Described as the "sick man of Europe" by the Great Powers, the Ottoman Empire in the early twentieth century was in terminal decline. The newly independent Balkan states—Greece, Serbia, Montenegro and Bulgaria—each had significant ethnic populations who had remained under Ottoman rule. Under the gui
The Balkan Wars: Ottoman Perspectives
✍ Scribed by Ercan Karakoç (editor), Ali Serdar Mete (editor)
- Publisher
- Peter Lang
- Year
- 2024
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 259
- Series
- South-East European History; 6
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Described as the "sick man of Europe" by the Great Powers, the Ottoman Empire in the early twentieth century was in terminal decline. The newly independent Balkan states—Greece, Serbia, Montenegro and Bulgaria—each had significant ethnic populations who had remained under Ottoman rule. Under the guidance of Russia, which had its own interests in south-east Europe, they joined forces against the Ottomans, under the name of the Balkan League, in 1912.
In the first phase of the Balkan Wars, Bulgarian, Greek, Montenegrin and Serbian armies fought together against the Ottoman Empire, dealing the Ottomans a heavy defeat in a result that made headlines around the world. In the second phase, the Balkan states fought each other, and Romania also entered the war. In the conflict’s aftermath, new borders failed to satisfy any of the belligerent parties. Interventions by the Great Powers further increased tensions in the region. As the ultimate result, the first bullet that triggered the First World War was fired in Sarajevo in June 1914. The causes and effects of the Balkan Wars have remained controversial despite the passage of time. In this volume, writers from various Balkan nations and from across various disciplines have come together under the aegis of the Balkan History Association to address little-known and little-studied aspects of the wars. Collectively they analyze a huge range of political, historical, medical, sociological and religious aspects of the conflict. The book, with its ground-breaking content and unique bibliographies, will be an important guide for undergraduate and graduate students studying the political, military and social history of the Balkan Wars and the Balkan nations.
✦ Table of Contents
Preface
Contents
List of Tables
List of Figures
Introduction
Part I: The War
1. Diplomacy behind the Curtain: Making the Balkan League • Biljana Stojić
2. Making the Balkan League with(out) the European Powers • Biljana Stojić
3. Turkish Aviation during the Balkan Wars • Osman Yalçın
4. The Occupation of the Aegean Islands by Greece in the First Balkan War According to Turkish Sources • Sabri Can Sannav
Part II: The Struggle
5. The Hospitalization of the Ottoman Soldiers during the First Balkan War: The Case of the First Relief Expedition to İstanbul by the German Red Cross • Theodoros Giannopoulos and Christos Mantzanas
6. The Balkan Wars 1912–13: The Albanian Question • Ethem Çeku
Part III: The Nations
7. The Population Exchange between Bulgaria and the Ottoman Empire after the Balkan Wars of 1912–1913 • Cengiz Yolcu
8. The Issue of Waqf Institutions in the Kingdom of Serbia: The Example of the Münderise Waqf Register of Ottoman Provenance from the Ex-Sanjak of Skopje • Irena Kolaj Ristanović
9. Young Turk Policy and Albanian Uprisings in Ottoman Macedonia: From Revolution to Balkan War(s) (1908–1912) • Denis Ljuljanović
10. Albania in the First Balkan War in the Ottoman Turkish Sources • Ilirjana Kaceli (Demirlika)
Notes on Contributors
Index
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