The Diary of a Turk

audiobook

The Diary of a Turk

by Çerkesseyhizade Halil Halit

EN·~5 hours·20 chapters

Chapters

20 total

THE DIARY OF A TURK

0:23

PREFACE

1:35

ILLUSTRATIONS

0:23

CHAPTER I. MY HOME IN ASIA MINOR.

23:58

CHAPTER II. AT SCHOOL AND IN THE HAREM.

27:10

CHAPTER III. THE HAREM AND WOMEN IN THE EAST.

33:25

CHAPTER IV. I GO TO CONSTANTINOPLE AND PURSUE MY STUDIES.

25:11

CHAPTER V. A NEW PROFESSION AND THE QUESTION OF CONSCRIPTION.

23:18

CHAPTER VI. TURKEY'S INTERNAL DANGERS.

17:25

CHAPTER VII. A NEW COSTUME AND A NEW CAREER.

16:58

Description

A vivid, first‑person portrait opens this modest travelogue, inviting listeners into the world of a native of ancient Angora. The narrator weaves personal memory with family legend, tracing his lineage from a mystic religious order in Persia to the bustling streets of Ottoman Anatolia. Through anecdotes about his great‑grandfather’s miracles, his father’s charitable excesses, and the everyday customs of his hometown, he paints a picture of a region where ancient Celtic whispers mingle with Islamic devotion.

Beyond his own story, the diary offers a gentle corrective to Western misconceptions about Turkey. The author shares observations on social life, women’s roles, and the clash of tradition with modernity, all presented with humor and humility. Listeners will enjoy the blend of historical tidbits, vivid descriptions of local festivals, and candid reflections that reveal a culture both familiar and surprising, making the early chapters a compelling window into Ottoman life at the turn of the twentieth century.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~5 hours (302K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Turgut Dincer (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive and Hathi Trust)

Release date

2015-09-24

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

ÇH

Çerkesseyhizade Halil Halit

1869–1931

A sharp-eyed Ottoman writer and public intellectual, he brought together memoir, politics, and cultural criticism in work shaped by life in both Turkey and Britain. Best known in English for The Diary of a Turk, he wrote with urgency about empire, identity, and the pressures of modern life.

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