Egypt and the Ottoman Empire in the 19th Century
2011 ж. 17 Қаз.
32 507 Рет қаралды
Prof. Richard Bulliet
History W3903 section 001
Session 10: Egypt and the Ottoman Empire in the 19th Century
HISTORY OF THE WORLD SINCE 1500CE
Prof. Richard Bulliet
History W3903 section 001
Session 10: Egypt and the Ottoman Empire in the 19th Century
HISTORY OF THE WORLD SINCE 1500CE
Thank you for putting your lectures online. These Open Source type learning opportunities are great to see.
Impressive lecture. no notes, just a cup of coffee
He seems to know appropriate facts. I find it interesting even if the delivery is a bit uninspiring; but he doesn't know what the mid term will be. I suspect the course outline is fluid. Who is gonna care if he skips fez hat era?
Thank you for making this lecture available.
Some interesting concepts here such as the operation of the "waqf" and the shift from "Justice" to "Freedom" as rallying cries for change.
I am not a student but I was very interested :-)
THANK YOU FOR SHARING THIS INFORMATION AND YOUR OTHER LECTURES WITH A MAN LIKE MYSELF WHO CAN ONLY DREAM OF GOING TO A BEAUTIFUL COLLEGE LIKE COLOMBIA THE CHANCE TO LEARN FROM SUCH A GREAT PROFESSOR... THANK YOU SINCERELY...
And the ability to write without caps
16:06 typical western haughtiness . Europe learned the art of music i,e, Orchestra , opera fom Andalusi ( Mu ashahat) Where collectives of singers sang poems of beautiful Arab poetry , an extravagant experience a europeans just wouldent see or hear in his wildest dreams in the Middle Ages.
Audio only coming through one channel?
+William Fenton I guess whoever processed and uploaded the video didn't notice that the audio was split to a single channel, and the other was "removed." I also hear it through one channel too
The point of cutting the streets is so very true there a big highway and a tunnel cutting the biggest and oldest streets of Cairo which separated the old city and ruined its integrity, but I would say they were created more to accommodate the new traffic to the new town built in 19th century not only for “looking modern” reasons.
I applaud the practice of uploading the lectures for the benefit of any English-speaking person who has internet access. I must note, however, that in this lecture Mr. Bulliet wastes much time over detail, without touching upon the importance of Egypt to successive Mediterranean empires (partly because of Egypt's agricultural production --three harvests a year), the conflict between the Ottomans and their Albanian subject, Mehmed Ali Pasha of Kavala, the interests of European powers, and the like...
Very great perspective to modernization process of Turkey and countries be like.
thanks for making this lecture available. yet I have to say that i am not at all convinced about any conclusions or the questions about destruction or undermining of "Islamic institutions" or the structure of society leading to tyranny etc. These institutions of the legal system and religious orders were not actually fulfilling the functions they were supposed to fill in the late ottomans, on the contrary they were detrimental to the state or "the justice" (circle of justice, whatever) itself.
the voice quilty is very bad i barely can hear anything
Quality يابو صطيف
Audio interference is so bad 👎 😫 😩 😭 😪
1:07:04 :D
Mohamad Ali was part of the Ottoman empire
Which one?
says uhhm 783 times
Propaganda