Iklil Selcuk
İklil Selçuk received her B.Sc. in Economics from Middle East Technical University in 1994, and her M.A. in History from Bilkent University in 1997 under the supervision of Halil İnalcık. She continued her graduate studies at McGill University between 1997 and 2000. She received her Ph.D. in History and Middle Eastern Studies from Harvard University in 2009 with her dissertation entitled “State and Society in the Marketplace: A Study of Late Fifteenth-Century Bursa”. Selçuk joined Bahçeşehir University’s Department of Economics following her graduation, where she taught various courses in Economic History, History of Business and Finance, and History of Civilization. She joined Özyeğin University’s Faculty of Social Sciences in 2012, where she teaches history courses and continues her studies on Ottoman social and economic history, and the history of crafts and towns. Among Selçuk’s publications are:
____ “State Meets Society: A Study of Bozahane Affairs in Bursa” Princeton Papers. Interdisciplinary Journal of Middle Eastern Studies. Vol. XVI (2011): 23-48;
____“Onbeşinci Yüzyıl Bursa Örneğinde Osmanlı Şehir Ekonomisi ve Yönetim Özellikleri Üzerine,” (Ottoman Urban Economy and Administrative Particularities in the case of Fifteenth-Century Bursa” Prof. Dr. Özer Ergenç’e Armağan. Ümit Ekin (ed) (İstanbul: Bilgi Kültür Sanat Yay., 2013), pp: 351-362;
___“Tracing Esnāf in Early Fifteenth-Century Bursa Court Records” in Bread from the Lion’s Mouth. Artisans Struggling for a Livelihood in Ottoman Cities. Suraiya Faroqhi (ed) (New York: Berghann Press, 2015), pp. 51-69;
___“Suggestions on the Social Meaning and Functions of Akhi Communities and their Hospices in Medieval Anatolia” forthcoming in Patricia Blessing and Rachel Goshgarian (Eds.) Architecture and Landscape in Medieval Anatolia 1100-1500, Edinburgh University Press.
Supervisors: Cemal Kafadar and Halil İnalcık
____ “State Meets Society: A Study of Bozahane Affairs in Bursa” Princeton Papers. Interdisciplinary Journal of Middle Eastern Studies. Vol. XVI (2011): 23-48;
____“Onbeşinci Yüzyıl Bursa Örneğinde Osmanlı Şehir Ekonomisi ve Yönetim Özellikleri Üzerine,” (Ottoman Urban Economy and Administrative Particularities in the case of Fifteenth-Century Bursa” Prof. Dr. Özer Ergenç’e Armağan. Ümit Ekin (ed) (İstanbul: Bilgi Kültür Sanat Yay., 2013), pp: 351-362;
___“Tracing Esnāf in Early Fifteenth-Century Bursa Court Records” in Bread from the Lion’s Mouth. Artisans Struggling for a Livelihood in Ottoman Cities. Suraiya Faroqhi (ed) (New York: Berghann Press, 2015), pp. 51-69;
___“Suggestions on the Social Meaning and Functions of Akhi Communities and their Hospices in Medieval Anatolia” forthcoming in Patricia Blessing and Rachel Goshgarian (Eds.) Architecture and Landscape in Medieval Anatolia 1100-1500, Edinburgh University Press.
Supervisors: Cemal Kafadar and Halil İnalcık
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policies and practices, by highlighting some
turning points in their evolution in the early
modern period. The task of the Ottoman market inspector evolved to focus largely on the
mundane or economic affairs of the market,
diverging from previous practices in Islamicate
societies. The study interprets particularities
of Ottoman market regulation policies by accounting for nuanced interpretations of the
implementation of rules regarding non-Muslim
subjects, overlapping jurisdictions between policing and market inspection, and the increasing intricacies of tax farming.
modern period. The task of the Ottoman market inspector evolved to focus largely on the mundane or economic affairs of the market,
diverging from previous practices in Islamicate societies. The study interprets particularities of Ottoman market regulation policies by accounting for nuanced interpretations of the implementation of rules regarding non-Muslim subjects, overlapping jurisdictions between policing and market inspection, and the increasing intricacies of tax farming.
policies and practices, by highlighting some
turning points in their evolution in the early
modern period. The task of the Ottoman market inspector evolved to focus largely on the
mundane or economic affairs of the market,
diverging from previous practices in Islamicate
societies. The study interprets particularities
of Ottoman market regulation policies by accounting for nuanced interpretations of the
implementation of rules regarding non-Muslim
subjects, overlapping jurisdictions between policing and market inspection, and the increasing intricacies of tax farming.
modern period. The task of the Ottoman market inspector evolved to focus largely on the mundane or economic affairs of the market,
diverging from previous practices in Islamicate societies. The study interprets particularities of Ottoman market regulation policies by accounting for nuanced interpretations of the implementation of rules regarding non-Muslim subjects, overlapping jurisdictions between policing and market inspection, and the increasing intricacies of tax farming.