Muslim sharia law that was prominent during the Ottoman Empire is family law. This law relates to marriage, children, and divorce. Family law falls under the category of private law in the Ottoman Empire. Family and inheritance law was at the very center of Ottoman law, and thus was least affected by the penetration of foreign law.[1] Family law also had a significant role in establishing the gender roles in Islamic society in the Ottoman Empire. During the Tanzimat Period in the Ottoman Empire with the Empire's new focus on bureaucracy, they began to collect information on the families living under their rule including births, marriages, and deaths.[2]

The Ottoman Law of Family Rights edit

The Ottoman Law of Family Rights is a new codification in Ottoman law that emerged in 1917.[3] This law remained legitimate in Jordan until the year of 1951, and Syria in 1949. It is still valid for Muslim citizens of Israel and Lebanon.[4] This law reestablished family law, specifically in regards to marriage and divorce, children and inheritance, and men and women's roles. One of the main reasons for the creation of the Ottoman Law of Family Rights and a reform of family laws in the Ottoman Empire, was to give women better access to divorce.[5] However, it is argued by scholar Judith Tucker that the Ottoman Law of Family Rights did little to advance women's rights in the Ottoman Empire.[4]

References edit

  1. ^ Hanley, William. "Commercial Law." Speech, Legal History of the Modern Middle East, Florida State University, Tallahassee, September 2016.[verification needed]
  2. ^ Ortayli, Ilber (2010). "Ottoman Family Law and the State in the Nineteenth Century". Studies on Ottoman Transformation. pp. 149–160. doi:10.31826/9781463231767-017. ISBN 978-1-4632-3176-7.
  3. ^ Hanley, William. "Ottoman Family Law." Lecture, Legal History of the Modern Middle East, Florida State University, Tallahassee, October 24, 2016.[verification needed]
  4. ^ a b Tucker, Judith E. (1996). "Revisiting Reform: Women and the Ottoman Law of Family Rights, 1917". The Arab Studies Journal. 4 (2): 4–17. JSTOR 27933698. OCLC 5544907762.
  5. ^ Anderson, James Norman Dalrymple (1959). Islamic Law in the Modern World. New York University Press. p. 26.