Winter-Quartering Tribes: Nomad-Peasant Relations in the Northeastern Frontiers of the Ottoman Empire (1800s-1850s)

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Abstract

Focusing on the winter quartering of Kurdish nomadic tribes among peasant villages, this article discusses the patterns of Kurdish nomadism and nomad-peasant relations in the Ottoman sanjaks of Muş, Bayezid, and Van during the first half of the nineteenth century. It argues that the political structure of these regions and the requirements of animal husbandry among the nomads not only created a distinct pattern of nomadism among the Kurdish tribes, but also led to the polarization of relations between nomads and peasants. Moreover, the article observes how nomad-settled, tribe-peasant relations in these regions evolved as a result of the gradual sedentarization of the pastoral nomads and related changes in their subsistence economies starting from the mid-nineteenth century. Finally, this article provides a background for a better understanding of the intercommunal tensions and conflicts over land in the Ottoman Empire of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

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APA

Koç, Y. (2023). Winter-Quartering Tribes: Nomad-Peasant Relations in the Northeastern Frontiers of the Ottoman Empire (1800s-1850s). International Review of Social History. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0020859023000639

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