VI International Graduate Conference Cultural Entanglement, Transfer and Contention in Mediterran... more VI International Graduate Conference Cultural Entanglement, Transfer and Contention in Mediterranean Communities, by Cems-Center for Eastern Mediterranean Studies. Budapest 30 May-1 June 2019.
Cohabitation without respective knowledge? Reggio Calabria's Muslim community.
I'm a co-author o... more Cohabitation without respective knowledge? Reggio Calabria's Muslim community. I'm a co-author of the paper
Ottoman Mobilities in Italy: The Expansion of Ottoman Communities and Diplomatic-Consular Network in the Italian Penınsula in the Second Half of the 19 Century, 2023
Through the analysis and the comparison of Ottoman and Italian diplomatic and consular documents,... more Through the analysis and the comparison of Ottoman and Italian diplomatic and consular documents, this paper aims to map and describe the Ottoman quarantine system against the spread of plague and cholera. The system in question was developed between the 1830s and the beginning of the 20th century by the government of the Sublime Porte. This approach will allow us not only to describe the Ottoman re-elaboration of quarantinist, hygienist and neo-quarantinist doctrines before the Pasteurian discoveries, but also to demonstrate the Ottoman Empire's autonomous commitment to stop the spread of epidemics arriving from the Indian Peninsula through the Red Sea and the Suez Canal. By the end of the Crimean War of 1853-56 the Ottoman Empire had developed a series of infrastructures between the Eastern Mediterranean, the Red Sea and the Black Sea, and made a significant contribution to preventing the spread of epidemics across the Mediterranean and the European continent. For example, during the Crimean War the Ottoman government adopted measures to the ensure the safe and quarantined transport of allied troops as well. Through the various international sanitary conferences of the 19th century, the Ottoman system underwent further development up until the First World War, making it one of the most complex intercontinental quarantine systems in the world, stretching from Yemen to Bosnia. Therefore, the present paper focuses on mapping the Ottoman quarantine system; explaining its nature and evolution; and, finally, describing the anti-contagionist policies promoted by the Sublime Porte during the long' 19th century.
Made available to the widest possible audience, the multiplicity and
complexity of Italian-Ottoma... more Made available to the widest possible audience, the multiplicity and complexity of Italian-Ottoman relations are placed at the heart of this volume, in order to underline the existence of a common Italo-Turkish heritage and the importance of dialogue between academics from different countries, in order to highlight what unites us in the common Mediterranean mirror.
VI International Graduate Conference Cultural Entanglement, Transfer and Contention in Mediterran... more VI International Graduate Conference Cultural Entanglement, Transfer and Contention in Mediterranean Communities, by Cems-Center for Eastern Mediterranean Studies. Budapest 30 May-1 June 2019.
Cohabitation without respective knowledge? Reggio Calabria's Muslim community.
I'm a co-author o... more Cohabitation without respective knowledge? Reggio Calabria's Muslim community. I'm a co-author of the paper
Ottoman Mobilities in Italy: The Expansion of Ottoman Communities and Diplomatic-Consular Network in the Italian Penınsula in the Second Half of the 19 Century, 2023
Through the analysis and the comparison of Ottoman and Italian diplomatic and consular documents,... more Through the analysis and the comparison of Ottoman and Italian diplomatic and consular documents, this paper aims to map and describe the Ottoman quarantine system against the spread of plague and cholera. The system in question was developed between the 1830s and the beginning of the 20th century by the government of the Sublime Porte. This approach will allow us not only to describe the Ottoman re-elaboration of quarantinist, hygienist and neo-quarantinist doctrines before the Pasteurian discoveries, but also to demonstrate the Ottoman Empire's autonomous commitment to stop the spread of epidemics arriving from the Indian Peninsula through the Red Sea and the Suez Canal. By the end of the Crimean War of 1853-56 the Ottoman Empire had developed a series of infrastructures between the Eastern Mediterranean, the Red Sea and the Black Sea, and made a significant contribution to preventing the spread of epidemics across the Mediterranean and the European continent. For example, during the Crimean War the Ottoman government adopted measures to the ensure the safe and quarantined transport of allied troops as well. Through the various international sanitary conferences of the 19th century, the Ottoman system underwent further development up until the First World War, making it one of the most complex intercontinental quarantine systems in the world, stretching from Yemen to Bosnia. Therefore, the present paper focuses on mapping the Ottoman quarantine system; explaining its nature and evolution; and, finally, describing the anti-contagionist policies promoted by the Sublime Porte during the long' 19th century.
Made available to the widest possible audience, the multiplicity and
complexity of Italian-Ottoma... more Made available to the widest possible audience, the multiplicity and complexity of Italian-Ottoman relations are placed at the heart of this volume, in order to underline the existence of a common Italo-Turkish heritage and the importance of dialogue between academics from different countries, in order to highlight what unites us in the common Mediterranean mirror.
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complexity of Italian-Ottoman relations are placed at the heart of this volume, in order to underline the existence of a common Italo-Turkish heritage and the importance of dialogue between academics from different countries, in order to highlight what unites us in the common Mediterranean mirror.
I'm a co-author of the paper
complexity of Italian-Ottoman relations are placed at the heart of this volume, in order to underline the existence of a common Italo-Turkish heritage and the importance of dialogue between academics from different countries, in order to highlight what unites us in the common Mediterranean mirror.