
History of the Turkish Jews and Sephardim
Memories of a Past Golden Age
Elli Kohen(Author)
University Press of America
Published on 20. December 2006
Book
Paperback/Softback
266 pages
978-0-7618-3601-8 (ISBN)
Description
This book presents aliving history of the Turkish Jews. Despite numerous historical studies of this time period and its people, includingFarewell to Salonica by Leon Sciaky, the works of the Bulgarian Sephardic author Canetti,History of the Israelites of Salonica by Joseph Nehama,Salonica by Mark Mazower, and the works of Abraham Galante, there are few livinghistories. InHistory of the Turkish Jews and Sephardim author Elli Kohen attempts to combine the patience of the chronicler with the folksy humor of the storyteller, without undermining the presentation of the Sephardic Jews cultural history. It is a book of love for all the cultures that have come to coexist on the shores of the Bosphorus.
This comprehensive work explores the early Ottomon period, the Sephardi period, and concludes on the eve of the Sabbastian upheaval. Unique in tone and purpose,History of the Turkish Jews and Sephardim explores the cultural synthesis resulting from the interaction of the various elements co-existing near the shores of the Bosphorus. In style and breadth, this new work complements the existing literature on this historical period.
Below are some of the events and stories chronicled in the History of the Turkish Jew and Sephardim:
- The mysterious sect of Judaizing Chiones
-The enigmatic Torlak and the Anatolian syncretistic-communist revolution
- The Jewish doctors of Sultan Mehmed II and Suleyman the Magnificent
-The circular letter of the Sarfati calling the Ashkenazes to Turkey
-The lives of the Iberian Jews in the Turkish Paradise
-The rise of Joseph Nasi, the Duke of Naxos
-The charter for the quasi-autonomous Jewish mini-state, Muselemlik, in Salonica
-The monetary crisis of coinage (Jew money)
-The rise and fall of Esther Kyra, Court Jewess
-Murad IV and the Salonica textile crisis
This comprehensive work explores the early Ottomon period, the Sephardi period, and concludes on the eve of the Sabbastian upheaval. Unique in tone and purpose,History of the Turkish Jews and Sephardim explores the cultural synthesis resulting from the interaction of the various elements co-existing near the shores of the Bosphorus. In style and breadth, this new work complements the existing literature on this historical period.
Below are some of the events and stories chronicled in the History of the Turkish Jew and Sephardim:
- The mysterious sect of Judaizing Chiones
-The enigmatic Torlak and the Anatolian syncretistic-communist revolution
- The Jewish doctors of Sultan Mehmed II and Suleyman the Magnificent
-The circular letter of the Sarfati calling the Ashkenazes to Turkey
-The lives of the Iberian Jews in the Turkish Paradise
-The rise of Joseph Nasi, the Duke of Naxos
-The charter for the quasi-autonomous Jewish mini-state, Muselemlik, in Salonica
-The monetary crisis of coinage (Jew money)
-The rise and fall of Esther Kyra, Court Jewess
-Murad IV and the Salonica textile crisis
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Lanham, MD
United States
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Thickness: 16 mm
Weight
437 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-7618-3601-8 (9780761836018)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Elli Kohen, MD, born in Istanbul, Turkey, is an anatomopathologist, researcher in cell biology, cell biochemistry, and cellular pharmacology, and Professor Emeritus at the University of Miami. He has written eight books in science, a Ladino/English Encyclopedic Dictionary, and the biography of Rabbi Nissim Ovadia, A Pillar of Sephardi Judaism. He appears in the marquis Who's Who in America 2005 and 2006, Who's Who in Science and Engineering 2005, Who's Who in the World of Education 2005, and the forthcoming Who's Who in Medicine and Healthcare 2007. Dr. Kohen has spent many years in Turkey and the surrounding area. He incorporates his experiences in these regions into his writing in an effort to preserve and impart the history of the Jews in the Byzantine and Ottomon periods.
Content
Part 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 The First Ottomans
Chapter 3 Communism Before Marx
Chapter 4 Murad II: The Agony of Byzantium, The Dawn of an Empire
Chapter 5 Mehmed II: The New Rome: Istanbul
Chapter 6 Bayezid II: The Gates of Paradise
Chapter 7 Selim I: Conqueror of the Holy Land, Syria and Egypt
Chapter 8 Suleynan I: Shelomo Hameleh
Chapter 9 Selim II: And the Duke of Naxos Was His Wine Companion!
Chapter 10 Safed in the Sixteenth Century: The Kingdom of Mystical Utopia
Chapter 11 Murad III: Jewish International Diplomacy in Search of Pax Ottomanica
Chapter 12 Mehmed III: A Question of Debased Coinage
Chapter 13 Ahmed I: Wondrous Healing by the Ashkenazi Widow
Chapter 14 Osman II: The First Regicide
Chapter 15 Murad IV: The Conqueror of Baghdad
Chapter 16 Ibrahim: The New Pharaoh, His Beard Decked with Jewels
Part 17 Notes and References
Part 18 Appendices
Part 19 Index
Chapter 2 The First Ottomans
Chapter 3 Communism Before Marx
Chapter 4 Murad II: The Agony of Byzantium, The Dawn of an Empire
Chapter 5 Mehmed II: The New Rome: Istanbul
Chapter 6 Bayezid II: The Gates of Paradise
Chapter 7 Selim I: Conqueror of the Holy Land, Syria and Egypt
Chapter 8 Suleynan I: Shelomo Hameleh
Chapter 9 Selim II: And the Duke of Naxos Was His Wine Companion!
Chapter 10 Safed in the Sixteenth Century: The Kingdom of Mystical Utopia
Chapter 11 Murad III: Jewish International Diplomacy in Search of Pax Ottomanica
Chapter 12 Mehmed III: A Question of Debased Coinage
Chapter 13 Ahmed I: Wondrous Healing by the Ashkenazi Widow
Chapter 14 Osman II: The First Regicide
Chapter 15 Murad IV: The Conqueror of Baghdad
Chapter 16 Ibrahim: The New Pharaoh, His Beard Decked with Jewels
Part 17 Notes and References
Part 18 Appendices
Part 19 Index