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The Merchants and Their Ciftliks – Dimitar Brakalov and His Agrarian Dilemmas in the 1860s and 1870s

Nikolay Todorov () and Petar Dobrev ()
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Nikolay Todorov: Regional Museum of History, Silistra, Bulgaria
Petar Dobrev: Sofia University 'St. Kliment Ohridski', Bulgaria

Proceedings of the Centre for Economic History Research, 2022, vol. 7, 320-332

Abstract: The present research was provoked by an extremely interesting correspondence between two Bulgarian merchants, Dimitar Brakalov and Hristo Tapchilestov, entirely dedicated to the leasing, management and organization of production in several ciftliks in the Burgas region, on the Black Sea coast. The documents span from the 1860s to the 1870s and are stored in the Bulgarian Historical Archive of the National Library "St. St. Cyril and Methodius". There are a total of 72 letters with the main addressees – Hristo Tapchilestov and Nikola Tapchilestov. Our paper dwells in more detail on the history of the ciftliks in question – in the villages of Atanaskoy and Keleshkoy. The information from the letters was correlated to data extracted from two types of Ottoman archives, which are particularly valuable for the reconstruction of the Ottoman economy in the 19th century – the temettuat and nufus defters. Thanks to these documents, the complete reconstruction of the structure of the ciftliks was possible: quantity of crops, yields, employment of seasonal workers, but also the amount of owned land, farm animals, taxes paid, total annual yield etc. The economic networks that were built around the ciftliks is also outlined. Judging from the data, the estates were quite profitable, strived for capitalist modernization and paid decent wages to the hired labour force. Our archival work showed that the ciftliks Atanaskoy and Keleshkoy were originally owned by high-ranking representatives of the Tanzimat political elite, but also direct relatives of the ruling sultans – Mahmud II and Abdulmejid I. This shows that large estates were considered a profitable investment by the Muslim elite at the time, but also by rich Christian merchants like Brakalov, who started leasing the ciftliks in the 1860s. The researched estates continued to be profitable even after the separation of Bulgaria from the Ottoman Empire in 1878, when Brakalov became their owner, showing the durability of the ciftlik phenomenon.

Keywords: ciftliks; Ottoman Empire; Bulgaria; Burgas; Agrarian question (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: N13 N23 N73 N93 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2022
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