What is the earliest record of smallpox inoculation in Turkey?

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This question is addressed in a wikipedia article with a long list of references, which I have not explored. The article has considerable overlap with a 2012 paper on the same subject, The origins of inoculation by A. Boylston, published in the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. According to a 1713 letter of Emanuel Timonius published (in a reputable journal) in 1714:

The writer of this ingenious discourse observes, in the first place, that the Circassians, Georgians, and other Asiatics, have introduced this practice of procuring the smallpox by a sort of inoculation, for about the space of forty years, among the Turks and others at Constantinople.
That although at first the more prudent were very cautious in the use of this practice; yet the happy success it has found to have in thousands of subjects for these eight years past, has put it out of all suspicion and doubt; since the operation, having been performed on persons of all ages, sexes, and different temperaments…none have been found to die of the smallpox.

Timonius asserts he had seen successful inoculations performed in the period 1706-1713, and suggests that the practice was a comparative innovation, having been introduced about 40 years previously, that is, in the late 1600's.

(See the 2020 paper "Smallpox inoculation: translation, transference and transformation" by Anne Eriksen for an informative discussion of who TImonius was, the cultural context of Timonius's letter, etc.)

The rest of Boylston's paper addresses the question of how did inoculation reach Turkey. It gives references proving that inoculation had been practiced in China and in India before its Turkish appearance, but does not give proof of how it came to Turkey.

In tracking down this paper's references I found a citation to a 2009 paper in Chinese whose title translates to "Were the Turks in the 18th century variolated against smallpox? the analysis of a typical example of misconception in medical cross-cultural transmission". The translated abstract is

There has been a continuing misconception for almost three centuries since the transmission of variolation from Turkey (actually the Ottoman Empire) to England that this was a practice of the Turkish Muslims. There are many sources of cogent evidence that variolation in the 18th century in the Ottoman Empire was opposed by Muslims due to their religious beliefs. This article uses cultural anthropology in its analysis of the reasons for the misconception.

I would like to know what this paper says. Alicia Grant, its author, has written a book Globalisation of Variolation, The Overlooked Origins of Immunity for Smallpox in the 18th Century, which I would like to read.

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