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Pax Ottomana
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{{Italic title}}File:OttomanEmpireMain.png|thumb|upright|The Ottoman Empire at its greatest extent, under Sultan Mehmed IVMehmed IVIn historiography, the Pax Ottomana (literally “the Ottoman Peace“) or Pax OttomanicaBOOK, The Holy Land, 1517-1713,books.google.com/books?id=bS4yAQAAQBAJ&pg=PA4, 2012, Brill, 978-90-04-23624-0, 4, From Selim I, Selim’s conquest until the early eighteenth century, which marked the beginning of British and French domination of the Mediterranean Sea routes, the region witnessed what Rhoads Murphey [an Ottoman Studies professor] has described as the pax Ottomanica., BOOK, Király, Béla K., Tolerance and movements of religious dissent in Eastern Europe,books.google.com/books?id=3tsoAAAAYAAJ, 1975, East European Quarterly, 978-0-914710-06-6, The Ottoman aspects of Pax Ottomanica, is a term used to describe the economic and social stability attained in the conquered provinces of the Ottoman Empire at the height of its power during the 16th and 17th centuries, applied to lands in the Balkans, Anatolia, the Middle East, North Africa, the Caucasus, and western Iran.{{cn|date=July 2023}}The term is preferred in particular by historians and writers who hold a positive view of Ottoman rule to underline the positive impact of Ottoman rule on the conquered regions. They compare it favourably with the instability experienced before the Ottoman founding and conquests, as well as with the period after World War I, when only Asia Minor and Eastern Thrace remained under Turkish rule and the Ottoman Empire was officially dissolved.{{cn|date=July 2023}}
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References
{{reflist}}- Richard Hooker. 1996. wsu.edu/~dee/OTTOMAN/OTTOMAN1.HTM" title="web.archive.org/web/20090218170054wsu.edu/~dee/OTTOMAN/OTTOMAN1.HTM">The Ottomans. Washington State University.
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- Ä°lber Ortaylı. 2004. Osmanlı BarıÅı. Ä°stanbul: TimaÅ.
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