How World War I Ended the Ottoman Empire Forever — Fexingo History
In 1917, as the Ottoman Empire teetered on the edge of collapse, a remarkable piece of legislation was passed: the Law of Family Rights. It granted women unprecedented access to divorce, including the right to initiate it for reasons like desertion, cruelty, or even a husband's failure to provide bread. Lucas and Luna explore how this law emerged from a tangle of Islamic jurisprudence, wartime necessity, and feminist advocacy by figures like Halide Edib Adıvar and Nezihe Muhiddin. They discuss the reaction of conservative clerics, the law's practical impact on women in Istanbul and the provinces, and its surprising afterlife in the legal codes of Turkey and other post-Ottoman states. We also look at the parallel story of the 1917 Russian 'Decree on Divorce' and how, briefly, two collapsing empires gave women more control over marriage than they'd ever had. A story of reform, resilience, and the intimate costs of empire's end. #LawOfFamilyRights #OttomanWomen #DivorceRights #HalideEdib #NeziheMuhiddin #1917 #IslamicFeminism #Istanbul #Şeyhülislam #Mecelle #OttomanEmpire #SublimePorte #WorldWarI #WomenInHistory #FexingoHistory #History #MiddleEastHistory #LegalHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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