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This chapter discusses how Nissim Shamama rose to power in the 1840s and 1850s, a period of rapid transformation in Tunisia and the rest of the Ottoman Empire. The turbulence of these decades also produced shifts in the nature of legal belonging. Like sovereignty, legal belonging was shared between Tunis and Istanbul; in the age of centralization, the division of power became increasingly contested. In Tunisia, the sovereign to whom Jews like the Shamamas could turn for protection was effectively the bey of Tunis. Tracing Nissim's ascension through the ranks of power offers a chance to rewrite the history of citizenship in nineteenth-century Tunisia—not as a story of creation ex nihilo, nor as another example of how modern forms of law pierced the imagined boundary between West and East, but as an account of legal belonging as it emerged in its North African context.
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