Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

Arrival of the Slave Seller to Constantinople in Collection de costumes civils et militaires, scènes populaires, et vues de l’Asie-Mineure

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Eugenio and Raffaele Fulgenzi (printers, active 1830s)
Smyrna, Ottoman Empire: Fulgenzi & Fils, 1838
Brown University Library, Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection


Costume albums like this one from Ottoman Smyrna reflect the sociopolitical concerns of their original owners. Many of the costume studies and scenes in this compilation portray individuals often encountered in the diverse social landscape of Smyrna, such as a slave merchant and his Christian captives. This topic had significance for American collectors like the Langdon family, who owned an identical print in another album now at Harvard Fine Arts Library. In 1827, Joseph Langdon rescued Garafilia Mohalebi, a Greek girl enslaved in a Muslim household at nine years old following her family’s murder by Ottoman soldiers. Joseph met Garafilia in the Smyrna bazaar and was so moved that he bought and emancipated her, eventually bringing her back to Boston with him. She died at thirteen while attending an Ursuline convent school. This girl’s tragedy inspired written and artistic works that fueled the American abolitionist movement before the Civil War.