Between tension and rapprochement: Sunni-Shi"ite relations in the pre-modern Ottoman period, with a focus on the eighteenth century

The title is an article by Özervarli M. S. published in “Historical Research,” vol.90, no.249, pp.526-542, 2017 (Journal Indexed in AHCI). The following is an excerpt of its abstract.[1]

Ottoman Empire and Iranian Safavid

The Ottoman Empire is known for its ethnically and religiously pluralistic social fabric, but also for defending the mainstream Sunni branch of Islam in opposition to its Iranian Safavid rival.

Objective of the article

This article revisits the Ottoman construction of Sunnism and suggests that, despite strict state policies from above to exclude Shiites and communal pressures from below in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, channels of dialogue could not be closed down in the long term. By focusing on a specific intra-religious dialogue of 1743, that aimed at reconciliation between Sunnis and Shiites, this article highlights a probable case of confessionalization'.

Finding

Close examination of the textual account of this inter-communal meeting demonstrates how the Ottomans were torn between defending their Sunni identity and the need for rapprochement to avoid further sectarianism in broader Muslim society.

Notes