montelatici
Gold Member
- Feb 5, 2014
- 18,686
- 2,104
- 280
Nope, there actually was an Ottoman census of 1905. The details are listed by several corroborating non biased official sources that have it down to minute details. You are a fulla shit cyber Jihadist as usual.The Ottoman census of 1905 flushes all your whiny claims down the toilet.I prefer to call your "undeniable facts" as cherry picking from the documents you post while ignoring other parts of same documents that disprove your "undeniable facts".Got to love how undeniable facts become "small portions". Better yet is how these bozos can't seem find anything but propaganda to address the facts.
Thanks for calling me a bozo.
You cannot present anything from an official source that disproves the factual data presented by the source documentation that I present. Nothing disproves the population surveys, nothing disproves the land ownership etc.
There was no Ottoman census in 1905. Uziel Schmelz's analysis of Ottoman registration data is not a census, it's a made up fantasy that you are using.
The census was undertaken in 1906 and 1907. There were exactly 3980 male Jews and 3903 Female Jews in the Kudus district, according to the census, see page 169.
View attachment 139387
OTTOMAN POPULATION, 1830-1914: Demographic and Social Characteristics, By KEMAL H. KARPAT
CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Jerusalem (After 1291)
Jerusalem (El Quds) is the capital of a sanjak and the seat of a mutasarrif directly dependent on the Sublime Porte. In the administration of the sanjak the mutasarrif is assisted by a council called majlis ida ra; the city has a municipal government (majlis baladiye) presided over by a mayor. The total population is estimated at 66,000. The Turkish census of 1905, which counts only Ottoman subjects, gives these figures: Jews, 45,000; Moslems, 8,000; Orthodox Christians, 6000; Latins, 2500; Armenians, 950; Protestants, 800; Melkites,ú Copts, 150; Abyssinians, 100; Jacobites, 100; Catholic Syrians, 50. During the nineteenth century large suburbs to the north and east have grown up, chiefly for the use of the Jewish colony. These suburbs contain nearly half the present population.
No, there was no 1905 census, as the census documents confirm. It was taken in 1906 and 1907. The Catholic Encyclopedia is a children's book, like the World Book Encyclopedia.