Ottoman archaeology between the Self and the Other: archaeological ethnography and the transborder research potential of the SW Balkans

Author

Moudopoulos-Athanasiou, Faidon ORCID

Publication date

2024-08-13



Abstract

Religious syncretism alongside the coexistence of various groups of people and their shared material culture was a reality in the Ottoman-era Balkans. Such entanglements remain underrepresented in archaeological theory and practice because of the temporal proximity of the subject to the present and due to the cultural and identity politics of nation-state formation. This article offers a method to delve into the aforementioned archaeological context through a combined investigation of textual evidence, survey and archaeological ethnography. The case studies presented draw from the cultural landscapes and the material culture of the transborder area of Northwest Greece and Southern Albania. Emphasis is placed on the agency of the local actors who dwelled in the region and are often neglected when placed in the context of the broader accounts of the Ottoman era.

Document Type

Article

Document version

Accepted version

Language

English

CDU Subject

90 - Archaeology. Prehistory

Subject

Etnologia -- Grècia; Pastoralisme -- Grècia; Etnologia -- Albània; Pastoralisme -- Albània

Pages

189-205 p.

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Version of

World Archaeology, 55(2), 2023

Documents

This document contains embargoed files until 2026-02-09

Rights

© 2024 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group

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