International Journal of Turkish Studies, Zväzok 12,Vydania 1–2University of Wisconsin, 2006 |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 3 z 58.
Strana 15
... Empire to the United States . This immigrant stream was minor relative to those of most contemporary groups , including Armenians , Greeks , Christian Arabs and other Ottoman subjects , and has been largely ignored by historians of ...
... Empire to the United States . This immigrant stream was minor relative to those of most contemporary groups , including Armenians , Greeks , Christian Arabs and other Ottoman subjects , and has been largely ignored by historians of ...
Strana 29
... empire and non - Muslim Ottoman subjects were emigrating to the recently established national - states such as Greece , a second type of emigration wave was developing for political and economic reasons . This new wave was destined ...
... empire and non - Muslim Ottoman subjects were emigrating to the recently established national - states such as Greece , a second type of emigration wave was developing for political and economic reasons . This new wave was destined ...
Strana 197
... Empire in the 19th Century with their Own Sources ] ( İstanbul , 2000 ) , Uygur Kocabaşoğlu has already has maintained that the American missionaries and the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire worked for U.S. interests . Insisting that ...
... Empire in the 19th Century with their Own Sources ] ( İstanbul , 2000 ) , Uygur Kocabaşoğlu has already has maintained that the American missionaries and the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire worked for U.S. interests . Insisting that ...
Obsah
ARTICLES | 1 |
Forging New Links in the Early Turkish Migration Chain | 15 |
The Emigration from the Ottoman | 29 |
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Iné vydania - Zobraziť všetky
Časté výrazy a frázy
American Anatolia areas Armenians arrived assimilation Bayram became become began called census century Christian cities Column continue created cultural early economic emigration English established ethnic Europe European experience followed Foreign Greek Hazım History household identity important income individual institutions interest International Islam İstanbul Jews labor land language letters living Main majority manifest married migration mosque Muslim nature occupation official origin Ottoman Empire Peabody percent period person political population Press reason records region relations relationships relatives religion religious remained reported residence result significant social society sources stay Street subjects traditional Turkey Turkish immigrants Turks United University village wanted White women workers World York Yuva