The purpose of this paper is to present for the benefit of other scholars statistical data on the population of the Ottoman Empire at the beginning of the 20th century as the available information on this subject is rather vague and insufficient. The figures for 1914 are official Ottoman ...
- 《Journal of Economic History》 被引量: 222发表: 2002年 The Ottoman road to war in 1914 : the Ottoman Empire and the First World War The Ottoman road to war in 1914 : the Ottoman Empire and the First World War Mustafa Aksakal (Cambridge military histories / edited by Hew Strachan, ...
related with the dismantling of the Ottoman Empire, the two governments launched the implementation of the exchange convention that would affect the fate of the nearly one million Greeks who had already fled from Anatolia and Eastern Thrace to Greece during the Greco-Turkish War, approximately three...
Population Statistics of the Ottoman Empire in 1914 and 1919doi:10.2307/4282818Meir ZamirMiddle Eastern Studies
1958. "Comment on Professor Barkan's Estimate of the Population of the Ottoman Empire." Journal o f Economic and Social History o f the Orient 1: 329-31.Charles Issawi, "Comment on Professor Barkan's Estimate of the Population of the Ottoman Empire in 1520- 30," Journal of the Economic...
This article examines the question of whether or not Turkey can be held responsible for internationally wrongful acts committed by the Ottoman Empire against thSocial Science Electronic Publishing
In this study, we first applied deep learning-based layout analysis techniques to detect individuals in the first Ottoman population register series collected between the 1840s and 1860s. Then, we used a star path planning algorithm-based line segmentation to the demographic information of these ...
CAUSES AND MILITARY IMPLICATIONS OF THE EMIGRATION OF THE MUSLIM POPULATION FROM ROMANIA TO THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE/REPUBLIC OF T RKIYE (1878-1939)OMER, METINReview of Military History
The measurement of preindustrial population changes: the Ottoman Empire from the 15th to the 17th century. Middle Eastern Studies 11: 284–301.Oxford University Press, 1972); Leyla Erder, "The Measurement of Pre-industrial Population Changes: The...
A recent estimate by the American historian Jan De Vries set Europe’s population (excluding Russia and the Ottoman Empire) at 61.6 million in 1500, 70.2 million in 1550, and 78.0 million in 1600; it then lapsed back to 74.6 million in 1650. The distribution of population across the ...