• Though the role and function of women practicing medicine or dealing with health in the Ottoman Empire has not been studied thoroughly yet, my research has showed that there were women of all statuses and classes who had a relation with health, either in sponsoring health institutions or practicing medicine themselves. (muslimheritage.com)
  • During the 18th century, the town became an administrative center in the Ottoman Empire. (wikipedia.org)
  • Professor Bahaeddin Ögel has published a work on the period, starting with the Gokturks, carrying on to the beginning of the Ottoman Empire, and dwelling extensively on the nutritional system of the Seljuk Turks. (turkish-cuisine.org)
  • The author has a deep understanding of Ottoman society and has travelled widely throughout what was the Ottoman Empire. (cornucopia.net)
  • A richly illustrated guide to the Ottoman Empire, 100 years since its dissolution, unravelling its complex cultural legacy and profound impact on Europe, North Africa and the Middle East. (cornucopia.net)
  • At its height, the Ottoman Empire spread from Yemen to the gates of Vienna. (cornucopia.net)
  • Darke celebrates the culture of the Ottoman Empire, from its aesthetics and architecture to its scientific and medical innovations, including the first vaccinations. (cornucopia.net)
  • Beautifully illustrated with manuscripts, miniatures, paintings and photographs, The Ottomans: A Cultural Legacy presents the magnificent achievements of an empire that lasted over 600 years and encompassed Asian, European and African cultures, shedding new light on its complex legacy. (cornucopia.net)
  • In this regard, the Ottoman Empire had a place in the Ottoman culture as much as the traditional Turkish Bath, dilden literature and everyday life. (avalonspawellness.com)
  • This noticeable architectural "Ottoman" expression included many building types, that were formed within this cultural mix: Architecture was practised primarily under the guidance of Islamic faith, serving also as a mean of responding to public needs, (social and commercial ones), as well as an expression of power and posthumous fame by the dominant rulers of the Empire. (uth.gr)
  • They are particularly strong on Ottoman imprints, as well as rare books from the Habsburg empire, including some in Arabic script. (melcominternational.eu)
  • The High Ottoman Empire: The original download Hands On Guide to studieneinstieg training coating semen train of the Ottoman Empire works significantly introduced as the plaster between 1453 and 1699. (chipmunk-app.com)
  • The Sulaymaniye Mosque's history is steeped in Ottoman Empire glory. (isfa.net)
  • The rise of Turkish power in Anatolia eventually gave rise to the Ottoman Empire which rapidly conquered. (brewminate.com)
  • An exceptional documentation of health care infrastructure in the Ottoman Empire, mentioning the Yildiz Ambulance, the Haider Pacha military hospital and the Haseki Hospital in Istanbul. (inlibris.com)
  • From the library of Sultan Abdul Hamid II, the last Sultan of the Ottoman Empire to exert effective contol over the fracturing state and also remembered as a poet, translator and one of the dynasty's greatest bibliophiles. (inlibris.com)
  • The Ottoman-Turkish language is an amalgam of Arabic, Persian, and modern Turkish. (yale.edu)
  • The practice of medicine in the region sometimes referred to as the Islamic World [1] predates the revelation of Islam: therapeutic practices before Islam relied heavily on Mesopotamian, Egyptian, Persian, Indian, and Greek medical knowledge. (mcgill.ca)
  • [2] Visitors will learn how the translations of foreign medical texts (from Greek, Sanskrit, Syriac, etc.) into Arabic and Persian eventually led to the need to codify such a large body of knowledge for the purpose of dissemination. (mcgill.ca)
  • This is the premier collection of Arabic, Persian, Ottoman Turkish, and other Islamic manuscripts in the Western Hemisphere. (lu.se)
  • Based on a lifetime's experience of living and working across its former provinces, Diana Darke offers a unique overview of the Ottoman Empire's cultural legacy one century after its dissolution. (cornucopia.net)
  • It was built in the 16th century as a testament to the Ottoman Empire's opulence and artistic achievements during the reign of Suleiman the Magnificent. (isfa.net)
  • Visitors are captivated by the mosque's impressive dome, towering minarets, and intricate detailing, which transport them back to the Ottoman Empire's golden age. (isfa.net)
  • It was commissioned by Suleiman the Magnificent, one of the empire's most powerful sultans, to demonstrate the Ottomans' strength and splendor. (isfa.net)
  • The Sulaymaniye Mosque has a special place in Istanbul's history because it was commissioned by Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent, one of the Ottoman Empire's most powerful rulers. (isfa.net)
  • These additional structures reflected not only the Ottoman Empire's commitment to the well-being of its citizens but also Islamic values of charity and education. (isfa.net)
  • The oldest book in Arabic script is Kitabü't-Tabih (manuscript located in the Suleymaniye Library, Ayasofya section, n° 3710), written by Hasan el-Baghdadi in 633 AH/1226 AD. (turkish-cuisine.org)
  • Its digital content consists mainly of manuscripts, pictorial images and European-language texts, but there are some Arabic printed items. (melcominternational.eu)
  • This catalogue contains the reproductions of over 2000 postal stamps used by the Ottoman Postal Administration between 1910 and 1918. (ircica.org)
  • Ilham Nurwansah (Center for the Study of Islam and Society (PPIM) Syarif Hidayatullah Jakarta State Islamic University (UIN) Jakarta, Indonesia): Renewing the Catalogue of Sundanese Manuscripts: Leiden University Library Collection. (universiteitleiden.nl)
  • Muhammad Haidar Izzuddin (Universitas Indonesia): Catalogue of Ulu manuscripts in the Special Collection of Leiden University: A Further Contribution to Uluan Manuscript Research. (universiteitleiden.nl)
  • Diana Darke sees religious tolerance and an ability to absorb from other societies as key to Ottoman success, but above all she believes it was Ottoman egalitarianism that explains that society's remarkable longevity. (cornucopia.net)
  • Therefore, mosques, religious schools, convents, soup-kitchens for the poor, khans, baths (hammams) were constructed, enriching the conquered cities with a number of religious and secular buildings, necessary for the Ottoman society's basic needs. (uth.gr)
  • As depicted in the miniature paintings of the 15th century Turkish manuscript on surgery, called Cerrahiyetü'l Haniye of Sabuncuoglu , the female physician who was involved with the operation of the female patient was called "tabibe" meaning female physician, whereas "tabib" meant male physician. (muslimheritage.com)
  • Dating from the mid-15th to early 20th centuries, the materials in the Ottoman-Turkish collection include works of history, poetry, literature, Islamic law, medical texts, dictionaries, and hand-annotated account books. (yale.edu)
  • People travelled, languages travelled, news travelled, information travelled, manuscripts travelled (Ancient Sanskrit manuscript of martial arts - The Marma Kala, travels in my novel ' Like the Radiant Sun '). There was an exchange of ideas, culture and food. (booxoul.com)
  • During the early and medieval periods of the Islamic era, physicians in the region achieved advancements and innovations that have had a lasting and significant impact on the evolution of medical practices around the world. (mcgill.ca)
  • This exhibition aims to show how medical knowledge first came to the Islamic World (pre-Islam until the 10th cent. (mcgill.ca)
  • Finally, visitors will understand the lasting and significant impact that medical knowledge produced in the Islamic World has had on modern Western medicine. (mcgill.ca)
  • Through the display of original manuscripts, books, and antique artefacts from the Islamic Studies Library (ISL), and the Osler Library of the History of Medicine, The rise and influence of Medicine in the Islamic World will take visitors on a fascinating journey into the world of Islamic medicine. (mcgill.ca)
  • AH onwards, a new type of medicine emerged by adopting Greco-Islamic medical knowledge and recorded as Ḥadīth [Reports from the Prophet Muḥammad]: This Prophetic medicine drawn from Ḥadīth co-existed with other types of medical care - like Greek humoral medicine - and kept developing until the 14th cent. (mcgill.ca)
  • From the website: Through the Islamic Heritage Project (IHP), Harvard University has cataloged, conserved, and digitized hundreds of Islamic manuscripts, maps, and published texts from Harvard's renowned library and museum collections. (lu.se)
  • The site displays descriptive information for a selection of digitized manuscripts from the Islamic Manuscripts Collection at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. (lu.se)
  • From the website: As a result of generous support from the David A. Gardner '69 Magic Project, the Princeton University Library created Voyager cataloging records for most of the approximately 9,500 Islamic manuscripts in the Manuscripts Division, which are from Robert Garrett (Class of 1897) and other sources. (lu.se)
  • Initially, more than 200 of these manuscripts were digitized as the core of the Princeton Digital Library of Islamic Manuscripts. (lu.se)
  • Also added are PDFs of Islamic manuscripts digitized in response to photoduplication requests. (lu.se)
  • In all, approximately a sixth of the Library's Islamic manuscripts have now been digitized and put online for the benefit of scholars worldwide. (lu.se)
  • The Sulaymaniye Mosque's architecture is a triumph of Ottoman design, with a harmonious blend of Islamic and Byzantine architectural elements. (isfa.net)
  • In the Ottoman period, the female patients were treated either at their homes or at the residences of the medical practitioners until the 19th century. (muslimheritage.com)
  • But the paths of women in this Turkish emigration project are not easy to trace. (we-refugees-archive.org)
  • The second part is focused on the issue of immigration and emigration in late Ottoman Eastern Mediterranean. (storicamente.org)
  • Unfortunately, there are only a few Turkish manuscripts in the libraries which are devoted solely to cookery. (turkish-cuisine.org)
  • World Digital Library (UNESCO) Contributed by a wide range of national and academic libraries across 6 continents, these images are mostly of manuscripts, documents, maps photographs and modern books in various languages. (melcominternational.eu)
  • Felek had already introduced several of these valuable manuscripts to students in her course "Reading and Research in Ottoman History and Literature. (yale.edu)
  • The vocabulary he used for describing foods and cooking utensils and materials is very important not only from the point of view of cultural history but also for that of Turkish cuisine. (turkish-cuisine.org)
  • The old trading routes between the East and the West came under Turkish control after the Ottoman conquest of Asia Minor and the capture of Constantinople in 1453. (booxoul.com)
  • After the fall of Constantinople (1453) and the fall of Rhodes, the possession of the Order of the Knights of Saint John (1522), to the Ottomans, the Republic of Venice was the ultimate protector of Christianity in the eastern Mediterranean. (cdc.gov)
  • In addition to guidance from Felek and Dougherty, Ünal receives support from Agnieszka Rec, an early materials cataloger at the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, which is the repository for the collection. (yale.edu)
  • For the IHP, Harvard's Open Collections Program (OCP) has produced digital copies of over 280 manuscripts, 275 printed texts, and 50 maps, totaling over 156,000 pages. (lu.se)
  • During the Ottoman period, the baths were not only places visited for cleaning purposes, but also social life was indispensable. (avalonspawellness.com)
  • In Avalon, we offer a range of beauty treatments in special body care areas such as Turkish Baths, facials, body treatments, massages and medical massages. (avalonspawellness.com)
  • As Islam prescribes ablution before prayer and the overall importance of water, there was a wide demand for the construction of fountains, public baths and water supplies, facilities which definitely were rare before the Ottoman occupation. (uth.gr)
  • Apart from the Ottoman monuments of Corinthia (mosques, baths, tekke, türbe, etc), the scientific research will incorporate a few representative buildings, that were constructed by the locals, the native Greek population, who resided the Corinthian villages. (uth.gr)
  • The present offprint also contains a medical bibliography of works in German, Danish and Swedish published in 1886-87 as well as several abstracts, including an article on gonorrhoea by the Ottowa physician Coyteux Prévost, published in the "Union Médicale du Canada" in the same year. (inlibris.com)
  • Also, since social and medical assistance are among the basic principles of this religion, hospices and hospitals were required to be built. (uth.gr)
  • Rare account, by the French physician Paul Aubry, of Turkish military and civil hospitals, describing in detail their design and medical capacities, including accurate numbers of beds. (inlibris.com)
  • The data we describe, obtained from the Archives of the Venetian State, are related to an operation organized by the Venetian Intelligence Services, which aimed at lifting the siege by infecting the Ottoman soldiers with plague by attacking them with a liquid made from the spleens and buboes of plague victims. (cdc.gov)
  • This feature somewhat explains the rich varieties of females practicing medicine both in and outside the Ottoman palace. (muslimheritage.com)
  • Exquisitely written and lavishly illustrated, this delightful book brings five centuries of Ottoman culture to life. (cornucopia.net)
  • These facts explain the variety of the female practicing medicine both in and outside the Ottoman palace, which I came to discover during my research. (muslimheritage.com)
  • The second part of this multiscientific research ( CN6 ) focuses on the Architectural, Topographical and Historical Documentation of the Ottoman Monuments in Corinthia , based on in situ conducted field work -architectural survey plans, combined with bibliographical references and historical data available. (uth.gr)
  • The important Turkish research library of Jacob Landau, which contains many Ottoman publications has been digitised as well. (melcominternational.eu)
  • Ayşe Çiçek Ünal, a graduate student in the Department of History, stepped in to help identify and describe the first 25 manuscripts Felek had selected as the most logical starting point for the project. (yale.edu)
  • We describe a plan-ultimately abandoned-to use plague as a biological weapon during the Venetian-Ottoman War in the 17th century. (cdc.gov)
  • Before coming to the subject of printed Turkish cookbooks, I would like to mention some of the manuscripts which were sources of the printed books. (turkish-cuisine.org)
  • Although most of the images are of manuscripts, there is a handful of early Middle Eastern printed books. (melcominternational.eu)
  • Among other items, it includes key works on medical aspects of inebriety, personal narratives and biographies of temperance leaders and alcoholics, and books on the formal temperance movement and prohibition. (umass.edu)
  • In Greece numerous Ottoman buildings were constructed during the Ottoman (Turkish) occupation, that can still be traced all over the Hellenic lands. (uth.gr)
  • The incident transpired during the Venetian-Ottoman War, when the city of Candia (now Heraklion, Greece) was under siege by the Ottomans (1648-1669). (cdc.gov)
  • Morning worship service on the Lord's Day including visits to the fortress Monastery of the Apocalypse (1088 AD) which has an important library of ancient manuscripts. (ldolphin.org)
  • The existing Ottoman monuments that have survived in the geographical region of Corinthia are found mostly in the former administrative centre of Ancient Corinth (Gördüs) and at the hill of Acrocorinth, while others are found scattered in smaller settlements of the area (i.e. (uth.gr)
  • The holdings of the Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library range from ancient papyri to records of modern advertising. (duke.edu)
  • During the Abbasid Caliphate (750-1258 AD/132-651 AH), significant effort went toward translating medical and scientific works from other cultures and languages. (mcgill.ca)
  • Thanks to their efforts so far, nearly 78 of these important manuscripts have already been cataloged. (yale.edu)
  • In this article, Professor Nil Sari, provides information on the various medical practices dedicated to female patients under the Ottomans. (muslimheritage.com)
  • Following their 2019 symposium about these manuscripts, held at Sterling Memorial Library, Özgen Felek, Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations, and Roberta Dougherty, librarian for Middle East Studies and curator for the Near East Collection, proposed a solution. (yale.edu)
  • A digital archive of Ottoman periodicals, included in the Hakkı Tarık Us Collection, which is currently kept at the Beyazıt State Library in Istanbul. (berkeley.edu)
  • The periodicals in this collection were donated by individuals, purchased, or separated from manuscript collections. (duke.edu)
  • Izmir is a modern seaport city having been completely rebuilt after a great fire in 1922 at the close of the Greek-Turkish war. (ldolphin.org)
  • In Ottoman Turkish, it was called طرنوه (Modern Turkish: Tırnova). (wikipedia.org)
  • This paper was originally published in Turkish by Professor Nil Sari in The New History of Medicine Studies , 2-3, Istanbul, 1996-97, pp. 11-64. (muslimheritage.com)
  • Therefore a. secular buildings , such as mansions belonging to noted Greek families, as well as fortified residences-towers), and b. religious buildings-complexes , such as Christian postbyzantine churches and monasteries, built during the time that the Corinthian lands were under the Ottoman occupation, may be included, although they certainly are not being considered as "Ottoman" but as "postbyzantine" , in case of the churches and monasteries. (uth.gr)
  • MAGPHYS is a elegant, left-handed download hate hope and high explosives a report platform to solve large Greek field people of methods in projects of Turkish contextual vehicles looking to the disciplines and the content inspiration. (fflossmann.de)
  • Wide outpatient treatment of females in a health institution dates back to 1839, at the Medical School clinics. (muslimheritage.com)
  • February 28, 2005 saw the deadliest single insurgent attack up till then, when a car bomb killed 125 people outside a medical clinic. (wikipedia.org)
  • Western perceptions of the Ottomans have often been distorted by Orientalism, characterising their rule as oppressive and destructive, while seeing their culture as exotic and incomprehensible. (cornucopia.net)
  • Ottomans marked their passage by the Balkan cities with the offprint of their culture: although they brought many of their cultural features from Anatolia, they assimilated others found in the conquered lands and developed a multi-cultural character. (uth.gr)
  • Archive of the Turkish weekly political magazine. (berkeley.edu)
  • They wanted to break the Arab and Venetian trade monopolies, bypass Turkish hostility, and open direct trade relations with the East. (booxoul.com)
  • Here are the home of Galen, the famous physician, and the Asclepion, dedicated to the god of health and medicine-a famous health spa and foremost medical center (symbolized by a pair of entwined snakes). (ldolphin.org)
  • MAH has the complex page of the ' Spherical native manuscript '( MAH) of an evolution by model the counterfeit regular rhythm of the usability and count. (fflossmann.de)
  • The mosque complex also includes a school, a hospital, a food bank, and a hammam (Turkish bath). (isfa.net)
  • The mosque complex includes a school (medrese), a hospital (darüşşifa), a soup kitchen (imaret), and a Turkish bath (hammam). (isfa.net)
  • She cites the development of Bursa, the first Ottoman capital, which was a city planned around the needs of a community. (cornucopia.net)
  • Today, these structures provide visitors with a glimpse into the multifaceted nature of Ottoman life. (isfa.net)
  • In many documents of the 1700 and 1800s it is possible to find a distinction between ibn 'Arab (Arab son) and ibn Turk (Turkish son). (storicamente.org)
  • For example, in a juridical registry record dated 1673, on an attempt for hospitalizing an insane woman called Fatima for medical treatment in Konya Hospital, his son Ömer objected, saying he would look after his mother at home and treat her. (muslimheritage.com)
  • Did the social practice under the Ottomans favour or prohibit the treatment of female patients by male practitioners? (muslimheritage.com)
  • It is a mirror of social, medical, and educational development in the Gulf States. (berkeley.edu)
  • As émigrés in Turkey these women became part of the major reform of state and society initiated by Kemal Paşa (Atatürk) in the wake of the founding of the Turkish Republic. (we-refugees-archive.org)