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Abstract

In the second half of the sixteenth century, the Ottoman Empire and the Habsburg-ruled Holy Roman Empire signed eleven peace treaties, exchanged nearly one-hundred ambassadors, and regularly corresponded across their Central European borderland. Earlier scholarly assessments have claimed that the relationship was overwhelmingly antagonistic and that the Ottomans did not participate meaningfully in the European diplomatic sphere until the eighteenth century. This dissertation offers a revisionist history of the interactions between these two empires in the period between the Ottoman conquest of the Danube River corridor in the 1540s and the outbreak of the Long Turkish War in the 1590s. It recovers the cross-border acts of a wide cast of characters, from the small class of ruling elite at the top down to the common soldiers at the bottom. By drawing on secondary literature in three overlapping academic traditions and archival sources in six languages, it reconstructs a profound shift from expansionist practices to diplomatic engagement and relatively peaceful coexistence.

Part one covers the state-centered version of diplomatic history, what I call "official diplomacy." It surveys negotiations and commissioned ambassadors whose operations resulted in the peace treaties signed and sealed by sovereigns in Ottoman Turkish and Latin. Part two examines this relationship from the borderland, what I call "vernacular diplomacy." It explores regional interactions between Vienna and Buda, local interactions between the borderland fortresses of Komárom and Esztergom, and relationships between borderland soldiers, all of whom communicated in the vernacular language of the borderland by the end of the 1570s. A culture of small scale diplomatic practice in the border zones operated somewhat autonomously from the imperial centers that laid claim to them. Each layer had its own strategies for establishing and maintaining cross-border relations. Taken together, these chapters argue that official and vernacular interactions between Habsburg Europe and the Ottoman world must be seen as working in tandem in order to arrive at a better understanding of early modern imperial diplomacy.

Details

1010268
Title
Vernacular Diplomacy in Central Europe: Statesmen and Soldiers between the Habsburg and Ottoman Empires, 1543-1593
Number of pages
343
Degree date
2017
School code
0181
Source
DAI-A 79/02(E), Dissertation Abstracts International
ISBN
978-0-355-32370-2
Committee member
DaCosta Kaufmann, Thomas; Mintzker, Yair
University/institution
Princeton University
Department
History
University location
United States -- New Jersey
Degree
Ph.D.
Source type
Dissertation or Thesis
Language
English
Document type
Dissertation/Thesis
Dissertation/thesis number
10624262
ProQuest document ID
1964384544
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/dissertations-theses/vernacular-diplomacy-central-europe-statesmen/docview/1964384544/se-2?accountid=208611
Copyright
Database copyright ProQuest LLC; ProQuest does not claim copyright in the individual underlying works.
Database
ProQuest One Academic