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Avret Pazarları

Avret Pazarları[lb 1] (Ottoman Turkish: پازار‎ [Avret Pazarları]) or simply Esir Bazar[4] was a market of women slaves located in Istanbul, in then Ottoman Empire (now Turkey) between the mid 15th-century and the early 20th-century.[nb 1][5] Many households owned female slaves were women, including many as domestic servants. Constantinople became the capital of forced captive slaves that included women. The slave market was under the supervision of the Ottoman state, which taxed every transaction of slaves.

Women were captured from various African, Asian, and European territories and sold in Istanbul markets. Unlike their male counterparts, women slaves were permitted to be exploited sexually, and their sexuality was deemed to be the personal property of their owners. Female slaves would have few possibilities, depending upon physical attributes such as beauty and natural skills of pleasure and entertaining of male counterparts with cajoling words and gestures,[6] to be selected by elite men as slaves or concubines.

Commoner and imperial palace slaves were marketed. Turkish television drama usually tend to ignore non-elite-commoner-women slavery and focuses more on privileged female slavery in elite Ottoman imperial palaces. In descriptions of Ottoman times, non-elite-commoner-women slavery are found in some of the then contemporary slave narrative accounts, traveler's accounts, folk songs, late ottoman times Turkish novels, twentieth century poems.

History and context Edit

The general slave trade of men and women was referred to as Esir Pazari.[7][8][9][10][11] According to Jane Hathaway, a sizable majority of the slaves traded in the Arab slave trade were often women; every substantial household and many less substantial households owned female slaves, including many as domestic servants. In history as well as in conventional scholarship on Ottoman historiography, non-elite slaves and women are far underrepresented.[12]

 
The Aurut Bazaar, or Slave Market - Walsh Robert & Allom Thomas - 1836
 
William Allan (1782-1850) - The Slave Market, Constantinople - NG 2400 - National Galleries of Scotland

According to Ehud R. Toledano, the Ottoman Empire followed the same path of enslavement as of other enslavers in general and their predecessor Islamic states in particular, especially the Caliphates of Al-Mu'tasim and Mamluk Sultanate.[1] Taledano says that while various Muslim societies had developed their own brand of enslavement, the legal essence was very much derived from Islamic law.[1] Taledano says harem slavery was a central component of early modern Ottoman imperial and elite households.[1]

 
Slave import from the Crimean Khanate in about 1600 (political map). Note that the areas marked Poland and especially Muscovy were claimed rather than administered and were thinly populated.
 
Contemporary Black Sea map

In 1453 AD, Constantinople (Istanbul) became the capital of the Ottoman Empire. Over the centuries, it became the capital of forced captive slaves that included women.[9] According to Taledano, during the 15th through 18th centuries, a large pool of women captives were brought in as loot of the war from various war fronts, including Greeks and Balkans from northeast shores of Mediterranean seas and also southeastern European lands lying north of the Black Sea i.e. Georgia and Circassia. These captives became forced labor including the concubinage of elite and royal harems of Ottoman sultans.[1] According to Taledano, in contrast to the Atlantic slave trade where the male-female ratio was 2:1 or 3:1, the Arab slave trade usually had a higher female:male ratio instead, suggesting a general preference for female slaves. Concubinage and reproduction served as incentives for importing female slaves (often European), although many were also imported mainly for performing household tasks.[13]

According to Robert C. Davis, in the 16th century, Avret Pazary was in full swing and doing strong business. Davis estimates demand and market of female slaves capturing and enslavement figure above a thousand per year, in the Ottoman Empire. The slave women market used to be filled with women captured from Corsairs, Tartars and miscellaneous slave dealers.

According to Taledano, slaves usually would not come on record unless reported by their masters, usually for absconding, so while knowing the exact number and composition of slaves remains difficult, analysis of 16th-century absconders presented by Yvonne Seng from Ottoman records shows that some were captured in Ottoman war campaigns in the Balkans, while many others were captured from Russia and Poland by the Crimean Khanate incursions there. Among absconding slaves, 39 percent were Russians, Serbs-Croats 31 percent, Bosnians 11 percent, and the remaining 19 percent from Hungary Bulgaria and Walachia.[14]

According to Davis, Ottaviano Bon, an early 17th-century Italian ambassador, made observations about Avret Pizary of Istanbul:

For such a purpose, there is an enclosed public market in Constantinople in which an open auction each Wednesday female slaves of every sort are bought and sold, and everybody freely goes there to buy them...

— Ottaviano Bon, Attributed in Davis, Robert C. (2009-07-01). Holy War and Human Bondage: Tales of Christian-Muslim Slavery in the Early-Modern Mediterranean:. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-0-313-06540-8.

Davis further quotes Bon as saying that slave girls in Istanbul were bought and sold like animals – ascertaining their country of origin, plus examining their bodies all over thoroughly to confirm that their buyer did not feel swindled. Virgin and beautiful girls used to get higher prices, and traders used to be held guilty if the slave girl did not turn out to be a virgin after promising so. While Turkish free women i.e. Muslim women could not be enslaved and Muslim Turkish women had some level of legal prerogative against sexual exploitation through slavery, the same prerogative was not available to slaves against their masters buying and selling them for sexual whims, and such sexual exploitation of female slaves could not be punished legally. According to Davis, by 1717, Lady Mary, wife of a British ambassador to Istanbul, reported in her later published letter that the women slave market of Istanbul was somewhat dwindling.

The slave market was under the supervision of the Ottoman state, which taxed every transaction of slaves. The official control of the slave market was executed by an official called esirci emini. A standard fee or the 1/40th of the value of the slave was imposed as tax. A guild of slave merchants existed (esirci esnafi), headed by a sheikh (esirci seyhi). He was elected by the members of the guild (esnaf) and was appointed by a sultanic decree. Apart from Muslims, Jews were also involved in the slave market, but it is not known whether they were organized in guilds (Sarris, 1990: 336, 337). As per Elviya Celebi memoir, slave traders' guild esirci esnafi had around 2000 members, and their shops had slave rooms.[15]

Limitations of enslaved women Edit

According to Robert C. Davis, although women slaves were mainly taken from war zones, referring to them as captives or prisoners of war was blatantly incorrect. It is significant to note that the women's religion was not the same as that of their captors, and most of them were not active combatants but were taken while going about their normal business as civilians, despite any sign of hostility.[7][16] The women were captured from various African, Asian, and European territories and sold in Istanbul markets. Madeline Zilfi maintains that, like male slaves, female slaves were considered the personal property of their owners. However, unlike their male counterparts, women slaves were permitted to be exploited sexually, and their sexuality was deemed to be the personal property of their owners.[10][17] Although using female slaves for prostitution was technically illegal, selling a slave woman to another man for sex was permissible, and slave women had no legal protection over their sexuality.[18] Zilfi explains that while slaves could seek recourse to Islamic Sharia courts for any other physical injury, the sexuality of women slaves was not their own to lose. As a result, they were unable to appeal to Sharia courts or Sultans.[10] Under systemic biases introduced under the Ottoman judicial system, enslaved women, most of whom were non-Muslims, were barred from testifying as witnesses against Muslims.[19] The loss of a slave's virginity was not a matter for herself but rather for her owner, unlike physical injuries to a woman slave by a non-owner, for example, to the arm, leg, eye, or other part of the body.[10] For instance, in the winter of 1817 AD, a female slave owner received compensation through the courts from a man who had raped her slave because the woman's virginity had been compromised, and it would no longer be possible for her owner to sell her as a highly priced virgin.[10]

According to Zilfi, the literature on slavery-related Fatwa, covering Ottoman legal commentaries, is full of discussions about past, present, and future access to female slaves' sexuality. Queries were asked and answered about disputed paternity, prostitution, adultery, joint ownership of slaves, childbirth, marriage, violation of woman slaves by those other than the owner, and sexual relations with a wife's slave woman without the wife's consent.[10] Muftis used to hold special authority as religious opinion givers, given that the interface between a slave's condition and the domestic household was problematic.[10][nb 2]

While some intellectuals dispute whether those deemed slaves would have been considered as such under our understanding of western slavery, Ehud R. Toledano, Liat Kozma, and Suraiya Faroqhi reveal that there were cases in which enslaved women were abused and deprived of legal protection and their rights. Faroqhi explains that while some historians attempt to contest contrasting law and society, law depends on society, and Islamic law and culture include provisions for the enslaved, facilitating their societal absorption over the generations. Nevertheless, although application and practice may not be universal, those in power impose legal systems to obtain significant advantage for themselves. When viewed from the perspective of disadvantaged slaves, it is reasonable to assume that a legal system is being imposed from outside on the micro-society of the enslaved.[6]

Finally, in the case of Ottoman Legal System in regards to slavery, individual rights to choice and consent were severely restrained. Abuse and limitations were frequent, and female slaves were reduced to the level of material possessions, to be listed in inheritance registers alongside household utensils or livestock, or given such physical descriptions in court.[17] Nineteenth century European women visitors reported that slave women had an astonishingly large amount of leisure time and freedom of speech and action inside the harem. They saw the slaves’ lives as preferable to those of domestic servants in the West.[21]


As Suraiya Faroqhi says, female slaves would have few possibilities, depending upon physical attributes such as beauty and natural skills of pleasure and entertaining of male counterparts with cajoling words and gestures,[6] to be selected by elite men as slaves or concubines. Few would be selected as slaves for the imperial harem, a few of them would be gifted to other elite men, a few more physically attractive ones would get selected for royal males, then few attractive ones would be reserved for the pleasure of the Sultan himself, a few of them will be selected as concubines of the Sultan. Those who would issue a male child from the Sultan will receive some extra facilities, but if the slave lady does not convert to Islam then she will be bereft of her child and the child would be raised separately as a Muslim. A rare few of the concubines would have a chance to be selected as an official wife of the Sultan, and rarer would have a chance of being a beloved wife, then rarer among them if her child gets selected as Sultan, would have the best possible honor of being Walide (Mother) of the Sultan.[7][11]

According to Lidia Zhigunova, during the Ottoman period, women in the Caucasus had to face a multiplicity of colonizing agents, the westerners' and Russians' narratives focused on stereotypes of beauty and sexuality of elite Circassian slave women and their perceived emancipation and attempted to ignore their agency and other facets like their voices, resistance and diversity. Zhigunova quotes Tlostanova to describe possibilities of agencies for Ottoman women slaves. They (Zhigunova, Tlostanova) say that (unlike western slavery) slave status of Ottomans did not rob rights and humanity of the slaves, absorbed and integrated into the society better, there was a chance of change of status from non-elite to elite, for women slaves it was easier through possibilities of marriage. An enslaved woman impregnated by her owner could not be easily resold, her children were considered free, and if the owner accepted they were his children, the same inheritance rights applied as if children were from a legitimate marriage. So over next several generations of slaves were easily absorbed and integrated into the society like other earlier similarly integrated members. Moreover, female slaves would become free after the death of their owners through mechanism known as tedbir, a declaration wherein a slave owner would promise to manumit slave prior to his death to avail religious points of good behavior. At times in the nineteenth century, the Ottoman state encouraged Mukatebe contracts wherein slaves could save to buy their own manumission.[22] However, Zhigunova notes that there used to be repeated instances of women slave abuse, too. According to one example cited by Ehud Toledano, on 30 June 1854 a Circassian slave woman of poor background, named Shemsigul, recorded her testimony with Cairo police. According to her testimony, she was first trafficked from her native village in Circassia to Istanbul where she was purchased by a slave trader named Deli Mehmet, who on the way to Cairo sexually forced himself on her and subsequently, despite her getting pregnant from him, the trader sold her to a son of Egypt's then-Governor Mehmet Ali Pasha and subsequently was resold many times during her pregnancy itself, and even attempted to abort her. But eventually she gave birth to a child and the child was adopted by the wife of Deli Mehmet and she was resold to another dealer—even while the reselling of a slave mother was illegal even by Islamic standards—so the persecuting dealer Deli Mehmet was duly convicted. Toledano's study further says that the trafficking of Circassian women was well established by the nineteenth century, getting an additional dimension when, from the 1850s onwards, Russians expelled Circassians en masse from their own territories. The Circasians sought refuge with the Ottomans at the cost of being slaves. When rates of white slave women went down, black slave women were dumped. Sudden dumping or sudden manumission without any other recourse could lead to slave women's further destitution.[23][24]

Suraiya Faroqhi compares agency to slaves of Ottoman in comparison to contemporary slaves of Mughal empire in South Asia. According to Faroqhi, no doubt, slave women of the Ottoman Empire had better chances of agency if they chanced upon elite masters, whereas in an attempt to ensure better life for own daughters, elites of Mughal empire used to precondition marriage contracts so that legally wedded wives had rights to dispose of husband's slave women and concubine as and when they wanted and add that amount to own kitty. Thus, they could get rid of any eventual competition from any concubine. Whereas Ottoman women did not take as much recourse to this strategy, they used to end up in familial jealousy wars and risked being dumped by husbands if any slave woman or concubine found better favor. So in Ottoman times, agency, if any, of any slave woman used to be achieved at the cost of other women's agency.[6] Faroqhi says that, whether any other law or Sharia, in slave holding society, for slaves, capacity to show initiative and gain any agency remains limited by law or otherwise.[6] For example, the mechanism of tedbir could prove riskier in achieving meaningful liberation on death of the owner, since the owner could not dispose of his two-thirds property which would get divided among decedent's inheritors, who could claim that (property) value of the slave was too high which owner could not dispose of in full so inheritors continue to have ownership rights over the slave.[6]

Rather than imposing a binary whether Ottoman slaves were slaves or not, Faroqhi prefers to categorize them in a larger spectrum, wherein few of the elite male slaves growing through their military or administrative careers, enjoying most of practical life full of freedoms, wealth and power may not necessarily be called as slaves at all in the western sense but just next to them elite harem women slaves might have shared wealth and even power in some cases but considerable freedoms were alluding from them, too. But non-elite, i.e. menial slaves suffered the most from legal disabilities and reduced life chances that we associate with slavery.[6] Faroqhi further points out that Farhat Yasa's study of 16th-18th Centuries fatwas claims under certain circumstances that slave owners could kill their slaves without worrying about being punishment while alive in living world, meaning thereby when one focuses on agency availed by few privileged ones, one ought to acknowledge most female slaves could show their agency only in very narrow limits, if at all. Some female slaves could turn out to be mere facade and slave users using them to face court punishments against their own crimes, too. So under the same spectrum talking of any agency of mere helpless victim female slaves would not remain relevant at all.[6]

According to Kate Fleet, female slaves had more likelihood of access to public spaces as compared to non-slave Ottoman Muslim women. In fact, elite women usually had to take their female slaves along with them if a close male relative was not there to accompany them in public spaces. At times female slaves used to get some amount of agency as informant or spies.[17] More often than not, access to public spaces for female slaves was not dignified.[17]

Fleet says the visibility of a female slave was always meant to be fluid, since she would quickly move from one level of visibility to another, from being a protected possession to an exposed commodity without any choice over the levels to which they could be displayed to public gaze, could be handled naked by customers in the slave market, or from household servant to prostitute at the whim of their owners.[17]

Geographies, locations and economics Edit

East European Crimean Khanate had the largest share in conducting raids, captivating and indulging in exporting East European slaves and fulfilling the demands of Ottoman Empire and beyond.[25] The slave trade and enslaving and ransoming had become an important source of tax revenue for Crimean Khanate and Ottoman Empire both. On one hand, the Islamic tradition of frequent religious manumission used to set a large number of slaves free but on the other hand, the same culture used to create new continued demand for slaves.[25][26] As with Islam, Jewish slave traders used to have their own religious restrictions wherein once a slave owner has sexual relations with his female slave, he either had to sell the slave or manumit them—again the trader would be adding to new demand for the slaves.[25] This Ottoman practice at times used to increase population leading to economic pressure—even leading to revolts though they were successfully suppressed. Large numbers of manumitted slaves used to end up in begging or giving back in slavery due to non-availability of any other recourse.

The Circassians, Syrians, and Nubians were the three primary races of females who were sold as sex slaves (Cariye) in the Ottoman Empire. Circassian girls were described as fair and light-skinned and were frequently enslaved by Crimean Tatars then sold to Ottoman Empire to live and serve in a harem. They were the most expensive, reaching up to 500 pounds sterling, and the most popular with the Turks. Second in popularity were Syrian girls, with their dark eyes, dark hair, and light brown skin, and came largely from coastal regions in Anatolia. Their price could reach up to 30 pounds sterling. They were described as having "good figures when young". Nubian girls were the cheapest and least popular, fetching up to 20 pounds sterling.[27] Sex roles and symbolism in Ottoman society functioned as a normal action of power. The palace harem excluded enslaved women from the rest of society.[28]

The Ottomans' slave trade to South Asia was to and fro in both directions, but by comparison with the South Asia Uzbec slave trade, it was marginal—still catering demand of white female slaves in elite South Asian harems on the other hand South Asian markets used to fulfill the demand of non-Muslim female slaves.

Avret Pazari of Istanbul at Forum of Arcadius Edit

 
Map of Byzantine (Pre Ottoman) Constantinople. The locations of Forum of Arcadius near Ese Kapi Mosque, which is located at the corner between the Walls of Constantine and the southern branch of the Mese, in the southwestern part of the city near seventh hill

Avret Pazari of Istanbul was located near the Forum of Arcadius.[29] A small mosque to the west of Avret Bazaar bears the name Isa Kapoussi Mesdjidi, while the adjoining street is called Isa Kapoussi Sokaki.[30] The journey Hobhouse describes took place in 1809–10, and so the "last rebellion" must refer to the Ottoman coups of 1807–08, in particular Kabakçı Mustafa's rebellion of 1807. Apparently the "Aurat-Bazar" that Hobhouse reported to have been burnt down before 1810 was rebuilt on the same spot, as we can deduce from the 1839 book Constantinople and the Scenery of the Seven Churches of Asia Minor. It describes the "Aurut Bazaar" as standing "near the burnt column".[1] That this refers to the Column of Arcadius is clear from an earlier book by Walsh (who was an abolitionist), A Residence at Constantinople.[31] The same book specifically identifies the "Aurut Bazaar" as "[t]he usual place where Circassian slaves are sold".[32] The English novellist Julia Pardoe described the Istanbul slave market in her 1837 visit as, a square court three of whose side are built round with low stone rooms, or cells beyond which projects a wooden peristyle.[33]

Other locations Edit

There is a street in Gaziantep that is named Avrat Pazarı, the street name of the narrow street where the Old Municipality and Şıra Inn are located, north of İnönü Street, which runs parallel to the street starting right across the west-facing door of Kemikli Bedestens, and opens to Şıhcan Street.[34] Other Ottoman cities, such as Belgrade, Sophia, Damascus, Aleppo also had slave markets.[35]

Captures, retrievals, escapes and flights Edit

George of Hungary Edit

George of Hungary (c. 1422–1502)[36] was an Ottoman slave taken prisoner and sold into slavery when the Ottoman Turks invaded the town of Mühlbach (now Sebeș) in 1438. George escaped and reverted from Islam to Christianity, writing afterwards about his experiences.[37]

"..There they are examined and stripped...the private parts of men and women are handled and openly shown before everyone. Naked, they are compelled to go before everyone, to run, walk, and jump, so that it may be plainly apparent whether they are sick or healthy, male or female, old or young, virgin or corrupt"... "There the son is sold while the grieving mother looks on. There the mother is bought to the confusion and humiliation of the son. There the wife is mocked as a harlot and is handed over to another man, while her husband blushes. There is a little one snatched from the bosom of his mother while she is sold off, with every deep emotion shaken." ~ Reference: Brother George of Hungary, Treatise on the Customs, Living Conditions and Wickedness of the Turks, ~ David Ryan Stevenson (Atlanta, Department of Classics), p. 20

Emily Ruete Edit

There is a lack of (non-elite) slave narratives or folk literature of Circassian women. Emily Ruete's description of kidnapping and enslavement of her mother 'Jilfidan' is one of the closest available testimonies about a captive female slave. Until Ruete's mother was sold to her father, she was a common (non-elite) slave but when purchased by Ruete's father she became an elite slave, i.e. a concubine. Ruete wrote about the captivity of her mother 'Jilfidan':

...My mother was a Circassian by birth, who in early youth had been torn away from her home. Her father had been a farmer, and she had always lived peacefully with her parents and her little brother and sister. War broke out suddenly, and the country was overrun by marauding bands ; on their approach the family fled into an underground place, as my mother called it — she probably meant a cellar, which is not known in Zanzibar. Their place of refuge was, however, invaded by a merciless horde, the parents were slain, and the children carried off by three mounted Arnauts. One of these, with her elder brother, soon disappeared out of sight; the other two, with my mother and her little sister, three years old, crying bitterly for her mother, kept together until evening,when they too parted, and my mother never heard any more of the lost ones as long as she lived.
She came into my father's possession when quite a child, probably at the tender age of seven or eight years, as she cast her first tooth in our house...[38]

Margaret Himfi Edit

The Hungarian noblewoman Margaret Himfi was abducted and enslaved by Ottoman marauders at the turn of the 14th and 15th centuries. She later became a slave mistress of a wealthy Venetian citizen of Crete, with whom she had two daughters. Margaret was able to return to Hungary in 1405.[39]

During one of the first Ottoman incursions at the borderland of the Kingdom of Hungary, Margaret was abducted from the family seat, the village of Egerszeg in Temes County (today part of Vermeș in Romania).[40] As Margaret was found by 1405 and she had two underage children. Sometimes before 1405, Margaret was sold in Crete which then was an overseas colony of the Republic of Venice under the name Kingdom of Candia. She became a slave mistress of a wealthy citizen, Giorgio Darvasio, who came from a Venetian merchant family. Margaret had two daughters from his slave master; Marieta and Iacoba, who were still minors in 1405 and even in 1408. According to that charter which narrated Margaret's story, the lady was well treated by his slave master and lover Darvasio during her captivity. Thus he was possibly attached to her emotionally.[41] Despite her relative good fate in Darvasio's estate, Margaret never gave up her intention to return to Hungary. On 1 July 1405, a charter was issued on Crete in the case of the noblewoman. Darvasio agreed to release her without any ransom and also took an escort for her mistress. Initially he wanted one of their daughters to stay on Crete, but later his only condition was occasional visit opportunity to Hungary to see her former slave and their two children.[42] In the charter, Marcali expressed his intention to return to Crete for Margaret and the two children.[43] Darvasio transferred Margaret and their daughters to Venice in order to travel to Hungary. There he hand them over to Margaret's alleged brother-in-law John of Redel, and also covered her travel expenses. Margaret was able to return to Hungary after lengthy years and resided in Buda with her children.[42]

Other examples Edit

In 1460s Ilona from Garai, wife of Tamas who was taken captive could only escape at an opportune moment but when recaptured she was eventually resold by Serbs five times before she managed to escape successfully again. Similarly in 1471, one Anna Nagy escaped from captivity, but these are exceptions. Several women could not be found again even where families or the state was able to arrange for ransom and most could not afford ransom.[39]

Travelers' descriptions Edit

1592: Lorenzo Bernardo, Venetian Ambassador:[44][45]

"...Turkey is bordering with Adyghas and Mingrelians, who represent something like slave mine, whom they take to Constantinople like cattle and sell them in auctions..."

Evliya Çelebi (1611–1682) was 17th century Ottoman traveler who him self participated in some raids and taking captives, writes from his travels from Crimean Khanate (one of largest slave captivator and suppliers to Ottomans):

"...A man who had not seen this market, had not seen anything in this world. A mother is severed from her son and daughter there, a son—from his father and brother, and they are sold amongst lamentations, cries of help, weeping and sorrow..."[46]

Robert Walsh, a writer of Irish descent who in his later career campaigned against slavery, was the chaplain to the British Embassy at Istanbul from roughly from 1820 to 1827 witnessed and described condition of then fresh enslavement of Sciote (Chios) post the 1822 Chios massacre from nearby Greek majority island by Ottomans.[47][48]

1822AD "...The first news of these events was brought to Constantinople by the caiquegees, hummals, and other adventurers of the rabble, who returned with boats full of plunder and slaves. The Oriental manner of making slaves, and securing a property in them, is this. Any fellows who join an expedition as volunteers for plunder of this kind enter a house, and after setting fire to it, and killing generally the adult males, they carry off the property, with the females and boys.

They then proceed to the next custom-house, and having paid twenty piasters, or about ten shillings, they take out a teskerai, or ticket, which certifies the slavery, and then the persons of the unfortunate family become the property of the captors for ever, with all their posterity! If any of them is disposed to sell the whole or part, he gives up with them their teskerai, which transfers the property to the purchaser in perpetuity. Forty-one thousand teskerais were granted in this way for Sciote slaves up to the 1st of May, of which five thousand had been taken out for those proceeding to Constantinople alone, and generally by fellows in the lowest grade of society. The usual place where Circassian slaves are sold is the Aurut Bazaar, or Women's Market, in the vicinity of the Burnt Column. Here decorum is no further violated than in the act of sale. It consists of a quadrangular building, with an open court in the middle. Round this arc raised platforms, on which black slaves sit: behind are latticed windows lighting apartments, where the white and more costly women are shut up till they are sold, and there is a certain decency and propriety observed in the purchase. But the glut of unfortunate Sciotes were as such, that they were exhibited for sale in any public place, even the streets. The most usual was the Baluk Bazaar, or Fish-market. Here the first exposure was a number of poor girls, of the age of twelve or fourteen, who were sold like cattle at an English fair. Several of them were without trousers, or the necessary articles of dress. Terror and anxiety had so affected them, that they exhibited the most deplorable picture of human suffering I ever beheld, and such as cannot be described; yet they were treated by the Turks with a contemptuous freedom, as if they did not think they ought to show them the courtesies of decorum which a sense of modesty generally induces a Turk to show to any other female. They were taken and handled with the roughness of butchers examining young cattle, and generally sold at the rate of one hundred piastres, or 3/. a head. Five hundred were disposed of here in this way, and Turkish men and women were everywhere seen leading young Christian slaves to their houses.

The next day, June the 16th, was Sunday, and a slave market was established in Pera Street, leading to our palace. A number of captives had been brought up the day before, and some of them exposed for sale in that place,..."[49]

1828: "...this woman had come over to Chesme, and bargained with the Turk for her liberation. He asked the sum of twelve hundred piastres; they could scarcely raise twelve;—but they applied to the Franks who had come to Chesm £, and through their subscriptions, added to those of the captain and officers of the English brig-of-war, the " Jasper," and what I gave, they collected eight hundred piastres, which, at the intercession of my friend, Mr. W-, the Turk agreed to take. The poor Sciote had just received the liberating paper, signed and sealed by the Mollah and her old master, and had come to thank me for the part I had taken in restoring her to the blessings of freedom ...Charles Macfarlane[50]

1830s: Admiral Sir Adolphus Slade CB (1804 – 13 November 1877) was a British admiral who became an admiral in the Ottoman Navy.[51][52]

Occasionally, I will not deny, heart rending scenes occur, in the case of captives of war, or victims of revolt, wrenched suddenly from all that is dear, but these are rare occurrences. The Circassians and Georgians, who form the trade supply, are only victims of custom, willing victims; being brought up by their mercenary parents for the merchants....they look for the moment of going to Anapa or Poti whence they are shipped for stamboul, ...In the markets they are lodged in separate apartments, carefully secluded, where in the hour of business between nine and twelve they may be visited by aspirants for possessing such delicate ware. i need not draw a veil over what follows. decorum prevails. The would be purchaser may fix his eyes on the lady's face, and his hands may receive evidence of her bust. The waltz allows nearly as much liberty before hundreds of eyes. Of course merchant gives his warranty, on which, and the preceding data, the bargain is closed. the common price for tolerable looking girl is 100/. some fetch hundreds...such are generally singled out by Kislar Aga. a coarser article from Nubia and Abysinia is exposed publicly on platforms, beneath verandahs, before the cribs of white china. A more white toothed, plump cheeked, ... with a smile and gibe for everyone, and often an audible 'buy me'. they are sold easily and without trouble. Ladies are usual purchasers for domestics . a slight inspection suffices The girl gets up off the ground, gathers her coarse cloth round her loins, bids her companions adieu, and trips gaily, bare footed and bare headed, after her new mistress, who immediately dresses her la Turque and hides her ebony with white veils. (price of one is about 16/. Males are sold in a different place always young. Boys fetch a much higher price than girls for evident reasons: in the east, unhappily, they are also subservient to pleasures, and when grown up are farther useful in many ways, if clever may arrive at higher employments; where as woman is only a toy with orientals, and like toy when discarded, useless.

Danish author Hans Christian Andersen visited Istanbul in April 1841, and wrote:

"...Not far from great bazaar, we come to place surrounded by wooden buildings, forming an open gallery; the jutting roof is supported by rough beams; inside along the gallery, are small chambers where trader stow their goods, and these goods are human beings, black and white female slaves.[nb 3]

We are now in the square, sun shines, rush mats are spread over under the green trees, and there sit and lie Asia's daughters. A young mother gives the breast to her child, and they will separate these two. On the stairs leading to the gallery sits a young negress not more than fourteen years of age; she is almost naked; an old Turk regards her. He has taken one of her legs in hand; she laughs and shows her shining white teeth.

Do not veil the beautiful white women, thou hideous old wretch; it is these we wish to see; drive them not into the cage; we shall not, as thou thinkest, abash them with bold eyes.

See! a young Turk with fiery looks; four slaves follow him; two old Jewesses are trading with him. Some charming Tscherkasier girls have come; he will see them dance, hear them sing, and then choose and buy! He could give us a description of the slave market, such as we are not able to offer..."

A Poet's Bazaar. Hans Christian Andersen · 1871 [53]

Cultural depictions Edit

Reflection in folk songs Edit

Many Russian, Ukrainian, and Polish folk songs from Ottoman Empire era reflect the impact of the raids on common people in Eastern Europe and Black sea regions.[25]

The fires are burning behind the river—
The Tatars are dividing their captives
Our village is burnt and our property plundered.
Old mother is sabred
And my dear is taken into captivity.

   ~ A Ukrainian folk song

In Claude Fauriel's Greek folk songs collection, published in 1824–25, there are some songs mentioning Greeks slaves of the Turks, or the danger of one becoming a slave and fighting to avoid it. These songs refer to pre-revolution events (before 1821), mainly the wars of Souli against Ali Pasha of Jannina and Albanian Muslims. Despo, the wife of Souliote chieftain Tzavellas, is one of the heroines of the songs, committing an honor suicide with other women before they all get captives and slaves. When women and children got surrounded by the enemy in a small fortress, with no chance of escape, Despo sets fire to the gun-powder keg:[54] The original Greek with French translation can be found in Fauriel work.[55]

"... 'O come, my children, come with me,
We shall not live as slaves of Turks.'
She touched the powder with the torch
— Engulfing flames consumed them all."

Literature Edit

 
The return from captivity by Leopold Loeffler

Literary depiction of female slavery issues as such begins in 19th-century Ottoman Turkish novels.[56] According to Elif Aksit, while Samipaşazade Sezai, Ahmet Mithat and Halit Ziya elaborate the tragic lives of passive slave girls, Fatma Aliye focuses empowerment even from slavery. The approaches of the first three authors indicates a choice to depict tragicized and caricatured situations to create strong emotional appeal to then prevailing change public opinion.[56] A 1877 novel 'Aşk-ıVatan' (Love of Country) talking about homesickness of a female slave written by Zafer Hanım is supposed to be first novel by first Turkish female writer.[57]

In Namık Kemal's first (1876) novel İntibah (Awakening), a woman named Fatma buys a slave girl Dilaşub, to distract her son Ali from another woman Mahpeyker. When the slave girl Dilaşub fulfils her duty of distraction, Fatma the owner resales her at the slightest doubt of her taking an interest in another man. Aksit says, Dilaşub is depicted as a good in character but weak submissive slave girl, who pays the price for the weaknesses of others, since Fatma manipulates her own son's plus slave girls life by buying and selling at her own convenience.[56] Aksit maintains the early Ottoman male novel writers' focused on themes sympathizing with slave girls depicting their lives from childhood to their transformation in their womanhood, like wise Ahmet Mithat's depiction of his protagonist Rakım goes on to educate his slave girl Canan and marries her.[56] Author Halit Ziya, in his (1886–1887) novel Sefile (The Miserable) describes an adventurous slave girl Mazlume (feminine name for 'Oppressed') who gets sold and resold to good as well as bad people but fails to overcome her fate being a slave girl.[56]

In Samipaşazade Sezai's 1888 novel Sergüzeşt ("Life story" or "Adventure") the slave girl named Dilber is also bought and resold from one family to another, and over a period of time Dilber grows to become an attractive young woman from weak young girl. Aksit says, ironically, while being weak and girly largely protects Dilber from wanted and unwanted sexual advances, her beauty and passage to womanhood prove to be a fatal recipe in combination with slavery, in one of the owner's house where she arrives as an attractive young woman, the young man first ignores and mocks her and then begins painting her picture, manipulating her like his toy. She revolts and cries and he sees that she is in fact a human being. Later they fall in love. However, his mother, the lady of the house, sells Dilber in the market to prevent the love between a slave and a lord, and her love draws her to step of suicide.[56]

While novelist Fatma Aliye (1862 – 1936), progressive for her times, viewed sexual slavery (along with polytheism) as forms of exploitation, according to Zeynep Direk, still Aliye's response is insufficient from feminist point of view due to Aliye's focus on defending Ottomanism and Islamism since Aliye plays down coercion, servitude, oppression, and sexual exploitation aspects of female slavery and talks about female slavery in idyllic and romantic terms and does not support abolishing of institution of slavery even though legally abolished before Fatma Aliye's birth in 1847, though it was still in vogue in practice.[57] Still boundaries of female slavery in Aliyes novels are fluid, in one novel Muhadarat, for example, a non-slave woman even though married to a wealthy man sales herself into slavery to flee from the husband, in another novel Enin family wants their son to marry their female slave but the son is in love with someone else so declines to marry with their female slave, in one another novel Dar'ul Muallimat, character Refet, a daughter of a poor female slave, attends school (Dar'ul Muallimat) to become a teacher.[57]

According to Seteney Nil Dogan, the second generation of nationalist Circassian diaspora of 1970s explored and criticized Circassians and Turks for human sale, arranged and involuntary marriages through their periodicals and activism. In 1975 in Circassian magazine Yamçı a circassian female author Karden D., expressed her hope that emancipation of Circassian woman from image as of a commodity and a product that is being sold with the maximum price is not very distant.[58] Kanuko Cemil's following poem authored in the same magazine in 1976 is an example of the often themes of forced marriage and human sale in the periodicals published by the Circassian diaspora nationalists in the 1970s:[58]

" ...Far away... In the East
Circassian girl is in the arm of the foreigner
........
........
In the spring of her life
Circassian girl is 19 years old
When she is sold viciously
The foreigner takes the girl, he is sixty years old
.....
It is sad but its reflection is true
[...] The master is on the mirror of shame.

~ Kanuko Cemil' 1976 poem in Circassian magazine Yamçı[58]

Dogan and Toledano say that post 2000 discourse in descendants of slavery is of assimilation within Turkish identity with space for cultural diversity.[58]

Television Edit

Turkish television drama usually tend to ignore non-elite-commoner-women slavery and focuses more on privileged female slavery in elite Ottoman imperial palaces. Turkish television drama series, such as Abad Kejayaan, get exported to various Muslim countries, most of which mainly focus on elite part of Ottoman slavery; new generation audience is unaware of forms pre-20th-century Islamic sexual slavery as, in spite of clearances from Islamic clergy, conservative audiences lobby to demand showcasing of sanitized versions without any depiction of slave women in Ottoman times and life.[59]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Old→New place names quick rough guide:
    Ottomans→Turkey; Istanbul→Constantinople;Smyrna→Izmir; Caliphates of Al-Mu'tasim→The Abbasid Caliphate in Baghdad in modern-day Iraq; Mamluk Sultanate → a medieval realm spanning Egypt, the Levant and Hejazc; Crimean Khanate → Areas taken over by Russia from Ukraine; Circassia→ areas neighboring Georgia taken over by Russia; Muscovy→Russia; Wallachia; region of Romania;
  2. ^ Ottoman Islamic laws were usually governed according to Hanafi school (Madhhab); See also Islamic schools and branches[20]
  3. ^ While Hans Christian Andersen description matches for Istanbul but Turkish translator of Hans Christian Andersen book uses term "Kızlarağası Hanı" (which means something like "Girls' Master Lodge"), but place known as "Kızlarağası Hanı" is in Izmir

Linguistics notes Edit

  1. ^ *In (Ottoman) Turkish the word avret was used more for common married or adult women, whereas the word hatun was used for more respected women.[1][2] In Ottoman times any unmarried adolescent girl was called kiz but they were mobility wise freer and less controlled until marriage but once married and considered avret their mobility and sexuality came under drastic social control so as they would not engage in adultery to preserve male right of linage and patriarchal honor.[1] In modern Turkish since the 20th century use of word avret was limited to intimate body parts.[1]
    *Pazarları is the plural of Pazari, which comes from Persian-language word Bazaar, meaning market
    Word Esir means Slave
    surriyya in Arabic means Concubine[3]
    * Mukateb A type of Islamic slave manumission where in Slave convinces Owner for a contract where slave earns and saves money for self manumission

References Edit

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  3. ^ "surriyya". Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition, Glossary and Index of Terms. May 1, 2012 – via referenceworks.brillonline.com.
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  1. ^ King, Charles (2008-03-20), "Chapter 1 Empires and boundaries", The Ghost of Freedom: A History of the Caucasus., Oxford University Press, pp. 42–63, doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195177756.003.0004, retrieved 2022-01-29

avret, pazarları, this, article, require, copy, editing, grammar, style, cohesion, tone, spelling, assist, editing, february, 2023, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, ottoman, turkish, پازار, simply, esir, bazar, market, women, slaves, located, ista. This article may require copy editing for grammar style cohesion tone or spelling You can assist by editing it February 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Avret Pazarlari lb 1 Ottoman Turkish پازار Avret Pazarlari or simply Esir Bazar 4 was a market of women slaves located in Istanbul in then Ottoman Empire now Turkey between the mid 15th century and the early 20th century nb 1 5 Many households owned female slaves were women including many as domestic servants Constantinople became the capital of forced captive slaves that included women The slave market was under the supervision of the Ottoman state which taxed every transaction of slaves Women were captured from various African Asian and European territories and sold in Istanbul markets Unlike their male counterparts women slaves were permitted to be exploited sexually and their sexuality was deemed to be the personal property of their owners Female slaves would have few possibilities depending upon physical attributes such as beauty and natural skills of pleasure and entertaining of male counterparts with cajoling words and gestures 6 to be selected by elite men as slaves or concubines Commoner and imperial palace slaves were marketed Turkish television drama usually tend to ignore non elite commoner women slavery and focuses more on privileged female slavery in elite Ottoman imperial palaces In descriptions of Ottoman times non elite commoner women slavery are found in some of the then contemporary slave narrative accounts traveler s accounts folk songs late ottoman times Turkish novels twentieth century poems Contents 1 History and context 2 Limitations of enslaved women 3 Geographies locations and economics 3 1 Avret Pazari of Istanbul at Forum of Arcadius 3 2 Other locations 4 Captures retrievals escapes and flights 4 1 George of Hungary 4 2 Emily Ruete 4 3 Margaret Himfi 4 4 Other examples 5 Travelers descriptions 6 Cultural depictions 6 1 Reflection in folk songs 6 2 Literature 6 3 Television 7 Notes 7 1 Linguistics notes 8 References 9 BibliographyHistory and context EditSee also Aurat word Crimean Nogai slave raids in Eastern Europe and Slavery in the Ottoman Empire The general slave trade of men and women was referred to as Esir Pazari 7 8 9 10 11 According to Jane Hathaway a sizable majority of the slaves traded in the Arab slave trade were often women every substantial household and many less substantial households owned female slaves including many as domestic servants In history as well as in conventional scholarship on Ottoman historiography non elite slaves and women are far underrepresented 12 The Aurut Bazaar or Slave Market Walsh Robert amp Allom Thomas 1836 William Allan 1782 1850 The Slave Market Constantinople NG 2400 National Galleries of ScotlandAccording to Ehud R Toledano the Ottoman Empire followed the same path of enslavement as of other enslavers in general and their predecessor Islamic states in particular especially the Caliphates of Al Mu tasim and Mamluk Sultanate 1 Taledano says that while various Muslim societies had developed their own brand of enslavement the legal essence was very much derived from Islamic law 1 Taledano says harem slavery was a central component of early modern Ottoman imperial and elite households 1 Slave import from the Crimean Khanate in about 1600 political map Note that the areas marked Poland and especially Muscovy were claimed rather than administered and were thinly populated Contemporary Black Sea mapIn 1453 AD Constantinople Istanbul became the capital of the Ottoman Empire Over the centuries it became the capital of forced captive slaves that included women 9 According to Taledano during the 15th through 18th centuries a large pool of women captives were brought in as loot of the war from various war fronts including Greeks and Balkans from northeast shores of Mediterranean seas and also southeastern European lands lying north of the Black Sea i e Georgia and Circassia These captives became forced labor including the concubinage of elite and royal harems of Ottoman sultans 1 According to Taledano in contrast to the Atlantic slave trade where the male female ratio was 2 1 or 3 1 the Arab slave trade usually had a higher female male ratio instead suggesting a general preference for female slaves Concubinage and reproduction served as incentives for importing female slaves often European although many were also imported mainly for performing household tasks 13 According to Robert C Davis in the 16th century Avret Pazary was in full swing and doing strong business Davis estimates demand and market of female slaves capturing and enslavement figure above a thousand per year in the Ottoman Empire The slave women market used to be filled with women captured from Corsairs Tartars and miscellaneous slave dealers According to Taledano slaves usually would not come on record unless reported by their masters usually for absconding so while knowing the exact number and composition of slaves remains difficult analysis of 16th century absconders presented by Yvonne Seng from Ottoman records shows that some were captured in Ottoman war campaigns in the Balkans while many others were captured from Russia and Poland by the Crimean Khanate incursions there Among absconding slaves 39 percent were Russians Serbs Croats 31 percent Bosnians 11 percent and the remaining 19 percent from Hungary Bulgaria and Walachia 14 According to Davis Ottaviano Bon an early 17th century Italian ambassador made observations about Avret Pizary of Istanbul For such a purpose there is an enclosed public market in Constantinople in which an open auction each Wednesday female slaves of every sort are bought and sold and everybody freely goes there to buy them Ottaviano Bon Attributed in Davis Robert C 2009 07 01 Holy War and Human Bondage Tales of Christian Muslim Slavery in the Early Modern Mediterranean ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 313 06540 8 Davis further quotes Bon as saying that slave girls in Istanbul were bought and sold like animals ascertaining their country of origin plus examining their bodies all over thoroughly to confirm that their buyer did not feel swindled Virgin and beautiful girls used to get higher prices and traders used to be held guilty if the slave girl did not turn out to be a virgin after promising so While Turkish free women i e Muslim women could not be enslaved and Muslim Turkish women had some level of legal prerogative against sexual exploitation through slavery the same prerogative was not available to slaves against their masters buying and selling them for sexual whims and such sexual exploitation of female slaves could not be punished legally According to Davis by 1717 Lady Mary wife of a British ambassador to Istanbul reported in her later published letter that the women slave market of Istanbul was somewhat dwindling The slave market was under the supervision of the Ottoman state which taxed every transaction of slaves The official control of the slave market was executed by an official called esirci emini A standard fee or the 1 40th of the value of the slave was imposed as tax A guild of slave merchants existed esirci esnafi headed by a sheikh esirci seyhi He was elected by the members of the guild esnaf and was appointed by a sultanic decree Apart from Muslims Jews were also involved in the slave market but it is not known whether they were organized in guilds Sarris 1990 336 337 As per Elviya Celebi memoir slave traders guild esirci esnafi had around 2000 members and their shops had slave rooms 15 Limitations of enslaved women EditAccording to Robert C Davis although women slaves were mainly taken from war zones referring to them as captives or prisoners of war was blatantly incorrect It is significant to note that the women s religion was not the same as that of their captors and most of them were not active combatants but were taken while going about their normal business as civilians despite any sign of hostility 7 16 The women were captured from various African Asian and European territories and sold in Istanbul markets Madeline Zilfi maintains that like male slaves female slaves were considered the personal property of their owners However unlike their male counterparts women slaves were permitted to be exploited sexually and their sexuality was deemed to be the personal property of their owners 10 17 Although using female slaves for prostitution was technically illegal selling a slave woman to another man for sex was permissible and slave women had no legal protection over their sexuality 18 Zilfi explains that while slaves could seek recourse to Islamic Sharia courts for any other physical injury the sexuality of women slaves was not their own to lose As a result they were unable to appeal to Sharia courts or Sultans 10 Under systemic biases introduced under the Ottoman judicial system enslaved women most of whom were non Muslims were barred from testifying as witnesses against Muslims 19 The loss of a slave s virginity was not a matter for herself but rather for her owner unlike physical injuries to a woman slave by a non owner for example to the arm leg eye or other part of the body 10 For instance in the winter of 1817 AD a female slave owner received compensation through the courts from a man who had raped her slave because the woman s virginity had been compromised and it would no longer be possible for her owner to sell her as a highly priced virgin 10 According to Zilfi the literature on slavery related Fatwa covering Ottoman legal commentaries is full of discussions about past present and future access to female slaves sexuality Queries were asked and answered about disputed paternity prostitution adultery joint ownership of slaves childbirth marriage violation of woman slaves by those other than the owner and sexual relations with a wife s slave woman without the wife s consent 10 Muftis used to hold special authority as religious opinion givers given that the interface between a slave s condition and the domestic household was problematic 10 nb 2 While some intellectuals dispute whether those deemed slaves would have been considered as such under our understanding of western slavery Ehud R Toledano Liat Kozma and Suraiya Faroqhi reveal that there were cases in which enslaved women were abused and deprived of legal protection and their rights Faroqhi explains that while some historians attempt to contest contrasting law and society law depends on society and Islamic law and culture include provisions for the enslaved facilitating their societal absorption over the generations Nevertheless although application and practice may not be universal those in power impose legal systems to obtain significant advantage for themselves When viewed from the perspective of disadvantaged slaves it is reasonable to assume that a legal system is being imposed from outside on the micro society of the enslaved 6 Finally in the case of Ottoman Legal System in regards to slavery individual rights to choice and consent were severely restrained Abuse and limitations were frequent and female slaves were reduced to the level of material possessions to be listed in inheritance registers alongside household utensils or livestock or given such physical descriptions in court 17 Nineteenth century European women visitors reported that slave women had an astonishingly large amount of leisure time and freedom of speech and action inside the harem They saw the slaves lives as preferable to those of domestic servants in the West 21 As Suraiya Faroqhi says female slaves would have few possibilities depending upon physical attributes such as beauty and natural skills of pleasure and entertaining of male counterparts with cajoling words and gestures 6 to be selected by elite men as slaves or concubines Few would be selected as slaves for the imperial harem a few of them would be gifted to other elite men a few more physically attractive ones would get selected for royal males then few attractive ones would be reserved for the pleasure of the Sultan himself a few of them will be selected as concubines of the Sultan Those who would issue a male child from the Sultan will receive some extra facilities but if the slave lady does not convert to Islam then she will be bereft of her child and the child would be raised separately as a Muslim A rare few of the concubines would have a chance to be selected as an official wife of the Sultan and rarer would have a chance of being a beloved wife then rarer among them if her child gets selected as Sultan would have the best possible honor of being Walide Mother of the Sultan 7 11 According to Lidia Zhigunova during the Ottoman period women in the Caucasus had to face a multiplicity of colonizing agents the westerners and Russians narratives focused on stereotypes of beauty and sexuality of elite Circassian slave women and their perceived emancipation and attempted to ignore their agency and other facets like their voices resistance and diversity Zhigunova quotes Tlostanova to describe possibilities of agencies for Ottoman women slaves They Zhigunova Tlostanova say that unlike western slavery slave status of Ottomans did not rob rights and humanity of the slaves absorbed and integrated into the society better there was a chance of change of status from non elite to elite for women slaves it was easier through possibilities of marriage An enslaved woman impregnated by her owner could not be easily resold her children were considered free and if the owner accepted they were his children the same inheritance rights applied as if children were from a legitimate marriage So over next several generations of slaves were easily absorbed and integrated into the society like other earlier similarly integrated members Moreover female slaves would become free after the death of their owners through mechanism known as tedbir a declaration wherein a slave owner would promise to manumit slave prior to his death to avail religious points of good behavior At times in the nineteenth century the Ottoman state encouraged Mukatebe contracts wherein slaves could save to buy their own manumission 22 However Zhigunova notes that there used to be repeated instances of women slave abuse too According to one example cited by Ehud Toledano on 30 June 1854 a Circassian slave woman of poor background named Shemsigul recorded her testimony with Cairo police According to her testimony she was first trafficked from her native village in Circassia to Istanbul where she was purchased by a slave trader named Deli Mehmet who on the way to Cairo sexually forced himself on her and subsequently despite her getting pregnant from him the trader sold her to a son of Egypt s then Governor Mehmet Ali Pasha and subsequently was resold many times during her pregnancy itself and even attempted to abort her But eventually she gave birth to a child and the child was adopted by the wife of Deli Mehmet and she was resold to another dealer even while the reselling of a slave mother was illegal even by Islamic standards so the persecuting dealer Deli Mehmet was duly convicted Toledano s study further says that the trafficking of Circassian women was well established by the nineteenth century getting an additional dimension when from the 1850s onwards Russians expelled Circassians en masse from their own territories The Circasians sought refuge with the Ottomans at the cost of being slaves When rates of white slave women went down black slave women were dumped Sudden dumping or sudden manumission without any other recourse could lead to slave women s further destitution 23 24 Suraiya Faroqhi compares agency to slaves of Ottoman in comparison to contemporary slaves of Mughal empire in South Asia According to Faroqhi no doubt slave women of the Ottoman Empire had better chances of agency if they chanced upon elite masters whereas in an attempt to ensure better life for own daughters elites of Mughal empire used to precondition marriage contracts so that legally wedded wives had rights to dispose of husband s slave women and concubine as and when they wanted and add that amount to own kitty Thus they could get rid of any eventual competition from any concubine Whereas Ottoman women did not take as much recourse to this strategy they used to end up in familial jealousy wars and risked being dumped by husbands if any slave woman or concubine found better favor So in Ottoman times agency if any of any slave woman used to be achieved at the cost of other women s agency 6 Faroqhi says that whether any other law or Sharia in slave holding society for slaves capacity to show initiative and gain any agency remains limited by law or otherwise 6 For example the mechanism of tedbir could prove riskier in achieving meaningful liberation on death of the owner since the owner could not dispose of his two thirds property which would get divided among decedent s inheritors who could claim that property value of the slave was too high which owner could not dispose of in full so inheritors continue to have ownership rights over the slave 6 Rather than imposing a binary whether Ottoman slaves were slaves or not Faroqhi prefers to categorize them in a larger spectrum wherein few of the elite male slaves growing through their military or administrative careers enjoying most of practical life full of freedoms wealth and power may not necessarily be called as slaves at all in the western sense but just next to them elite harem women slaves might have shared wealth and even power in some cases but considerable freedoms were alluding from them too But non elite i e menial slaves suffered the most from legal disabilities and reduced life chances that we associate with slavery 6 Faroqhi further points out that Farhat Yasa s study of 16th 18th Centuries fatwas claims under certain circumstances that slave owners could kill their slaves without worrying about being punishment while alive in living world meaning thereby when one focuses on agency availed by few privileged ones one ought to acknowledge most female slaves could show their agency only in very narrow limits if at all Some female slaves could turn out to be mere facade and slave users using them to face court punishments against their own crimes too So under the same spectrum talking of any agency of mere helpless victim female slaves would not remain relevant at all 6 According to Kate Fleet female slaves had more likelihood of access to public spaces as compared to non slave Ottoman Muslim women In fact elite women usually had to take their female slaves along with them if a close male relative was not there to accompany them in public spaces At times female slaves used to get some amount of agency as informant or spies 17 More often than not access to public spaces for female slaves was not dignified 17 Fleet says the visibility of a female slave was always meant to be fluid since she would quickly move from one level of visibility to another from being a protected possession to an exposed commodity without any choice over the levels to which they could be displayed to public gaze could be handled naked by customers in the slave market or from household servant to prostitute at the whim of their owners 17 Geographies locations and economics EditSee also Column of Arcadius Forum of Arcadius and Bedesten East European Crimean Khanate had the largest share in conducting raids captivating and indulging in exporting East European slaves and fulfilling the demands of Ottoman Empire and beyond 25 The slave trade and enslaving and ransoming had become an important source of tax revenue for Crimean Khanate and Ottoman Empire both On one hand the Islamic tradition of frequent religious manumission used to set a large number of slaves free but on the other hand the same culture used to create new continued demand for slaves 25 26 As with Islam Jewish slave traders used to have their own religious restrictions wherein once a slave owner has sexual relations with his female slave he either had to sell the slave or manumit them again the trader would be adding to new demand for the slaves 25 This Ottoman practice at times used to increase population leading to economic pressure even leading to revolts though they were successfully suppressed Large numbers of manumitted slaves used to end up in begging or giving back in slavery due to non availability of any other recourse The Circassians Syrians and Nubians were the three primary races of females who were sold as sex slaves Cariye in the Ottoman Empire Circassian girls were described as fair and light skinned and were frequently enslaved by Crimean Tatars then sold to Ottoman Empire to live and serve in a harem They were the most expensive reaching up to 500 pounds sterling and the most popular with the Turks Second in popularity were Syrian girls with their dark eyes dark hair and light brown skin and came largely from coastal regions in Anatolia Their price could reach up to 30 pounds sterling They were described as having good figures when young Nubian girls were the cheapest and least popular fetching up to 20 pounds sterling 27 Sex roles and symbolism in Ottoman society functioned as a normal action of power The palace harem excluded enslaved women from the rest of society 28 The Ottomans slave trade to South Asia was to and fro in both directions but by comparison with the South Asia Uzbec slave trade it was marginal still catering demand of white female slaves in elite South Asian harems on the other hand South Asian markets used to fulfill the demand of non Muslim female slaves Avret Pazari of Istanbul at Forum of Arcadius Edit Map of Byzantine Pre Ottoman Constantinople The locations of Forum of Arcadius near Ese Kapi Mosque which is located at the corner between the Walls of Constantine and the southern branch of the Mese in the southwestern part of the city near seventh hillAvret Pazari of Istanbul was located near the Forum of Arcadius 29 A small mosque to the west of Avret Bazaar bears the name Isa Kapoussi Mesdjidi while the adjoining street is called Isa Kapoussi Sokaki 30 The journey Hobhouse describes took place in 1809 10 and so the last rebellion must refer to the Ottoman coups of 1807 08 in particular Kabakci Mustafa s rebellion of 1807 Apparently the Aurat Bazar that Hobhouse reported to have been burnt down before 1810 was rebuilt on the same spot as we can deduce from the 1839 book Constantinople and the Scenery of the Seven Churches of Asia Minor It describes the Aurut Bazaar as standing near the burnt column 1 That this refers to the Column of Arcadius is clear from an earlier book by Walsh who was an abolitionist A Residence at Constantinople 31 The same book specifically identifies the Aurut Bazaar as t he usual place where Circassian slaves are sold 32 The English novellist Julia Pardoe described the Istanbul slave market in her 1837 visit as a square court three of whose side are built round with low stone rooms or cells beyond which projects a wooden peristyle 33 Other locations Edit There is a street in Gaziantep that is named Avrat Pazari the street name of the narrow street where the Old Municipality and Sira Inn are located north of Inonu Street which runs parallel to the street starting right across the west facing door of Kemikli Bedestens and opens to Sihcan Street 34 Other Ottoman cities such as Belgrade Sophia Damascus Aleppo also had slave markets 35 Captures retrievals escapes and flights EditGeorge of Hungary Edit George of Hungary c 1422 1502 36 was an Ottoman slave taken prisoner and sold into slavery when the Ottoman Turks invaded the town of Muhlbach now Sebeș in 1438 George escaped and reverted from Islam to Christianity writing afterwards about his experiences 37 There they are examined and stripped the private parts of men and women are handled and openly shown before everyone Naked they are compelled to go before everyone to run walk and jump so that it may be plainly apparent whether they are sick or healthy male or female old or young virgin or corrupt There the son is sold while the grieving mother looks on There the mother is bought to the confusion and humiliation of the son There the wife is mocked as a harlot and is handed over to another man while her husband blushes There is a little one snatched from the bosom of his mother while she is sold off with every deep emotion shaken Reference Brother George of Hungary Treatise on the Customs Living Conditions and Wickedness of the Turks David Ryan Stevenson Atlanta Department of Classics p 20 Emily Ruete Edit There is a lack of non elite slave narratives or folk literature of Circassian women Emily Ruete s description of kidnapping and enslavement of her mother Jilfidan is one of the closest available testimonies about a captive female slave Until Ruete s mother was sold to her father she was a common non elite slave but when purchased by Ruete s father she became an elite slave i e a concubine Ruete wrote about the captivity of her mother Jilfidan My mother was a Circassian by birth who in early youth had been torn away from her home Her father had been a farmer and she had always lived peacefully with her parents and her little brother and sister War broke out suddenly and the country was overrun by marauding bands on their approach the family fled into an underground place as my mother called it she probably meant a cellar which is not known in Zanzibar Their place of refuge was however invaded by a merciless horde the parents were slain and the children carried off by three mounted Arnauts One of these with her elder brother soon disappeared out of sight the other two with my mother and her little sister three years old crying bitterly for her mother kept together until evening when they too parted and my mother never heard any more of the lost ones as long as she lived dd She came into my father s possession when quite a child probably at the tender age of seven or eight years as she cast her first tooth in our house 38 dd Margaret Himfi Edit The Hungarian noblewoman Margaret Himfi was abducted and enslaved by Ottoman marauders at the turn of the 14th and 15th centuries She later became a slave mistress of a wealthy Venetian citizen of Crete with whom she had two daughters Margaret was able to return to Hungary in 1405 39 During one of the first Ottoman incursions at the borderland of the Kingdom of Hungary Margaret was abducted from the family seat the village of Egerszeg in Temes County today part of Vermeș in Romania 40 As Margaret was found by 1405 and she had two underage children Sometimes before 1405 Margaret was sold in Crete which then was an overseas colony of the Republic of Venice under the name Kingdom of Candia She became a slave mistress of a wealthy citizen Giorgio Darvasio who came from a Venetian merchant family Margaret had two daughters from his slave master Marieta and Iacoba who were still minors in 1405 and even in 1408 According to that charter which narrated Margaret s story the lady was well treated by his slave master and lover Darvasio during her captivity Thus he was possibly attached to her emotionally 41 Despite her relative good fate in Darvasio s estate Margaret never gave up her intention to return to Hungary On 1 July 1405 a charter was issued on Crete in the case of the noblewoman Darvasio agreed to release her without any ransom and also took an escort for her mistress Initially he wanted one of their daughters to stay on Crete but later his only condition was occasional visit opportunity to Hungary to see her former slave and their two children 42 In the charter Marcali expressed his intention to return to Crete for Margaret and the two children 43 Darvasio transferred Margaret and their daughters to Venice in order to travel to Hungary There he hand them over to Margaret s alleged brother in law John of Redel and also covered her travel expenses Margaret was able to return to Hungary after lengthy years and resided in Buda with her children 42 Other examples Edit In 1460s Ilona from Garai wife of Tamas who was taken captive could only escape at an opportune moment but when recaptured she was eventually resold by Serbs five times before she managed to escape successfully again Similarly in 1471 one Anna Nagy escaped from captivity but these are exceptions Several women could not be found again even where families or the state was able to arrange for ransom and most could not afford ransom 39 Travelers descriptions Edit1592 Lorenzo Bernardo Venetian Ambassador 44 45 Turkey is bordering with Adyghas and Mingrelians who represent something like slave mine whom they take to Constantinople like cattle and sell them in auctions Evliya Celebi 1611 1682 was 17th century Ottoman traveler who him self participated in some raids and taking captives writes from his travels from Crimean Khanate one of largest slave captivator and suppliers to Ottomans A man who had not seen this market had not seen anything in this world A mother is severed from her son and daughter there a son from his father and brother and they are sold amongst lamentations cries of help weeping and sorrow 46 Robert Walsh a writer of Irish descent who in his later career campaigned against slavery was the chaplain to the British Embassy at Istanbul from roughly from 1820 to 1827 witnessed and described condition of then fresh enslavement of Sciote Chios post the 1822 Chios massacre from nearby Greek majority island by Ottomans 47 48 1822AD The first news of these events was brought to Constantinople by the caiquegees hummals and other adventurers of the rabble who returned with boats full of plunder and slaves The Oriental manner of making slaves and securing a property in them is this Any fellows who join an expedition as volunteers for plunder of this kind enter a house and after setting fire to it and killing generally the adult males they carry off the property with the females and boys They then proceed to the next custom house and having paid twenty piasters or about ten shillings they take out a teskerai or ticket which certifies the slavery and then the persons of the unfortunate family become the property of the captors for ever with all their posterity If any of them is disposed to sell the whole or part he gives up with them their teskerai which transfers the property to the purchaser in perpetuity Forty one thousand teskerais were granted in this way for Sciote slaves up to the 1st of May of which five thousand had been taken out for those proceeding to Constantinople alone and generally by fellows in the lowest grade of society The usual place where Circassian slaves are sold is the Aurut Bazaar or Women s Market in the vicinity of the Burnt Column Here decorum is no further violated than in the act of sale It consists of a quadrangular building with an open court in the middle Round this arc raised platforms on which black slaves sit behind are latticed windows lighting apartments where the white and more costly women are shut up till they are sold and there is a certain decency and propriety observed in the purchase But the glut of unfortunate Sciotes were as such that they were exhibited for sale in any public place even the streets The most usual was the Baluk Bazaar or Fish market Here the first exposure was a number of poor girls of the age of twelve or fourteen who were sold like cattle at an English fair Several of them were without trousers or the necessary articles of dress Terror and anxiety had so affected them that they exhibited the most deplorable picture of human suffering I ever beheld and such as cannot be described yet they were treated by the Turks with a contemptuous freedom as if they did not think they ought to show them the courtesies of decorum which a sense of modesty generally induces a Turk to show to any other female They were taken and handled with the roughness of butchers examining young cattle and generally sold at the rate of one hundred piastres or 3 a head Five hundred were disposed of here in this way and Turkish men and women were everywhere seen leading young Christian slaves to their houses The next day June the 16th was Sunday and a slave market was established in Pera Street leading to our palace A number of captives had been brought up the day before and some of them exposed for sale in that place 49 1828 this woman had come over to Chesme and bargained with the Turk for her liberation He asked the sum of twelve hundred piastres they could scarcely raise twelve but they applied to the Franks who had come to Chesm and through their subscriptions added to those of the captain and officers of the English brig of war the Jasper and what I gave they collected eight hundred piastres which at the intercession of my friend Mr W the Turk agreed to take The poor Sciote had just received the liberating paper signed and sealed by the Mollah and her old master and had come to thank me for the part I had taken in restoring her to the blessings of freedom Charles Macfarlane 50 1830s Admiral Sir Adolphus Slade CB 1804 13 November 1877 was a British admiral who became an admiral in the Ottoman Navy 51 52 Occasionally I will not deny heart rending scenes occur in the case of captives of war or victims of revolt wrenched suddenly from all that is dear but these are rare occurrences The Circassians and Georgians who form the trade supply are only victims of custom willing victims being brought up by their mercenary parents for the merchants they look for the moment of going to Anapa or Poti whence they are shipped for stamboul In the markets they are lodged in separate apartments carefully secluded where in the hour of business between nine and twelve they may be visited by aspirants for possessing such delicate ware i need not draw a veil over what follows decorum prevails The would be purchaser may fix his eyes on the lady s face and his hands may receive evidence of her bust The waltz allows nearly as much liberty before hundreds of eyes Of course merchant gives his warranty on which and the preceding data the bargain is closed the common price for tolerable looking girl is 100 some fetch hundreds such are generally singled out by Kislar Aga a coarser article from Nubia and Abysinia is exposed publicly on platforms beneath verandahs before the cribs of white china A more white toothed plump cheeked with a smile and gibe for everyone and often an audible buy me they are sold easily and without trouble Ladies are usual purchasers for domestics a slight inspection suffices The girl gets up off the ground gathers her coarse cloth round her loins bids her companions adieu and trips gaily bare footed and bare headed after her new mistress who immediately dresses her la Turque and hides her ebony with white veils price of one is about 16 Males are sold in a different place always young Boys fetch a much higher price than girls for evident reasons in the east unhappily they are also subservient to pleasures and when grown up are farther useful in many ways if clever may arrive at higher employments where as woman is only a toy with orientals and like toy when discarded useless Danish author Hans Christian Andersen visited Istanbul in April 1841 and wrote Not far from great bazaar we come to place surrounded by wooden buildings forming an open gallery the jutting roof is supported by rough beams inside along the gallery are small chambers where trader stow their goods and these goods are human beings black and white female slaves nb 3 We are now in the square sun shines rush mats are spread over under the green trees and there sit and lie Asia s daughters A young mother gives the breast to her child and they will separate these two On the stairs leading to the gallery sits a young negress not more than fourteen years of age she is almost naked an old Turk regards her He has taken one of her legs in hand she laughs and shows her shining white teeth Do not veil the beautiful white women thou hideous old wretch it is these we wish to see drive them not into the cage we shall not as thou thinkest abash them with bold eyes See a young Turk with fiery looks four slaves follow him two old Jewesses are trading with him Some charming Tscherkasier girls have come he will see them dance hear them sing and then choose and buy He could give us a description of the slave market such as we are not able to offer A Poet s Bazaar Hans Christian Andersen 1871 53 Cultural depictions EditReflection in folk songs Edit See also Souliotic songs and Duma epic Many Russian Ukrainian and Polish folk songs from Ottoman Empire era reflect the impact of the raids on common people in Eastern Europe and Black sea regions 25 The fires are burning behind the river The Tatars are dividing their captives Our village is burnt and our property plundered Old mother is sabred And my dear is taken into captivity A Ukrainian folk song In Claude Fauriel s Greek folk songs collection published in 1824 25 there are some songs mentioning Greeks slaves of the Turks or the danger of one becoming a slave and fighting to avoid it These songs refer to pre revolution events before 1821 mainly the wars of Souli against Ali Pasha of Jannina and Albanian Muslims Despo the wife of Souliote chieftain Tzavellas is one of the heroines of the songs committing an honor suicide with other women before they all get captives and slaves When women and children got surrounded by the enemy in a small fortress with no chance of escape Despo sets fire to the gun powder keg 54 The original Greek with French translation can be found in Fauriel work 55 O come my children come with me We shall not live as slaves of Turks She touched the powder with the torch Engulfing flames consumed them all Literature Edit The return from captivity by Leopold LoefflerLiterary depiction of female slavery issues as such begins in 19th century Ottoman Turkish novels 56 According to Elif Aksit while Samipasazade Sezai Ahmet Mithat and Halit Ziya elaborate the tragic lives of passive slave girls Fatma Aliye focuses empowerment even from slavery The approaches of the first three authors indicates a choice to depict tragicized and caricatured situations to create strong emotional appeal to then prevailing change public opinion 56 A 1877 novel Ask iVatan Love of Country talking about homesickness of a female slave written by Zafer Hanim is supposed to be first novel by first Turkish female writer 57 In Namik Kemal s first 1876 novel Intibah Awakening a woman named Fatma buys a slave girl Dilasub to distract her son Ali from another woman Mahpeyker When the slave girl Dilasub fulfils her duty of distraction Fatma the owner resales her at the slightest doubt of her taking an interest in another man Aksit says Dilasub is depicted as a good in character but weak submissive slave girl who pays the price for the weaknesses of others since Fatma manipulates her own son s plus slave girls life by buying and selling at her own convenience 56 Aksit maintains the early Ottoman male novel writers focused on themes sympathizing with slave girls depicting their lives from childhood to their transformation in their womanhood like wise Ahmet Mithat s depiction of his protagonist Rakim goes on to educate his slave girl Canan and marries her 56 Author Halit Ziya in his 1886 1887 novel Sefile The Miserable describes an adventurous slave girl Mazlume feminine name for Oppressed who gets sold and resold to good as well as bad people but fails to overcome her fate being a slave girl 56 In Samipasazade Sezai s 1888 novel Serguzest Life story or Adventure the slave girl named Dilber is also bought and resold from one family to another and over a period of time Dilber grows to become an attractive young woman from weak young girl Aksit says ironically while being weak and girly largely protects Dilber from wanted and unwanted sexual advances her beauty and passage to womanhood prove to be a fatal recipe in combination with slavery in one of the owner s house where she arrives as an attractive young woman the young man first ignores and mocks her and then begins painting her picture manipulating her like his toy She revolts and cries and he sees that she is in fact a human being Later they fall in love However his mother the lady of the house sells Dilber in the market to prevent the love between a slave and a lord and her love draws her to step of suicide 56 While novelist Fatma Aliye 1862 1936 progressive for her times viewed sexual slavery along with polytheism as forms of exploitation according to Zeynep Direk still Aliye s response is insufficient from feminist point of view due to Aliye s focus on defending Ottomanism and Islamism since Aliye plays down coercion servitude oppression and sexual exploitation aspects of female slavery and talks about female slavery in idyllic and romantic terms and does not support abolishing of institution of slavery even though legally abolished before Fatma Aliye s birth in 1847 though it was still in vogue in practice 57 Still boundaries of female slavery in Aliyes novels are fluid in one novel Muhadarat for example a non slave woman even though married to a wealthy man sales herself into slavery to flee from the husband in another novel Enin family wants their son to marry their female slave but the son is in love with someone else so declines to marry with their female slave in one another novel Dar ul Muallimat character Refet a daughter of a poor female slave attends school Dar ul Muallimat to become a teacher 57 According to Seteney Nil Dogan the second generation of nationalist Circassian diaspora of 1970s explored and criticized Circassians and Turks for human sale arranged and involuntary marriages through their periodicals and activism In 1975 in Circassian magazine Yamci a circassian female author Karden D expressed her hope that emancipation of Circassian woman from image as of a commodity and a product that is being sold with the maximum price is not very distant 58 Kanuko Cemil s following poem authored in the same magazine in 1976 is an example of the often themes of forced marriage and human sale in the periodicals published by the Circassian diaspora nationalists in the 1970s 58 Far away In the East Circassian girl is in the arm of the foreigner In the spring of her life Circassian girl is 19 years old When she is sold viciously The foreigner takes the girl he is sixty years old It is sad but its reflection is true The master is on the mirror of shame Kanuko Cemil 1976 poem in Circassian magazine Yamci 58 Dogan and Toledano say that post 2000 discourse in descendants of slavery is of assimilation within Turkish identity with space for cultural diversity 58 Television Edit Turkish television drama usually tend to ignore non elite commoner women slavery and focuses more on privileged female slavery in elite Ottoman imperial palaces Turkish television drama series such as Abad Kejayaan get exported to various Muslim countries most of which mainly focus on elite part of Ottoman slavery new generation audience is unaware of forms pre 20th century Islamic sexual slavery as in spite of clearances from Islamic clergy conservative audiences lobby to demand showcasing of sanitized versions without any depiction of slave women in Ottoman times and life 59 Notes Edit Old New place names quick rough guide Ottomans Turkey Istanbul Constantinople Smyrna Izmir Caliphates of Al Mu tasim The Abbasid Caliphate in Baghdad in modern day Iraq Mamluk Sultanate a medieval realm spanning Egypt the Levant and Hejazc Crimean Khanate Areas taken over by Russia from Ukraine Circassia areas neighboring Georgia taken over by Russia Muscovy Russia Wallachia region of Romania Ottoman Islamic laws were usually governed according to Hanafi school Madhhab See also Islamic schools and branches 20 While Hans Christian Andersen description matches for Istanbul but Turkish translator of Hans Christian Andersen book uses term Kizlaragasi Hani which means something like Girls Master Lodge but place known as Kizlaragasi Hani is in Izmir Linguistics notes Edit In Ottoman Turkish the word avret was used more for common married or adult women whereas the word hatun was used for more respected women 1 2 In Ottoman times any unmarried adolescent girl was called kiz but they were mobility wise freer and less controlled until marriage but once married and considered avret their mobility and sexuality came under drastic social control so as they would not engage in adultery to preserve male right of linage and patriarchal honor 1 In modern Turkish since the 20th century use of word avret was limited to intimate body parts 1 Pazarlari is the plural of Pazari which comes from Persian language word Bazaar meaning marketWord Esir means Slavesurriyya in Arabic means Concubine 3 Mukateb A type of Islamic slave manumission where in Slave convinces Owner for a contract where slave earns and saves money for self manumissionReferences Edit a b c d e f g Zilfi Madeline C 1997 Women in the Ottoman Empire Middle Eastern Women in the Early Modern Era BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 10804 2 Flemming Barbara 2018 Essays on Turkish literature and history Leiden Brill p 362 ISBN 978 90 04 29310 6 surriyya Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Glossary and Index of Terms May 1 2012 via referenceworks brillonline com Bulgaru M M Alexandrescu Dersca 2010 49 The role of slaves in fifteenth century Turkish Romania In Bostom Andrew G M D ed The Legacy of Jihad Islamic Holy War and the Fate of Non Muslims Amherst Prometheus p 568 ISBN 978 1 61592 017 4 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names editors list link Catch and Release Piracy Slavery and Law in the Early Modern Ottoman Mediterranean a b c d e f g h Faroqhi Suraiya 11 May 2020 Slave agencies compared to The Ottoman and Mughal Empires pp 55 86 ISBN 978 3 8470 1037 1 OCLC 1154547774 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help a b c Davis Robert C 2009 07 01 Holy War and Human Bondage Tales of Christian Muslim Slavery in the Early Modern Mediterranean Tales of Christian Muslim Slavery in the Early Modern Mediterranean ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 313 06540 8 De Busbecq Ogier Ghislain 2005 Turkish letters Forster E S Edward Seymour 1879 1950 London Eland ISBN 978 0 907871 69 9 OCLC 76961364 a b Zilfi Madeline 2010 03 22 Women and Slavery in the Late Ottoman Empire The Design of Difference Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 51583 2 a b c d e f g Zilfi Madeline 2010 03 22 Women and Slavery in the Late Ottoman Empire The Design of Difference Cambridge University Press pp 189 to 209 ISBN 978 0 521 51583 2 a b The Ottoman Harem All About Turkey www allaboutturkey com Retrieved 2020 10 15 Hathaway Jane 2020 The Arab lands under Ottoman rule 1516 1800 Second ed Abingdon Oxon ISBN 978 1 003 01507 9 OCLC 1135094891 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Ehud R Toledano 1998 Slavery and abolition in the Ottoman Middle East University of Washington Press pp 13 4 ISBN 978 0 295 97642 6 Toledano Ehud R 2014 Shifting Patterns Of Ottoman Enslavement in Early Modern Period The Ottoman Middle East studies in honor of Amnon Cohen Editors Cohen Amnon 1936 Editors Ginio Eyal Podeh Elie Leiden Brill pp 201 to 220 ISBN 978 90 04 26296 6 OCLC 869281895 Conermann Stephan Agcagul Sevgi Sen Gul 11 May 2020 Slaves and slave agency in the Ottoman Empire Gottingen ISBN 978 3 8470 1037 1 OCLC 1154547774 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Broyles Shawn Christian 2014 05 01 Slavery and the Ottoman crimean Khanate Connection sharek org a b c d e Fleet Kate 2016 05 09 The Extremes of Visibility Slave Women in Ottoman Public Space Ottoman Women in Public Space BRILL pp 128 149 ISBN 978 90 04 31662 1 Zilfi Madeline 2010 03 22 Feminizing slavery Women and Slavery in the Late Ottoman Empire The Design of Difference Cambridge University Press p 205 ISBN 978 0 521 51583 2 Female slaves were legally vulnerable to involuntary sexual use Their second disadvantage as sexual beings were uniquely theirs from moment of capture were legally subject to the disposition of male captors p p 197 198 female slaves were personal property of their master s Unlike males however every female slave of whatever age or provenance by whatever label was also her master s sexual property Women had no right of refusal or appeal with regard to their sexuality although the law forbade owners to use women for outright prostitution The notional if not the legal line between prostitution and the selling of female slave to another male who might sale her to yet another was whisper thin p205 Kuran T Lustig S 2012 Judicial biases in Ottoman Istanbul Islamic justice and its compatibility with modern economic life Journal of Law and Economics 55 2 631 666 doi 10 1086 665537 JSTOR 665537 S2CID 222321949 Faroqhi Suraiya 11 May 2020 Slave agencies compared to The Ottoman and Mughal Empires In Conermann Stephan Agcagul Sevgi Sen Gul eds Slaves and slave agency in the Ottoman Empire Ottoman studies Gottingen Germany Vol 7 Gottingen V amp R Unipress pp 55 86 ISBN 9783847010371 OCLC 1154547774 Allingham Merryn Slavery in the Ottoman Empire Merryn Allingham White Joshua M Sen Gul 2020 05 11 Slavery Manumission and freedom suits in early modern Ottoman Empire p 298 ISBN 978 3 8470 1037 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Zhigunova Lidia 2016 From Harem To Feminocracy De orientalizing The Circassian National Imaginary In Literature And Art From The Early Modern To The Post soviet Periods Tulane Digital Library Retrieved 2020 11 15 Toledano Ehud R 1993 Shemsigul A Circassian Slave in Mid Nineteenth Century Cairo Struggle and survival in the modern Middle East London I B Tauris pp 59 74 ISBN 978 1 85043 607 2 a b c d BROYLES SHAWN CHRISTIAN 2010 SLAVERY AND THE OTTOMAN CRIMEAN KHANATE CONNECTION PDF Oklahoma State University via shareok org bitstream The persistence of history The Economist 2015 08 22 ISSN 0013 0613 Retrieved 2020 11 17 Wolf Von Schierbrand March 28 1886 Slaves sold to the Turk How the vile traffic is still carried on in the East Sights our correspondent saw for twenty dollars in the house of a grand old Turk of a dealer PDF The New York Times Retrieved 19 January 2011 Peirce Leslie P 1993 The imperial harem women and sovereignty in the Ottoman Empire New York ISBN 978 0 19 507673 8 OCLC 27811454 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Burford Robert 1846 Description of a view of Constantinople with its European and Asiatic suburbs and a great extent of surrounding country PDF London T Brettell Printer Rupert Street Haymarket p 5 Millingen Alexander Van 2010 10 31 Byzantine Constantinople The Walls of the City and Adjoining Historical Sites Cambridge University Press p 22 ISBN 978 1 108 01456 4 Walsh Robert 1836 A Residence at Constantinople During a Period Including the Commencement Progress and Termination of the Greek and Turkish Revolutions Vol 2 London F Westley amp A H Davis p 353 Walsh Robert 1836 A Residence at Constantinople During a Period Including the Commencement Progress and Termination of the Greek and Turkish Revolutions Vol 2 London F Westley amp A H Davis p 2 Pardoe Julia S H 1845 The city of the sultan and domestic manners of the Turks in 1836 Vol I Clarke p 111 Cizgi Yeni Fevzi Gunenc yenicizgihaber com in Turkish Retrieved 2020 10 25 Neoklis Sarris Osmanikh pragmatikothta Osmanic reality 1990 vol 1 pp 339 340 in Greek N Sarris Istanbul 1940 Athens 2011 was a professor of Sociology of History at the Panteion University of Athens He was brought up in Turkey where he received his secondary education He studied at the universities of Athens Istanbul and Geneva from the Greek WP el Neoklhs Sarrhs Burke Peter 2012 Translating the Turks Why Concepts Matter Translating Social and Political Thought Brill Publishers pp 141 152 doi 10 1163 9789004194908 009 ISBN 978 90 04 19490 8 David Geza Fodor Pal 2007 Ransom Slavery Along the Ottoman Borders Early Fifteenth Early Eighteenth Centuries BRILL p 6 ISBN 978 90 04 15704 0 Ruete Emily 1888 Memoirs of an Arabian Princess New York D Appleton and Company p 6 a b David Geza Fodor Pal 2007 Ransom Slavery Along the Ottoman Borders Early Fifteenth Early Eighteenth Centuries BRILL p 6 ISBN 978 90 04 15704 0 Csukovits 2005 p 80 Csukovits 2005 p 81 a b Kumorovitz 1983 p 944 E Kovacs 2009 p 105 Natho Kadir I 2009 12 03 Circassian History Xlibris Corporation ISBN 978 1 4653 1699 8 E S Zevakin A Pencko April 1986 translated from the Russian by Maria Teresa Dellacasa in Miscellanea di studi storici vol 1 Genoa Fratelli Bozzi 1969 pp 7 98 Also mentioned in Natho Kadir I 2009 12 03 Circassian History Ricerche sulla storia delle colonie genovesi nel Caucaso occidentale nei secoli XIII XV Speculum Miscellanea di studi storici 2 Collana Storica di Fonti e Studi 38 Genoa Istituto di Medievistica Universita di Genova 1983 Paper Pp 266 61 2 41 doi 10 1017 s0038713400118718 ISBN 978 1 4653 1699 8 ISSN 0038 7134 Mikhail Kizilov 2007 Slave Trade in the Early Modern Crimea From the Perspective of Christian Muslim and Jewish Sources Oxford University 11 1 24 Walsh Robert 1836 A Residence at Constantinople During a Period Including the Commencement Progress and Termination of the Greek and Turkish Revolutions F Westley amp A H Davis The Edinburgh Review Or Critical Journal Longmans Green amp Company 1837 Walsh R Robert 1836 A residence at Constantinople during a period including the commencement progress and termination of the Greek and Turkish Revolutions Wellcome Library London F Westley amp A H Davis caiquegees Caique men hummals porters Charles MacFarlane Constantinople in 1828 a Residence of Sixteen Months in the Turkish Capital and Provinces Archives The National The Discovery Service Retrieved 14 December 2017 Slade Adolphus 1833 Records of Travels in Turkey Greece amp c And of cruise in the Black sea with the captain Pasha in the years 1829 1830 and 1831 PDF Vol II Conduit street London Saunders and Otley pp 242 243 Andersen Hans Christian 1871 Chapter VIII A ramble through Constantinople Book A Poet s Bazaar New York Hurd and Houghton Cambridge Riverside Press pp 231 232 Constantinides Elizabeth 1983 Andreiomeni The Female Warrior in Greek Folk Songs Journal of Modern Greek Studies 1 1 63 72 doi 10 1353 mgs 2010 0076 S2CID 143873840 Fauriel Claude Charles 1824 Guerres de Soulotes 8 Chants populaires de la Grece moderne in French Vol 1 Dondey Dupre pere et fils pp 302 303 a b c d e f Aksit Elif 2016 Being a Girl in Ottoman Novels In Fortna Benjamin C ed Childhood in the Late Ottoman Empire and After The Ottoman Empire and its Heritage Vol 59 Leiden Brill pp 104 112 doi 10 26530 OAPEN 613397 ISBN 978 90 04 30580 9 S2CID 163014481 a b c Direk Zeynep 2018 09 01 Fatma Aliye Hanim Gender Debates in Turkey Asiatische Studien Etudes Asiatiques in German 72 3 693 716 doi 10 1515 asia 2017 0075 ISSN 2235 5871 S2CID 105568574 a b c d Dogan Setenay Nil Spring 2010 From national humiliation to difference The image of the Circassian beauty in the discourses of Circassian diaspora nationalists PDF New Perspectives on Turkey No 42 91 Rakhmani Inaya Zakiab Adinda 2020 Consuming Halal Turkish Television in Indonesia A Closer Look at the Social Responses Towards Muhtesem Yuzyil Consuming Halal Turkish Television in Indonesia A Closer Look at the Social Responses Towards Muhtesem Yuzyil Television in Turkey local production transnational expansion and political aspirations Kaptan Yeșim Algan Ece Cham Switzerland Palgrave Macmillan pp 245 265 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 46051 8 13 ISBN 978 3 030 46051 8 OCLC 1193329109 S2CID 226531970 Bibliography EditGursel Burcu Dissolving into the Nile Ottoman Reformism and Maternal Slavery in Serguzest Work Narratives of Dislocation in the Arab World Routledge 2023 ISBN 978 1 003 30177 6 Tug Basak Politics of Honor in Ottoman Anatolia Sexual Violence and Socio Legal Surveillance in the Eighteenth Century Netherlands Brill 2017 ISBN 978 90 04 33865 4 Faroqhi Suraiya Women in the Ottoman Empire A Social and Political History United Kingdom Bloomsbury Publishing 2023 ISBN 978 0 7556 3827 7 Ipsirli Argit Betul et al Slaves and Slave Agency in the Ottoman Empire Germany Bonn University Press 2020 Csukovits Eniko 2005 Csodas szabadulasok a torok rabsagbol Miraculous Escapes from Turkish Captivity Aetas in Hungarian AETAS Konyv es Lapkiado Egyesulet 20 4 78 90 ISSN 0237 7934 A Monument to Medieval Syrian Book Culture Ashrafiya The Library of Ibn Abd al Haˉ diˉ Konrad Hirschler Series Editor Carole Hillenbrand Edinburgh University Press 2020 Page 33 King Charles The Ghost of Freedom A History of the Caucasus United Kingdom Oxford University Press 2008 1 Kizilov Mikhail B The Black Sea and the Slave Trade The Role of Crimean Maritime Towns in the Trade in Slaves and Captives in the Fifteenth to Eighteenth Centuries1 Critical Readings on Global Slavery Leiden The Netherlands Brill 2017 doi 10 1163 9789004346611 032 A Spectrum of Unfreedom Captives and Slaves in the Ottoman Empire Leslie Peirce Central European University Press 2021 ISBN 978 963 386 400 5 Ahmed Leila Chapter 6 Medieval Islam Women and Gender in Islam Historical Roots of a Modern Debate New Haven Yale University Press 2021 pp 102 124 doi 10 12987 9780300258172 009 Beyond the Exotic Women s Histories in Islamic Societies United States Syracuse University Press 2021 Concubines and Courtesans Women and Slavery in Islamic History edited by Matthew S Gordon Kathryn A Hain Powell Eve Troutt Tell This in My Memory Stories of Enslavement from Egypt Sudan and the Ottoman Empire United States Stanford University Press 2012 Conquered Populations in Early Islam Non Arabs Slaves and the Sons of Slave Mothers Elizabeth Urban Toledano Ehud R As If Silent and Absent Bonds of Enslavement in the Islamic Middle East United Kingdom Yale University Press 2007 A goston Ga bor Masters Bruce Alan 21 May 2010 Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 1 4381 1025 7 Rough Guides 1 May 2015 The Rough Guide to Istanbul Rough Guides UK ISBN 978 0 241 21762 7 Kozma Liat 6 September 2011 3 Policing Egyptian Women Sex Law and Medicine in Khedival Egypt PDF Syracuse University Press ISBN 978 0 8156 5134 5 Kononenko Natalie 6 March 2019 Ukrainian Epic and Historical Song Folklore in Context Toronto University of Toronto Press p 114 ISBN 978 1 4875 0263 8 E Kovacs Peter 2009 Egy magyar rabszolgano Kretan a 15 szazadban A Hungarian Woman Slave in Crete in the 15th Century In Neumann Tibor Racz Gyorgy eds Honoris causa Tanulmanyok Engel Pal tiszteletere Analecta mediaevalia III in Hungarian PPKE Tortenettudomanyi Intezete pp 105 123 ISBN 978 963 9627 25 3 Kumorovitz L Bernat 1983 I Lajos kiralyunk 1375 evi havasalfoldi hadjarata es torok haboruja Our King Louis I s Wallachian Campaign and Turkish War of 1375 Szazadok in Hungarian Magyar Tortenelmi Tarsulat 117 5 919 982 ISSN 0039 8098 Klarer Mario Mediterranean Slavery and World Literature Captivity Genres Form Cervantes to Rousseau New York NY ISBN 978 1 351 96758 7 OCLC 1127928575 Ali Kecia February 2017 Concubinage and Consent International Journal of Middle East Studies 49 1 148 152 doi 10 1017 S0020743816001203 S2CID 159722666 King Charles 2008 03 20 Chapter 1 Empires and boundaries The Ghost of Freedom A History of the Caucasus Oxford University Press pp 42 63 doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780195177756 003 0004 retrieved 2022 01 29 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Avret Pazarlari amp oldid 1172086104, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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