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Education Educational Institutions General

Ottoman Educational Institutions during the Reform Period

See the link below to the full article if you need to obtain PDF reading softwareThis short article is taken from the full article which is available here as a PDF file

The Imperial Tanzimat Rescript (Tanzimat Fermani) announced on 3rd November 1839 provided state protection for basic rights and freedoms such as the right to life, property and honour, the right to just taxation, regulation of military service, fair trial and the right not to have one's property confiscated. These rights and freedoms were ensured to all Ottoman subjects, Muslim or non-Muslim. The purpose of the Tanzimat was not just to renovate the relationship between religion and the state, but also between property and the public and to ensure that the state was guided not by the principle of the public serving the state, but rather of the state serving the people.

In the nineteenth century the official edicts issued in the name of the Ottoman State and the statements of its administrators constitute important sources for understanding the direction of modern Ottoman education. One should not ignore the fact that this had a political aspect to it. The state had as its primary goal the training of a new group of civil servants for the newly formed bureaucracy. This task was assigned to the newly established schools, which were expected to replace the old madrasas as a source for civil servants. The functions of the new schools were not much different than those of the madrasas they were beginning to replace, which during the classical period had served to inculcate the public with official state policy.

Changes in the Ottoman educational system first began with the education of the military class. The reorganization of primary and secondary education did not receive the attention it required at that time. Following the proclamation of the Tanzimat, programs of educational reform made the reorganization of secondary education a priority and the educational system was restructured. The goal of secondary educational institutions established during this period was primarily to provide a kind of preparatory training to meet the needs of the existing bureaucracy and to produce knowledgeable civil servants. By contrast, the education provided at the military higher educational institutions such as the Engineering and Medical schools or the War Academy established during an earlier period, included both secondary and higher levels. That is why consideration was given to the idea of setting up secondary school programs to prepare students for all the higher schools in the empire. It was in this context that Muslims felt a need for secondary educational institutions, especially for the children of wealthy merchants, other than the madrasas, institutions like the private schools to which the non-Muslims were sending their children.

by: FSTC., Mon 26 April, 2004


Related Articles:
Madrasas of the Ottoman Empire by: FSTC. Limited
Ottoman Madrasas, were generally the continuation of traditional Islamic Madrasas, but they created their own curriculum and education tradition with the passing of centuries.

The Development and Decline of Ottoman Madrasas by: FSTC. Limited
The development of madrasas was greatly influenced by the impact of a strengthened central state authority and the resulting political stability and economic well-being it brought to the society. Toward the end of the sixteenth century the performance of madrasas began gradually to fall below earlier levels for various reasons.

Madrasa Education during the Early Ottoman Period by: FSTC. Limited
The madrasas of the early Ottoman period can be considered as institutions which continued the established educational tradition of the Seljuk Turks but also augmented by the contributions of the Ottomans.

Resources:
FULL ARTICLE: Ottoman Educational Institutions during the Reform Period, by: Prof Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu
Download the full version of this publication in PDF Format. The document includes all references and figures.
PUBLICATION NUMBER: 4057
COPYRIGHT: © FSTC Limited 2003, 2004



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