IN MEMORIAM
Rifa‘at ‘Ali Abou-El-Haj (1933-2022)
Baki Tezcan
University of California, Davis, CA, USA
Email: btezcan@ucdavis.edu
Born in Jerusalem in 1933, Rifa‘at A. Abou-El-Haj attended the Friends School in
Ramallah from 1949 to 1952, when he immigrated to the United States.
He graduated from Washington and Lee University in 1956 and received his
PhD in History and Oriental Studies at Princeton University in 1963 with a
dissertation entitled “The Reisülküttab and Ottoman Diplomacy at
Karlowitz.” In 1967, Abou-El-Haj published select conclusions from his
dissertation in the Journal of the American Oriental Society.
1
While he was still at graduate school, Abou-El-Haj started teaching at
St. Lawrence University in Canton, New York. In 1964, he moved jobs to Long
Beach State College, which became California State University, Long Beach
(CSULB), in 1972. In the early years of his career, he worked on the period
that immediately followed the Treaty of Karlowitz (1699) and published “The
Formal Closure of the Ottoman Frontier in Europe: 1699-1703.”
2
He also flirted
with psychohistory very briefly in “The Narcissism of Mustafa II (1695-1703):
A Psychohistorical Study.”
3
During the 1970s, his interests shifted to new sociopolitical structures that
arose in the late-seventeenth and eighteenth-century Ottoman world, as evi-
denced by “The Ottoman Vezir and Paşa Households 1683-1703: A Preliminary
Report,”
4
which laid down one of the central arguments in his work: the growth
of a new political elite that challenged the centrality of the sultan and his house-
hold. During this decade, he seems to have grown increasingly frustrated both
with traditional approaches to Ottoman history and with newer approaches
that he found lacking in theoretical grounding. While reviewing the first volume
of Stanford Shaw’s History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey, he wrote:
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Middle East Studies Association of
North America, Inc.
1
Rifa‘at A. Abou-El-Haj, “Ottoman Diplomacy at Karlowitz,” Journal of the American Oriental
Society, 87 (1967): 498-512.
2
Rifa‘at A. Abou-El-Haj, “The Formal Closure of the Ottoman Frontier in Europe: 1699-1703,”
Journal of the American Oriental Society 89 (1969): 467-75.
3
Rifa‘at A. Abou-El-Haj, “The Narcissism of Mustafa II (1695-1703): A Psychohistorical Study,”
Studia Islamica 40 (1974): 115-31.
4
Rifa‘at A. Abou-El-Haj, “The Ottoman Vezir and Paşa Households 1683-1703: A Preliminary
Report,” Journal of the American Oriental Society 94 (1974): 438-47.
Review of Middle East Studies (2022), 55, 301–306
doi:10.1017/rms.2022.13
https://doi.org/10.1017/rms.2022.13 Published online by Cambridge University Press