From Slaves to Prisoners of War
Oxford University Press

From Slaves to Prisoners of War

Subjects: History, Middle Eastern history
ISBN13: 9780198785415
Published: 20 Sep 2018

Format - Hardback
By Smiley, Will

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Regular price A$167.58
Sale price A$167.58 Regular price A$172.76

From Slaves to Prisoners of War

Regular price A$167.58
Sale price A$167.58 Regular price A$172.76
Product description

The Ottoman-Russian wars of the eighteenth century reshaped the map of Eurasia and the Middle East, but they also birthed a novel concept - the prisoner of war. For centuries, hundreds of thousands of captives, civilians and soldiers alike, crossed the legal and social boundaries of these empires, destined for either ransom or enslavement. But in the eighteenth century, the Ottoman state and its Russian rival, through conflict and diplomacy, worked out a new system
of regional international law. Ransom was abolished; soldiers became prisoners of war; and some slaves gained new paths to release, while others were left entirely unprotected. These rules delineated
sovereignty, redefined individuals' relationships to states, and prioritized political identity over economic value. In the process, the Ottomans marked out a parallel, non-Western path toward elements of modern international law. Yet this was not a story of European imposition or imitation-the Ottomans acted for their own reasons, maintaining their commitment to Islamic law. For a time even European empires played by these rules, until they were subsumed into the codified global law of war in
the late nineteenth century. This story offers new perspectives on the histories of the Ottoman and Russian Empires, of slavery, and of international law.

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