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Istanbul’s dog days

First loved and then massacred during the days of the Ottoman Empire, stray dogs in modern Turkey still can't find much peace.
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Sultan Mahmud II is known for one of the most ferocious anti-military acts in all of Turkish history. On June 15, 1826, he abolished the Janissaries, the Ottoman Empire’s omnipotent military forces with a long record of revolts against sultans they did not like. In one bold move, some 6,000 Janissaries were killed by new troops loyal to Mahmud, and the rest were exiled. When Mahmud exiled the dogs in Istanbul to one of the Prince Islands, however, the residents of the Ottoman capital rose up in a rare act of civil disobedience, forcing the sultan to bring the dogs back home.

Today, Istanbul is known as a cat city. This image was reinforced earlier this year with the installment of a statue memorializing Tombili, the town cat and feline symbol of the city, in his customary state of repose, as did the documentary “Kedi” (Turkish for “cat”). This summer, however, the dogs struck back with “The Four-Legged Municipality,” an exhibition at the Istanbul Research Institute.

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