The Ottoman Empire Audiobook By Kenneth W. Harl, The Great Courses cover art

The Ottoman Empire

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The Ottoman Empire

By: Kenneth W. Harl, The Great Courses
Narrated by: Kenneth W. Harl
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About this listen

By understanding the dramatic story of the Ottoman Empire - from its early years as a collection of raiders and conquerors to its undeniable power in the 15th and 16th centuries to its catastrophic collapse in the wreckage of the First World War - one can better grasp the current complexities of the Middle East.

Over the course of these 36 enlightening lectures, investigate over 600 years of history that covers the nature of Ottoman identity, the achievements of the Sultan's court, and stories of confrontation and cooperation with the West.

Befitting a story of such epic scope and grandeur, every lecture is a treasure trove of historical insights into the people, events, themes, and locales responsible for shaping the story of this often-overlooked empire. You'll cover everything from Rumi, the whirling dervishes, and the importance of the sultan's grand viziers to the wars of Sultan Suleiman I, the shadowy politics of the Committee of Union and Progress, and the birth of the Turkish Republic under Kemal Atatürk.

Welcome to a fascinating story of the triumph and tragedy, war and peace, intellectual progress and civil insurrection of a great empire that, for all its glory and grandeur, has left an important legacy that will shape the future of the Balkan nation-states, the Turkish Republic, and the Arab world - and those of us in the West as well.

PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying reference material will be available in your Library section along with the audio.

©2017 The Teaching Company, LLC (P)2017 The Great Courses
World Ottoman Empire Imperialism War Thought-Provoking Ottoman History
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Comprehensive Historical Narrative • Fascinating Cultural Insights • Engaging Speaker • Engaging Military History
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I recommend listening with a map / world atlas handy - lots of country & region names are presented.

I found that the narrative bogged down during WWI - I was overwhelmed by the lists of battles, and lost track of the big picture. Overall, though, I enjoyed both the course structure and narration. I particularly enjoyed the discussion of technological developments in military & architecture.

A solid spoken-word history course

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Engaging story of the history of the Ottoman Empire, and its influence on the present day power struggles and strife in the Middle East. While I would have preferred to hear about art, architecture, textiles, and music, most chapters were about wars and successions. Then again, perhaps the centuries of Ottoman power struggles are what is significant about Ottoman contributions to the world.

Wars, power, and Mideast

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I love when Kenneth W. Harl throws shade on Thucydides "writing about what you're not good at." to criticize armchair experts. Historical context is given over multiple disciplines; political, religious, cultural, military, economic, etc.

I will make one major correction; he says Australia and New Zealand celebrate the ANZAC invasion of Gallipoli as a major success. We commemorate it yearly as a tragic loss of life and senseless violence, definitely not a celebration.

Very respectful and thorough explanation of the Ottoman-Armenian catastrophe.

Great to hear a non-Eurocentric view

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The series gives you a valuable summary about the Ottoman Empire. however, you would wish it was a book narrated by a professional narrator. it lacks the order and clarity of a book.

valuable info missing the clarity of a book

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The info was well organized as a broad overview then specific topics within that framework.

The narrator however was terrible. Ugh's, Aaaahhh's, and ummm's were so common they became distracting. The speaker also couldn't say just one very, everything was very very this or very very that. To his credit he is a professor and not a voice actor but that doesn't make the verbal ticks any less distracting.

great info bad speaker

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An expert review of the ottoman empire from the 12th century to the end of ww1. It's a lecture format so if you're good with that, you'll really enjoy this book.

loved it

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An extraordinary, engaging survey of the vast Ottoman empire and civilization from a sympathetic but critical & learned perspective.

Comprehensive, fast-paced Ottoman History

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Great well done interesting and extreemly important for every one to know 👌well done waiting for more

Love it

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A good distinction is made about why this empire was not "Turkish" or Arabic, but Muslim.
Also, provides good background about the modern day conflicts between Serbia and Bosnia.



Good clear sum-up of the history for anyone who wants understand this period in time.

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Professor Harl covers the facts and broad sweep of this subject with the kind of confident grasp that we expect from the Great Courses. I did find that his diction took some getting used to (many umms and ahhs, with rapid fire delivery) and I found myself wishing he did a better job of tying the raw facts into overarching themes. A note about his treatment of the Armenian genocide: I disagree with a number of reviewers that he presented a Turkish apologia. He did go out of his way to clarify the Turkish perspective of the events, which I took to be an important scholarly service. Overall, recommended.

A solid treatment with some rough edges

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