"Çelik’s stimulating book draws on multilingual archival research to explore this urban center on the Danube as the vanguard of Ottoman reform."—Uğur Zekeriya Peçe, author of Island and Empire: How Civil War in Crete Mobilized the Ottoman World
"An important work for its innovative perspective, cross-disciplinary approach, and for introducing fresh archival material in several languages."—Leyla Amzi-Erdogdular, author of The Afterlife of Ottoman Europe: Muslims in Habsburg Bosnia Herzegovina
Description
To curb the influence of minority populations and “outside enemies,” the Ottoman government implemented new and experimental Tanzimat reforms within the empire’s center and provincial regions. By the 1860s, the city of Rusçuk in present-day Bulgaria and capital of the Ottoman Danube province became a test case for this expansive reform movement within an urbanizing and contested peripheral landscape. In Empire and Nation in the City, Mehmet Çelik traces how the Danube province and Rusçuk, in particular, experienced a series of swift political transitions from a “modernized” Ottoman administration, to a Russian provisional government, and finally to a Bulgarian nation-state.
Çelik examines the transformative effects of each political system, arguing that Bulgarian nationalism was not a uniform ideology, but a flexible and mutable one that engaged multiple loyalties—Bulgarian and Ottoman among them. To understand these competing loyalties, he explores the diverse religious and multiethnic makeup of Rusçuk and the multifaceted responses to imperial control, nationalist sympathies, and political movements. Rather than assess Ottoman rule and Bulgarian nationhood as separate periods, Çelik bridges these moments to understand the continuity of Ottoman reforms within a burgeoning Bulgarian nation.
About the Author
Mehmet Çelik is a senior academic advisor and lecturer in the Department of History at the University of Texas at Austin. His research focuses on Ottoman, Balkan, and Turkish history.
Series: Modern Intellectual and Political History of the Middle East
6 x 9, 352 pages, 11 black and white illustrations, 4 maps
May 2026



