Influence of Othello Turks In Shakespeare plays, Turkish Othello is a dark enemy and has always been hiding in the background but has never seen it. Although not shown in the drama, the Turks played an important role in Othello: the Turks and the reference to their Muslim / heathen culture show progress and clarify the theme of the tragedy . The Ottoman Empire is the closest Islamic country to Shakespeare Europe and the most dangerous country. The collapse of Constantinople in 1453 told the complete destruction of the old Byzantine Empire and the emergence of a new Ottoman Turkish.
Reading after the colony is concentrated on Ottoman Turkish masterpieces in the play. Shakespeare painted Othello conspiracy from the short story of Gli Hecatommithi (1565) of Giraldi Cinthio but set his play in the context of Venice's struggle against the Ottoman Empire of Cyprus in the 1570s. Eastern Mediterranean islands between the routes. And East Trade Center. Venice had Cyprus from 1470 to 1569, but the Turkish army occupied the island in 1571. In the second half of that year, the Christian Powers Union beat the Turks in a famous levant fight. As a young man, James VI of Scotland (James I of England in 1603) celebrated the fight, fought against 'bttiz' d 'wartt and circumcised Turband Turkes. What Othello states as "Turks" or "Transfiguration of the Turks" caused an intermittent confrontation between European Christian forces and the Islamic Ottoman Empire.
Religion is the theme of Shakespeare Othello. Hatred is born in religion and economy. As the Turks are Muslims, Othello ignored them, further insulted them, and called one of them "a circumcision dog". He is a religious Christian, a war for Christians. The handkerchief event made Othello angry, and anger linked him to the previous Christian or former Muslim faith. Initially, he said he would break Desdemona apart, but later prepared for killing her as a victim. If you notice what you did, he will kill himself because he killed the Turks (he is running a Turkish and he is looking at him as an anti Christian). During the Shakespeare era, Britain was mainly Protestant and Spain was a Catholic country.