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Heath W. Lowry
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk Professor of Ottoman and Modern Turkish Studies
Email: ataturk@princeton.edu
It was a two-year stint as a Peace Corps Volunteer (1964-1966), working in a
remote mountain village in western Turkey, that precipitated what is rapidly
becoming a life-long fascination with and interest in things Turkish on my part.
What had begun as a general interest began to focus on early Ottoman history
during my years as a graduate student at U.C.L.A. in the late 1960s. Working
with scholars such as Speros Vryonis, Jr., Andreas Tietze, Gustav von Grunebaum
and Stanford J. Shaw was a stimulating experience and one which provided an
extraordinary introduction to the full scope of Islamic and Turkish studies.
My education continued in Turkey (albeit informally) throughout the decade of
the 1970s. In this period, in addition to teaching full-time at the Bosphorus
University and serving as the Istanbul Director of the American Research
Institute in Turkey, I had the opportunity to hone my craft in the frequent
company of a number of outstanding scholars. These included the late Omer Lutfi
Barkan, the late Nejat Goyunc, and the late Cengiz Orhonlu, each of whom were
always willing to share their encyclopaedic knowledge of things Ottoman with a
younger colleague.
Between 1979-1982, as a member of Harvard University's Dumbarton Oaks Center
(Washington, D.C.), I co-directed a team of international scholars working on
late Byzantine and early Ottoman historical demography.
In 1983 I, together with a distinguished group of scholars, businessmen, and
retired diplomats, established the Institute of Turkish Studies, Inc. in
Washington, D.C. The 'ITS,' a non profit educational foundation, has in the past
two decades provided over $2.5 million in grants to scholars and universities
with interests and/or programs in Turkish studies.
During my tenure as Director of the ITS (and perhaps as a reflection of the fact
that the climate in Washington, D.C. tends to favor 'politics' over 'history',)
I began to spend a great deal of time studying the contemporary Turkish
political scene. A five year teaching stint at the U.S. State Department's
National Foreign Affairs Training Center, where I provided the area studies
component of the training for American diplomats assigned to Turkey, furthered
my interest in present-day Turkey.
Since 1993 I have been the Atatürk Professor of Ottoman & Modern Turkish Studies
at Princeton University, where from July 1994-June 1999 I was the Director of
the Program in Near Eastern Studies. Between 1994-1997 I served concurrently as
Chairman of the Department of Near Eastern Studies.
Currently, I am offering seminars on early Ottoman history and undergraduate
lecture courses on Ottoman history and contemporary Turkey.
Representative Publications
My most recent publications include a series of three books on early Ottoman
history: Fifteenth Century Ottoman Realities: Christian Peasant Life on the
Aegean Island of Limnos. Istanbul (Eren Press), 2002; The Nature of the Early
Ottoman State. Albany (SUNY Press), 2003; and Ottoman Bursa in Travel Accounts.
Bloomington (Indiana University: Ottoman and Modern Turkish Studies
Publications), 2003.
Earlier publications include books on: The Islamization and Turkification of
Trabzon, 1461-1483. Istanbul (Bosphorus University Press), 1981 & 1999;
Continuity and Change in Late Byzantine and Early Ottoman Society [with: A.
Bryer et. al.] Cambridge, MA & Birmingham, England (Dumbarton Oaks & University
of Birmingham), 1985; The Story Behind ‘Ambassador Morgenthau's Story.’ Istanbul
(Isis Press), 1990; and, Studies in Defterology: Ottoman Society in the
Fifteenth and Sixteenth Century Istanbul (Isis Press), 1992.
I am also the co-author of a recent book entitled: Challenges to Democracy in
the Middle East. Princeton (M. Weiner Publications), 1997, where I contributed a
chapter on: ‘Challenges to Turkish Democracy in the Decade of the Nineties,’ as
well as the author of two chapters on contemporary Turkish politics in the Aspen
Institute publication (edited by P. Zelikow & R. Zoellick) entitled: America and
the Muslim Middle East: Memos to a President. Washington, D.C. (Aspen
Institute), 1998. More recently I contributed a chapter (‘Betwixt & Between:
Turkey's Political Structure on the Eve of the Twenty-First Century’) to the
Morton Abramowitz edited volume entitled: Turkey's Transformation and American
Policy. New York (Century Foundation), 2000.