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Slavery and Decline of Slave-Ownership in Ottoman Bursa 1460–1880
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 June 2020
Abstract
The most widely accepted narrative about the long-term history of slavery in Ottoman lands rests on a supply-side story. According to this, military and diplomatic factors reduced the inflow of slaves from the seventeenth century onwards and, consequently, exorbitant prices turned slaveholding into a luxury inaccessible to all but the top elite. Using evidence from probate inventories of the city of Bursa and its hinterland from 1460 to 1880, the present study examines this narrative in light of the incidence of slave-ownership and prices. We observe substantial decline in slaveholding already before the beginning of the government reforms concerning slavery and slave trade in the nineteenth century. We also find a decline in slave prices, both absolute and relative to wages. This is unexpected. Further analysis suggests, on the one hand, that a different supply factor, relative increase in the African slave population due to changes in the global traffic may have been instrumental in these trends, which links Bursa's non-colonial market to world slavery. On the other hand, examination of the consumption/investment preferences of the wealthy suggests that demand for slaves, too, may have declined, we surmise, in response to demographic and social change affecting alternative labor costs as well as cultural change affecting the meaning of slaveholding.
- Type
- Changing Labor Relations in the Ottoman Empire and Turkey
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © International Labor and Working-Class History, Inc., 2020
Footnotes
We thank Terrence Walz and Ehud R. Toledano for generously sharing their extensive knowledge on the topic and Y. Hakan Erdem for his contribution to an early version of this study. We also thank our anonymous readers for very valuable suggestions.
References
NOTES
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