including the tendency to overlook conflicts in Turco-Muslim society in general and among its warriors in particular46 Since he made only scanty use of the sources in Islamic languages and clung to a rigid Marxist-Leninist position with a rather facile application of the notion of class struggle,47 his views were not seriously considered in the guildlike mainstream of Ottoman studies, which, despite the considerable impact of quasi-Marxian materialism beginning in the 1960s, stood on the western side of the cold war divide. Although Werner identifies K
Whatever the merits of the insights they brought to the rise of the Ottoman state, these works had agendas that assigned higher priority to other matters. Thus, their comments on our specific theme remained by and large buried. Surveys (and syllabi?) of Ottoman, Islamic, and world history framed the activities of the state founders in terms of the gaza thesis. It should be obvious, however, that not all the scholars in the field were compelled by Wittek's gaza thesis even when it reigned supreme. Their works rather represent a continual, if not direcdy critical or widely influential, search for alternative explanations. Even if the gaza ethos was accepted to have played a role, there was an obvious urge to consider other factors, mostly social and economic, like trade, demographics, nomad-settlded relations, as well as societal conflict, as the dynamics that produced an empire. In the beginning of the 1980s,
The Wittek Thesis and Its Critics
It is time now to go over the gaza thesis in more detail and then turn to its critics. As indicated above with respect to the methodological position he shared with K
The political and military leadership of the frontiers always belonged to the gazis, according to Wittek. Since the late eleventh century, Anatolian frontier areas were dominated by gazis, whose independent, sporadic, and unruly activities did not always conform to the stabilityoriented Realpolitik of the Seljuk administration. There were frequent clashes between Seljuk authorities and the gazis, whose most notable representatives were the D
In the second half of the thirteenth century, the western Anatolian marches were swollen not only by new influxes of nomadic groups and their holy men pushed by the Mongol invasions but also by “prominent Sel
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