Professor Kynn smiling in front of blooming tree in spring
Assistant Professor
History
International Studies
Office
Ebenezer D. Bassett Hall
216-05
Tuesday
1:00 pm - 3:00 pm
Wednesday
10:00 am - 12:00 pm
Thursday
1:00 pm - 3:00 pm
Or by appointment
Biography

Tyler Kynn is an Assistant Professor of History at 91精品 Connecticut State University. Tyler's research explores the hajj in the early modern world, examining both narrative and archival material related to questions of Ottoman sovereignty and power in the Hijaz. Their current book project is entitled A Season for Empire: The Hajj in the Early Modern World. Tyler is also one of the co-creators of  , a classroom tool and digital simulation of the seventeenth-century hajj journey coded via the Twine platform. A sequel to this educational game is entitled and is currently released as a free early access demo on Steam. Tyler's research interests includes the history of the Islamic World, the Ottoman Empire, early modern empires, sovereignty, mobility, identity formation, gender and power, and the intersection of digital history and gaming.

Tyler Kynn is also the Coordinator for the new Game Studies minor.

Tyler Kynn is also the campus advisor for the Critical Language Scholarship Program through the US State Department  


 

Education
History
Yale University
2020
History
91精品 European University
2014
History
University of Minnesota: Twin Cities
2012
Areas of Expertise

Ottoman Empire, Islamic World, Histories of Mobility, Early Modern World, Digital History, Historical Game Studies

Publications, Research & Presentations

Current Book Project:

A Season for Empire: The Hajj in the Early Modern World [Forthcoming]

Articles: 

鈥淧irates and Pilgrims: The Plunder of the Ganj-i Sawai, the Hajj, and a Mughal Captain鈥檚 Perspective,鈥 Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient (JEHSO). (March, 2021)

鈥淒igital Storytelling with Twine and Teaching Ottoman History: The Hajj Trail,鈥 in the Research Notes portion of the Journal of the Ottoman and Turkish Studies Association (JOTSA) special issue on 鈥楧igital Ottoman Studies鈥

鈥淎 Digital Imagination of the Road to Mecca: Time, Digital Distance, and Game Design,鈥 in the International Journal of Islamic Architecture (IJIA) for their special issue 鈥淭he Urgency of the Digital.鈥 [Summer 2025]

Book Chapters:

鈥淭he Indians of Ottoman Jerusalem鈥 in an edited volume entitled Naseej: Life-weavings of Palestine, eds. Arpan Roy and Noura Salahaldeen, (London: Pluto Press, 2025).

Book Reviews:

Book review on Lale Can鈥檚 Spiritual Subjects in The Middle Ground Journal: World History and Global Studies. (Fall 2022).

Selected Invited Talks:

University of Utah, 鈥淭he Hajj Trail: Imagining the Ottoman World,鈥 as one of the two invited speakers for Gaming the Middle East: History and Humanists in the Gaming Industry, (April 16, 2024).

Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, "Along the Virtual Road to Mecca: Imagining the Ottoman World in Digital Spaces," (May 31, 2023).

Oxford University, Indian Ocean in the Age of Empire Speaker Series, (Feb. 14, 2023), 鈥淭he Seasonality of Ottoman Imperial Power: Mecca, Medina, and the Sultan鈥檚 Purse,鈥 Online.

Stanford University, Center for Spatial and Textual Analysis, (May 17, 2022), 鈥淥n the Road to Mecca: Simulating the Ottoman Hajj鈥, at CESTA Seminar Series.

Harvard University, the Center for Middle Eastern Studies (May 3rd 2019), 鈥淏etween Empire and Sacred Space: Mecca as a Global Space in the Early Modern World,鈥 at the Mecca: The Lived City Symposium.

 

In the Media.

Recorded Interview with Digital Ottoman Studies Talks: 鈥淭yler Kynn 鈥 Game Studies and Ottoman History鈥 鈥 interviewed by Ay艧e H眉meyra Demirci 鈥 [Dec. 27, 2024] 

Ottoman History Podcast Interview, March 2023, "On the Hajj Trail,"

The Economist: Books and Arts Section, 鈥淕aming the haj, from the comfort of home鈥 [The Economist, 7/7/2022] - Interviewed for the Hajj Trail project

Memberships & Affiliations

Middle East Studies Association

Courses Taught

Sample Courses Taught:
HIST 100: Piracy and World History
HIST 100: Sweet Addictions: Coffee, Tea, and Sugar in World History
HIST 100: Animals and World History
HIST 291: The Modern Middle East
HIST 295: The Ottomans: Islam and Empire
HIST 395: Gaming and History / GMST 300
HIST 402: Muslims in Europe: Conquest, Community, and Captivity
HIST 511: Digital History: The History of Coffee Through Digital Methods

GMST 100: Introduction to Game Studies