Venue: Trinity Long Room Hub Arts & Humanities Research Institute, Trinity College Dublin
Date: 5-8 November 2025

In association with the Trinity Centre for the Book, supported by Marc and Hala Cochrane, and the Trinity Research Incentive Scheme.

Keynote speakers: Prof. Tülay Artan (Sabancı University), Prof. Konrad Hirschler (Hamburg University)

Convened by: Moya Carey (Chester Beatty, Dublin), Boris Liebrenz (Bibliotheca Arabica, Sächsische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Leipzig), Murat Şiviloğlu (Department of Near and Middle Eastern Studies, Trinity College Dublin)

The Ottoman empire spanned three continents and a vast urban network, inhabited by a cosmopolitan civilian population as well as a political and military elite long steeped in book culture as part of practices of learning, entertainment, and status-making. Both cultural diversity and intellectual engagement are neatly evidenced by reading habits, as told in the material history of book collections across the Ottoman world. Whether private, imperial or institutional in nature, libraries existed in every city, each a potential nexus of academic enquiry and thought, sometimes with a distinct architectural identity of enclosed space for reading, debate, reflection, and competitive self-projection. Books were written in all the languages spoken across this multi-ethnic and multi-faith realm: Turkish, Arabic, Persian, Hebrew, Greek, Syriac, Armenian, Kurdish, Coptic, Latin, Hungarian, Serbian, and more. As Ottoman power and territory expanded (and later contracted), the political transition impacted libraries and intellectual culture all over the Arab world as well as the Ottoman heartland and Ottoman Europe.

The longer history of libraries is one of flux, with books forever moving in and out as new purchases, respectful gifts, personal loans, political confiscations and military loot. Whole collections can mobilise at critical transition-points such as the owner’s death or a significant handover of political power, potentially resulting in complete dispersal into the book market or wholesale absorption into another library, either circulating locally or exporting abroad. In more granular terms, the dynamic and mobile biography of individual books is also told through their evolving materiality, with successive owner interventions confirmed by replacement bindings, re-margined folios, new campaigns of illumination, and phases of inserted paratext. Today, the collective evidence of “past lives” remains documented in the notes added into books, by owners, borrowers, auditors, dealers and above all readers. The systematic cataloguing of this invaluable resource, central to new methodological approaches of book history, has also been taken up with increasing urgency. Data-driven projects such as Bibliotheca Arabica are currently facilitating access to a growing corpus of such material and thus allow for the connection of books with their past owners and readers across modern collections on a global scale.

Download the conference programme.

Image: Coffee house scene (recto) and Persian calligraphy (verso), folio from an Ottoman album (source: Chester Beatty Library, CBL T 439.9)