Porte
English
Alternative forms
- Ottoman Porte
- Sublime Porte
Etymology
From Middle French porte (“gate”), referring to the gate of the sultan's palace at which justice was administered, ultimately after Ottoman Turkish bāb-i ‘ālī (“high gate”).
Proper noun
Porte
- (now historical) The Ottoman court; (hence), the government of the Ottoman empire. [from 15th c.]
- 1988, Christina Pribićević-Zorić, translating Milorad Pavić, Dictionary of the Khazars, Vintage 1989, p. 24:
- A hired diplomat in Edirne and to the Porte in Constantinople, a military commander in the Austro-Turkish wars, a polyhistor and a learned man.
- 2015, Eugene Rogan, The Fall of the Ottomans, Penguin 2016, p. 19:
- The Ottoman defenders in Edirne (ancient Adrianople, a city in modern Turkey near Greece and Bulgaria) were left surrounded and under siege when the Porte sued for an armistice in early December 1912.
- 1988, Christina Pribićević-Zorić, translating Milorad Pavić, Dictionary of the Khazars, Vintage 1989, p. 24:
German
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