Mark L. Stein 
Professor of History
 Ettinger 300E
 484-664-3789
Education:
 B. A., History with Certificate in Asian Studies, Northwestern University, 1984
 M. A., History University of Chicago, 1985
 Ph.D. History University of Chicago, 2001
 Teaching Fields:
 Middle East History
 Mediterranean History
 Balkan History
 As an historian of the Middle East I teach a wide variety of courses focused on that world region.  In addition to broad survey courses I offer upper-level courses on topics such as the Arab-Israeli Conflict, the Mongols, Women in the Middle East, and the Ottoman Empire.  In all my courses we will explore the diverse consequences of encounters between states, peoples, and cultures.
My training as an historian was in the social and economic history of the Ottoman Empire, and my first book was a study of seventeenth-century Ottoman administration of that empire's frontier with the Habsburgs in Hungary. My current research builds on that topic, to consider more widely the social, economic, political, and military aspects of the Ottoman-Habsburg frontier. I am also interested in the broader questions of frontier history, particularly when placed in a comparative framework.
 Courses Taught:
 Mediterranean Encounters
 Frontiers in History
 The Crusades
 Rise of Islam
 Modern Middle East
 Mongol Legacy
 Women in the Middle East
 Arab-Israeli Conflict
 Sultans, Harems, and Slaves: The Ottoman Empire
 Spain, Islam, and the Mediterranean World
 The Making of Modern Turkey
 Senior Seminar: Silks, Spices, and World Trade
 Publications:
A Brief History of Turkey (New York: Fact on File, forthcoming).
Guarding the Frontier:  Ottoman Border Forts and Garrisons in Europe (London:  I. B. Tauris, 2007).
 
 “Military Service and Material Gain on the Ottoman-Habsburg Frontier,” in The Frontiers of the Ottoman World:  Proceedings of the British Academy, edited by A.C.S. Peacock, (Oxford:  Oxford University Press, 2010 ).
 
“The Ottoman Empire, France, and Austria-Hungary,” in Encyclopedia of Western Colonialism since 1450, (Detroit:  Macmillan Reference, 2006).
 

