Articles
Tracing the Origin of a New Meaning of the Term Re‘āyā in the Eighteenth-Century Ottoman Balkans
Published 01.12.2017
Keywords
- Ottoman Empire,
- Balkans,
- re‘āyā,
- non-Muslims,
- eighteenth century
How to Cite
Fotić, A. (2017). Tracing the Origin of a New Meaning of the Term Re‘āyā in the Eighteenth-Century Ottoman Balkans. Balcanica - Annual of the Institute for Balkan Studies, (XLVIII), 55–66. https://doi.org/10.2298/BALC1748055F
Copyright (c) 2017 Balcanica
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Abstract
Besides its usage with the primary meanings: 1) social status; 2) subjectship, the term re‘āyā was used to denote, as many historians tend to claim, “only non-Muslim subjects” from “sometime” in the second half of the eighteenth and in the nineteenth century. The paper demonstrates that this meaning of the term re‘āyā had already been in use since the first decades of the eighteenth century, and not to the exclusion of but along with other meanings. More frequent replacement of the neutral shari‘a term zimmī(ler) and the usual official term kefere with the word re‘āyā should be considered a consequence of structural social change taking place in the same century.Metrics
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