New Books Network

Jacob Daniels, "The Jews of Edirne: The End of Ottoman Europe and the Arrival of Borders" (Stanford UP, 2025)

Dec 3, 2025
Jacob Daniels, an Assistant Professor at the University of Texas at Austin, discusses his book on the Jews of Edirne, a once-thriving community in the Ottoman Empire. He reveals how Edirne Jews navigated the transition from empire to nation-state without physically relocating. The conversation highlights community dynamics during the Balkan Wars and local politics involving significant figures like Boris Khak. Daniels also examines how borders ultimately reshaped identities and influenced survival during tumultuous times, challenging conventional narratives about Jewish experiences.
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INSIGHT

Edirne As A Networked Ottoman Jewish Hub

  • Edirne formed a dense network of Jews living across city and small towns rather than only in a port metropolis.
  • Their economy tied closely to the Ottoman army and local Ottoman institutions, shaping a distinctive Ottoman Jewish identity.
INSIGHT

Multiple Political Experiments After 1908

  • After 1908 Jews in Edirne experimented with varied political identities: communal milet, integrationist Ottomanism, Alliance French cosmopolitanism, and emergent Zionism.
  • These debates reveal fluid, simultaneous attachments rather than a single linear shift to nationalism.
ANECDOTE

1910 Demolition, Shootout, And Communal Mediation

  • A 1910 municipal demolition of a Jewish man's business sparked a violent standoff and shootout with police, yet no one was killed.
  • The communal council pursued conciliatory mediation, revealing tensions between protesters and conservative leaders.
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