Giaour
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Giaour or Gawur (Turkish: gâvur; Turkish pronunciation: [ɟaˈʋur], /dʒaʊər/, from Persian: گور gaur, Albanian: Kaur), meaning "infidel", is an offensive term, a slur, historically used in the Ottoman Empire for Christians, such as Orthodox Christians in the Balkans (non-Muslims).[1][2] Christian ethnic groups in the Ottoman Empire referred to with the term include Greeks, Armenians, Bulgarians, Serbs and Assyrians among others. It was widely used in defters (tax registries) for Orthodox Christians.[2]
The 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica described the term as follows:
Giaour (a Turkish adaptation of the Persian gdwr or gbr, an infidel), a word used by the Turks to describe all who are not Muslims, with especial reference to Christians. The word, first employed as a term of contempt and reproach, has become so general that in most cases no insult is intended in its use; similarly, in parts of China, the term foreign devil has become void of offence. A strict analogy to giaour is found in the Arabic kafir, or unbeliever, which is so commonly in use as to have become the proper name of peoples and countries.
European representations

- Giaour is the name given to the evil monster of a man in the tale Vathek, written by William Thomas Beckford in French in 1782 and translated into English soon after. The spelling Giaour appears in the French, as well as in the English translation.
- Lord Byron published his poem "The Giaour: A Fragment of a Turkish Tale" in 1813, whose themes revolve around the ideas of love, sex, death, and afterlife in Western Europe and Ottoman Turkey.
- "Le Giaour", a 1832 painting by Ary Scheffer, oil on canvas, Musée de la Vie romantique, Hôtel Scheffer-Renan, Paris
See also
Notes
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References
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- Islam-related slurs
- History of Islam
- Turkish words and phrases
- Ethno-cultural designations
- Christianity in the Ottoman Empire
- Non-Muslims in the Ottoman Empire