War, Environment, and the Ottoman-Habsburg Frontier

with Gábor Ágoston

hosted by Graham Auman Pitts and Faisal Husain

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Whereas military histories once focused narrowly on armies, battles, and technologies, the new approach to military history emphasizes how armies and navies were linked to issues such as political economy, gender, and environment. In this episode, we sit down with Gábor Ágoston to discuss the principal issues concerning the relationship between the Ottoman-Habsburg military frontier in Hungary and the environmental history of the early modern period. From the battle of Mohacs in 1526, through the dramatic battle of Vienna 1683, and until the Treaty of Sistova 1791, the Ottoman-Habsburg frontier was the site of fighting, fortification, and mobilization. In our conversation, we consider the environmental dimensions of these centuries of conflict and contact, focusing on how the military revolution transformed the way in which armies used and managed resources and the role of both anthropogenic and climatic factors in reshaping the Hungarian landscape.

This episode is part of an forthcoming series entitled "Political Ecologies."

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PARTICIPANT BIOS

Gábor Ágoston is an Associate Professor of History at Georgetown University. He specializes in the history of the Ottoman Empire and has published widely on the subject of the Ottoman military and arms production, as well as issues of frontiers, borderlands, and environment in the early modern world. In addition to authoring Guns for the sultan: military power and the weapons industry in the Ottoman Empire (Cambridge University Press, 2005), he is co-editor of Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire. 
Graham Auman Pitts holds a doctorate in history from Georgetown University's Department of History. His dissertation, "Fallow Fields: Famine and the Making of Lebanon," probes the intersections of ecology, capital, and colonialism in the modern Middle East. He is currently a postdoctoral scholar at North Carolina State University.   
Faisal Husain is a doctoral student at Georgetown University researching the environmental history of the Ottoman Tigris and Euphrates rivers.   

CREDITS

Episode No. 276
Release Date: 27 October 2016
Recording Location: Georgetown University
Editing and production by Chris Gratien
Sound excerpts: from archive.org - Baglamamin Dugumu - Necmiye Ararat and MuzafferHarmandali - Recep Efendi, Cemal Efendi
Special thanks to Monsieur Doumani for allowing us to use "The System/Το σύστημαν" in the intro music, Muhtelif for "Ta Paidia & Lamma Bada" in the interlude, and Kara Güneş for the composition "Istanbul" in the outro music

IMAGES
"Turkeningel (i.e., Ada Kaleh) and the Iron Gate of the Danube, Tatra, Austro-Hungary"
Detroit Publishing Co., c1890-1900
Source: Library of Congress
SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY

Gábor Ágoston, Guns for the Sultan: Military Power and the Weapons Industry in the Ottoman Empire (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2005).

Gábor Ágoston, "Where Environmental and Frontier Studies Meet: Rivers, Forests, Marshes and Forts along the Ottoman—Hapsburg Frontier in Hungary," in The Frontiers of the Ottoman World, edited by A. C. S. Peacock, (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009) 57-79.

Gábor Ágoston, "The Costs of the Ottoman Fortress-System in Hungary in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries," in Ottomans, Hungarians, and Habsburgs in Central Europe, edited by Géza Dávid and Pál Fodor (Leiden: Brill, 2000).

Karl Appuhn, “Ecologies of Beef: Eighteenth-Century Epizootics and the Environmental History of Early Modern Europe,” Environmental History 15 (2010): 268-87.

Caroline Finkel, The Administration of Warfare: The Ottoman Military Campaigns in Hungary, 1593-1606 (Wien: VWGÖ, 1988).

William Hardy McNeill, Europe's Steppe Frontier, 1500-1800 (Chicago: University of Chicago, 1964).

Geoffrey Parker, The Military Revolution: Military Innovation and the Rise of the West, 1500-1800 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988).

David Parrott, The Business of War: Military Enterprise and Military Revolution in Early Modern Europe (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2012).

 John F. Richards, The Unending Frontier: An Environmental History of the Early Modern World (Berkeley: University of California, 2003).

Sam White, The Climate of Rebellion in the Early Modern Ottoman Empire (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2011).

Comments

Unknown said…
What about muslims populations in the territories given up to Habsburg by Ottomans. We see the big mosques in the cities such as Pecc but without their muslims.

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