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Short description: Senior interpreter of the Ottoman government
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Consider adding a transliteration to the Greek in the lead, to aid pronunciation. Should the μέγας be moved a bit later, to where we talk about it sometimes being called the Grand Dragoman?
From the position's inception in 1661 until the outbreak of the Greek Revolution in 1821, the office was occupied by Phanariotes,: I'm not sure this was quite true (the Ghica family don't sound like Phanariots?) and, at any rate, it is much stronger than the framing we have in the body, that almost all subsequent Grand Dragomans of the Porte were of Greek origin.
The phrasing is deliberately chosen in the lede, as the Phanariotes were not just Greeks. As you say, they included families like the Ghica, who were not ethnic Greeks, but were culturally Hellenized and intermarried with the Greek Phanariotes. These are included within the ranks of the Phanariotes as 'Hellenized Balkan Christians'. Constantine ✍ 08:50, 25 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Can we have a citation somewhere to use the word "Greek" in connection with the Ghica? I trust your knowledge here, but can also imagine this being a magnet for the various flavours of nationalistic IP editors who like to flock to Balkan articles. UndercoverClassicistT·C09:30, 25 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]
In the same way, I think it would help to explain who the Phanariots were at some point, and perhaps a touch about their wider importance to the Ottoman Empire.
As such the post was the highest public office available to non-Muslims in the Ottoman Empire.: not really an as such: it doesn't follow from the Dragoman's wide responsibilities that there was no higher office available to non-Muslims. From what I remember, there was quite a delicate balance of power as to which ethno-religious groups held which high offices -- is there something to be said about that here?
We haven't explained what a Grand Vizir was, and I think that's important.
File:Grigore II Ghica.jpg: need to use PD-Art here, as it's watermarked, so clearly this image itself wasn't published 100 years ago. Also needs a US PD tag.
File:Scarlat Callimachi.jpg: this has almost no information as to its provenance (and no US PD tag). Can we get some idea of where it's from, who made it and when it was published?
I'm not sure that File:Stamp of Moldova md412.jpg: here, we could use PD-because to explain that the copyright holder (the Moldovan government) has waived its rights?
Some of the images have no sourcing for their author info (e.g. File:Μαυροκορδάτος ο φιραρής.jpg). For GA, I'm happy to take on trust when it's given, but you might consider tracking down something more authoritative than a Commons editor's word.
File:Reisülküttab.jpg: we have this down as a 2013 publication. None of the source links work, but last I checked, that was long after the end of the Ottoman Empire, so we need to work out which, if any, licence we can use here.
Eliott 1900 is not a scholarly source and is very old -- it is only used twice; any way to swap that out?
On Ottoman-Greek matters, my eternal question is whether Mark Mazower has written anything of relevance -- he has quite a lot to say about the Phanariots in general across his works (I remember reading a few for Kyriakos Pittakis)
He is indeed an excellent scholar, and thanks for reminding me; I will check his book on the Greek Revolution, it may have something relevant. Constantine ✍ 19:10, 25 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Optional for GA, but I would put Hart et al in the bibliography -- I see the logic, but it's odd to treat only one source differently to the others.
This was added by another editor, which is why it is inconsistent both in format and in extent with the others in the list. I am waiting to see whether I can gather enough sources for the brief biographical sketches as you suggested above. May take a while. Constantine ✍ 19:10, 25 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Nice work -- I always enjoy reading your articles and learning something more about topics I thought I was getting a handle on. Spot checks to follow once the above is addressed.