Published by Dar üt-Tibaat ül-Âmire. [H.: 1219], Istanbul, 1804
Language: Turkish, Ottoman (1500-1928)
Seller: Khalkedon Rare Books ABA, ILAB, IOBA, ESA, Istanbul, Turkey
First Edition
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Add to basketLeather. Condition: Good. 1st Edition. Original full leather bdg. in traditional Ottoman style. Repaired skillfully. 4to. (29 x 18 cm). In Ottoman script. 2 volumes set in one: ([15], 327 p.; [6], 315 p.). Vasif tarihi. Mahasin ül-âsâr ve hakayik ül-ahbâr. 2 volumes set. Özege 22519. Extremely rare. First Edition. In the late eighteenth century the Ottoman Empire experienced a time of profound crisis, political as well as intellectual, moral, and ideological. This dissertation explores the mental and moral climate of the period through the work of Ahmed Vasif Efendi, a statesman, ambassador, intellectual, and author of one of the century's largest histories, and also through his personal development as a reformer. Divided into five chapters, each treating a distinct aspect of Vasif's thought, this dissertation argues that Ottoman elites after 1774 responded to growing foreign and domestic challenges with not only military reform but a broad re-evaluation of subjects like war, peacemaking, moral rule, and human agency in history. It suggests these debates, including a basic disagreement over the legitimate place of human reason and action across life's many spheres, indicate a vital if fractured response to the crisis, and an incipient breakdown in certain storied intellectual frameworks.
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Add to basket2 volumes bound as 1. An important first-hand account of relations between the Porte and central Europe as well as the wider political events during the second half of the 18th century. Written in Turkish (set in a Naskh Arabic type) by the Baghdad-born diplomat Ahmed Vasif Effendi and also known as "Vasif Tarihi" ("Vasif's History"), it forms one of the most important works of Ottoman political history for the period between 1754 and 1774, when the author actively participated in the world of diplomacy in the Ottoman Empire, on the Balkans, in Russia and in Vienna. Vasif was known for his quick temper and was later described by the German orientalist Franz Babinger as "vain, stingy, jealous, and excessively vicious" (cf. p. 336). His text was left unfinished after a dispute with the Istanbul-based press of Rasid Efendi, which Vasif himself had helped establish, and it was completed by Sadullah Enveri (d. 1794), who himself had participated in the military events described. He is remembered for establishing modern Egypt as an independent country.With the label of the 19th-century bookseller Benjamin Duprat, Paris, on the front paste-down. Later the book was owned by the Iraqi architect Mohamed Makiya (2015). With old pencil and ink annotations on the endpapers. Binding a little worn with some scratches, interior of the book clean with sporadic old stains. A copy in contemporary calf, bound in Bulaq itself, surviving in very good condition.l Özege V, 22519; WorldCat 949617481, 777193206, 320228577, , 600848792 (4 copies); cf. Ethan L. Menchinger, The first of the modern Ottomans: the intellectual history of Ahmed Vasif (2017); Franz Babinger, Die Geschichtsschreiber der Osmanen und ihre Werke (1927), pp. 335-337. Contemporary calf with later paper label; later marbled paper on the spine. In Turkish, with the main text set in a naskh Arabic type, with a woodcut decoration and decorations built up from typographic ornaments at the opening of the main text (incorporating a woodcut heading in Arabic script). Pages: 14, 210, [1 blank], 7, 190 pp.