The Precarious Intimacy of Honor in Late Ottoman Accounts of Para-militarism and Banditry

This essay sets up a dialogue between the self-narrative of an irregular cavalryman (deli) Deli Mustafa that recounts the campaigns he took part in between 1801/2 and 1825 and the corpus of Ottoman archival sources written about Kara Feyzi, an irregular soldier (sekbân) and bandit leader who marshal...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tolga Uğur Esmer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association pour la Recherche sur le Moyen-Orient 2014-07-01
Series:European Journal of Turkish Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/ejts/4873
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1846134490544472064
author Tolga Uğur Esmer
author_facet Tolga Uğur Esmer
author_sort Tolga Uğur Esmer
collection DOAJ
description This essay sets up a dialogue between the self-narrative of an irregular cavalryman (deli) Deli Mustafa that recounts the campaigns he took part in between 1801/2 and 1825 and the corpus of Ottoman archival sources written about Kara Feyzi, an irregular soldier (sekbân) and bandit leader who marshaled a successful, trans-regional organized crime network that pillaged Ottoman Rumeli from 1793 to 1823. It does so in order to tell a larger story about how imperial governance came to depend on wide-spread networks of violence for defending and policing the Empire but became imbricated in their criminal activities during this period of Ottoman history. Together, Kara Feyzi and Deli Mustafa’s stories shed light on much larger interpretative and moral communities forged upon the same kinds of “texts,” narrative strategies, group experiences, exchange of material and symbolic resources, or simply a concept like honor woven throughout the narratives discussed below.This essay builds on recent historiography that revisits honor as a discourse that imperial officials, subjects, warriors, irregulars, and bandits all invoked in everyday relations as well as crisis. Rather than emphasizing honor as the mechanism of social organization in the absence of the reaches of the modern state as it featured in twentieth-century anthropology of the Mediterranean, this essay illuminates the ways in which the discourse of honor (and its relational components) mediated the integration of individuals, groups, and local communities into much larger entities such as trans-regional networks and structures of the state. As it will be argued, the reliance of imperial governance on the trans-regional networks of violence to police and defend empire resulted in a precarious intimacy that conventionalized the unconventional, insubordinate behavior of vast echelons of Ottoman society, making violent behavior a marker of prestige and masculine aesthetic—indeed an enduring legacy of the Ottoman past from Serbia to Syria.
format Article
id doaj-art-5c5da9729a3e463b8838fd7c6ccc89b5
institution Kabale University
issn 1773-0546
language English
publishDate 2014-07-01
publisher Association pour la Recherche sur le Moyen-Orient
record_format Article
series European Journal of Turkish Studies
spelling doaj-art-5c5da9729a3e463b8838fd7c6ccc89b52024-12-09T13:09:53ZengAssociation pour la Recherche sur le Moyen-OrientEuropean Journal of Turkish Studies1773-05462014-07-011810.4000/ejts.4873The Precarious Intimacy of Honor in Late Ottoman Accounts of Para-militarism and BanditryTolga Uğur EsmerThis essay sets up a dialogue between the self-narrative of an irregular cavalryman (deli) Deli Mustafa that recounts the campaigns he took part in between 1801/2 and 1825 and the corpus of Ottoman archival sources written about Kara Feyzi, an irregular soldier (sekbân) and bandit leader who marshaled a successful, trans-regional organized crime network that pillaged Ottoman Rumeli from 1793 to 1823. It does so in order to tell a larger story about how imperial governance came to depend on wide-spread networks of violence for defending and policing the Empire but became imbricated in their criminal activities during this period of Ottoman history. Together, Kara Feyzi and Deli Mustafa’s stories shed light on much larger interpretative and moral communities forged upon the same kinds of “texts,” narrative strategies, group experiences, exchange of material and symbolic resources, or simply a concept like honor woven throughout the narratives discussed below.This essay builds on recent historiography that revisits honor as a discourse that imperial officials, subjects, warriors, irregulars, and bandits all invoked in everyday relations as well as crisis. Rather than emphasizing honor as the mechanism of social organization in the absence of the reaches of the modern state as it featured in twentieth-century anthropology of the Mediterranean, this essay illuminates the ways in which the discourse of honor (and its relational components) mediated the integration of individuals, groups, and local communities into much larger entities such as trans-regional networks and structures of the state. As it will be argued, the reliance of imperial governance on the trans-regional networks of violence to police and defend empire resulted in a precarious intimacy that conventionalized the unconventional, insubordinate behavior of vast echelons of Ottoman society, making violent behavior a marker of prestige and masculine aesthetic—indeed an enduring legacy of the Ottoman past from Serbia to Syria.https://journals.openedition.org/ejts/4873Ottoman EmpirehonorMediterraneanBalkansGreek RevolutionKabudlı Vasfî Efendi
spellingShingle Tolga Uğur Esmer
The Precarious Intimacy of Honor in Late Ottoman Accounts of Para-militarism and Banditry
European Journal of Turkish Studies
Ottoman Empire
honor
Mediterranean
Balkans
Greek Revolution
Kabudlı Vasfî Efendi
title The Precarious Intimacy of Honor in Late Ottoman Accounts of Para-militarism and Banditry
title_full The Precarious Intimacy of Honor in Late Ottoman Accounts of Para-militarism and Banditry
title_fullStr The Precarious Intimacy of Honor in Late Ottoman Accounts of Para-militarism and Banditry
title_full_unstemmed The Precarious Intimacy of Honor in Late Ottoman Accounts of Para-militarism and Banditry
title_short The Precarious Intimacy of Honor in Late Ottoman Accounts of Para-militarism and Banditry
title_sort precarious intimacy of honor in late ottoman accounts of para militarism and banditry
topic Ottoman Empire
honor
Mediterranean
Balkans
Greek Revolution
Kabudlı Vasfî Efendi
url https://journals.openedition.org/ejts/4873
work_keys_str_mv AT tolgauguresmer theprecariousintimacyofhonorinlateottomanaccountsofparamilitarismandbanditry
AT tolgauguresmer precariousintimacyofhonorinlateottomanaccountsofparamilitarismandbanditry