This is part one of a series of 3 on The Ottomans - East or West.*
The Invention Of...Turkey Episode 1 of 3
Mehmed the Conqueror enters Constantinople, 1453 |
This was the age of mighty sultans, Selim the Grim and Suleiman the Magnificent, who was happy to take the challenge to the catholic Habsburgs.
But as modern Turkey prepares to celebrate a hundred years without the Ottomans, how is this period remembered under the government of President Erdogan?
This is the fiftieth episode of Misha Glenny and Miles Warde's How to Invent a Country series, which sets out to explain where nations come from, who decides their borders, and what stories the people tell themselves.
These programmes are recorded on location in Istanbul, Belgrade and Vienna.
"All these sultans, they were mythical creatures for us. I really thought they were part of a fictional world because the real history for us was about Ataturk, and in primary school Ottoman history was a foreign country for us." Kaya Genc, novelist and author of The Lion and Nightingale.
The Ertugrul Cavalry Regiment crossing the Galata Bridge, 1901 |
Presenter Misha Glenny is the author of McMafia and a former Central Europe correspondent for the BBC. The producer in Bristol is Miles Warde'*
Pictures; Mehmed the Conqueror enters Constantinople, and The Ertugrul Cavalry Regiment crossing the Galata Bridge, 1901, painting by Fausto Zonaro.
*The Ottomans - East or West, https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m001rqxn
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