The Sultan's Hydra: Ottoman Espionage In The Sixteenth Century
Abstract
Relying on documentation from Ottoman, Spanish, Venetian and Florentine archives, this article delineates the characteristics of Ottoman espionage in the sixteenth-century. It argues that Ottoman information gathering was different from its contemporaries, namely the Venetian and the Habsburg secret services, in two aspects. First, it was not institutionalized, but rather personal, in harmony with the empire's patrimonial nature. Second of all, this lack of institutionalization meant that the central control over espionage was limited and the provincial authorities were given a free hand to develop their own information gathering mechanisms that operated in independence and with little interference from the centre, which was more concerned with the results produced rather than the agents and the methods employed. In spite of this decentralized and non-institutionalized nature, however, as this article will seek to show, the Ottoman secret service did not lag behind its contemporaries in laying its hands on confidential information in a timely fashion and keeping imperial authorities abreast of information even from faraway lands. Telif hakları gereğince yayın erişime kapalıdır. Yayın yayıncı tarafından erişime açık ise bağlantılar kısmından ulaşılabilmektedir.
Source
Mediterranea: Ricerche StoricheVolume
13Issue
38URI
https://doi.org/10.19229/1828-230X/38172016https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12723/2057
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/313576719_The_Sultan's_hydra_Ottoman_espionage_in_the_sixteenth_century