2018
DOI: 10.1177/0019464618760453
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Pan-Islamic bonds and interest: Ottoman bonds, Red Crescent remittances and the limits of Indian Muslim capital, 1877–1924

Abstract: This article analyses the Ottoman government’s attempt to encourage Indian Muslims to purchase its treasury bonds during the Balkan Wars in 1912–13. It contrasts this largely unsuccessful scheme with the enormous contributions of Indian Muslims to the parallel campaign to raise relief funds for Ottoman soldiers and refugees. While this latter movement involved the intermittent dispatch of remittances to the Ottoman Ministry of Finance and Red Crescent, the bond drive demanded a multi-year commitment and conjur… Show more

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“…118 These cards, following a tradition that had connected a Persianate "cosmopolis" of letters during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, sent to individual editors and their subscribers, provide a powerful image of the tangible global as well as regional connections being forged between different audiences through newspaper reprints. 119 Russian expansion and aggression towards the Ottoman Empire prompted a rising demand for global news among Indian newspaper audiences during the 1870s. In northern India, rumination on the nature of empire, geopolitics, and just governance in the context of the Russo-Turkish conflict was delivered to readers in multiple formats, including serialised fiction.…”
Section: And the 1878 Vernacular Pressmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…118 These cards, following a tradition that had connected a Persianate "cosmopolis" of letters during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, sent to individual editors and their subscribers, provide a powerful image of the tangible global as well as regional connections being forged between different audiences through newspaper reprints. 119 Russian expansion and aggression towards the Ottoman Empire prompted a rising demand for global news among Indian newspaper audiences during the 1870s. In northern India, rumination on the nature of empire, geopolitics, and just governance in the context of the Russo-Turkish conflict was delivered to readers in multiple formats, including serialised fiction.…”
Section: And the 1878 Vernacular Pressmentioning
confidence: 99%