LUTHER AND SULEYMAN

成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Iyigun, Murat
署名单位:
University of Colorado System; University of Colorado Boulder; Harvard University
刊物名称:
QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS
ISSN/ISSBN:
0033-5533
DOI:
10.1162/qjec.2008.123.4.1465
发表日期:
2008
页码:
1465-1494
关键词:
PROPERTY-RIGHTS middle-east CONFLICT interdependence minorities sacrifice culture origins PEACE TRADE
摘要:
Various historical accounts have suggested that the Ottomans' rise helped the Protestant Reformation as well as its offshoots, such as Zwinglianism, Anabaptism, and Calvinism, survive their infancy and mature. Utilizing a comprehensive data set on violent confrontations for the interval between 1401 and 1700 CE, I show that the incidence of military engagements between the Protestant Reformers and the Counter-Reformation forces between the 1520s and 1650s depended negatively on the Ottomans' military activities in Europe. Furthermore, 1 document that the impact of the Ottomans on Europe went beyond suppressing ecclesiastical conflicts only: at the turn of the sixteenth century Ottoman conquests lowered the number of all newly initiated conflicts among the Europeans roughly by 25 percent, while they dampened all longer-running feuds by more than 15 percent. The Ottomans' military activities influenced the length of intra-European feuds too, with each Ottoman-European military engagement shortening the duration of intra-European conflicts by more than 50 percent. Thus, while the Protestant Reformation might have benefited from-and perhaps even capitalized on-the Ottoman advances in Europe, the latter seems to have played some role in reducing conflicts within Europe more generally.
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