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Tudor Turks: Ottomans speaking English in early modern Sultansbriefe
A distinctive Ottoman voice was near-ubiquitous in late Elizabethan England, appearing in books and on stages with remarkable regularity. This essay questions the dominant assumption that such a voice emerges, fully formed, in the first part of Christopher Marlowe’s Tamburlaine the Great (1587). Turning to largely unknown Henrician sources in print and manuscript—in particular a letter from the Emperor of Babylon to Henry VIII—it argues for the importance of a continental Sultansbriefe (“Letters of the Sultan”) genre in which fictional letters from various Eastern potentates to Christian monarchs and the pope circulated widely. Such letters took on new forms in English contexts and reveal the different registers that voice could occupy: they could be read as satire, as travel accounts, or as news, and might be belligerent, bombastic, heroic, or pathetic. They offer a means to defamiliarize the standard “Turkish” voice of the end of the sixteenth century and show it to be a late and productive reinvention of an earlier Sultansbriefe tradition.
History
Publication status
- Published
File Version
- Published version
Journal
English Literary RenaissanceISSN
0013-8312Publisher
The University of Chicago PressExternal DOI
Issue
3Volume
50Page range
335-358Department affiliated with
- English Publications
Research groups affiliated with
- Centre for Early Modern and Medieval Studies Publications
Full text available
- Yes
Peer reviewed?
- Yes