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Between Arabs, Turks and Iranians: The town of Basra, 1600–1700

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 April 2006

RUDI MATTHEE
Affiliation:
University of Delaware
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Abstract

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Early modern Basra is often portrayed as the end of an Ottoman chain of command that grew successively weaker as it stretched from Istanbul to the Persian Gulf. This article complicates the picture of an imperial outpost over which the metropole was unable to impose effective control by discussing seventeenth-century Basra as the point of convergence of various regional and trans-regional spheres of influence and jurisdiction. Basra remained contested territory long after the city was supposedly incorporated into the Ottoman framework in 1546, and in its subsequent history we see multiple actors engaged in a fierce struggle over power and income. Local authorities, regional tribal forces, and outside elements—the Portuguese and the two imperial powers with claims on the region, the Ottomans and the Safavids—participated in this struggle through alliance building and mutual manipulation.

Type
Articles
Copyright
School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, 2006

Footnotes

The research for this study was made possible in part with a joint travel grant from the University of Leiden and the University of Delaware. I would also like to thank Dina Rizk Khoury for providing me with a photocopy of the Gulshan-i khulafā, João Teles e Cunha for commenting on an earlier draft, and the participants in the conference on borders in the Persian Gulf region held at the University of Pennsylvania on 7 October 2005, for their comments on a presentation based on this essay.