MICROHISTORY OF A DJEMADAN: STEAM TRANSPORTATION, CONSULAR NETWORKS, AND THE MODERNIZATION OF THE LOWER DANUBE REGION Cover Image
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MICROHISTORY OF A DJEMADAN: STEAM TRANSPORTATION, CONSULAR NETWORKS, AND THE MODERNIZATION OF THE LOWER DANUBE REGION
MICROHISTORY OF A DJEMADAN: STEAM TRANSPORTATION, CONSULAR NETWORKS, AND THE MODERNIZATION OF THE LOWER DANUBE REGION

Author(s): Simeon Simeonov
Subject(s): History, Diplomatic history, Modern Age, Special Historiographies:, 19th Century, The Ottoman Empire
Published by: Институт за балканистика с Център по тракология - Българска академия на науките
Keywords: consuls; microhistory; Ottoman Empire; Danube; modernization;

Summary/Abstract: In 1869, the failed detention of a Bulgarian passenger on board the Austrian Danubian steamer Arpad by the Ottoman police at Tulcea resulted in a heated contestation involving the Ottoman authorities, the k.u.k. consul at Rousse, and the Austrian Danubian Steam Company. At the center of this transnational contestation was the Bulgarian printer-photographer Nedyalko Pandurski, whose confiscated djemadan (suitcase) made national headlines. The article embeds the Arpad incident in a broader socio-political landscape, arguing that the event represented not only an important (if somewhat neglected) flashpoint in Bulgarians’ struggle for emancipation, but also a deliberately choreographed attempt to enshrine a Bulgarian national pantheon against the backdrop of growing revolutionary ferment, foreign consular expansion, and proliferating notions of international law in the highly contested, rapidly modernizing Lower Danube region.

  • Issue Year: 2025
  • Issue No: 3
  • Page Range: 583-599
  • Page Count: 17
  • Language: English
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