Daybreak in Turkey / Second Edition
The Project Gutenberg eBook, Daybreak in Turkey, by James L. (James Levi) Barton
GALATA AND PERA AND THE BRIDGE OF BOATS CONNECTING WITH STAMBOUL, CONSTANTINOPLE
BY JAMES L. BARTON, D. D. Secretary of the American Board
AUTHOR OF “THE MISSIONARY AND HIS CRITICS,” “THE UNFINISHED TASK OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH,” ETC.
SECOND EDITION
BOSTON THE PILGRIM PRESS NEW YORK CHICAGO
Copyright, 1908 By James L. Barton
THE UNIVERSITY PRESS, CAMBRIDGE, U. S. A.
To the revered memory of that noble company of men and women of all races and creeds who have toiled and sacrificed and died that Turkey might be free, this volume is dedicated.
This book was not written in order to catch popular favor at this time of revolution in the Ottoman empire. All except the concluding chapter was prepared some time before the 24th of July, 1908, and the entire work was at that time nearly ready for the press. Much of the material had been used in the Hyde Lecture Course at Andover Seminary and in the Alden Lecture Course at the Chicago Theological Seminary. The chapter, “Turkey and the Constitution,” was written since the overthrow of the old régime, and appeared as an article in The Outlook in September, 1908. The book does not pretend to be an exhaustive study of the Turkish empire and its problems. Such a work would necessarily be encyclopedic in its size and scope.
The purpose from the beginning has been briefly and clearly to set forth the various historical, religious, racial, material, and national questions having so vital a bearing upon all Turkish matters, and which now reveal the forces that have had so much to do in changing Turkey from an absolute monarchy into a constitutional and representative government. Reformations have never come by accident, and this moral and political revolution in Turkey, the most sweeping of all, is no exception. To one who traces the entrance and development in the Ottoman empire during the last century, of reformative ideas in the religious, intellectual, and social life of the people, the present almost bloodless revolution presents no mysteries. It is but the fruit of the seeds of intelligence, of righteousness, and of holy ambition, sown in good soil and now bearing fruit after their kind.
James L. Barton
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DAYBREAK IN TURKEY
FOREWORD
CONTENTS
ILLUSTRATIONS
INTRODUCTION
I. THE COUNTRY
II. ITS RESOURCES
III. HISTORY AND GOVERNMENT
IV. THE SULTAN, THE HEART OF TURKEY
THE NUSAIRIYEH
THE MARONITES
THE DRUSES
THE JEWS
SYRIANS OR JACOBITES
THE GREEKS
VI. THE ARMENIANS
VII. MOSLEM PEOPLES
THE KOORDS
THE TURKS
OTHER RACES
VIII. TURKEY AND THE WEST
IX. A STRATEGIC MISSIONARY CENTER
XI. CHRISTIANITY AND ISLAM
XII. EARLY PIONEERING AND EXPLORATIONS
XIII. ESTABLISHED CENTERS
XIV. BEGINNINGS IN REFORM
XVI. RESULTS
XVII. INTELLECTUAL RENAISSANCE
XVIII. THE PRINTING-PRESS
XIX. MODERN MEDICINE
XX. STANDING OF MISSIONARIES
XXI. COMPLETED WORK
XXIII. AMERICAN RIGHTS
XXIV. RELIGIOUS TOLERATION
XXV. THE MACEDONIAN QUESTION
XXVI. GENERAL POLITICAL SITUATION
XXVII. CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT
INDEX