Introduction
Since the end of the Cold War – with a turn to history in legal studies and with the imperial turn in historiography – law and empire have become a promising subject for both legal scholars and historians. The less the state's legal unity is taken for granted, the more the relationship between law and empire attracts the attention of researchers. The notion of legal pluralism has come to be seen, especially in the last decade or so, as key to understanding Eurasian polities.Footnote 1 Scholars have examined Islamic empires, in particular, as conglomerates of various institutions,Footnote 2 while Muslims under colonial rule – as well as Muslim minorities in Christian Europe – have become a fascinating object of legal studies.Footnote 3
The Ottoman Empire, one of the longest-lasting Islamic empires in the world, has prompted many studies on the hybridity or flexibility in its legal system. Multiple works have explored such aspects of Ottoman legal pluralism as the Sultan's law versus Islamic law, mainland law versus laws in the tributaries, and imperial law versus local custom.Footnote 4 Not surprisingly, two of the most attractive Ottoman topics in this context are the Capitulations and the non-Muslim communities. Capitulatory extraterritoriality represents a typical case of legal pluralism, with foreigners refusing to comply with the law of the country in which they reside.Footnote 5 No less important is the status of Ottoman non-Muslims, the issue on which the present paper focuses.
Conventional wisdom readily explains away the non-Muslim communities in the Ottoman Empire as being an autonomous institution. Theorists frequently refer to the millet system as a functional (though illiberal) method of non-territorial multi-religious rule.Footnote 6 Yet Ottomanists have long since disputed the existence of such a thing as ‘millet system’.Footnote 7 By taking the early modern institution's persistence for granted, theorists of the millet system effectively juxtapose a Muslim confessional system with Christian (or post-Christian) modernity. Such an assumption can easily degenerate into an Orientalist trope which denies any substantial change in Muslims’ law. When it comes to Ottoman modernization, the millet system – or more broadly, legal pluralism – is an issue to be addressed, not to be presupposed. The Ottoman Empire was among the few Muslim states that remained sovereign throughout the long nineteenth century. Neither colonized nor a minority, Muslim Ottomans engaged in their own legal reforms and legal studies.Footnote 8 They had their own sense of legal unity, or lack thereof, not least with regard to non-Muslims.
Far from being secured by the so-called millet system, the status of non-Muslims provoked much debate in the late Ottoman Empire. The Tanzimat reforms of the mid-nineteenth century engaged in a top-down codification, selectively incorporating indigenous legal traditions. Against the long arm of the modernizing state, non-Muslim subjects of the Sultan had to claim their legal rights, especially when it came to the question of religion. Who defined what was religious in the multi-confessional Ottoman Empire was no simple matter, not least because the Great Powers’ ‘humanitarian’ interventions on behalf of Ottoman Christians turned non-Muslims’ status into an international question.Footnote 9 Western views often prevailed in this age of European hegemony, but Eastern and Western Christians did not necessarily have the same idea of Ottoman law. Living in the Sultan's realm – even after the Greek War of Independence and the establishment of the Kingdom of Greece – the Ottoman Greeks’ own understanding of Ottoman law provides an insight into how modern jurisprudence functioned in a Muslim-majority but multi-religious environment. A case in point is the ‘privileges question’: the dispute between the Sublime Porte and the Ecumenical Patriarchate over the latter's jurisdiction. Greek nationalist historiography tends to see the privileges question – which came to a head first in the 1880s and 1890s and then again in 1909–1911 – as an expression of the ‘Turkish yoke’. In fact, it was a legal issue, reflecting church-state relations in a specifically Ottoman setting.Footnote 10 The privileges question illuminates why and how the Greeks might challenge the Muslim-majority state's legal policy.
In what follows, I examine Greeks’ ideas on their privileges and argue that they were the advocates of legal pluralism avant la lettre. First, I investigate two jurists’ views. Whereas one Greek jurist (Miltiadis Karavokiros) acknowledged the Sultans’ ‘political purpose’ in respecting Christians’ privileges, another (Nikolaos Eleutheriadis) denied Muslims any agency free from Sharia. Alleged incommensurability between the Christian and Islamic law was their common agenda. Second, I compare Greek historians’ views with those of the jurists. Two Greek historians, religiously orientated (Manouil Gedeon) and secular (Pavlos Karolidis) respectively, saw Greek privileges as a sign of good will on the part of the Turks, emphasizing the civilizational gap between Catholic West and Ottoman East. Arguably, historians were less enthusiastic to underscore the alleged incommensurability between Christian and Islamic law. Being a normative expression rather than a neutral description, legal pluralism justified – in the name of religion – Greek jurists’ opposition to the Porte's (modernist) endeavour for legal unity. Contesting as it does the prevailing view of Muslim/non-Muslim relations in law, the privileges question – or the Greek insistence on and Muslim rejection of legal pluralism – helps us to have a nuanced understanding of what is religious in law.
Karavokiros: privileges granted with a Sultan's ‘political purpose’?
Miltiadis Karavokiros (1860s–1928), from Kalymnos in the Dodecanese, settled in Ottoman Istanbul in the 1870s to become a prominent lawyer in the wealthy society of Constantinopolitan Greeks.Footnote 11 Although he has earned little more than passing reference in Ottoman studies, Karavokiros’ works represent the Greeks’ particular approach to Ottoman law at the turn of the twentieth century.
Karavokiros was perhaps most famous as the compiler of a dictionary of Ottoman law published in Turkish in 1894.Footnote 12 At first glance, it may appear that his dictionary simply provided a glossary of Ottoman law. A closer look reveals that Karavokiros did more than just present a neutral description of Ottoman legal terms. First, every entry in his dictionary was accompanied by the French and Greek equivalents – almost a meaningless effort if it was meant for Muslim readers, because few of them read Greek. Second, many entries provided specifically Greek usages in explaining the legal terms in question. To give but one example, the entry vasiyet (testament in French and διαθήκη in Greek) devoted most of its pages to the procedure regarding the Patriarchate, which was, of course, few Muslims’ business.Footnote 13 Karavokiros apparently had Turkish-reading Greeks in his mind. His intention was more manifest in the Greek edition of his dictionary, published twelve years earlier. The Greek edition redirected many entries to one term, δίκαια (rights). Remarkably, Karavokiros allocated nearly one eighth of the total pages to this single entry.Footnote 14 Here Karavokiros catalogued the Ecumenical Patriarchate's rights, which he believed had regulated almost all the spheres of Orthodox Greeks’ life under Ottoman rule. Both in Greek and in Turkish, Karavokiros intentionally if indirectly attempted to elucidate what the Greeks’ ‘age-old’ rights and privileges were.
Many scholars now argue that, in the early modern Ottoman Empire, non-Muslim administration revolved primarily around fiscal concerns, with the prelates held responsible for the loyalty and tax payment of their flock.Footnote 15 By the eighteenth century, the Greek elite had become so intimately integrated in the Ottoman ruling apparatus that the Ecumenical Patriarchate yielded an immense influence in the core areas of the empire.Footnote 16 However, the rights of the Patriarchate fluctuated from time to time, until after the Reform Edict and the Treaty of Paris in 1856, when the religious privileges (imtiyazat-ı mezhebiye) of non-Muslims were guaranteed – or rather invented.Footnote 17 Privileges were consolidated in the early 1860s with written regulations for community administration (often called the millet constitution). Introduced under the strained conditions of the Crimean War (1853–6), religious privileges as a legal institution were a product of bargaining between the Porte, the Great Powers, and non-Muslims.Footnote 18 The Porte sought to check the expansion of what was religious but the non-Muslim communities effectively became ‘states within a state’ in the name of religion.Footnote 19
The Ecumenical Patriarch Joachim III (1878–84 and 1901–12) – widely thought of as the last great Patriarch – recognized these facts.Footnote 20 But Karavokiros was confident of the continuity with the past when he espoused the Greeks’ rights. Under the rubric of δίκαια in his dictionary, Karavokiros enlisted what were bestowed on the Ecumenical Patriarch Joachim II (1860–3 and 1873–8) and other prelates in the mid-nineteenth century. In so doing Karavokiros maintained, anachronistically, that the Greeks’ rights had been acknowledged by all the Sultans beginning with Mehmet II (1444–6 and 1451–81), the Conqueror of Constantinople, who supposedly confirmed the Byzantine rights of the Orthodox prelates. Since then, Karavokiros argued, the Greeks’ rights had been guaranteed by a kind of Constitutional Charters (εἶδος Συνταγματικῶν Χαρτῶν), i.e. the imperial rescripts (berats), including the 1856 Reform Edict.Footnote 21
An expert lawyer in the field, Karavokiros explained Ottoman legal pluralism by giving as an example the law of succession. Only with episcopal permission could Greeks marry, since marriage was a sacrament rather than a civil affair.Footnote 22 This is because, Karavokiros argued, the laws in force pertaining to the Greeks’ private lives were derived from the Basilica laws or the Hexabiblos of Constantine Armenopoulos (1320–ca. 1385, a Byzantine jurist who compiled a wide range of Byzantine legal sources); from Patriarchal and synodical decisions and encyclicals; and from local custom.Footnote 23 Karavokiros’ treatises on testate and intestate succession – written first in Greek and then in French – carefully examined the cases in which either Islamic or Byzantine law was applied according to one's religious affiliation.Footnote 24 Consequently, Karavokiros divided the groups overseen by Ottoman judicial organizations before 1856 into three: the Muslim population; the Greek community with religious privileges; and the communities of foreigners who enjoyed the Capitulations.Footnote 25
Recent studies have discovered many non-Muslims frequenting Sharia courts – despite, or even because of, the clerics’ prohibition – for the sake of their personal interests. Muslim jurists rarely hesitated to give their opinion on Christians’ personal status because, in their view, Sharia as God's order was universally applicable to all mankind.Footnote 26 Meanwhile, in the eighteenth century, secular Byzantine law as compiled in Hexabiblos became the ‘official’ code of the Great Church, endorsing the lay power's influence over the Christians’ lives.Footnote 27 The lines of demarcation between the Islamic and Christian law, on the one hand, and between the imperial and church laws, on the other, were often blurred. But Karavokiros believed that religious affiliation had been and was the most basic marker in Ottoman law. He went so far as to openly criticize İbrahim Hakkı (1863–1918), a qualified legal counsellor at the Sublime Porte and future Grand Vizier.Footnote 28 İbrahim Hakkı had observed – almost in passing – in his administrative law textbook that non-Muslims’ testaments not contradictory to Sharia became valid upon the prelates’ approval.Footnote 29 Karavokiros regarded this statement as a sign of Muslim aggression against the Greeks’ legitimate rights. From his point of view, there was no meaning left for the Patriarchate's privileges if the Greeks’ testaments were valid only when they conformed to Sharia. Islamic and Church law were so different from each other – so Karavokiros’ argument went – that the Sultan and the Porte had repeatedly announced the validity of church law pertaining to the Greeks when it came to inheritance and guaranteed their personal status as religiously determined.Footnote 30
Karavokiros’ otherwise religiously based theory of Ottoman law was, however, conditioned by the secularization that accompanied the 1862 General Regulations (Εθνικοί Κανονισμοί) – pseudo-constitutional charters for Orthodox Christians. Composed after the 1856 Reform Edict, the Regulations transformed the Orthodox community as part of the overall restructuring of church-state relations in the Ottoman Empire. General Regulations – to the dismay of conservative clerics – admitted laymen in the administration of the Great Church, thus secularizing Greek church-state relations in the Ottoman Empire.Footnote 31 Having recognized the fundamental changes in the 1850s–60s, Karavokiros had to adapt to the shifting ground for interpreting Ottoman law, which was no longer strictly religious in nature.Footnote 32
Accordingly, Karavokiros evaluated the Sultan's agency in respecting the Greeks’ privileges. He contended that the Greeks’ rights consisted of two categories: those established before and those bestowed after 1453. In so doing, he highlighted the ‘political purpose’ (πολιτικὸς σκοπός), by virtue of which Mehmet II supposedly confirmed the prelates’ established rights.Footnote 33 Added to these after 1453 were the political rights bestowed and guaranteed by the Ottoman Sultans.Footnote 34 Karavokiros’ thesis not only appreciated the Sultan's initiative in 1453 but also helped accommodate the state reforms after 1856 in the Greek narrative of their rights and privileges. In Karavokiros’ opinion, Islamic and Byzantine law had coexisted throughout Ottoman history, but it was the Sultan's initiative that ultimately regulated the Muslim-Christian relationship in law. Karavokiros continued to argue in his later works that the Sultan had acted with a political purpose.Footnote 35
In the last quarter of the nineteenth century, the ‘golden age of Greek capital,’ the Patriarchate's ecumenism and the despotic but reforming Sultan Abdülhamit II (1876–1909)'s Pan-Islamism played complementary roles.Footnote 36 Karavokiros’ view suited the Hamidian regime that propagated religion as a pillar of Sultan's authoritarian rule by law. Karavokiros accepted the Ottoman reform, gave no less priority to imperial rescripts than Sharia, and thus celebrated the legal pluralism as established by virtue of Sultan's political purpose.Footnote 37 Not discriminatory against Islam and Muslims, Karavokiros’ version of legal pluralism allowed him to dedicate his treatise to the Grand Vizier, in which Karavokiros defined the Ottoman case as one variant of legal pluralism in world history.Footnote 38 Karavokiros’ idea was a legal expression of the Greek elite's accommodation of Ottoman modernity – or what Greek historiography calls Helleno-Ottomanism.Footnote 39
In sum, Karavokiros found an essential difference between the Islamic and Christian law but deemed the Sultan's political purpose as no less important a source of law than Islamic precepts. Amidst the first round of privileges question in the 1880s–90s, Karavokiros’ expert view, often written for the Patriarchate's official journal, Ekklisiastiki Alitheia, must have been highly valued among the Ottoman Greek elite. As if to endorse his authority, Karavokiros alone signed a report officially commissioned by the Patriarchate to identify the Greeks’ privileges regarding inheritance.Footnote 40 Semi-officially representing the Patriarchate, Karavokiros endeavoured to convince Muslim and Greek decision-makers alike. Nevertheless, the privileges question – or the question how to react the Porte's attempt at legal unity – split the Orthodox community, which was already stricken with the antagonism between the supporters of Patriarch Joachim III (Joachimists) and their opponents (anti-Joachimists).Footnote 41 Not free from intra-communal politics – which continued to hurt the Great Church until the end of empire – Karavokiros’ thesis eventually invited criticism from among his fellow Greeks.
Eleutheriadis: privileges ordered by Sharia?
In 1909, when the Ottomans were experiencing a reshuffling of power, discourse, and legitimacy following the Young Turk Revolution, Nikolaos Eleutheriadis (1867–1943) compiled the articles he had written since 1903 and published them as a book in Greek, with the title The Privileges of the Ecumenical Patriarchate.Footnote 42 A native of Lesbos but with a legal education in Athens and further abroad, Eleutheriadis is primarily remembered as an adversary of the Young Turks. He was, but his book was also a criticism of Karavokiros.
Eleutheriadis began his argument with the unexpected proclamation that Christianity had developed thanks to the Aryan traits of secular European peoples, while Judaism and Islam had remained static because of their Semitic origins.Footnote 43 European and Islamic law were so different from each other that European legal principles were inapplicable in the East.Footnote 44 Islam ordered a peculiar relationship between the Muslims and Christians. The Covenant of Muhammad with the monks of Mount Sinai and the Pact of Umar with the Patriarch of Jerusalem (both allegedly made in the seventh century) determined how non-Muslims should be treated under Muslim domination. Even though he knew of the two documents’ dubious authenticity, Eleutheriadis insisted that the right to dissolve these divinely prescribed ahdnames was at no Muslim ruler's discretion – because they formed part of Islamic law.Footnote 45 Whether coming from outside or residing in the ruler's territory, non-Muslims were to be treated according to Sharia; hence the resemblance of religious privileges to foreigners’ privileges. While the Capitulations allowed extraterritorial consular jurisdiction, berats accorded the Patriarchs ecclesiastical jurisdiction.Footnote 46 In any case – so Eleutheriadis’ argument went – where Christians and Muslims coexisted, legal pluralism was unavoidable, a fact testified to by administration pertaining to Muslims in the European colonies.Footnote 47
As discussed above, the Patriarchate's religious privileges represented a typical case of invented tradition on the part of the Greeks, but Eleutheriadis was intransigent in maintaining his strictly religious theory of Ottoman law. Inevitably, he had to deny the fact that Ottoman law and administration continued to evolve. Static law in a theocratic empire as it was, there was no chance of changing Ottoman law, according to Eleutheriadis. Neither the Gülhane Edict in 1839, the Reform Edict in 1856, nor the Constitution (Kanun-ı Esasi) in 1876 had altered the essence of Ottoman law.Footnote 48 Notwithstanding the superficial Europeanization, the Ottoman state remained inherently Islamic. Regardless of the appearance of legal dualism (δινομία), in fact Sharia was omnipotent and always superior to Sultan's law (kanun or nizam).Footnote 49
Eleutheriadis was not shy to instruct Muslims what Islam was and should be. Alluding to Muslim jurists’ opinions, especially those of Abū Ḥanīfa (699–767) – the eponymous founder of the Hanafi school of Sunni jurisprudence, to which many Ottomans belonged as the empire's ‘official’ doctrine – Eleutheriadis underscored the inseparability of church and state in Islam. As a Muslim sovereign, Mehmet II could not act but upon Sharia, which was the Constitution (Σύνταγμα) of any Muslim polity. Privileges had not been granted with some political purpose; they were predetermined religiously in the theocratic Ottoman Empire.Footnote 50 There was no continuity from the Byzantine Golden Bulls to Ottoman berats because Christian and Islamic law were incommensurable.Footnote 51
Eleutheriadis must have known that his thesis of a static Ottoman law was erroneous. In 1896, he paid due respect to the Ottoman school of modern legal studies.Footnote 52 Eleutheriadis’ Turkish-Greek dictionary for Greek high school students seemed less obsessed with Greek interests than Karavokiros’.Footnote 53 In his study of immovable property published in 1903, Eleutheriadis did not exclude the prospects for change in Ottoman law.Footnote 54 He even attributed the Greeks’ rights to ‘the magnanimity and munificence’ of the Ottoman Sultans.Footnote 55 In his early days, Eleutheriadis had discussed such matters in a way not dissimilar to Karavokiros, but, in his 1909 book, he had become a theorist of static theocracy who denied Mehmet II any agency free from Islamic precepts. Eleutheriadis’ entirely religious theory of Ottoman law resulted in an inclusive claim of Greek privileges, covering judicial, educational, and even administrative spheres.Footnote 56
Eleutheriadis’ theory was not only defiant of Muslims but also subversive of the Greek establishment that had usually sought a compromise with the Muslim elite. He explicitly disapproved of the ideas of Karavokiros and George Young, compiler of Corps de droit ottoman, an influential companion to Ottoman law.Footnote 57 Eleutheriadis’ audacity did not escape the attention of the Greek public.Footnote 58 Eleutheriadis in 1909 anticipated a different type of audience than the one Karavokiros had appealed to in the 1880s and 1890s. In the second round of privileges question in 1909–11, Greeks witnessed a new phase of Ottomanism. As part of a long process that aimed at the rule of law, Muslims demanded a limitation (if not the abolition) of religious privileges – as well as the sultanic authority – for the sake of civic constitutionalism. Meanwhile, Greek politicians of middle-class origin resorted to ‘religious’ privileges to defend their socio-economic interests.Footnote 59 Eleutheriadis’ theory provided the Greeks with a sweeping but functional answer to the challenge: Ottoman law was uniquely Islamic since the Muslims were essentially religious. Ottoman constitutionalism was doomed to failure because of unalterable Sharia – the Constitution of any Islamic state which was nothing but an ecclesia of Muslims. In an age of parliamentary politics under a weak Sultan who styled himself a constitutional monarch, Eleutheriadis rejected Sultan's political purpose. Only with privileges could Christians be exempted from being subject to ‘barbarous’ Islamic law, according to Eleutheriadis. His theory may have found support among his fellow Greeks,Footnote 60 but few Muslims agreed with this peculiarly Greek view of Ottoman law.
Religious privileges in history, legal pluralism in context
Greeks on the two shores of the Aegean had conflicting views on Ottoman law. In Greece, a predominantly Orthodox state separated from the Ottoman Empire, few bothered to study Ottoman law. Jurists in Greece treated the Ottomans as barbarians par excellence, denying the benefit of droit public européen to this Islamic empire.Footnote 61 Ottoman Greeks took Ottoman law seriously, but jurisprudence was not the only method through which to defend the Greeks’ rights. While jurists were preoccupied with determining the essence of Ottoman law, historians were willing to understand the Greeks’ status in the Ottoman Empire in context.
An eminent church historian and the editor in chief of the Patriarchate's official journal, Ekklisiastiki Alitheia, Manouil Gedeon (1851–1943) presented his study on privileges to his mentor, Patriarch Joachim III. Gedeon examined the relations between the prelates and laymen, on the one hand, and between the church and state, on the other. In his argument on the limits of Byzantine law to ecclesiastical law, Gedeon praised the Ottoman Sultans for their respect for the Great Church. All the more so since the Roman/Byzantine emperors had carried out persecutions and iconoclasm, and the Venetians had routinely attacked the rights of the Greeks.Footnote 62 Gedeon even attributed the expansion of the Ecumenical Patriarchate's jurisdiction – namely, its incorporation of Slavic dioceses and its supremacy over the other Eastern churches – to the Sultan's initiatives.Footnote 63 Gedeon referred both to Islamic precepts and to the Sultan's benevolence – in a manner reminiscent of Karavokiros – but was less interested in defining the source(s) of Ottoman law, unitary or plural. Nor did he inquire into the Capitulations. To set the Orthodox Christians and their Western Catholic rivals in the same category was not Gedeon's business – albeit for the defence of privileges. Despite – or rather, because of – his devotion to Orthodox Christianity, Gedeon found the Byzantine and Ottoman law commensurable, at least to some extent.
In the late nineteenth century, in addition to Ottoman reforms, the rise of the bourgeoisie and of secular nationalism challenged the traditional authority of the clergy. Averse to both the bourgeoise and nationalism, Gedeon clung to what he considered the ideal of the ecclesia prior to 1862 General Regulations. On the one hand, he condemned the ‘ethno-phyletic’ Bulgarians for introducing a schism in the otherwise ecumenical Orthodox Church by founding an ethnic church of their own, the Exarchate, in 1870. On the other, he lamented the deplorable state of Patriarchate due to the 1862 General Regulations, which he believed were the product of influential Galata bankers’ initiatives.Footnote 64 Gedeon illustrated the symbiosis between the Sultans and Patriarchs to commemorate the (already lost) ideal of ecclesia. The Great Church should be immune from lay power, be it Byzantine or Ottoman, not to mention Catholic. Ottoman Sultans since Mehmet II had respected this rule.Footnote 65 But Gedeon's position was precarious. The Ecumenical Patriarchate since the mid-nineteenth-century had been sustained by Galata bankers’ money. The Joachimists – to whom Gedeon adhered – were conciliatory to the non-Greek elements.Footnote 66 He may have been a campaigner for the losing side, but Gedeon offered an alternative view of Ottoman law in relation to the privileges of Greeks.
Akin to Gedeon's argument were the views of Pavlos Karolidis (1849–1930), a renowned professor of history at the University of Athens. Karolidis referred to the similarity between the Capitulations and religious privileges but did so in support of the Turks who were disgusted by the foreigners’ abuses of their privileges.Footnote 67 As a Turkish- speaker from Cappadocia, Karolidis was aware of the reality of multi-religious Ottoman East. At a time when Athens’ irredentism challenged Constantinople's ecumenism, Joachim III embodied the Patriarchate's alliance with the Porte to defend their common tradition of universal rule.Footnote 68 It was no coincidence that Cappadocians like Karolidis lent their support to the Joachimists.Footnote 69
At the same time, Karolidis was also an intellectual heir to Constantine Paparrigopoulos (1815–91), the founder of modern Greek historiography, who had endeavoured to prove the Greek nation's continuity from antiquity. Synthesizing the Hellenic and Ottoman Greek approaches to history, Karolidis wanted to promote harmonious relations between Greeks and Turks. Despite Eleutheriadis’ claim to the contrary,Footnote 70 Karolidis did not set out to prove the alleged incommensurability between the European and Ottoman law. Rather, he appreciated – as Karavokiros and Gedeon did – Mehmet II's high regard for Greek privileges as derived from both his pragmatism and Islamic precepts.Footnote 71
In sum, Greek historians, both religious and secular, had different methods and vocabularies in defending their rights than their jurist compatriots. Historians were not an isolated case. Uncomfortable with the dichotomy of civilized West versus barbarous East, many Orthodox Greeks preferred the autonomy of the East to subjugation to the West. Nevertheless, the jurists’ shared belief was that Greeks could not live securely without privileges and that privileges could not be guaranteed without legal pluralism. Similarity between the Capitulations and religious privileges – originating as they did in an alleged incommensurability between the Christian and Islamic law – formed the kernel of Greek jurists’ theories. In this way of thinking, Greek jurists followed the dominant understanding of law in Europe. European jurists usually divided Ottoman law into two mutually exclusive elements, namely, Muslim and non-Muslim law.Footnote 72 Europeans regarded a set of privileges – foreigners’ privileges by virtue of the Capitulations, religious privileges of Christian churches, and the territorial autonomy of ‘privileged’ provinces – as the working institutions for Christian protection in an Islamic state.Footnote 73 It is no coincidence that Greeks counted in their list of privileges the autonomy of the Aegean islands.Footnote 74
This does not mean that Greek jurists always imitated their European masters. As specialists in private law – Karavokiros in the law of succession and Eleutheriadis in the law of immovable property – the two Greek jurists were responding to the practical demands in Ottoman Greek society. Frequently quoting European authors, while at the same time boasting their first-hand knowledge of what was Ottoman-Islamic, Karavokiros and Eleutheriadis were proud of their jurisprudence as distinguished from, if not superior to, its counterparts in the distant West and the Kingdom of Greece.Footnote 75
Being indigenous did not necessarily preclude conflict. On the contrary, Greek jurists often disagreed with their Muslim colleagues. Muslims could hardly welcome the non-Muslims’ privileges in the name of religion, not least because they contradicted the Ottoman pursuit of equality – which was introduced, as a prerequisite of becoming a modern state, at the expense of the Muslims’ traditional superiority.Footnote 76 The bone of contention was why and how the Greeks should be privileged. Significantly, neither Muslims nor Greeks discussed the millet system on this occasion. The question was who defined what was religious in Ottoman law – or in other words, whether Ottoman law was (modernly) unitary or (religiously) plural. Muslim jurists reluctantly accepted religious privileges as an Ottoman expression of the liberal principle of religious freedom.Footnote 77 They believed that, as in other civilized states, the Ottomans as a sovereign nation must have legal unity irrespective of religion. Greeks advocated legal pluralism in the name of religion, which they believed had been an institutional guarantee in an Islamic empire. Asymmetrical as their assumptions were, Muslims and Greeks continued to contest each other until the very end of the empire.
Fall of empire, end of Ottoman Greek jurisprudence
In the final years of the empire, Ottoman Greeks were increasingly affected by nationalism, but not all of them surrendered to Athens’ irredentism. With the Bulgarian question far from settled as late as the decade of 1910,Footnote 78 Gedeon – who had praised the Ottoman Sultans for having safeguarded the Orthodox Greeks’ privileges – was less opposed to the Young Turks than he was to the Slavs. For pious Greeks, Muslims sometimes appeared as a lesser evil than the ‘schismatic’ Bulgarians. It is not surprising that Karolidis – an Ottoman parliamentary deputy from 1908 – tried to defend the Greeks’ rights in alliance with the Committee of Union and Progress (CUP), a new decision-maker in Ottoman politics. He believed that only in cooperation with the strongest player among the Turks could the Greeks prosper.Footnote 79 Despite the nationalist discourses claiming the contrary, pro-CUP Greeks were anything but exceptional.Footnote 80
Caught between the establishment and the newly emerging middle-class activists in the Orthodox community, Karavokiros oscillated after 1908. In his new book on the rights and privileges of the Patriarchate, published in 1913 in Greek, Karavokiros referred to the Covenant of Muhammad and the Pact of Umar (which he had previously neglected) while avoiding mention of Mehmet II's political purpose (which he had championed before).Footnote 81 However, Karavokiros returned to his initial thesis when it came to Mehmet II's political purpose in his publications after 1914.Footnote 82 The state's law had been, he argued, authentic along with Sharia in the Ottoman Empire and changed over time. ‘In view of the multiple laws valid in Turkey’ (ἐν Τουρκίᾳ ἰσχυόντων πολλῶν καὶ ποικίλων νόμων), one needs to study the history of Ottoman justice.Footnote 83 Karavokiros did not think that the difference between the Western and Eastern law was insurmountable. He studied the Ottoman case as one variant of judicial systems in the world, together with the Jewish, Egyptian, Greek, Roman, French, and British examples.Footnote 84 Significantly, Karavokiros touched on the diversity of privileges granted to various non-Muslim communities, including the Armenians, Catholics, and Jews. This diversity stemmed from the different content and backgrounds of the various berats,Footnote 85 a fact difficult to explain from Eleutheriadis’ essentialist approach. Moreover, in his study on the Capitulations in 1915, Karavokiros sought to bring out the continuity in foreigners’ privileges from the Byzantine to Ottoman times. Implicitly departing from the idea of an essential difference between Christian and Islamic law, Karavokiros defied Eleutheriadis’ theory of discontinuity from the Byzantium to the Ottomans. In addition, Karavokiros gave a sympathetically overview of the Ottoman quest for reciprocity with the West that had led to the unilateral abolition of the Capitulations in 1914.Footnote 86
The Balkan Wars (1912–13), World War I (1914–18), and the Turkish War of Independence (1919–22) fundamentally altered the Greeks’ fate in the (former) Ottoman lands, bringing about a prolonged end to the Greek elite's Ottoman life. In those years – just as he had done under the Hamidian despotism – Karavokiros presented a theory of Ottoman law that might find favour with both his fellow Greeks and Muslim Turks. As if to normalize the field, Karavokiros’ comparative succession law, published in 1915 in Greek, investigated the issue from an unusually impartial perspective, placing Ottoman law in context and giving it its due in history.Footnote 87 Appreciating legal pluralism as a norm in the East – as opposed to legal unity as a modern principle – Karavokiros espoused the autonomy of the East, which had been sustained by the continuity from Byzantine to Ottoman law. Karavokiros’ studies in the war years represented one of the highest achievements of Ottoman Greek jurisprudence.
Unfortunately for Karavokiros, his enterprise did not prevent the Porte from abolishing the non-Muslims’ privileges. In 1917, the Decree on family rights (Hukuk-ı aile kararnamesi) deprived the Orthodox Church of its rights over the Greeks’ personal status.Footnote 88 Muslims were so antipathetic to non-Muslims’ privileges that the Greeks’ rights – indeed their very existence – became a prey to the Turks’ project of national unity. Muslims attempted to create a ‘National Economy’ (Milli İktisat) of their own at the expense of Greeks.Footnote 89 Muslim resentment of Greeks was exacerbated by the Greek invasion of Anatolia after 1919. With the Greek army defeated, Orthodox Christians in Turkey were, with a few exceptions, exchanged with the Muslims in Greece by the Treaty of Lausanne in 1923. The Ecumenical Patriarchate narrowly escaped removal from Constantinople and the remaining Greeks became a legal minority. Worse still, the interwar minority protection regime – which was supposed to guarantee the rights of Greeks in place of the abolished privileges – soon proved to be a mere scrap of paper.Footnote 90 Karavokiros stayed in Istanbul until 1926, while Gedeon had left for Athens in 1921. Karolidis departed Ottoman territory as early as 1912, after the outbreak of the first Balkan War, of which he was a fervent opponent. Until his death in 1930, he preserved his pro-Turkish attitude. Karolidis, Gedeon, and Karavokiros seemed to remain loyal to what they believed to be the East's tradition: multi-religious imperium in the Byzantine/Ottoman ecumene.
Eleutheriadis, by contrast, increasingly became a Greek nationalist. In his Study of Islamic Law, a collection of essays published in Greek in 1912, he appeared more Hellenic than Ottoman. Eleutheriadis described the Ottoman Greeks as a mere object of Athens’ policy rather than a subject in themselves; saw the fanatically oppressive Turks as dominating over their Greek victims;Footnote 91 and ignored Sultan Mehmet II's political purpose.Footnote 92 Eleutheriadis called attention to the international character of non-Muslims’ privileges while at the same time neglecting the Ottoman Constitution or Muslim constitutionalism at large. This meant nothing short of denying Ottoman sovereignty vis-à-vis the (Christian) international society.Footnote 93 From Eleutheriadis’ viewpoint, Christians’ dual privileges of the church and as foreigners trumped any Islamic state's rights.
After the Balkan Wars, in the New Territories of Greece in Macedonia and Crete – newly conquered from the Ottomans – land tenure and related legal issues were so pressing that knowledge of Ottoman law was in great demand.Footnote 94 Eleutheriadis benefited from his fame as a specialist in Ottoman law and offered legal opinions on such issues as the waqfs and the ownership and usufruct of lands.Footnote 95 He spared no effort in legitimizing Greece's policy toward its Muslim subjects with a deliberate interpretation of treaties and laws for the benefit of Orthodox Greeks. According to Eleutheriadis, the alleged inseparability of church and state in Islam justified the privileges of Greeks in the Ottoman Empire, while ostensibly secular Greece had no obligation to respect Islamic institutions – even though the Orthodox Church remained highly influential in Greece.Footnote 96 Eleutheriadis insisted that the Ottomans had to guarantee Christian institutions, but the Greeks were free to transform the waqfs as they pleased. This was because, as he put it:
an Islamic State, which, as Church, composes religious environment, is not able to include Christians in this religious environment and leaves them outside the Church of Islam, being obliged to allow them codifying their internal relationship in accordance with their manners, customs and especially their laws. But a European State is completely different from Church and has purely secular power.Footnote 97
The status of Greece's Muslim citizens must be determined ‘from the viewpoints of international law and the European understanding of law in general’. One needed not – indeed, should not – interpret it from Islamic viewpoints.Footnote 98 Frankly Eurocentric, Eleutheriadis’ version of legal pluralism served the Christian interest at the expense of Muslims, whether in the Ottoman Empire, Greece, or international society at large.
Conclusion
Ottoman Greek scholarly opinion was far from uniform when it came to Ottoman law. Jurists and historians had different ideas. Karolidis extolled the tradition of coexistence between Greeks and Turks. A believer in the divinely prescribed truth of Orthodox Christianity, Gedeon advocated the immutable privileges of the Church that must be free from state intervention, be it Byzantine or Ottoman. Both historians described the Greeks’ privileges as a sign of good will on the part of the Turks. In their opinion, civilizational gap between the Catholic West and Ottoman East ordered the Orthodox Greeks and Muslim Turks to unite against their common enemy, the Europeans. But Greek historians rarely won the sympathy of Muslims, not least because of their insistence on the privileges of the Patriarchate; yet little could infuriate the Ottoman Muslims more than the Greeks of their own lands turning Eurocentric. Eleutheriadis was not only Eurocentric but racist, as demonstrated by his Aryanist approach to Greek prehistory.Footnote 99 Insisting on the inseparability of church and state in Islam, he declared that there was no constitution but Sharia in an Islamic empire which was nothing but an ecclesia of Muslims. Eleutheriadis denied Muslims any agency free from Islamic precepts. No wonder his idea of static Islamic law alienated the Muslim public. More open to dialogue with Muslims was Karavokiros’ thesis. He paid due respect to Ottoman reforms and appreciated the Sultan's rescripts as the empire's constitutional texts. Still, Karavokiros held firm in his belief that church law was an integral part of Ottoman rule so long as it concerned the Sultan's Orthodox subjects. Jurists’ shared focus on private law, especially personal status law, reflected the Greeks’ particular interest that necessitated legal pluralism. Marriage, succession, and inheritance had an economic as well as religious meaning in the world of the Greek bourgeoisie, where the family ties supplied the cultural and social capital necessary for success. Greeks needed a jurisprudence that safeguards their wealth and status in the name of religion. Offering a peculiarly Greek understanding of Ottoman law, Greek jurists had a role to play even after – or rather, precisely because of – the emergence of Muslim jurists who represented the state's interest in law.Footnote 100 Insisting on the allegedly fundamental difference between the Christian and Islamic law, Greek jurists effectively denied the Porte its sovereign right to legal unity when they demanded religious privileges – although Karavokiros introduced some nuances by emphasizing what he argued had been the Sultan's political purpose.
The Greeks lost their privileges with the imperial collapse, but the legacy of Ottoman Greek jurisprudence is still alive. A conventional understanding of the millet system reiterates what Karavokiros and Eleutheriadis had argued in the late Ottoman period. It is interesting that two articles in the same issue of the same journal – which addresses ‘La culture juridique dans les Balkans’ – take Ottoman legal pluralism for granted, while each adheres to the different understanding of Ottoman law represented by Karavokiros and Eleutheriadis respectively.Footnote 101 Whether they faithfully describe the legal reality is another matter. Law has never been static or neutral; least of all in an age of Western hegemony when the notorious ‘standard of civilization’ was predominant. Few Europeans recognized the Muslims’ ability to modernize their law.Footnote 102 Many Greek jurists followed suit. In the Ottoman Empire as in many parts of the world, law was a battlefield where the diverging parties fought one another. Given that legal pluralism functioned as a normative category rather than a neutral description, we need to examine the concepts used by contemporary actors – in this case, privileges – in context.Footnote 103 Greek views were not so much an objective representation of Ottoman law as a subjective argument for their vested interest in the name of religion. When placed in its proper context and history, the privileges question and the Greek involvement with Ottoman law provide an insight into what we now (perhaps too readily) call legal pluralism.
In conclusion, Greek jurists’ views reveal the peculiarly Ottoman background of Muslim-Christian relationship in terms of modern law. One might ask: to what extent was the Greek case representative of the entanglement of modern jurisprudence with Islam? What did Greeks have in common with their counterparts in other multi-religious empires? To answer these questions, we need further comparative studies that shed light on the variety of ways in which law and empire interacted in modern times.Footnote 104
Nobuyoshi Fujinami is a professor at the Tsuda University in Japan. Originally trained as an Ottomanist, he is currently interested in the early twentieth-century Eastern Mediterranean as a forum for legal and intellectual interaction. He is the author of The Ottomans and Constitutionalism: Politics, Religion, and Communities in the Young Turk Revolution (Nagoya, 2011, in Japanese). His recent articles include ‘The Ottoman Empire and International Law’, in Oxford Bibliographies in International Law (New York, 2021) and ‘Defining Religion in a State that wasn't: Autonomous Crete and the Question of Post-Ottoman Millet System’, Journal of Church and State 63 (2021).