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Description
This book reveals how Egypt's sixteenth-century Ottoman conquest reshaped historical writing and knowledge, uncovering a pivotal yet overlooked era of transition and transformation. Reassessing Egypt's quiet sixteenth century: shifts in knowledge transmission and historiography This book examines one of the most obscure periods in Egypt's Islamic history: the sixteenth century, a time of major transition between the Mamluk Sultanate and Ottoman rule. Despite its importance, the century remains poorly understood due to a significant gap in the historical record. Focusing on this lacuna, the study explores how the Ottoman conquest of 1517 disrupted the social and institutional conditions that had previously supported historical writing and scholarly production. Drawing on chronicles, manuscript catalogs, and material evidence, it traces how Cairo's intellectual life, book markets, and the very act of writing history were transformed. In doing so, it repositions the sixteenth century as a vital hinge between the late medieval and early modern periods and reconsiders the period's supposed "quietude" as a historiographical problem, not a historical fact. Anthony T. Quickel is a postdoctoral scholar at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science.



