Academic literature on the topic 'Italo-Turkish War'

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Journal articles on the topic "Italo-Turkish War"

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Salvatore, Armando, and Timothy W. Childs. "Italo-Turkish Diplomacy and the War over Libya, 1911 - 1912." Die Welt des Islams 33, no. 1 (April 1993): 133. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1571214.

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Doğar, Mehmet. "‘Complete Neutrality’ or ‘Controlled Enmity’? The Role of the Turkish Press during the Italo-Ethiopian War of 1935–36." Turkish Historical Review 10, no. 02-03 (March 16, 2020): 213–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18775462-01002007.

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This article examines the relationship between the Turkish government and the Turkish press by taking the Italo-Ethiopian War of 1935–36 as a case study. The Turkish press attached much importance to the conflict and covered two main issues: the increasingly insecure environment in world politics and how Turkey should position itself in the face of these changing dynamics. Emphasising the divergences between the rhetoric of the government and the coverage of the press about these issues, this article argues that in the early Republican period, the press, rather than being simply dictated to by the government, had a more independent and active position than it is often given credit for in the secondary literature.
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Dierks, Dennis. "Mediatising Violence and Renegotiating Commonality: Bosnian Muslim Press Reporting on the Italo-Turkish War (1911–1912)." DIYÂR 2, no. 1 (2021): 105–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/2625-9842-2021-1-105.

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This article presents a case study concerning Bosnian Muslim press reporting on the Italo-Turkish War in 1911 and 1912. It discusses the impact of mediatised violence and emotions on the imagination of space, commonality and future. The case under scrutiny is situated at the Eastern European margins of what was, during the course of the long nineteenth century, increasingly conceptualised and perceived as the ‘Muslim world’. This process of imagining the Muslim world as a politically meaningful entity engendered the constitution and transformation of mental maps which played, as this article argues, a key role in local processes of making modernity in a Transottoman setting.
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Illuzzi, Jennifer. "Reimagining the Nation: Gendered Images of Italy and the Italo-Turkish War of 1911-12." Gender & History 30, no. 2 (June 1, 2018): 423–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1468-0424.12362.

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ELGHARBI, Hamza. "L’impresa coloniale libica tra letteratura coloniale e stampa (The Libyan colonial enterprise between colonial literature and the press)." ALTRALANG Journal 2, no. 02 (December 31, 2020): 133–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.52919/altralang.v2i02.80.

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ABSTRACT: This article aims to analyze the war in Libya, also called the Italian-Turkish war from a historical, literary and journalistic point of view. To find out how colonial literature and the press of the 11th and 12th century presented the historical event, we decided to focus our work on two authors and two journalists. The colonial writers who have dedicated their works to the Libyan war are Enrico Corradini and Giovanni Pascoli, while the journalists are Renato Serra and Giuseppe Bevione. Colonial literature and the press contributed to the Libyan war with the task of spreading colonial consciousness and nationalism in Italian society RIASSUNTO: Il presente articolo mira ad analizzare la guerra di Libia, detta anche la guerra italo-turca da punto di vista storico letterario e giornalistico. Per saper come la letteratura coloniale e la stampa degli anni 11 e 12 del Novecento hanno presentato l’evento storico, abbiamo deciso di concentrare il nostro lavoro su due autori e su due giornalisti. Gli scrittori coloniali che hanno dedicato le loro opere alla guerra di Libia sono Enrico Corradini e Giovanni Pascoli, invece i giornalisti sono Renato Serra e Giuseppe Bevione. La letteratura coloniale e la stampa hanno contribuito alla guerra di Libia con il compito di diffondere la coscienza coloniale e il nazionalismo nella società italiana.
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Munzi, Massimiliano, and Andrea Zocchi. "The Lepcitanian territory: cultural heritage in danger in war and peace." Libyan Studies 48 (September 25, 2017): 51–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/lis.2017.11.

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AbstractSince 1995 the Archaeological Mission to Libya of Roma Tre University has carried out several surveys in the territory and suburbs of Lepcis Magna. Besides the survey of the archaeological and historical sites, the Roma Tre team has also had the opportunity to observe and record the development of the landscape through periods of war and peace.In this article, the issues related to the cultural heritage in the area of the modern city of Khoms and in the Lepcis hinterland are analysed and particular consideration is given to the damage and destruction that has occurred since the Italian occupation (1911) until the present day. The Lepcitanian/Khoms territory is an interesting case study in which the cultural heritage has been, and still is, at risk due to ‘civilian’ and ‘conflict’ causes. Besides the damage that occurred during the Italo-Turkish War and – to a minor extent – during WWII, the main damage seems to have occurred in the last sixty years due to the expansion of Khoms and to the ongoing unstable political situation in which the lack of central government control is playing an important role. In particular, since 2011, Islamic fundamentalists have demolished in these areas several ancient marabouts, destroying one of the most characteristic aspects of the Tripolitanian/Libyan cultural landscape.
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Munzi, Massimiliano, Fabrizio Felici, Jabar Matoug, Isabella Sjöström, and Andrea Zocchi. "The Lepcitanian landscape across the ages: the survey between Ras el-Mergheb and Ras el-Hammam (2007, 2009, 2013)." Libyan Studies 47 (November 2016): 67–116. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/lis.2016.9.

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AbstractSince 2007, the Archaeological Mission of Roma Tre University has conducted surveys in the territory of Lepcis Magna, in a peri-urban area between Ras el-Mergheb and Ras el-Hammam. To date, 168 sites have been surveyed. From the analysis of this data collection can be drawn a synthesis of the landscape's evolution from the Hellenistic to the end of the Ottoman period (including the analysis of battlefields and military structures related to the Italo-Turkish War and World War I). As elsewhere in Tripolitania, the Roman productive and settlement system was based on the villae and farms with torcularia for olive (and wine) production. However, the ancient suburban landscape was here characterised by local limestone quarry activities and funerary monuments, the research on which has given significant new data. The Late Antique and medieval periods, with their conjunctures of growth and contraction, as well as the Karamanli/Ottoman phase have been analysed for their agricultural peculiarities and forms of settlement. The Late Antique and medieval defensive system (gsur, the Ras el-Hammam and Ras el-Mergheb castles) and the Ottoman religious landscape (marabouts or ‘shrines’, today almost completely demolished) have also been taken into consideration.
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KODET, Roman. "Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire since the End of the Bosnian Annexation Crisis till the Italo-Turkish War." Central European Papers 1, no. 2 (September 1, 2013): 29–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.25142/cep.2013.014.

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Wright, J. "Colonial and Early Post-Colonial Libya." Libyan Studies 20 (January 1989): 221–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0263718900006725.

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Libya at the beginning of this century had little to offer the would-be imperialist and coloniser. The true value of Turkey's last remaining African possessions was not — despite the insistence of the Italian nationalist lobby — as a settler-colony or as a gateway to the largely illusory wealth of central Africa, but as a strategic base on the central Mediterranean. The general poverty of Ottoman Tripolitania and Cyrenaica was reflected indeed in the poverty of the literature in any language on contemporary Libya.But growing Italian interest in these territories, by 1900 almost the last parts of Africa unclaimed by any European power, generated a series of books and articles by an imperialist-nationalist lobby eager to prove the case that Italy's political, strategic, economic and social wellbeing depended on the immediate possession of Turkish North Africa. Such writings naturally generated a rather less voluminous counter-flow of material, mainly from socialist sources, putting the opposite and (as events were to prove) essentially more realistic case.The outbreak of the Italo-Turkish war in September 1911 and the subsequent Italian occupation of bridgeheads at Tripoli, Horns, Benghazi, Derna and Tobruk first brought Libya to the notice of the international press. The British correspondents who reported one or other side of the conflict subsequently produced a number of surprisingly partisan books about the war and their own adventures in it, but had very much less to say about the little-understood country and its people. With the sudden end of the war in 1912 and the outbreak of more serious fighting in the Balkans, interest in Libya quickly waned. For the next 30 years nearly all the relevant literature was to be provided by Italians, in Italian and written from a purely Italian point of view — some of it later to be destroyed in the antifascist and anti-imperialist reaction from 1943 onwards.
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Kotyukova, Tat’yana V. "“TURKEY STARTS AND WINS?”. INTERNATIONAL GEOPOLITICS AND THE ATTITUDE OF THE TURKESTAN POPULATION TO IT BY THE EXAMPLE OF THE ITALO-TURKISH WAR AND THE FIRST BALKAN WAR." RSUH/RGGU Bulletin. Series Eurasian studies. History. Political science. International relations, no. 1 (2021): 85–108. http://dx.doi.org/10.28995/2686-7648-2021-1-85-108.

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National and religious issues have always been uneasy and topical for the Russian state. In the first decades of the twentieth century, the religious affiliation question became one of the key factors in the contradictory attitude of the Russia peoples to the choice of the Empire’s foreign policy. That is proved by the materials stored in the National Archives of the Republic of Uzbekistan. Most Russian Muslims felt like second-class citizens, only because they professed Islam, not Orthodox Christianity. Such a situation was a natural consequence of the ill-conceived and uncoordinated ethno-confessional policy in the Empire. On the eve of the First World War, Ottoman Turkey, as a long-time geopolitical rival of Russia, was interested in escalating the internal political tensions in the Russian Empire by all means. The most effective way was to speculate on existing religious and national intolerance. However, masses of ordinary Muslims, for a variety of reasons, were not always able to fully accept the Ottoman ideological and modernist attitudes that representatives of the national elites of Russian Muslims, acting as intermediaries, tried to introduce into their minds. On the other hand, the Russian Empire itself could not offer its Muslims an attractive modernisation project.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Italo-Turkish War"

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Di, Giovanni Antonino Maria Marco. "Gaetano Salvemini storico e politico. La riflessione sulla storia e la prassi politica." Doctoral thesis, Università di Catania, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/10761/1208.

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Un lavoro su Gaetano Salvemini deve necessariamente fare i conti, oltre che con la statura del personaggio e la vastità dell opera, anche con la rilevante letteratura che la sua figura ha saputo stimolare. I testi di Salvemini hanno sempre sollevato intensi dibattiti, indicando uno stile di pensiero, un metodo, e creando soprattutto un seguito e un influenza ancora oggi non sufficientemente riconosciuta in tutta la sua portata. È noto che dei suoi molti allievi alcuni raggiunsero una tal fama da oscurare nel tempo pure quella del maestro, fra gli altri Federico Chabod, Carlo Rosselli, Ernesto Rossi. La sua partecipazione attiva, come pubblicista e come deputato, alle turbolente vicende dell agone politico italiano della prima metà del Novecento, fu contrassegnata da una personale indipendenza che connotò, del resto, anche la sua vita intellettuale e accademica. Bersaglio di furiosi attacchi fascisti, bilanciati dall ammirazione dei colleghi, degli amici e degli studenti, non si piegò mai ad alcuna forma di compromesso, né in Italia, durante gli anni della militanza da pubblicista e da politico, né all estero, dove per circa un quarto di secolo gli furono offerti tra il 1925 e il 1933 asili di ripiego e precariato accademico a Parigi, a Londra e negli Stati Uniti, dove infine accettò la cattedra «Lauro De Bosis» in Storia della Civiltà italiana ad Harvard, e qui rimase dal 33 fino al rientro in Italia nel 1949. Di una così vasta trama di opere e di azioni ci sembrava necessario cogliere soprattutto quei momenti, snodi biografici e di pensiero, che segnano in Salvemini le più significative evoluzioni e mutamenti di prospettiva: pur all interno di una sostanziale continuità tra la storia e la politica la cui indagine merita una sistemazione organica non dettata da schemi antagonistici, che privilegiano ora l uno ora l altro periodo della sua vita, ora questa ora quella particolare opera. Parte non secondaria di questo tentativo di sistemazione organica ci è parsa la necessità di restituire Salvemini al panorama filosofico italiano: una restituzione che meno si nutre di un dialogo rimasto nel complesso scarno e diffidente, quanto di idee e riflessioni che dall'opera sorgono e all'opera ritornano in forma sia di scelte metodologiche che di selettività tematica, definendo il profilo di un positivista epistemologicamente aggiornato. In tale contesto, assecondando peraltro un ordine cronologico di esposizione cui in certo modo ci obbligava la centralità del nesso fra storia e politica, risultava ineludibile una analisi delle idee salveminiane sul metodo storico e il loro confronto con quelle dell'autorevolissimo amico, poi sempre più distante per ragioni ideologiche e impostazioni scientifiche, Benedetto Croce; tanto più quelle due visioni del sapere storico avrebbero informato l'attività di ricerca di molti delle migliori menti del firmamento intellettuale italiano nei decenni successivi. Ma il tempo delle riflessioni salveminiane sul mestiere dello storico diventa presto il tempo delle prime, robuste prove del pubblicista e del politico: nella vicenda della guerra italo-turca Salvemini, nei panni del giornalista e direttore de «L'Unità», denuncia le mistificazioni tripoline, stimola il dibattito tra le posizioni divergenti e conduce una campagna anticolonialista contro le prime forze italiane con intenti imperialistici; nell'importantissimo snodo elettorale del 1919, ispiratore e organizzatore del movimento di Rinnovamento ed eletto deputato, si trovò davanti agli interrogativi posti durante la Conferenza di pace di Parigi e alle questioni per lo più lasciate irrisolte dai tavoli delle trattative; mentre, quasi in parallelo Salvemini si occupa sia da storico che da politico della questione adriatica, offrendo un contributo che ancora appare esemplare per contenuti e metodo. Nell'intrecciarsi di storia e politica andava prendendo forma lo storico del presente, giunto a piena maturità nel Salvemini antifascista.
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Semelsberger, Daniel B. "An Italian Voice Overseas: War and the Making of National Identity in Cleveland, Ohio, 1910-1920." Miami University / OhioLINK, 2012. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=miami1335530324.

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Books on the topic "Italo-Turkish War"

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Childs, Timothy Winston. Italo-Turkish diplomacy and the war over Libya, 1911-1912. Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1990.

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Childs, Timothy W. Italo-Turkish diplomacy and the war over Libya, 1911-1912. Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1990.

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Italy. Esercito. Corpo Di Stato Maggiore. The Italo-Turkish war. Franklin Classics, 2018.

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Italy. Esercito. Corpo Di Stato Maggiore. The Italo-Turkish war. Franklin Classics, 2018.

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Childs, Timothy W. Italo-Turkish Diplomacy and the War over Libya, 1911-1912 (Social, Economic and Political Studies of the Middle East and Asia). Brill Academic Publishers, 1997.

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Book chapters on the topic "Italo-Turkish War"

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Williamson, Samuel R. "Aehrenthal’s Legacy: Bosnian Colonial Success and the Italo-Turkish War." In Austria-Hungary and the Origins of the First World War, 58–81. London: Macmillan Education UK, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-21163-0_5.

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Santagata, Alessandro. "Archbishop Giacomo Della Chiesa Facing the Italo-Turkish War (1911–12)." In Benedict XV: A Pope in the World of the 'Useless Slaughter' (1914-1918), 207–21. Turnhout, Belgium: Brepols Publishers, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/m.str-eb.5.118772.

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"Italy Goes to War." In Italo-Turkish Diplomacy and the War over Libya, 1911-1912, 49–70. BRILL, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004491885_008.

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Kissin, S. F. "Curtain-raisers to World War: the the Italo-Turkish and Balkan Wars." In War and the Marxists, 141–53. Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429267178-17.

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"The Negotiations Leading to the Peace of Lausanne—Phase Two: 16 September to 18 October, 1912." In Italo-Turkish Diplomacy and the War over Libya, 1911-1912, 201–30. BRILL, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004491885_015.

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"The Sazonov Mediation Attempts." In Italo-Turkish Diplomacy and the War over Libya, 1911-1912, 106–31. BRILL, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004491885_011.

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"Italian Diplomatic Preparations for the Libyan Enterprise; the Woes and Disarray of the Ottoman Empire." In Italo-Turkish Diplomacy and the War over Libya, 1911-1912, 1–28. BRILL, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004491885_006.

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"Military and Diplomatic Developments through Italy’s Annexation Decree." In Italo-Turkish Diplomacy and the War over Libya, 1911-1912, 71–91. BRILL, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004491885_009.

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"The Diplomatic Stalemate." In Italo-Turkish Diplomacy and the War over Libya, 1911-1912, 92–105. BRILL, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004491885_010.

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"The Negotiations Leading to the Peace of Lausanne—Phase One: 3 August to 15 September, 1912." In Italo-Turkish Diplomacy and the War over Libya, 1911-1912, 174–200. BRILL, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004491885_014.

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