Letters from Turkey

Letters from Turkey are actually memoirs written by Europeans who had been to Ottoman Empire. Usually, the series of letters had been collected and published later on with various titles. But they are popularly known as Letters from Turkey or Turkish letters. Below is the summary of these.

Letters by Busbecq

Ogier Ghiselin de Busbecq (1522-1592) was a diplomat in the Holy Roman Empire.[1] He was sent to the Ottoman Empire to discuss the disputed territory of Transylvania (modern west Romania) in 1554. During his stay his addresses were Rüstem Pasha and Semiz Ali Pasha both of which were grand viziers. Upon returning to his country he published the letters he had written to his colleague Nicholas Michault under the title Turcicae epistolae. Busbuecq is also known for his introduction of tulip, from Turkish flora to Europe.[2]

Letters by Montagu

Lady Mary Wortley Montagu (1689-1762) was the wife of Edward Wortley Montagu, the British ambassador to Ottoman Empire between 1716-1718.[3] The letters about her travels and observations about Ottoman life was published under the title Turkish Embassy Letters.[4] One of her important observations was the primitive form of smallpox vaccination.

Letters by Mikes

Kelemen Mikes (1690–1761) was a Hungarian essayist, noted for his rebellious activities against the Habsburg Monarchy.[5] Although backed by Ottoman Empire, Hungarian rebels were defeated and had to choose a life in exile. After 1715, Mikes spent the rest of his life in Tekirdağ, a city near to İstanbul (also known as Constantinople). His work is known as Letters from Turkey.

Letters by Moltke

Helmuth von Moltke the Elder (1800-1891) was an officier in Prussian army.[6] He spent four years in the Ottoman Empire as a military advisor between 1835-1839. Upon returning to Germany, he published Letters on Conditions and Events in Turkey in the Years 1835 to 1839.

gollark: If your death is very likely, then you'll experience it not happening through increasingly contrived outcomes.
gollark: The consequences are weird though.
gollark: What actually happens is that if you have some many-worlds setup where each different outcome of an event happens in a different universe branch, then *from your perspective* there are no branches without you in them.
gollark: I would have been informed of this. Since I haven't, it hasn't happened. QED.
gollark: I doubt this.

See also

References

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