TY - JOUR
T1 - Intergenerational mobility in the Ottoman Empire
T2 - Observations from eighteenth-century Kastamonu
AU - Ergene, Boǧaç A.
AU - Kaygun, Atabey
PY - 2011/3/15
Y1 - 2011/3/15
N2 - Based on probate estate inventories from eighteenth-century Kastamonu in north Anatolia, this study examines intergenerational mobility patterns in one Ottoman provincial town. Although the topic is well-studied in many Western contexts, historical and contemporary, we still know little about the ways in which socioeconomic disparities and class identities were transmitted across subsequent generations of parents and children in the Ottoman Empire. In order to explore this issue in a sophisticated fashion, this article introduces quantitative techniques and categories of analysis tailored specifically for Ottoman sources. In addition to other findings, our analysis suggests that Kastamonu in the eighteenth century was vertically and horizontally segmented: Not only were there significant impediments to intergenerational mobility across privileged and underprivileged sectors of the society, such transitions were also infrequent across sub-groups within upper and lower classes. Despite a general lack of intergenerational fluidity at all socioeconomic levels, however, our calculations also reveal that the provincial elite were particularly immobile.
AB - Based on probate estate inventories from eighteenth-century Kastamonu in north Anatolia, this study examines intergenerational mobility patterns in one Ottoman provincial town. Although the topic is well-studied in many Western contexts, historical and contemporary, we still know little about the ways in which socioeconomic disparities and class identities were transmitted across subsequent generations of parents and children in the Ottoman Empire. In order to explore this issue in a sophisticated fashion, this article introduces quantitative techniques and categories of analysis tailored specifically for Ottoman sources. In addition to other findings, our analysis suggests that Kastamonu in the eighteenth century was vertically and horizontally segmented: Not only were there significant impediments to intergenerational mobility across privileged and underprivileged sectors of the society, such transitions were also infrequent across sub-groups within upper and lower classes. Despite a general lack of intergenerational fluidity at all socioeconomic levels, however, our calculations also reveal that the provincial elite were particularly immobile.
KW - Anatolia
KW - Eighteenth century
KW - Intergenerational mobility
KW - Kastamonu
KW - Ottoman
KW - Probate estate inventories (terekes)
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=79951770763&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.hisfam.2010.10.003
DO - 10.1016/j.hisfam.2010.10.003
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:79951770763
SN - 1081-602X
VL - 16
SP - 30
EP - 46
JO - History of the Family
JF - History of the Family
IS - 1
ER -