The Ottoman Consuls in Boston, 1845–1914: An Untold Story

Ömür Budak
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Abstract

Abstract:The Ottomans institutionalized and expanded their diplomatic and consular affairs in the first half of the nineteenth century. The bridgehead of the Ottoman consular initiative to the New World was Boston. In 1845, twenty-two years before the opening of the Ottoman legation in Washington, Boston became the first city in the Western Hemisphere to ever host an Ottoman consul. The Ottoman consular presence in this city, which lasted unremittingly until 1914, is unmapped, as is also the case with the rest of the US. The empire's consuls in Boston acted mostly in line with the playbook of nineteenth century diplomacy: While in the first three decades they mainly facilitated Ottoman-American maritime trade, from 1880s onwards, they gradually became more involved in carrying out political duties. This study, which sets to identify the six Ottoman consuls in Boston for the first time, mirrors through their stories such diverse issues as the development of trade, structural reforms, minorities, immigration, nationalist movements, and transcending ethnic and religious identities coloring the late Ottoman world. It also shows that with a belated and limited consular presence, the Ottomans remained rather unassertive in the US compared to rival European powers.
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波士顿的奥斯曼帝国领事,1845–1914:不为人知的故事
摘要:19世纪上半叶,奥斯曼帝国将外交和领事事务制度化并扩大。奥斯曼帝国向新大陆的领事倡议的桥头堡是波士顿。1845年,也就是奥斯曼公使馆在华盛顿设立22年前,波士顿成为西半球第一个接待奥斯曼领事的城市。奥斯曼帝国在这座城市的领事存在一直持续到1914年,没有绘制地图,美国其他地区也是如此。帝国在波士顿的执政官们的行为基本上与19世纪的外交剧本一致:虽然在最初的三十年里,他们主要是促进奥斯曼与美国的海上贸易,但从19世纪80年代开始,他们逐渐更多地参与到履行政治职责中来。本研究首次确定了波士顿的六位奥斯曼帝国执政官,通过他们的故事反映了贸易发展、结构改革、少数民族、移民、民族主义运动以及超越种族和宗教身份等各种各样的问题,这些问题为后期奥斯曼世界增添了色彩。它还表明,与欧洲竞争对手相比,由于姗姗来迟且领事存在有限,奥斯曼帝国在美国仍然相当不自信。
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