Organised chaos as diplomatic ruse and demographic weapon. The expulsion of the Ottoman Greeks (Rum) from Foça, 1914
The process of transition from Ottoman Empire to nation states witnessed dramatic changes in the demographic and socio-economic structures of the once imperial lands. The summer of organized chaos in Foça, an Ottoman boomtown in Western Anatolia, represents one of the chapters of this dramatic trans...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Tijdschrift voor Sociale en Economische Geschiedenis 2013-12, Vol.10 (4), p.66-96 |
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description | The process of transition from Ottoman Empire to nation states witnessed dramatic changes in the demographic and socio-economic structures of the once imperial lands. The summer of organized chaos in Foça, an Ottoman boomtown in Western Anatolia, represents one of the chapters of this dramatic transition. After the Balkan Wars, Foça became one of the contested zones of Greek and Ottoman Muslim nationalisms. In 1914, Young Turk clandestine operations ousted the Greek majority of Foça right before to outbreak of the World War I. This article argues that this particular demographic project can only be understood within a wider context. The nationalist rivalry between the Ottoman Empire and the Kingdom of Greece, unresolved issues of the Balkan Wars and Young Turks' radicalization, together with their monopolization of power played crucial roles in the way nationalist competition and inter-ethnic tensions were "imported" into the region. The case of Foça provides a good example showing how such policies of demographic engineering developed in relation to dynamic changes of the period rather than being master planned in retrospect. The case of Foça also shows us that those who were subjected to nationalist violence are more likely to participate in nationalist projects. This paper discusses this over the comparison of natives' roles and perceptions of the forced Reprinted by permission of the International Institute of Social History |
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The expulsion of the Ottoman Greeks (Rum) from Foça, 1914</title><source>Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals</source><source>Alma/SFX Local Collection</source><creator>Erol, Emre</creator><creatorcontrib>Erol, Emre</creatorcontrib><description>The process of transition from Ottoman Empire to nation states witnessed dramatic changes in the demographic and socio-economic structures of the once imperial lands. The summer of organized chaos in Foça, an Ottoman boomtown in Western Anatolia, represents one of the chapters of this dramatic transition. After the Balkan Wars, Foça became one of the contested zones of Greek and Ottoman Muslim nationalisms. In 1914, Young Turk clandestine operations ousted the Greek majority of Foça right before to outbreak of the World War I. This article argues that this particular demographic project can only be understood within a wider context. The nationalist rivalry between the Ottoman Empire and the Kingdom of Greece, unresolved issues of the Balkan Wars and Young Turks' radicalization, together with their monopolization of power played crucial roles in the way nationalist competition and inter-ethnic tensions were "imported" into the region. The case of Foça provides a good example showing how such policies of demographic engineering developed in relation to dynamic changes of the period rather than being master planned in retrospect. The case of Foça also shows us that those who were subjected to nationalist violence are more likely to participate in nationalist projects. 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The expulsion of the Ottoman Greeks (Rum) from Foça, 1914</title><title>Tijdschrift voor Sociale en Economische Geschiedenis</title><description>The process of transition from Ottoman Empire to nation states witnessed dramatic changes in the demographic and socio-economic structures of the once imperial lands. The summer of organized chaos in Foça, an Ottoman boomtown in Western Anatolia, represents one of the chapters of this dramatic transition. After the Balkan Wars, Foça became one of the contested zones of Greek and Ottoman Muslim nationalisms. In 1914, Young Turk clandestine operations ousted the Greek majority of Foça right before to outbreak of the World War I. This article argues that this particular demographic project can only be understood within a wider context. The nationalist rivalry between the Ottoman Empire and the Kingdom of Greece, unresolved issues of the Balkan Wars and Young Turks' radicalization, together with their monopolization of power played crucial roles in the way nationalist competition and inter-ethnic tensions were "imported" into the region. The case of Foça provides a good example showing how such policies of demographic engineering developed in relation to dynamic changes of the period rather than being master planned in retrospect. The case of Foça also shows us that those who were subjected to nationalist violence are more likely to participate in nationalist projects. This paper discusses this over the comparison of natives' roles and perceptions of the forced Reprinted by permission of the International Institute of Social History</description><subject>Class</subject><subject>Greece</subject><subject>Greek Orthodox Church</subject><subject>Nationalism</subject><subject>Orthodox Christians</subject><subject>Ottoman Empire</subject><subject>Social forces</subject><subject>Social mobilization</subject><subject>Turkey</subject><issn>1572-1701</issn><issn>2468-9068</issn><issn>2468-9068</issn><fulltext>true</fulltext><rsrctype>article</rsrctype><creationdate>2013</creationdate><recordtype>article</recordtype><sourceid>DOA</sourceid><recordid>eNpFkcFq3DAQhkVJoUuaQ99AxwTqjSRLsnUsIdkGAgslPYuxNdr11rYcySbJE_VB-mJVsmk6l2F-_vmY4SfkC2drXpdKXM4Jd2tRmg9kJaSuC8N0fUJWXFWi4BXjn8hZSgeWS8k8ViuybOMOxi6ho-0eQqKQqOumPgwwdy2NS0IKo6MOh7CLMO2z-IgwhXFN7_dI8Wla-tSFkQZP5yxs5znvjnQTEX8lev5jGS6oj2GgN-HPb_hKueHyM_nooU949tZPyc-b6_ur78XddnN79e2uaEvOTSG9qVyJTDtnjGhQKA3Ay1aAQc10C9KDq1kFxgmQXDSeOe11XSsFSghfnpLbI9cFONgpdgPEZxugs69CiDsLMf_Zo-WmcZo1bYNNLXmFYBhIqRlnTigQmFnnR1aYcDyEJY758nfmP0ylmPlvnWJ4WDDNduhSi30PI4YlWa5YLct8Z5WtF0drG0NKEf07kTP7Gqp9CdXmUMu_s66VQA</recordid><startdate>20131215</startdate><enddate>20131215</enddate><creator>Erol, Emre</creator><general>Leuven University Press</general><general>openjournals.nl</general><scope>AAYXX</scope><scope>CITATION</scope><scope>8BJ</scope><scope>FQK</scope><scope>JBE</scope><scope>OHJYF</scope><scope>DOA</scope></search><sort><creationdate>20131215</creationdate><title>Organised chaos as diplomatic ruse and demographic weapon. 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The expulsion of the Ottoman Greeks (Rum) from Foça, 1914</atitle><jtitle>Tijdschrift voor Sociale en Economische Geschiedenis</jtitle><date>2013-12-15</date><risdate>2013</risdate><volume>10</volume><issue>4</issue><spage>66</spage><epage>96</epage><pages>66-96</pages><issn>1572-1701</issn><issn>2468-9068</issn><eissn>2468-9068</eissn><abstract>The process of transition from Ottoman Empire to nation states witnessed dramatic changes in the demographic and socio-economic structures of the once imperial lands. The summer of organized chaos in Foça, an Ottoman boomtown in Western Anatolia, represents one of the chapters of this dramatic transition. After the Balkan Wars, Foça became one of the contested zones of Greek and Ottoman Muslim nationalisms. In 1914, Young Turk clandestine operations ousted the Greek majority of Foça right before to outbreak of the World War I. This article argues that this particular demographic project can only be understood within a wider context. The nationalist rivalry between the Ottoman Empire and the Kingdom of Greece, unresolved issues of the Balkan Wars and Young Turks' radicalization, together with their monopolization of power played crucial roles in the way nationalist competition and inter-ethnic tensions were "imported" into the region. The case of Foça provides a good example showing how such policies of demographic engineering developed in relation to dynamic changes of the period rather than being master planned in retrospect. The case of Foça also shows us that those who were subjected to nationalist violence are more likely to participate in nationalist projects. This paper discusses this over the comparison of natives' roles and perceptions of the forced Reprinted by permission of the International Institute of Social History</abstract><pub>Leuven University Press</pub><doi>10.18352/tseg.239</doi><tpages>31</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record> |
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subjects | Class Greece Greek Orthodox Church Nationalism Orthodox Christians Ottoman Empire Social forces Social mobilization Turkey |
title | Organised chaos as diplomatic ruse and demographic weapon. The expulsion of the Ottoman Greeks (Rum) from Foça, 1914 |
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