An Environmental History of the Late Ottoman Frontier
hosted by Susanna Ferguson
| How did ordinary Ottoman subjects experience the momentous changes that made our modern world? This episode explores that question through the history of the Çukurova region of southern Turkey. As our guest Chris Gratien has argued in a new book entitled The Unsettled Plain: An Environmental History of the Late Ottoman Frontier, Çukurova can be studied as a microcosm of social and environmental change in the late Ottoman Empire. In our conversation, we explore how the approaches of environmental history can offer a fresh perspective on the political history of the Tanzimat period, and we discuss how the history of malaria -- an ancient disease -- sheds light on a modern experience of displacement and dispossession for rural communities in the Ottoman Empire and beyond.
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How did ordinary Ottoman subjects experience the momentous changes that made our modern world? This episode explores that question through the history of the Çukurova region of southern Turkey. As our guest Chris Gratien has argued in a new book entitled The Unsettled Plain: An Environmental History of the Late Ottoman Frontier, Çukurova can be studied as a microcosm of social and environmental change in the late Ottoman Empire. In our conversation, we explore how the approaches of environmental history can offer a fresh perspective on the political history of the Tanzimat period, and we discuss how the history of malaria -- an ancient disease -- sheds light on a modern experience of displacement and dispossession for rural communities in the Ottoman Empire and beyond.
Map indicating location of places discussed in The Unsettled Plain. Map by Chris Gratien.
Ottoman map of Adana region following the settlement programs of the 1860s (click for high resolution). This map was drawn by the assistant engineer of the Province of Adana Yusuf Efendi in 1870/71. It labels all the settlements of the lowlands, surrounded by the Taurus and Amanus Mountains depicted with green shading. The settlements created for the local tribes (aşair) and new immigrants (muhacirin) were mainly located near the Ceyhan River (right half of the map). The map also depicts features like orchards around the cities of Adana, Tarsus, and Mersin, which residents used as spaces of leisure during the summer, along with wetlands such as the large Karabucak lagoon south of Tarsus (left side of map). Ruins of medieval fortifications such as Anavarza and Hemite, as well as near the Armenian ecclesiastical center of Sis at the foot of the mountains (upper-right corner) are also depicted. The port of İskenderun and the road to Aleppo through the Amanus Mountains mark the lower-right corner of the map. Source: Ottoman Archives, HRT-h 486.
Cotton harvest at a farm in late Ottoman Çukurova, early 20th century. Most agricultural labor in Çukurova was carried out by seasonal workers from Eastern Anatolia and Northern Syria. Source: Georges Tsapalos and Pierre Walter, Rapport sur le domaine imperial de Tchoucour-Ova. Paris: Villeneuve-Saint-Georges, 1912.
A Circassian house in Çukurova, early 20th century. From the 1850s onward, Muslim refugees from Crimea and the North Caucasus settled in the sparsely populated lowlands surrounding the Ceyhan River, becoming a major social demographic in Çukurova. Source: Georges Tsapalos and Pierre Walter, Rapport sur le domaine imperial de Tchoucour-Ova.
Contributor Bios
Chris Gratien is Assistant Professor of History at University of Virginia, where he teaches classes on global environmental history and the Middle East. His first book, The Unsettled Plain: An Environmental History of the Late Ottoman Frontier, explores the social and environmental transformation of the Adana region of Southern Turkey during the 19th and 20th century. | |
Susanna Ferguson is Assistant Professor of Middle East Studies at Smith College. She writes and teaches on the history of gender, sexuality, and political thought in the modern Arab world. |
Credits
Episode No. 523
Release Date: 11 March 2022
Recording Location: Northampton, MA
Sound production by Chris Gratien
Music: Ruhi Su - Kalktı Göç Eyledi Avşar Elleri / İskan Türküsü (digitized by Chris Gratien); Seyfettin Sucu - Canım Anzılha (digitized by Chris Gratien); A.A. Aalto - Canyon; Pictures of the Floating World - Waves; Spent Lemons - The Hollow Plain
Bibliography and images courtesy of Chris Gratien
Additional thanks to Sam Dolbee
Release Date: 11 March 2022
Recording Location: Northampton, MA
Sound production by Chris Gratien
Music: Ruhi Su - Kalktı Göç Eyledi Avşar Elleri / İskan Türküsü (digitized by Chris Gratien); Seyfettin Sucu - Canım Anzılha (digitized by Chris Gratien); A.A. Aalto - Canyon; Pictures of the Floating World - Waves; Spent Lemons - The Hollow Plain
Bibliography and images courtesy of Chris Gratien
Additional thanks to Sam Dolbee
Further Listening
Ella Fratantuono | 331
9/1/17
|
Migrants in the Late Ottoman Empire | |
Şölen Şanlı Vasquez | 513
9/16/21
|
The Circassian Diaspora | |
Faisal Husain | 504
6/27/21
|
The Environmental Origins of Ottoman Iraq | |
Suja Sawafta | 414
6/14/19
|
The Environmental Politics of Abdul Rahman Munif | |
Yiğit Akın | 429
10/3/19
|
How War Changed Ottoman Society | |
Mostafa Minawi | 143
2/1/14
|
The Ottoman Scramble for Africa | |
Michael Christopher Low | 501
4/7/21
|
Ottoman Mecca and the Indian Ocean Hajj | |
Alan Mikhail | 070
9/16/12
|
Ecology and Empire in Ottoman Egypt | |
Bathsheba Demuth | 439
12/6/19
|
An Environmental History of the Bering Strait |
Images
Map indicating location of places discussed in The Unsettled Plain. Map by Chris Gratien.
Ottoman map of Adana region following the settlement programs of the 1860s (click for high resolution). This map was drawn by the assistant engineer of the Province of Adana Yusuf Efendi in 1870/71. It labels all the settlements of the lowlands, surrounded by the Taurus and Amanus Mountains depicted with green shading. The settlements created for the local tribes (aşair) and new immigrants (muhacirin) were mainly located near the Ceyhan River (right half of the map). The map also depicts features like orchards around the cities of Adana, Tarsus, and Mersin, which residents used as spaces of leisure during the summer, along with wetlands such as the large Karabucak lagoon south of Tarsus (left side of map). Ruins of medieval fortifications such as Anavarza and Hemite, as well as near the Armenian ecclesiastical center of Sis at the foot of the mountains (upper-right corner) are also depicted. The port of İskenderun and the road to Aleppo through the Amanus Mountains mark the lower-right corner of the map. Source: Ottoman Archives, HRT-h 486.
Cotton harvest at a farm in late Ottoman Çukurova, early 20th century. Most agricultural labor in Çukurova was carried out by seasonal workers from Eastern Anatolia and Northern Syria. Source: Georges Tsapalos and Pierre Walter, Rapport sur le domaine imperial de Tchoucour-Ova. Paris: Villeneuve-Saint-Georges, 1912.
A Circassian house in Çukurova, early 20th century. From the 1850s onward, Muslim refugees from Crimea and the North Caucasus settled in the sparsely populated lowlands surrounding the Ceyhan River, becoming a major social demographic in Çukurova. Source: Georges Tsapalos and Pierre Walter, Rapport sur le domaine imperial de Tchoucour-Ova.
Bibliography
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Turkish-Language Works
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_____. “Kırım Savaşı Sonrası Adana Eyaleti’ne Yapılan Nogay Göç ve İskânları (1859–1861)" Bilig, no. 45 (2008).
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Cebe, Günil Ayaydın. "İskâna Direnen Kimlik: Dadaloğlu'nun Coğrafyası," Milli Folklor 23, no. 90 (2011).
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Armenian Memory Literature
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Զէյթունի պատմագրիրք. Buenos Aires: Tp. Ararat, 1960.
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