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Urban Cultures of Flower Breeding in Ottoman Istanbul
Abstract by Dr. Aleksandar Shopov On Session VI-19  (Urban Natures)

On Friday, December 2 at 4:00 pm

2022 Annual Meeting

Abstract
In the seventeenth century, new varieties of fruits, vegetables, and flowers were created in the city’s many agricultural spaces. During this same period, new genres of writings appeared related to flower-breeding: technical “how-to” manuals, which derived from an earlier tradition of agricultural treatises; encyclopedias of flower varieties created in Istanbul; and biographical dictionaries of Istanbul flower-breeders. Such texts attempt to prescribe note-taking habits, agricultural timelines, and observational techniques related to their propagation. The creation of different shapes, sizes, and colors of flowers are credited to the work of individuals residing in the city and its neighboring towns. What can the texts tell us about the practice of creating new floral varieties? Were such texts an attempt to control the proliferation of new flower varieties and practitioners in the city? What was the relationship between the recorded genealogies of flowers, the prescribed techniques of seeding, and the flower industry in Istanbul? Flowers in this period emerge from the texts as technological or human-made plants rather than things, whose history unfolded not only in Ottoman exchanges with western Europe. Taking flower breeding in Istanbul as a case study for the creation of urban natures, this paper focuses on the formation of discourses about city’s history, urban identities, social belonging, and science and technology.
Discipline
History
Geographic Area
All Middle East
Sub Area
13th-18th Centuries