The Trade Zone as Cross-Cultural Space: Belgrade Carsi
Trgovačka zona kao međukulturalni prostor: Beograd Karsi

2013
Book part (Published version)

Moshe David Gaon Center for Ladino Culture Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer-Sheva Israel
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"The creation of the Ottoman Balkan culture was a very complex process involving the state, society, religion, local traditions, and trade.1 One of the main characteristics of Balkan culture is its multicultural nature. Along with the predominantly Ottoman state and religious cultural model, the meeting and crossing of cultures also played an important role. The models of everyday life, as well as the material and religious culture, were commonly exchanged and melded throughout the Balkans. A significant part of this process was the places that allowed the meeting and crossing of cultures. In addition to private spaces and private communication, the role of the public spaces and activities, which were not limited by the religious and ethnic barriers, was essential. The most important activity enabling different cultures to meet and interconnect within the Ottoman Empire was trade. One of the examples attesting to that fact can be found in nineteenth-century Belgrade, where the trade an...d the market spaces allowed for the creation of communal cultural models..."
Stvaranje otomanske balkanske kulture bio je veoma složen proces koji je uključivao državu, društvo, religiju, lokalnu tradiciju i trgovinu. Jedna od glavnih karakteristika balkanske kulture je njena multikulturalna priroda. Uz pretežno osmanski državni i verski kulturni model, važnu ulogu imalo je i susretanje i ukrštanje kultura. Modeli svakodnevnog života, kao i materijalna i verska kultura, bili su uobičajeno razmenjivani i stapani širom Balkana. Značajan deo ovog procesa bila su mesta koja su omogućavala susret i ukrštanje kultura. Pored privatnih prostora i privatne komunikacije, bitna je bila i uloga javnih prostora i aktivnosti koje nisu bile ograničene verskim i etničkim barijerama. Najvažnija aktivnost koja je omogućila da se različite kulture susreću i međusobno povezuju unutar Osmanskog carstva bila je trgovina. Jedan od primera koji to svedoči nalazi se u Beogradu u devetnaestom veku, gde su trgovinski i tržni prostori omogućavali stvaranje komunalnih kulturnih modela.
Keywords:
Jevreji - trgovina (Balkan) / Jews - trade (Balkans)Source:
El prezente : studies in Sephardic culture. Vol. 7 = Menorah : collection of papers. Vol. 3 [Common culture and particular identities: Christians, Jews and Muslims in the Ottoman Balkans = Zajednička kultura i pojedinačni identiteti: hrišćani, Jevreji i muslimani na osmanskom Balkanu], 2013, 233-245Publisher:
- Beer-Sheva : Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Moshe David Gaon Center for Ladino Culture
Note:
- Ovo zajedničko izdanje "El Prezente - Studije o sefardskoj kulturi" i "Menora - Zbornik radova" je još jedan plod višestruke akademske saradnje između Univerziteta Ben-Gurion, Centra za ladino kulturu "Moše David Gaon" i Odeljenja za istoriju umetnosti na Filozofskom fakultetu Univerziteta u Beogradu (this joint issue of "El Prezente - Studies in Sephardic Culture" and "Menorah - Collection of Papers" is yet another a fruit of the multifaceted academic cooperation between Ben-Gurion University, Moshe David Gaon Center for Ladino Culture, and the Department of History of Art at Belgrade University's Faculty of Philosophy).
- Većina članaka u ovom broju prvobitno je prezentovana na međunarodnoj konferenciji "Zajednička kultura i pojedinačni identiteti: hrišćani, Jevreji i muslimani na osmanskom Balkanu“, koju su 2011. godine organizovale ove dve institucije u Beogradu (most of the articles in this issue were originally presented at the international conference "Common Culture and Particular Identities: Christians, Jews and Muslims on the Ottoman Balkans", organized in 2011 by these two institutions in Belgrade).
Collections
TY - CHAP AU - Makuljević, Nenad PY - 2013 UR - https://www.jevrejskadigitalnabiblioteka.rs/handle/123456789/1900 AB - "The creation of the Ottoman Balkan culture was a very complex process involving the state, society, religion, local traditions, and trade.1 One of the main characteristics of Balkan culture is its multicultural nature. Along with the predominantly Ottoman state and religious cultural model, the meeting and crossing of cultures also played an important role. The models of everyday life, as well as the material and religious culture, were commonly exchanged and melded throughout the Balkans. A significant part of this process was the places that allowed the meeting and crossing of cultures. In addition to private spaces and private communication, the role of the public spaces and activities, which were not limited by the religious and ethnic barriers, was essential. The most important activity enabling different cultures to meet and interconnect within the Ottoman Empire was trade. One of the examples attesting to that fact can be found in nineteenth-century Belgrade, where the trade and the market spaces allowed for the creation of communal cultural models..." AB - Stvaranje otomanske balkanske kulture bio je veoma složen proces koji je uključivao državu, društvo, religiju, lokalnu tradiciju i trgovinu. Jedna od glavnih karakteristika balkanske kulture je njena multikulturalna priroda. Uz pretežno osmanski državni i verski kulturni model, važnu ulogu imalo je i susretanje i ukrštanje kultura. Modeli svakodnevnog života, kao i materijalna i verska kultura, bili su uobičajeno razmenjivani i stapani širom Balkana. Značajan deo ovog procesa bila su mesta koja su omogućavala susret i ukrštanje kultura. Pored privatnih prostora i privatne komunikacije, bitna je bila i uloga javnih prostora i aktivnosti koje nisu bile ograničene verskim i etničkim barijerama. Najvažnija aktivnost koja je omogućila da se različite kulture susreću i međusobno povezuju unutar Osmanskog carstva bila je trgovina. Jedan od primera koji to svedoči nalazi se u Beogradu u devetnaestom veku, gde su trgovinski i tržni prostori omogućavali stvaranje komunalnih kulturnih modela. PB - Beer-Sheva : Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Moshe David Gaon Center for Ladino Culture T2 - El prezente : studies in Sephardic culture. Vol. 7 = Menorah : collection of papers. Vol. 3 [Common culture and particular identities: Christians, Jews and Muslims in the Ottoman Balkans = Zajednička kultura i pojedinačni identiteti: hrišćani, Jevreji i muslimani na osmanskom Balkanu] T1 - The Trade Zone as Cross-Cultural Space: Belgrade Carsi T1 - Trgovačka zona kao međukulturalni prostor: Beograd Karsi SP - 233 EP - 245 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_jdb_1900 ER -
@inbook{ author = "Makuljević, Nenad", year = "2013", abstract = ""The creation of the Ottoman Balkan culture was a very complex process involving the state, society, religion, local traditions, and trade.1 One of the main characteristics of Balkan culture is its multicultural nature. Along with the predominantly Ottoman state and religious cultural model, the meeting and crossing of cultures also played an important role. The models of everyday life, as well as the material and religious culture, were commonly exchanged and melded throughout the Balkans. A significant part of this process was the places that allowed the meeting and crossing of cultures. In addition to private spaces and private communication, the role of the public spaces and activities, which were not limited by the religious and ethnic barriers, was essential. The most important activity enabling different cultures to meet and interconnect within the Ottoman Empire was trade. One of the examples attesting to that fact can be found in nineteenth-century Belgrade, where the trade and the market spaces allowed for the creation of communal cultural models...", Stvaranje otomanske balkanske kulture bio je veoma složen proces koji je uključivao državu, društvo, religiju, lokalnu tradiciju i trgovinu. Jedna od glavnih karakteristika balkanske kulture je njena multikulturalna priroda. Uz pretežno osmanski državni i verski kulturni model, važnu ulogu imalo je i susretanje i ukrštanje kultura. Modeli svakodnevnog života, kao i materijalna i verska kultura, bili su uobičajeno razmenjivani i stapani širom Balkana. Značajan deo ovog procesa bila su mesta koja su omogućavala susret i ukrštanje kultura. Pored privatnih prostora i privatne komunikacije, bitna je bila i uloga javnih prostora i aktivnosti koje nisu bile ograničene verskim i etničkim barijerama. Najvažnija aktivnost koja je omogućila da se različite kulture susreću i međusobno povezuju unutar Osmanskog carstva bila je trgovina. Jedan od primera koji to svedoči nalazi se u Beogradu u devetnaestom veku, gde su trgovinski i tržni prostori omogućavali stvaranje komunalnih kulturnih modela.", publisher = "Beer-Sheva : Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Moshe David Gaon Center for Ladino Culture", journal = "El prezente : studies in Sephardic culture. Vol. 7 = Menorah : collection of papers. Vol. 3 [Common culture and particular identities: Christians, Jews and Muslims in the Ottoman Balkans = Zajednička kultura i pojedinačni identiteti: hrišćani, Jevreji i muslimani na osmanskom Balkanu]", booktitle = "The Trade Zone as Cross-Cultural Space: Belgrade Carsi, Trgovačka zona kao međukulturalni prostor: Beograd Karsi", pages = "233-245", url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_jdb_1900" }
Makuljević, N.. (2013). The Trade Zone as Cross-Cultural Space: Belgrade Carsi. in El prezente : studies in Sephardic culture. Vol. 7 = Menorah : collection of papers. Vol. 3 [Common culture and particular identities: Christians, Jews and Muslims in the Ottoman Balkans = Zajednička kultura i pojedinačni identiteti: hrišćani, Jevreji i muslimani na osmanskom Balkanu] Beer-Sheva : Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Moshe David Gaon Center for Ladino Culture., 233-245. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_jdb_1900
Makuljević N. The Trade Zone as Cross-Cultural Space: Belgrade Carsi. in El prezente : studies in Sephardic culture. Vol. 7 = Menorah : collection of papers. Vol. 3 [Common culture and particular identities: Christians, Jews and Muslims in the Ottoman Balkans = Zajednička kultura i pojedinačni identiteti: hrišćani, Jevreji i muslimani na osmanskom Balkanu]. 2013;:233-245. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_jdb_1900 .
Makuljević, Nenad, "The Trade Zone as Cross-Cultural Space: Belgrade Carsi" in El prezente : studies in Sephardic culture. Vol. 7 = Menorah : collection of papers. Vol. 3 [Common culture and particular identities: Christians, Jews and Muslims in the Ottoman Balkans = Zajednička kultura i pojedinačni identiteti: hrišćani, Jevreji i muslimani na osmanskom Balkanu] (2013):233-245, https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_jdb_1900 .