Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 July 2014
This article analyzes different traditions of nocturnal conviviality in 18th-century Istanbul and demonstrates their importance for social, political, and cultural life. The main argument is that the palace used the night to demonstrate its power in spectacles of light and to cultivate personal relations within the elite, both of which were crucial for a patrimonial government based on face-to-face interaction. Yet, it was exactly the reliance on such interaction that marked the limits of the palace's hold of the night. With the neighborhood gaze blinded by darkness, communal policing lost much of its effectiveness, leaving nocturnal social life largely concealed from the eyes of the authorities. Nighttime therefore offered opportunities for illicit modes of socialization and, at times, for subversive political action.
Author's note: I thank the Lady Davis Fellowship Trust at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem and the Kreitman School for Advanced Graduate Studies at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev for their generous support. My thanks also to my academic hosts, Yaron Ben-Naeh and Iris Agmon. For their close reading and valuable comments on different versions of this study, I thank Ehud Toledano, Mira Tzoreff, Cyrus Schayegh, Eyal Ginio, Reşat Kasaba, and the participants of the Turkish Circle at the University of Washington in Seattle. Special thanks to On Barak for his insights and ideas, to the anonymous IJMES readers for their sharp critiques, and to Walter Andrews and Selim Kuru for their ideas and continuous support.
1 Going for nighttime cruises on the Bosporus (mehtab seyri or gümüş servi) was a developed tradition among the elites. For a description of these cruises by the prominent scholar and statesman Ahmed Cevdet (d. 1895), see Cevdet, Ahmed, Maʿruzat, vol. 2, ed. Halaçoğlu, Yusuf (Istanbul: Çağrı Yayınları, 1980), 9Google Scholar. For 18th-century poems that refer to mehtab seyri, see Öztekin, Özge, Divanlardan Yansıyan Görüntüler: XVIII. Yüzyıl Divan Şiirinde Toplumsal Hayatın İzleri (Ankara: Ürün Yayınları, 2006), 376–80Google Scholar.
2 Başbakanlık Osmanlı Arçivleri (hereafter BOA), HAT 193/9461, 29 Z 1204 (9.9.1790).
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5 This perspective was deliberated in “The Bright Side of the Night” workshop, organized within the framework of the “Loss of the Night” project in Erkner, Berlin, 21–22 June 2013.
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14 See Zarinebaf, Crime and Punishment, esp. 11–34; and Betül Başaran, “Remaking the Gate of Felicity: Policing, Social Control and Migration in Istanbul at the End of the Eighteenth Century, 1789–1793” (PhD diss., University of Chicago, 2006), esp. 12–73.
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19 Schivelbusch, Disenchanted Night, 81.
20 Marcus, The Middle East, 325; Semerdjian, Elyse, “Off the Straight Path”: Illicit Sex, Law, and Community in Ottoman Aleppo (Syracuse, N.Y.: Syracuse University Press, 2008), 73–88Google Scholar. See also Zarinebaf, Fariba, “Maitien de l'ordre et contrôle social à Istanbul au XVIII siècle,” in Metiérs de police: être policier en Europe, XVIII-XXe siècle, ed. Jean-Marc Berlière (Rennes, France: Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 2008), 88, 90, 95Google Scholar.
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23 Behar, Cem, A Neighborhood in Ottoman Istanbul: Fruit Vendors and Civil Servants in the Kasap İlyas Mahalle (Albany, N.Y.: State University of New York Press, 2003), 324Google Scholar. See also Marcus, The Middle East, 323. Both Abdul-Karim Rafeq and Elyse Semerdjian stress that the Ottoman mahalle system was not merely a mechanism of control imposed by the authorities through coercion, but rather a system of self-policing that protected and served the inhabitants. Rafeq, Abdul-Karim, “Public Morality in 18th Century Damascus,” Revue du mondes musulmans et de la Méditerranée 55 (1990): 181Google Scholar; Semerdjian, “Off the Straight Path,” 81–86.
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25 Başaran, “Remaking,” 62–71, 234–24; Ginio, “Anshey Shulayim baʿir ha-ʿOtmanit,” 81–85; Rafeq, “Public Morality,” 182; Semerdjian, “Off the Straight Path,” 96–97; Zarinebaf, Crime and Punishment, 93, 131. On the use of the term ajnabī, see Semerdjian, “Off the Straight Path,” 96–99, 205, n. 7.
26 See, for example, D'Ohsson, Tableau général, 4:242; and Caulfeild, The Travels, 209.
27 See Zarinebaf, Crime and Punishment, esp. 125–74.
28 In European cities, street lighting was installed starting in the late 17th century. Koslofsky, Evening's Empire, esp. 128–56.
29 See, for example, BOA, C.AS 1152/51221, 25 Ra 1194 (31.3.1780).
30 BOA, C.AS 1023/44841, 1201 (1787).
31 BOA, C.AS 1075/47341 1201 (1787).
32 Uzunçarşılı, İsmail H., Osmanlı Devleti Teşkilâtından Kapukulu Ocakları, 1. Cilt (Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu, 1943), 323Google Scholar. Betül Başaran provides a good survey of the various offices in charge of public order in 18th-century Istanbul. Başaran, “Remaking,” 128–42. On policing forces, night patrols, and neighborhood night guards, see also Zarinebaf, Crime and Punishment, 91–92, 133–39.
33 See Nuri's, Osmandescription of “anonymous” individuals walking without a lantern (fenersiz gezen hüvviyyeti mechul) in Osman Ergin, Mecelle-i Umûr-ı Belediyye, vol. 1 (Istanbul: İstanbul Büyükşehir Belediyesi Kültür İşleri Daire Başkanlığı, 1995), 914, n. 70Google Scholar.
34 See, for example, Takvim-i Vekayi, 307, 17.Za.1262 (7.11.1846); BOA, A.MKT.UM 574/82, 28.Z.1278 (26.6.1862); BOA, İ.MSM 5/77, 1 Za 1261 (1.11.1845). See also Zarinebaf, Crime and Punishment, 136–37.
35 Andrews, Walter, “Ottoman Love: Preface to a Theory of Emotional Ecology,” in A History of Emotions, 1200–1800, ed. Lileiquist, Jonas (London: Pickering and Chatto, 2012), 27Google Scholar.
36 It is noteworthy that in different Islamic literary traditions the madman (majnūn) is often depicted as speaking the truth to power and challenging social norms. Nighttime and madness are thus both associated with counter-order. On the love-madness of Majnun and Layla, see for example, Dols, Michael W., Majnūn: The Madman in Medieval Islamic Society (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1992), 313–39CrossRefGoogle Scholar. For an Ottoman interpretation of the story, see Andrews, Walter G. and Kalpaklı, Mehmet, “Layla Grows Up: Nizami's Layla and Majnun ‘in The Turkish Manner,’” in The Poetry of Nizami Ganjavi: Knowledge, Love, and Rhetoric, ed. Talattof, Kamran and Clinton, Jerome W. (New York: Palgrave, 2000), 27–51Google Scholar.
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40 Yâver, Enderunlu Hasan, Divan: İnceleme—Metin—Çeviri—Dizin, ed. Üstüner, Kaplan (Urfa, Turkey: T.C. Kültür ve Turizm Bakanlığı, 2010), 151Google Scholar.
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42 Ottoman poetry weaves together several layers, or “voices,” that speak simultaneously, each echoing the others. See Andrews, Walter G., Poetry's Voice, Society's Song: Ottoman Lyric Poetry (Seattle, Wash.: University of Washington Press, 1985)Google Scholar.
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46 Night poems appear in numerous contemporary poetry collections (divans) with such redifs as bu şeb, bu gece, gecelerde (this night, tonight, at night) and nısf-i leyl (midnight). See, for example, Vasıf, Ederunlu Osman, Enderunlu Osman Vâsıf Bey Ve Divânı: Divân-ı Gülşen-i Efkâr-ı Vâsıf-ı Enderûni, ed. Gürel, Rahşan (Istanbul: Kitabevi, 1999), 282–83Google Scholar; Dede, Esrar, Esrar Dede: Hayatı, Eserleri, Şiir Dünyası, ed. Horata, Osman (Ankara: T.C. Kültür Bakanlığı, 1998), 296–97, 532–33Google Scholar; Erzurumlu İbrâhim, Tıpkı Basım, 252–53, 320–21; and Galib, Şeyh, Şeyh Galib Divanı, ed. Kalkışım, Muhsin (Ankara: Akçağ, 1994), 258–59Google Scholar. To the best of my knowledge, there is no systematic literary analysis of this tradition.
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49 Çalış, “Ideal,” 17.
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51 For full-moon parties, see Refik, Lale Devri, 35–36. For a reference to a çırağan party in a 17th-century poetry collection, see Öztekin, Divanlardan, 351. Nurhan Atasoy has located a contemporary manuscript that argues that the çırağan festivals originated in ancient China. Atasoy, Nurhan, Hasbahçe: Osmanlı Kültüründe Bahçe ve Çiçek (Istanbul: Aygaz, 2002), 169Google Scholar.
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55 See Asım Efendi Küçükçelebizade, Tarih-i Raşid, vol. 6, Tarih-i İsmail Asım Efendi eş-şehir bi-Küçük Çelebizade, 366–77, 470–71; Raşid Efendi, Tarih-i Raşid, 3:319. In mean-time terms, according to sunset hours in April for the latitude of Istanbul, these hours would translate to between 23:00 and 01:00 o'clock.
56 For descriptions of çırağan parties, see Efendi, Tarih-i Raşid, 5:205–206, 292–95, and Küçükçelebizade, Tarih-i Raşid, 6:363–67, 456–58, 460–61; Mignot, Vincent, Histoire de l'Empire Ottoman, depuis son origine jusqu’à la paix de Belgrade en 1740, vol. 4 (Paris: Le Clrec, 1773), 317–19Google Scholar; D'Ohsson, Tableau général, 4:248–49; and De Hammer, Histoire de'l Empire Ottoman, 64–65. For a description of such a party held during the reign of Mustafa III (1757–74), see Tott, François, Memoires of the Baron de Tott Containing the State of the Turkish Empire during the Late War with Russia, vol. 1 (London: G. G. J. & J. Robinson, 1786), 78–80Google Scholar.
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61 Nedim, Nedim Divanı, 196–97.
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63 Quoted in Öztekin, Divanlardan, 355.
64 Aypay, Lâle Devri Şairi, 94–96.
65 It is noteworthy that, in this respect, the Ottomans were much like their European contemporaries. See Koslofsky, Evening's Empire, 91–127.
66 See, for example, Salim, Mirzazade Mehmed Emin, Tezkire-i Salim (Istanbul: İkdam Matbaası, 1897), 155Google ScholarPubMed. For kubera hosting drinking gatherings in their homes, see also Bey, Abdülaziz, Osmanlı Âdet, Merasim Ve Tabirleri, vol. 1 (Istanbul: Tarih Vakfı, 1995), 307Google Scholar.
67 Ibid. Elites would also at times go to taverns. See Koçu, Reşat, Eski İstanbul'da Meyhaneler Ve Meyhane Köçekleri, vol. 2 (Istanbul: Doğan Kitapçılık, 2002), 48Google Scholar. On the inner organization of houses and the scarcity of indoor illumination, see Uğur Tanyeli, “Norms of Domestic Comfort and Luxury in Ottoman Metropolises, Sixteenth to Eighteenth Centuries,” in The Illuminated Table, esp. 302–308, 314.
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71 This assessment is based on documents pertaining to Sultan Selim III's attempts to close down all alcohol vending establishments in Istanbul. See BOA, HAT 195/9720, 29.Z.1204 (9.9.1790); BOA, HAT 206/10845, 29.Z.1204 (9.9.1790); HAT 212/11497, 29.Z.1204 (9.9.1790); BOA, HAT 211/11470, 29.Z.1205 (29.8.1791). The documents contain lists of alcohol producing and selling businesses arranged according to neighborhoods. Yet, since not all neighborhoods are listed, a definite number for the whole of Istanbul cannot be established. The most comprehensive discussion of the background of Selim's measures is Başaran, Remaking. On occasional measures taken against taverns in Istanbul from the 16th through the 18th centuries, see D'Ohsson, Tableau général, 4:56–62.
72 D'Ohsson, Tableau général, 4:63. On nighttime consumption of opium and alcohol among “dervishes,” see Tott, Memoires, 141, 143–44.
73 By the 19th century, different terms were used to denote different types of drinkers. A heavy drinker was şaribü’l leyli ve'n-nehar (lit. night and day drinker); someone who limited his drinking to the evenings was an akşamcı, literally an “evening person.” See Abdülaziz Bey, Osmanlı âdet, 2:307; and Redhouse, James, A Turkish and English Lexicon (Constantinople: A. H. Boyajian, 1890), 165Google Scholar.
74 This was still the arrangement in the late 19th century. See Rıza, Balıkhane Nazırı Ali, Eski Zamanlarda İstanbul Hayatı (Istanbul: Kitabevi, 2001), 180Google Scholar. The use of light-related metaphors in this anecdote suggests that the same arrangement was customary in the period here discussed.
75 Koçu, Eski İstanbul'da Meyhaneler, 46.
76 Abdülaziz Bey, Osmanlı âdet, 1:309.
77 Salim, Tezkire-i Salim, 536.
78 Every detail in this anecdote follows well-established traditions of writing, yet this does not diminish its value as a historical source. As Andrews and Kalpaklı have amply demonstrated, poetic traditions reflected but also scripted behaviors and modes of sociability in early modern Ottoman society. See Andrews and Kalpaklı, The Age of Beloveds.
79 For different, partly conflicting analyses of the rebellion and its social background, see Zarinebaf, Crime and Punishment, 54–69; Olson, Robert W, “The Esnaf and the Patrona Halil Rebellion of 1730: A Realignment in Ottoman Politics?,” Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient 17 (1974): 329–44Google Scholar; Aktepe, M. Münir, Patrona İsyanı (1730) (Istanbul: Edebiyat Fakültesi Basımevi, 1958)Google Scholar; and Karahasanoğlu, “A Tulip Age Legend.”
80 Abdi, Abdi Tarihi: 1730 Patrona Ihtilâli Hakkında Bir Eser, ed. Faik Reşit Unat (Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu, 1943), 26.
81 As argued in Karahasanoğlu, “A Tulip Age Legend.”
82 Montague, John, A Voyage Performed by the Late Earl of Sandwich Round the Mediterranean in the Years 1738 and 1739 (London: T. Cadell Jun. & W. Davies, 1799), 233Google Scholar.
83 Salih, Destari, Destari Salih Tarihi: Patron Halil Ayaklanması Hakkında Bir Kaynak, ed. Baykal, Bekir Sıtkı (Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu Basimevi, 1962), 7Google Scholar.
84 Ergin, “The Albanian Tellâk Connection.”
85 Salih, Destari Salih Tarihi, 8, 12, 15, 19, 20.
86 Abdi, Abdi Tarihi, 30–32.
87 Salih, Destari Salih Tarihi, 19.
88 The çırağan tradition continued into Mahmud I's reign (1730–54), if not later, but according to D'Ohsson the splendor of İbrahim's parties was never reached again. See D'Ohsson, Tableau général, 4:249.
89 The early phases of this colonization are discussed in Wishnitzer, Avner, Reading Clocks, Alla Turca: Time and Society in the Late Ottoman Empire (University of Chicago Press, forthcoming)CrossRefGoogle Scholar. My notion of “the colonization of the night” draws on Melbin, Murray, Night as Frontier: Colonizing the World after Dark (New York: Free Press, 1987)Google Scholar; and Koslofsky, Evening's Empire, 158, which uses the term to mean “the exercise of power and authority, or both, over the people already there.”