| Carte
der europaeischen Türkey nebst einem Theile von Kleinasien
in XXI Blattern.
Engraved map by Franz von Weiss.
In 21 sheets (sheets 11 and 12 exhibited)
300 x 196 cm.
Scale: ca. 1:576,000.
Vienna: Quarter Master General of the Austrian Army, 1829.
From
the collection of the Gennadius Library, American School of Classical
Studies (Athens), GT 237.34.
Click
maps or PDF links for larger images. Printable
PDF-sheet 11 (5,144 KB) /
Printable
PDF-sheet 12 (5,363 KB)
Tips
for Educators
/ Facts
about Turkey (CIA World Factbook)
|
The
phrase ‘European Turkey’, that part of the Ottoman Empire
on the European side of the Bosphorus, refers in essence to the
Balkan peninsula. In 1829 the Balkans were in a state of ferment.
This map was published two years after the Battle of Navarino, which
brought to a virtual end the Greek war of independence, and one
year after the end of the Russo-Turkish war of 1827-1828. For the
first time in Ottoman history, large land masses that had been part
of the Empire for centuries were lost. Greece would become independent,
and the Caucasus would fall into Russian hands. The struggle between
Russia and Turkey would continue throughout the 19th century. Weiss,
an officer in the Austrian army, constructed this map for the Austrian
Quarter Master General. An English edition of the map, edited by
Thomas Best Jervis, was published in 1854, on the outbreak of the
Crimean War. According to the English title, Weiss’s map was
constructed on the basis of Russian materials.
The
political and ethnological problems in the Balkans today all stem
in great part from historical developments in ‘European Turkey’
that came to a head in the 19th century. These include the Greek
war of independence in 1821, the Russo-Turkish war of 1827-28, the
Crimean War, 1854-1856, the Russo-Turkish war of 1877-78, the decisions
of the Congress and Treaty of Berlin, 1878, and the Bulgarian massacres
of the 1880s. The sheets exhibited here depict northern Greece and
eastern Thrace. Today, only eastern Thrace remains of what once
constituted ‘European Turkey’. |