkable man”. Loraine's report is one of a series included in this online collection of files and printed material from the India Office archives at the British Library. The collection focuses on the international aspects of the decline of the Ottoman Empire from the beginning of the twentieth century to its formal end after the First World War. At the same time it traces the emergence of Turkey as a nation state from the Young Turk revolution in 1908 and 1909 through the proclamation of the Turkish Republic in 1923, followed by post-war modernisation and secularisation programmes and territorial consolidation up to the death of Atatürk and the outbreak of the Second World War. International rivalry: British relations with the Ottoman Empire The rise of modern Turkey Contents of the collection Provenance and archival background From 1902 the most important of the Political and Secret Department’s correspondence and papers accumulated in London were registered, indexed and arranged in files according to subject. From 1902 to 1930 the “Subject Files” are located under the reference L/P&S/10. Around 1930/1931 the department replaced its subject file system with a new series of “Collections”, arranged according to geographical area. They are now to be found under the reference L/P&S/12. Material in this edition is drawn from collection 39 (“Turkey”). During the same period, and earlier, the department also maintained its own reference library of confidential handbooks for the restricted use of its own officials, as did the Military and other India Office departments. The departmental reference libraries from which the printed items in the collection are drawn are now classified as L/P&S/20 and L/MIL/17. These archive groups also include the set of Foreign Office printed correspondence on Asiatic Turkey. Some highlights of the collection
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