The Imperial Harem network in Istanbul, 1850s–1922
Date
2018Author
Sagaster, BörtePublisher
RoutledgePlace of publication
New YorkSource
Istanbul - Kushta - Constantinople Narratives of Identity in the Ottoman Capital, 1830-1930Pages
44-54Google Scholar check
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Istanbul seen through the eyes of the women of the nineteenth-century Imperial Harem: an initial reflection on this theme suggests a contradiction. As a social network that covered the whole city of Istanbul, the Imperial Harem kept its seclusion and its distance from the other "city people" until the very end of Ottoman rule. The description of the harem as a social system is a theme to which all authors attach great importance. All of them describe the Imperial Harem as a highly secluded place whose inhabitants formed a close community with fixed rules and a very sophisticated hierarchy, which every woman had to obey. All six authors state that during their period of stay, the women who lived in the Imperial Harem were mainly of Caucasian origin.