CANTEMIR AND THE 'ORDER OF THINGS' IN OTTOMAN SOCIETY Cover Image

CANTEMIR AND THE 'ORDER OF THINGS' IN OTTOMAN SOCIETY
CANTEMIR AND THE 'ORDER OF THINGS' IN OTTOMAN SOCIETY

Author(s): Zeynep Sözen
Subject(s): Music, Military history, 18th Century, The Ottoman Empire, Philosophy of History
Published by: Editura Pro Universitaria
Keywords: Ottoman Empire; Principalities; Dimitrie Cantemir;

Summary/Abstract: The source of inspiration for this paper is Cantemir’s book on musical theory, Kitâb-i ‘ilm al-musîqî ‘ala vechi’l Hurûfât (Book of the Science of Defining and Performing Music with Letters), written in Turkish somewhere between 1703 and 1705, followed by a Collection of melodies. The two works are known as Kantemiroğlu Edvarı, which is a massive attempt to impose order on what seemed to be a chaotic mess based on oral transmission through a notation system invented by Cantemir himself. In a similar vein, Cantemir’s History was far more than a passive narration of the Rise and Fall of the Ottoman Empire; it was a search for a taxonomic system by graphing and codifying Ottoman society for the purpose of understanding and communicating the logic of transformation.

  • Issue Year: 2021
  • Issue No: 3
  • Page Range: 22-30
  • Page Count: 9
  • Language: English