Ottoman Empire
The
Ottoman Empire (
Ottoman Turkish: دولت عليه عثمانيه
Devlet-i Âliye-i Osmâniyye; literally, "The Sublime Ottoman State"), also sometimes known in the
West as the
Turkish Empire, existed from 1299 to 1923. At the height of its power in the
16th and
17th centuries, its territory included
Anatolia, the
Middle East, parts of
North Africa, and much of south-eastern
Europe to the
Caucasus. It comprised an area of about 5.6 million
km²[Regnal Chronologies. "To Rule the Earth...". Retrieved 6 April 2006.] (though it controlled a much larger area if adjoining territories, dominated mainly by
nomadic tribes, where the empire's
suzerainty was recognised, are included). The empire interacted with both
Eastern and
Western cultures throughout its 624-year history.
In the 16th and 17th centuries, the Ottoman Empire was among the world's most powerful political entities, with the powers of eastern Europe constantly threatened by its steady advance through the
Balkans, the
Kingdom of Hungary and the southern part of the
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. Its navy was also a powerful force in the Mediterranean. On several occasions, the Ottoman army invaded central Europe, laying
siege to
Vienna in 1529 and again in 1683 in an attempt to conquer the
Habsburg domain, and was finally repulsed only by great coalitions of European powers at sea and on land. It was the only non-European power to seriously challenge the rising power of the West between the
15th and
20th centuries, eventually becoming an integral part of European
balance of power politics, hence blurring the distinctions.
The dissolution of the empire was a direct consequence of
World War I, when the
Allied Powers defeated the
Central Powers in Europe as well as the Ottoman forces in the
Middle Eastern theatre. At the
end of the war, the Ottoman government collapsed and was divided among the victorious powers. Subsequent years saw the declaration of new states from the remnants of the Ottoman Empire.
Republic of Turkey was one of them. The new republic declared most of the former ruling elite, including the
Ottoman Dynasty,
persona non grata. In
1974, after 50 years, the
Grand National Assembly of Turkey granted the right to re-acquire
Turkish citizenship to the descendants of the former ruling dynasty, (
Ertuğrul Osman V, head of the House of Ottoman,
repatriated in
2004).
The history of the Ottoman Empire spans more than seven centuries, and primary documentation of the empire's relations with other powers is to be found in the
archives of thirty-nine nations. Earlier historiography of the empire was based largely upon analysis of Ottoman military victories and defeats; current approaches take a wider perspective, the scope of which includes the social dynamics of territorial growth and dissolution, and examination of economic factors and their role in the empire's eventual stagnation and decline.
An examination of Ottoman history from a political and military viewpoint will be presented here; a socioeconomic analysis is treated in separate articles, divided between two periods, the
classic period (sometimes referred to as the "era of enlargement"), and the
reform period (also called "the era of Westernisation"). As the fullest understanding of Ottoman history may only be achieved through comparative study of these differing perspectives, rather than either alone, both are recommended to the attention of the interested reader.
Origins
The ancestors of the
Ottoman Dynasty were part of the
Turkic migrations from Asia, which began during the 10th century. The
Kayı (or Kai) tribe of
Oghuz Turks were one of the main groups taking part in this migration, and it was they who established what became the Ottoman Empire in western
Anatolia. When the Kayı first settled in Anatolia in the 12th century, they were under the suzerainty of the
Seljuk State of Anatolia. With the territorial expansion of the
Mongol Empire to the west, the Kayı became a
puppet and
vassal of the
Il Khanate of the Mongols. The Seljuk system allowed the Kayı protection from outsiders, which gave them a chance to develop their own internal structure; moreover, their position on far eastern fringe of the Seljuk state enabled them to build military power through cooperation with the non-Turkic populations of eastern Anatolia, among whom were many
Christians.
When the Seljuk state was in the process of collapse, the various
beyliks, or territories, of Anatolia came into conflict with one another, with the Ottoman
beylik eventually emerging as the supreme power in the region. In 1299,
Osman I declared the independence of the Ottoman
beylik, which had gradually been developed by the now-settled Kayı. The history of the tribe before Osman I extended back through Osman's father
Ertuğrul to his grandfather
Süleyman Shah, who was drowned in the river Euphrates in the year 1227 whilst fleeing the advance of the Mongol hordes.
Rise (1299"1453)
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Mehmed II and his agreement (ﻋﻬﺪنامه ahdnâme) to protect Bosnian Christians |
The rise of the empire defined the characteristics and nature of the state. The Ottomans definitively carved out their own preserve in history under the rule of
Mehmed II.
The Ottoman state existed before Osman I (
Arabic: عُثمَان ; hence the name
Ottoman Empire). However he is regarded as the founder of the empire, as he named it and was the first
bey (chieftain) to declare his independence. He extended the frontiers of Ottoman settlement towards the
Byzantine Empire, while other Turkish beyliks suffered from infighting. Under Osman I, the Ottoman capital moved to
Bursa. In centuries to come, his age would be recalled with the phrase, "May he be as good as Osman".
Ottoman historians attached great importance to "
Osman's Dream" and its supposed significance in the
foundation of the Empire. The dream is also an example of Turkish oral tradition. The historian
von Hammer cites the story.
It was in this period that a formal
Ottoman government occurred; it was to last in the form in which it was instituted for nearly four centuries before being reformed. In contrast to many contemporary states, the Ottoman bureaucracy tried to avoid military rule. Although the Ottoman Empire was primarily a military state, its civics and economy did not reflect a policy of aggression. The
expansionist policies of the Ottoman Empire did not lead to
total war, given the fact that the Ottoman raids in the Balkans were not undertaken with the aim of destruction and booty, but with the goal of Ottoman settlement in the area.
[ Herbert Adams Gibbons, Foundation of the Ottoman Empire, Frank Cass & Co (June 1968)]Mehmed II was only 12 years old when he became
sultan for the first time, and he was reputed to have been a capable warrior. Mehmed II enjoyed the full support of the empire, and used this to reorganise the structure of both the state and the military. He demonstrated his military prowess by his capture of
Constantinople in 1453 (which marked the final defeat and collapse of the
Byzantine Empire); the city became the new capital of the Ottoman Empire, being renamed
Istanbul (see:
Istanbul (Etymology)).
Growth
There are two reasonably distinct periods in this era. From the conquest of
Istanbul in 1453 to the death of
Suleiman I (the Magnificent) in 1566, the Ottoman state grew to its zenith as a dynamic engine of conquest and government. The Sultans of this era were committed and effective leaders, and under their guidance innovative and disciplined military, social and bureaucratic structures were established. In the second period after Suleiman's death, these structures were put under strain by diminishing territorial gains, economic difficulties and a protracted period of weak Sultans. Nonetheless, the empire remained a major expansionist power until the disaster at Vienna in 1683.
Expansion and apogee (1453"1566)
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Ottoman Empire, 1299"1683 |
In 1389, the Ottoman victory at the
Battle of Kosovo effectively marked the end of
Serbian power in the region, and paved the way for Ottoman expansion into Europe. Sultan
Selim I (1512"1520) dramatically expanded the empire's eastern and southern frontiers, defeating the young
Safavid Shah of
Persia,
Ismail I, in the
Battle of Chaldiran, establishing Ottoman rule in Egypt and a naval presence in the
Red Sea. Selim's successor, Suleiman the Magnificent (1520-1566), further expanded upon Selim's conquests. After capturing
Belgrade, Suleiman struck a major blow against the
Kingdom of Hungary at the
1526 Battle of Mohacs, causing that kingdom to fall into anarchy. He then laid
siege to Vienna in 1529, but failed to take the city, being forced to retreat before the onset of winter. Soon,
Transylvania,
Walachia, and, intermittently,
Moldavia, became tributary principalities of the Ottoman Empire. In the east, Suleiman took
Baghdad from the Persians in 1535, giving the Ottomans control of
Mesopotamia and naval access to the Persian Gulf.
Under Selim and above all Suleiman, the empire briefly became a highly proficient and dominant naval force, controlling the eastern Mediterranean and exerting an effective offensive capability into the western sector. The Ottoman admiral
Barbarossa ended the Spanish occupation of
Tunis and
Algeria. During the
Spanish Inquisition,
Barbarossa evacuated Muslims and Jews from Spain to the safety of Ottoman lands, particularly,
Salonica,
Cyprus, and the newly conquered, and empty city of
Istanbul. In 1543 the forces of the French king
Francis I (whose mother had requested the help of the Ottoman Sultan against the Holy Roman Empire,underlining the religious divisions in Europe at the time) and Barbarossa combined to capture
Nice on behalf of France. France was the empire's major European ally in this period; both powers were united by their mutual opposition to Hapsburg Spain, and the Ottomans' grant of the right to trade within their empire without levy of taxation was an economic boon for France.
Awareness of the newly global reach brought about by improved naval capability, and the need to balance the influence of the European states, saw efforts to combat the European powers (most particularly Portugal) in the Persian Gulf, Indian Ocean and the Spice Islands. The strain on the empire's resources, and the logistics of maintaining lines of supply and communication across such vast distances, rendered these efforts unsustainable and ultimately unsuccessful. Crucially, the empire's two main theatres of war, Austria-Hungary and Iran, lay in opposite directions from the capital, Istanbul, at gruelling distances, and the overriding military need for defence in these areas, which marked the western and eastern frontiers of the empire, rendered effective long-term engagement elsewhere impossible. Nevertheless, the Ottomans' strategic vision in this period, and their partial success in global campaigning, was striking and ambitious. With the Ottomans blockading sea lanes to the East and South, the European powers were driven to find another way to the ancient Silk and Spice routes, now under absolute Ottoman control.
The Ottoman Empire reached its apogee during Suleiman the Magnificent's reign. It was by now a highly significant and accepted part of the European political sphere and entered into an alliance with
France,
England and
Holland against Habsburg Spain, Italy and Habsburg Germany.
Revolts and Revival (1566"1683)
The Eastern blockage to the trade routes pushed the Europeans to the previously undiscovered extremes of the World, and also pushed them to new levels of technology and thought and pulled them together to fight the Ottomans with these. The Ottoman defeat at the
Battle of Lepanto (1571) destabilised the Ottoman control of the
Mediterranean Sea but did not in itself signal the beginning of Ottoman decline, as older histories used to claim. Nonetheless, by the end of the 16th century the era of sweeping conquest and vast territorial gain was over. The
Habsburg frontier in particular became substantially fixed, with relatively minor engagements and the to and fro of possession of individual fortresses defining the nature of engagement. This was partly a reflection of simple geographical limits - in the pre-mechanised age,
Vienna marked pretty much the outer limit of what the campaigning season allowed the Ottoman army to reach effectively from Istanbul, as Suleiman had discovered. It also reflected the difficulties created by coping with two opposite fronts, the second in the form of the persistent ideological and territorial threat posed by the
Safavid empire of
Persia.
On the battlefield, the Ottomans were beginning the process of gradually falling behind Europe in military technology as religious and intellectual conservatism began to act as an anchor to the spirit of innovation that had been a signal aspect to the empire's forceful expansion. The
Sipahi cavalry was becoming a dated force and, most seriously, relaxations of recruitment policy and ill-considered growth in numbers in the
Janissary corps engendered chronic defects in discipline and the ability to perform as an elite.
Economically, the huge in-pouring of Spanish silver from the New World caused a sharp devaluation of the Ottoman currency and rampant inflation. This had serious negative consequences across all strata of Ottoman society, being manifest in Janissary revolts that toppled Sultans and ministers and widespread lawlessness and rebellion in Anatolia in the late 16th and early 17th centuries, commonly known as the
Celalî rebellions.
Nevertheless, modern historians have been reassessing the conventional view of the 17th century as one of pure stagnation and decline, instead viewing it as the key period in which the Ottoman state and its structures began to endeavour to adapt to new pressures and new realities, internal and external. Crucially, the relative ineffectiveness of most individual Sultans created the need for directing power to be exercised through new hands, whether through powerful members of the
Harem or later the stern reactionary medicine of the first Koprullu Grand Vizier
Mehmed Koprullu (1656-1661) and the more subtle hands of his son
Fazil Ahmed Koprullu (1661-1676), under whom the state reasserted itself with some vigour. A throwback to his
ghazi ancestors, Sultan
Murad IV (1612 " 1640) was a unique example in this period of a warrior Sultan who wrestled effective power back into his own hands, recapturing Erivan (1635) and
Baghdad (1639) back from the
Safavids.
Indeed, frequently overlooked is the fact that despite the stresses at play on the state stuctures and its military arms, the 17th century saw the empire reach the apogee of its territorial coverage, with notable gains under the Koprullu administration in
Crete, Southern
Ukraine and
Podolia.
The defeat of the Grand Vizier
Kara Mustafa Pasha by a combined army of
Poland and the
Holy Roman Empire at the second siege of
Vienna in 1683 proved to the defining event that finally swung the balance of power away from the Ottomans in favour of its European opponents. Through the
Treaty of Karlowitz, that ended the
Great Turkish War in 1699, the Ottomans ceded nearly all of
Hungary,
Transylvania, the
Morea and
Podolia. They also acknowledged, for the first time in their history, that the Austrian Empire could sign a treaty with them on equal terms.
Decline
During the decline we see two main efforts; first the reforms and then modernisation.
The reforms (1699"1827)
Further wars and territories were lost to Austria in the
Balkans. Certain areas of the empire, such as
Egypt and
Algeria, became independent from the Ottoman Empire in all but name, and subsequently came under the influence of the
United Kingdom and
France. The 18th century saw direct authority giving way to varying degrees of autonomy enjoyed by local governors and leaders. A series of
ten wars was fought between the Russian and Ottoman empires from the 17th to the 19th centuries.
During the "
Tulip Era" (لاله دورى
Lâle Devri), named after Sultan Ahmed II's love of the
tulip flower and its symbolism of his peace-loving and aesthetic reign, policies toward Europe began to change. The region was peaceful between 1718"1730, as the Ottoman defeat of the Russians in the
Pruth Campaign in 1712 and the
Treaty of Passarowitz brought about a pause in warfare. The empire began to improve the cities bordering the Balkans to act as a defense against the expansionist movements of the different European States. Other tentative reforms were also enacted:
taxes were lowered; there were attempts to improve the image of the Ottoman state; and the first civilian industrial investments began. These measures, however, failed to put an end to the empire's decline. As covered in
technological and scientific advantages the Ottomans had once enjoyed over the European countries had long since disappeared. The 100-year delay of the entry of the first printing press into the Ottoman Empire, was thanks to the backward-minded religious authorities who deemed all technology as "the Devil's Invention".
Ottoman military reform efforts Sultan
Selim III (1789-1807) made the first major efforts to modernise the army along European lines. These efforts, however, were hampered by reactionary forces, partly religious but above all by the
Janissary corps, who had declined into an anarchic and ineffective rabble, jealous of their privileges and set firm against change. Selim's efforts cost him his throne and his life, but were to see spectacular and bloody resolution under his successor, the dynamic
Mahmud II. Also, under Selim's rule, the French, lead by
Napoleon invaded and occupied
Egypt from 1798 until they were defeated in 1801. It was only the first of gradual European occupation of Ottoman's land during the 19th and early 20th centuries.
Modernisation (1828"1908)
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"Consultative Menagerie", January 1885; see image detail for explication |
The period of the Ottoman Empire's decline was characterised by the reorganisation and transformation of most of the empire's structures in an attempt to bolster the empire against increasingly powerful rivals.
The
Tanzimat period"named from the term تنظيمات
tanzîmât, meaning "reorganisation""lasted from 1839 to 1876. During this time, many significant changes were effected: a fairly modern conscripted army was organised; the banking system was reformed; and the
guilds were replaced with modern
factories. Economically, the empire had difficulties in repaying its loans to European banks. At the same time, it had military difficulties in defending itself from foreign invasion and occupation: Egypt, for instance, was occupied by the French in 1798, while
Cyprus was occupied by the British in 1876. In a significant change from the past, the empire stopped entering conflicts alone and began to enter into alliances with European countries. There were a series of alliances with countries such as France, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and Russia. A prime example of this change was the
Crimean War, in which the British, French, Ottomans, and others united against
Imperial Russia.
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Opening of the Ottoman parliament, 1876 |
The
rise of nationalism swept many countries during the 19th century, and the Ottoman Empire was not immune. A burgeoning
national consciousness, together with a rise in
ethnic nationalism, became at this time, probably the most significant of the ideas that the Ottoman Empire imported from the West, as it was forced to deal with nationalism-related issues both within and beyond its borders. The
parties with revolutionary philosophies showed a surge. Uprisings in Ottoman territory had many far-reaching effects during the 19th century and determined many of the choices that the Ottoman Empire would have to make during the 20th century. Many Ottoman Turks questioned whether the policies of the state were the issue: some felt that the sources of the inter-
ethnic conflicts were external, with unrelated goals to imminent issues. While this period had many achievements, the ability of the Ottoman state to strongly influence the ethnic uprisings was questionable.
The
socioeconomics of the reformation era covers the changes during the decline period. From an economic perspective, it was just the opposite, even if it was common to describe the Empire as the "
sick man of Europe". The empire's actual weakness did not reside in its developing economy, but the cultural gap which separated it from the European powers. The empire's problems were, in fact, the result of incapability to deal with the new combination of problems arising from external
imperialism and rising internal
nationalism.
The empire's
First Constitutional Era (برنجى مشروطيت دورى
Birinci Meşrûtiyyet Devri), was a short-lived period, however the idea that was behind the movement "
Ottomanism" was continued. A wide-ranging group of reformers which named
Young Ottomans, primarily educated in Western
universities, believed that a
constitutional monarchy could ease the empire's growing social unrest. Through a
military coup in 1876, they forced Sultan
Abdülaziz (1861-1876) to leave his position to
Murad V. However, Murad V proved to be mentally ill, and was deposed within a few months. His heir-apparent
Abdülhamid II (1876-1909) was invited to assume power, with the promise that he would declare a constitutional monarchy, which he did on
23 November 1876. The subsequent constitution"called
Kanûn-ı Esâsî (قانون اساسى, meaning "
Basic Law")"was written by members of the
Young Ottomans, but was in effect for only two years.
However these reforms have not stopped the rise of nationalism in the
Danubian Principalities and
Serbia that have been semi-independent for almost 6 decades; in
1875 Serbia,
Montenegro,
Bosnia,
Bulgaria,
Wallacia and
Moldova proclaimed independence from the Empire, however it was granted only to
Serbia,
Romania and
Montenegro following the
Russo-turkish war.
Dissolution (1908"1922)
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Public demonstration in the Sultanahmet district of Istanbul, 1908 |
The period of the Ottoman Empire's final dissolution begins with the onset of the empire's
Second Constitutional Era (ايکنجى مشروطيت دورى
İkinci Meşrûtiyyet Devri). This era is symbolised by the
Committee of Union and Progress (اتحاد و ترقى جمعيت
İttihâd ve Terakkî Cem'iyyet) and the movement that would become known as the "
Young Turks" (ژون تورکلر
Jön Türkler). The
Young Turk Revolution began on
3 July 1908 and quickly spread throughout the empire, resulting in the sultan's announcement of the restoration of the 1876 constitution and the reconvening of parliament. The Committee of Union and Progress managed to win the elections that were held in that year. Now in power, the Young Turks introduced a number of new initiatives intended to promote the modernisation of the Ottoman Empire. They supported industrialisation and administrative reforms, and their reforms of provincial administration quickly led to a higher degree of centralisation. In addition, they implemented the secularisation of the legal system and subsidies for the education of women, and altered the administrative structure of the state-operated primary schools. Their domestic reforms were in some ways quite successful, but their foreign policy proved to be disastrous.
The
Balkan Wars were the first big test to the Committee of Union and Progress, just after the
Italian occupation (1911) of
Libya. The three new
Balkan states formed at the end of the 19th century, as well as
Montenegro, sought additional territories from
Albania,
Macedonia, and
Thrace, on nationalism-based grounds. The incomplete emergence of these nation-states on the fringes of the Ottoman Empire during the 19th century set the stage for the Balkan Wars. Initially, with the encouragement of Russia, a series of agreements were concluded between
Serbia and
Bulgaria in March 1912 and between
Greece and
Bulgaria in May 1912. Montenegro subsequently concluded agreements between Serbia and Bulgaria in October 1912. The Serbian-Bulgarian agreement specifically called for the partition of Macedonia, which resulted in the
First Balkan War. The
Second Balkan War soon followed. The political fallout of the Balkan Wars was reflected in the
coup of 1913, which set the environment for the famous
Three Pashas.
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The Ottoman Empire joins the Central Powers in World War I. |
The Ottoman Empire took part in the
Middle Eastern theatre of
World War I, under the terms of the
Ottoman-German Alliance. The Ottoman Empire had some successes in the beginning years of the war, particularly at the
Battle of Gallipoli. There were some setbacks as well, however, in particular the disastrous
Caucasus Campaign against the Russians. Also, in the winter of 1915-16, the Ottoman government ordered all Armenians deported from eastern Anatolia as a response to isolated Armenian rebellions. In the course of this deportation some 50,000 to 1.5 million Armenians died in what most academics call the
Armenian genocide and a minority define as
civil war. The
Armenian resistance at the Van was significant event, of which its core become the
Administration for Western Armenia. The
Russian Revolution of 1917 gave the Ottomans a chance to regain some of their lost ground; however, continued British offensives ultimately proved to be too much. The Ottomans were eventually defeated due to key attacks by the British general
Edmund Allenby, as well as assistance from the
Arab Revolt. The initial peace agreement with the Ottoman Empire was the
Armistice of Mudros, followed by the
Treaty of Sèvres, the treaty which granted recognition to the
Democratic Republic of Armenia. The United Kingdom obtained virtually everything it had sought"according to the secret
Sykes-Picot Agreement made together with France in 1916, while the war was still going on"from the empire's partition. The other powers of the
Triple Entente, however, soon became entangled in the Turkish War of Independence.
The
Turkish War of Independence was organised against the plans of the Allies. Angered by the Sèvres agreement,
Mustafa Kemal"who had been an important force at the 1915 Battle of Gallipoli"raised an army that expelled the Greeks, the Italians, and the French, confronted the Republic of Armenia, and eventually threatened the British as well.
Turkish revolutionaries, under Mustafa Kemal's leadership,
formed a parliament Grand National Assembly (
Büyük Millet Meclisi) in
Ankara by declearing its sovereignty on
23 April 1920. The final blow to the Ottoman Empire came on
1 November 1922, with the abolishment of the sultanate. The last sultan,
Mehmed VI Vahdettin (1918-1922), left the country on 17 November, and the
Republic of Turkey was officially declared on
29 October 1923. Republic of Turkey asserted its right to an independent national existence. The title of caliphate"the very last official remnant of the empire"was constitutionally abolished several months later, on
3 March 1924.
Ultimately, the main reasons for the
fall of the Ottoman Empire can be attributed to the failure of its economic structure; the size of the empire created problems. Also the empire's
communication technology did not migrate into the empire's state structure. The
trade dynamics were based on non-state elements. In many ways, the circumstances surrounding the Ottoman Empire's fall closely paralleled those surrounding the
fall of the Roman Empire, particularly in terms of the ongoing tensions among the empires' populations and the respective governments' inability to deal with these tensions. In the case of the Ottomans, the introduction of a parliamentary system during the
Tanzimat proved to be too late to reverse the damage that had already been done.
In diplomatic circles, the empire was often referred to as the "
Sublime Porte", a literal translation of the Ottoman باب عالی (
Bâb-ı Âlî), which was the one gate of the imperial
Topkapı Palace that was open to foreigners and was where the sultan greeted ambassadors.
The Ottoman state revolutionised its administrative system with the aid and experience of Greeks and other Christians, Muslims, and Jews, while many other states still held tightly to their own religions and national identities. The rapidly expanding state utilised skilled local people to manage the empire, people who were often selected from among loyal
Phanariot Greeks,
Armenians, and others. From the perspective of the West, this eclectic administration was apparent even in the diplomatic correspondence of the empire, which was undertaken in the
Greek language. Like the Byzantines before them, the Ottomans practiced a system in which the state had control of the clergy. The nomadic Turkic forms of land tenure were largely retained"with a number of unique adjustments"in the Ottoman Empire. Certain pre-Islamic Turkish practices that had survived the influx of administrative and legal practices from Islamic Iran continued to be important in Ottoman administrative circles. In the Ottoman judiciary, for example, the courts were run by
kadı (قاضی), who were religious judges appointed by the sultan and exercised direct control over members of the religious establishment. Ultimately, the Ottoman administrative system was a blend of influences derived from the Turkish nomads, the Byzantines, and the Islamic world.
The Ottomans were primarily administrators and not producers in the sense that the empire did not employ a program of economic exploitation, as did the colonial empires of the modern European states. Its economic outlook (
fiscalism) stressed abundance and regulated prices within the marketplace to ensure social stability, and the state never developed a Western mercantile outlook, leaving commerce very largely in the hands of the non-Muslim population. According to Ottoman understanding, the state's primary responsibility was to defend and extend the land of the Muslims and to ensure security and harmony within its borders within the overarching context of orthodox
sunni Islamic practice and dynastic sovereignty.
House of Osman
The Ottoman sultan, also known as the
pâdişâh (پادشاه) or "lord of kings", served as the empire's sole regent and was considered to be the embodiment of its government, though he did not always exercise complete control.
Throughout Ottoman history, however"despite the sultan's supreme
de jure authority and the Grand Vizier's sometime
de facto one"there were many insistences in which local governors acted with a degree of independence, sometimes even in opposition to the ruler. There are, for instance, eleven incidences in which the sultan was dethroned because he was perceived as a threat to the state. On the other hand, although new sultans were always chosen from among the sons of the previous sultan, there was a strong educational system in place that was geared towards eliminating the unfit and establishing a common trust among the ruling elite for the son before he was actually crowned. Only two failed attempts were made in the whole of Ottoman history to unseat the ruling Osmanlı dynasty, suggestive of a high level of political stability.
Imperial Harem
The
Harem was one of the most important powers of the Ottoman court. It was ruled by the
Valide Sultan (also known as the
Baş Kadın, or "chief lady"), who was the mother of the reigning sultan and who held supreme power over the Harem and thus a powerful position in the court. On occasion, the Valide Sultan would become involved in state politics and could diminish the power and position of the sultan. For a period of time beginning in the 16th century and extending into the 17th, the women of the Harem effectively controlled the state in what was termed the "
Sultanate of Women" (
Kadınlar Sultanatı).
The harem had its own internal organisation, and order of formulating policies. Beneath the Valide Sultan in the hierarchy was the Hasseki Sultana, the mother of the sultan's first-born son, who had the highest chance of becoming the next Valide Sultan. The sultan also had four other official wives, who were each called Hasseki Kadın. Next in rank below the sultan's wives were his eight favourite
concubines (
ikbâls or
hâs odalıks), and then the other concubines whom the sultan favoured and who were termed
gözde. Next in rank were the concubines of other court officials. Pupils (
acemî) and novices (
câriye or
şâhgird) were younger women who were either waiting to be married off to someone or who had not yet graduated out of the Harem School.
Palace schools
The palace schools were where the
devşirme boys where trained. There were palace schools in the old palace in
Edirne, one in
Galata Palace north of the Istanbul's
Golden Horn, and one in Ibrahim Pasha Palace in the
Hippodrome area of Istanbul. The boys would graduate from these schools after seven years, and were then ready to become servants to the sultan or other notables, to serve in the Six Divisions of Cavalry, or to serve as a Janissary. Some of the most talented
devşirme boys would come to
Topkapi Palace, where they were trained for high positions within the Ottoman court or military.
The Divan (Council)
Though the sultan was the sublime monarch he had a number of advisors and ministers. The most powerful of these were the viziers of the
Divan, led by the
Grand Vizier. The Divan was a council where the viziers met and debated the politics of the empire. It was the Grand Vizier's duty to inform the sultan of the opinion of the divan. The sultan often took his vizier's advices in consideration, but he by no means had to obey the Divan. The Divan consisted of three viziers in the 14th century and eleven in the 17th century, four of them served as Viziers of the Dome, the most important ministers next to the
Grand Vizier.
Imperial Government
Though the state apparatus of the Ottoman Empire underwent many reforms during its long history, a number of its basic structures remained consistently the same. Primary among these structures was the primacy of the sultan. Despite important decisions usually being made by the Divan, the final decision always belonged to the sultan.
The Divan, in the years when the Ottoman state was still a
beylik, was composed of elders of the tribe. It was later modified so as to include professionals from the military and also local elites, such as religious and political advisors. These individuals became known as
viziers. Later still, beginning in the year 1320, a Grand Vizier (صدر اﻋظم
Sadr-ı a'zam) was appointed in order to assume certain of the sultan's responsibilities. The
Sublime Porte, which became synonymous with the Ottoman government, was in fact the gate to the Grand Vizier's headquarters and the place where the sultan held the greeting ceremony for foreign ambassadors. At times throughout Ottoman history, the Grand Vizier became as important as, or more important than, the sultan himself. After the Young Turk Revolution of 1908, the Ottoman state became a constitutional monarchy without executive powers, and a parliament was formed, with representatives chosen from the provinces.
At the height of its power, the Ottoman Empire contained 29 provinces, in addition to the tributary principalities of
Moldavia,
Transylvania, and
Wallachia.
Insignia
 |
Sultan Mahmud II; it reads Mahmud Khan son of Abdulhamid is forever victorious |
The
Tughra were calligraphic monograms or signatures of the Ottoman Sultans, of which there were 35. Carved on the Sultan's seal, they bore the names of the Sultan and his father. The prayer statement "ever victorious" was also present in most. The earliest belonged to Orhan Gazi. It became a branch in Ottoman-Arabic
calligraphy.
One of the successes of the Ottoman Empire was the unity that it brought about among its highly varied population. While the main reason was the military might and heavyhandedness in newly invaded territories, one other indirect source of this unity was allowed for by the laws of Islam, which stated that Muslims, Christians, and Jews"who constituted the vast majority of the Ottoman population"were all related in that they were "
People of the Book" (Arabic: اهل الكتاب;
ahl al-Kitâb). As early as the rule of Mehmed II, the Ottomans had foreseen the results of such policies: Mehmed II, for instance, granted extensive rights to
Phanariot Greeks and invited many Jews to settle in Ottoman territory.
Concept of Nation
Under Ottoman rule the major religious groups were allowed to establish their own communities, called
millets, each retaining its own religious laws, traditions, and language under the general protection of the sultan. Millets were led by religious chiefs, who served as secular as well as religious leaders and thus had a substantial interest in the continuation of Ottoman rule.
Mehmed II used the conquering army to restore the physical structure of the city. Old buildings were repaired, streets, aqueducts, and bridges were constructed, sanitary facilities were modernised, and a vast supply system was established to provide for the city's inhabitants.
Ultimately, the Ottoman Empire's relatively high degree of tolerance on the level of ethnicity proved to be one of its greatest strengths in integrating the new regions until the
rise of nationalism under the Ottoman Empire. This non-assimilative policy became a weakness during the
dissolution that neither the
first or
second parliaments could reprimand. This tolerance was extended to "the Ottoman family was ethnically Turkish in its origins, as were some of its supporters and subjects. But ... the dynasty immediately lost this "Turkish" ethnic identification through intermarriage with many different ethnicities. As for a "Turkish empire", state power relied on a similarly heterogeneous mix of peoples. The Ottoman empire succeeded because it incorporated the energies of the vastly varied peoples it encountered, quickly transcending its roots in the Turkish nomadic migrations from Central Asia into the Middle East."
[Donald Quataert, 2]Slavery
Ottomans were coming from a nomadic nation in which
slavery was very distant to the social structure. Also, from the Islamic perspective, the
Kuran specifically states "everyone is same"
[O mankind! We created you from a single soul, male and female, and made you into nations and tribes, so that you may come to know one another. Truly, the most honoured of you in God's sight is the greatest of you in piety. God is All-Knowing, All-Aware. -- 49:13 ], although the practice showed differences based on cultures,
Islam and Slavery covers these perspectives. Specifically, Ottoman application on their domain was not approved. However, the Ottoman policies were based on a millet perspective in which each millet had the right to govern their own domain. Trafficking in slaves is expressly forbidden by the Ottoman application of
sharia, or Islamic law. For example, by the terms of the
sharia, any slaves who were taken could not be kept in the status of slaves if they converted to Islam. It was, in fact, considered an insult to term an Ottoman man as a slave-master, and there were incidents in which Ottomans responded unsympathetically to any who even mentioned the idea of slavery to them.
[The bulk of this section uses information from the article "Slavery in the Ottoman Empire".]Slavery was usually confined to domestic services, including
odalisques. Many were captives of war and cross-border raids. In the Mediterranean, such enslaved captives manned the galley oars in the navy. By the era of
Tanzimat, Ottoman Empire aimed to gradually limit the scope of slavery. However, slavery was not formally abolished until the proclamation of the Republic.
The
devshirmeh system can be considered as a form of slavery, considering the Sultans' absolute power over its members, but the high status of the 'slave' or
kul of the Sultan within Ottoman society, encompassing the very highest officers of state and the military elite, all well remunerated, makes 'slavery' as understood in the West a potentially misleading term.
Rural slavery was largely a
Caucasian phenomenon, carried to Anatolia and Rumelia after the
Circassian migration after
1864. Conflicts emerged within the immigrant community and the Ottoman Establishment, at times, intervened on the side of the slaves.
[Osmanlı İmparatorluğu'nda Kölelik]Many different cultures lived under the umbrella of the Ottoman Empire, and as a result, a specifically "Ottoman" culture can be difficult to define. To some extent, there existed a Turkish Ottoman culture, a Greek Ottoman culture, an Armenian Ottoman culture, and so on. However, there was also, to a great extent, a specific intersecting multi-ethnic culture that can be said to have reached its highest levels among the Ottoman elite, who"far from being monolithic"were in fact composed of a myriad of different ethnic and religious groups.
One of the roots of Ottoman culture comes from the Oghuz Turks with their Central Asian Turkic nomadic culture. As the Oghuz passed into Anatolia through Persia over a period of a few hundred years they absorbed many elements of
Persian culture. Following Sultan Mehmed II's capture of Istanbul in 1453, many aspects of Byzantine"and, more broadly, European"culture began to be integrated into Ottoman culture. As the empire expanded in subsequent years, different cultures were brought into this mix, enriching it still further.
This Ottoman multicultural perspective reflects on their policies. One of the reasons that the Ottoman Empire lasted as long as it did was the highly tolerant policies pursued originating from their nomadic inheritance. This statement should be taken as a comparison to assimilative
medieval times (east and west). The Ottoman State pursued multi-cultural and multi-religious policies - accommodating different perspectives. Two examples of this are the Ottoman
justice system and the regional governors. As the Ottomans moved further west, the Ottoman leaders themselves absorbed some of the culture of conquered regions. In addition, with intercultural
marriages, new cultural structures were gradually added to the Ottomans, creating the characteristic Ottoman elite culture. When compared to common Turkish arts (folkloric), the assimilation of the Ottoman elites to these new cultures is apparent.
Architecture
Ottoman architecture influenced by Seljuk,
Byzantine and
Arab architecture, came to develop a style all of its own. The years 1300-1453 (
Rise Period) constitute the early or first Ottoman period, when Ottoman art was in search of new ideas. The years 1453-1600, which is named the classical period, coinciding with the
growth period, constitutes the strongest period. During the years of the
stagnation period, principles of architecture deviated from classical times. During the
Tulip Era, it was under the influence of the excessive decorations of the west;
Baroque,
Rococo,
Empire and other styles intermingled.
Concepts of Ottoman architecture mainly circles around the
mosque. The society and mosque was being envisioned as an entity interconnected with
city planning and communal life. Beside the mosque, there were
soup kitchens, theological schools,
hospitals,
Turkish baths and
tombs.
Examples of Ottoman architecture of the classical period, aside from
Istanbul and
Edirne, can also be seen in Egypt, Eritrea, Tunisia, Algiers, the Balkans and Hungary, where mosques, bridges, fountains and schools were built.
Language
At the Ottoman court, a version of Turkish with Arabic and Persian vocabulary was spoken (see:
Ottoman Turkish language). The basic grammar was still largely Turkish, but far more elaborate than the Turkish that was spoken outside of the court. The two varieties of the language became so differentiated that ordinary people had to hire special "request-writers" (
arzıhâlcis) in order to be able to communicate with the government.
The Sultans had a very mixed ethnic lineage because the Sultans married women from various backgrounds. They spoke their mother tongue: Ottoman, Persian, Turkish, Greek, Arabic and some European languages.
In cosmopolitan cities, people often spoke their family languages, some Ottoman if they were educated, and some Arabic if they were Muslim. In the last two centuries, French and English emerged as popular languages where the elite learned French at school, and used European products as a fashion statement. All ethnicities who had their own language continued to speak their own language in their family, in villages where two populations lived together, the two populations would often speak each other's language (Cyprus:Greek/Turkish, the Balkans: Albanian/ Greek/ Serbian/ Bulgarian, Eastern Turkey: Kurdish/ Turkish/ Armenian, Northeastern Turkey: Laz/ Georgian/ Greek/ Turkish).
Music
As music was an important part of the education of the Ottoman elite, a number of the Ottoman sultans were accomplished musicians and composers themselves, such as
Selim III, whose compositions are still frequently performed today. Due to a geographic and cultural divide between the capital and other areas, two broadly distinct styles of music arose in the Ottoman Empire: Ottoman classical music, and folk music.
Ottoman classical music arose largely from a confluence of
Byzantine music,
Arab music, and
Persian music. Compositionally, it is organised around
rhythmic units called
usul, which are somewhat similar to
meter in Western music, and
melodic units called
makam, which bear some resemblance to Western
musical modes. The
instruments used are a mixture of Anatolian and Central Asian instruments (the
saz, the
bağlama, the
kemence), other Middle Eastern instruments (the
, the
tanbur, the
kanun, the
ney), and"later in the tradition"Western instruments (the
violin, the
piano).
In the provinces, several different kinds of
Folk music were created. The most dominant regions with their distinguished musical styles are: Balkan-Thracian Turkus, North-Eastern Turkus(
Laz), Aegean Turkus, Central Anatolian Turkus, Eastern Anatolian Turkus, and Caucasian Turkus. Istanbul does not have any Turkus, because it has the Turkish Classical Music.
Cuisine
When one talks about the "Ottoman Cuisine", one refers to the cuisine of the Capital - Istanbul, and the regional capital cities, where the melting pot of cultures created a common cuisine that all the populations enjoyed. This diverse cuisine was honed in the Imperial Palace's kitchens by chefs brought from all over the world to create and experiment with different ingredient. The creations of the Ottoman Palace's kitchens were then passed on to the population through Ramadan events and through the cookings at Yalis of Pashas, and from here on spread to the rest of the population.
Ottoman Cuisine is one of the most diverse and advanced cuisines in the World, and is based on the culmination of Ottoman regional and ethnic dishes and technological and innovational advancement of these with new ingredients and cooking techniques. Ottoman Cuisine ranks up with the elegance of French and the complexity of the Chinese cuisine, and today reaches millions of people's palates through Greek, Turkish and Middle Eastern restaurants in the United States and Europe.
Ottoman Cuisine is also a palatal bridge between the East and the West, where one can find Bread (European) and Rice or Noodles (Asian), on the same dinner table for the same meal.
The Imperial cooks were tested and hired by their method of cooking rice, a simple dish. They were brought over from various places to experiment and invent new dishes, which first passed by the palate of the Chesnidjibashi (the imperial food taster), who tested the food for poison and taste before it was served to the Sultan. These cooks experimented with such extreme textures and ingredients.
Few examples of Extreme Ottoman Cooking: Tavuk Gogsu (Chicken Breast Pudding): As the name states, chicken breast was beaten to strings and added as a texture to fine rice pudding to create this delicacy. Sonmus Kirec Kaymaginda Pismis Bal Kabagi Tatlisi (Pumpkin desert cooked on chalk)Shark Dolma: A seafood twist to a traditional dolma.Camel Dolma: An extravagant twist to a traditional dolma, where a camel is stuffed with 4 sheep, and the sheeps are stuffed with chicken, and rice, for a wedding or a feast.
The Ottoman court life in many aspects assembled ancient traditions of the
Persian
Shahs, but had many
Greek and
European influences.
In general, Turks take their shoes off in the house. There are slippers that are designated to home use. This custom was carried through centuries as the Turkish babies have been free to move and adults can rest on the floor. This custom aimed in keeping the carpet and kilim clean. Women and girls take up carpet and kilim weaving as a means of earning money.
The court (Topkapi)
The culture that evolved around the court was known as the Ottoman Way. To get a high position in the empire, one must be skilled in the Way. It included knowing both
Persian,
Arabic and
Ottoman Turkish and how to behave in court, in front of the sultan, and in formal and religious occasions. The Ottoman Way also used to separate the nobles from the lower classes. Peasants and villagers were called Turks, while nobles were Ottomans.
The sultan was served by an army of pages and scholars. Twenty-five of these served in the kitchen and in the
larder. Others served in the Treasury and the Armoury, maintaining the sultan's treasures and weapons. There where also a branch of servants that were said to serve the Chamber of Campaign, i.e. they accompanied the sultan and his court while on campaign. The best of the pages was chosen to serve the sultan in person. One was responsible for the sultan's clothing, one served him with drinks, one carried his weaponry, one helped him mount his horse, one was responsible for making his turban and a barber shaved the sultan every day. At the palace served also a great number of stewards who carried food, water and wood throughout the palace and lit the fireplaces and braziers. The corps of doorkeepers (
Kapıcı) numbered several hundred and were responsible for opening the doors throughout the entire palace. The chief doorkeeper was responsible for escorting important guests to the sultan. A number of lackeys (
Çikadar) served as messengers in the palace and the city and from one of these were the Imperial Herald (
Divan Çavısı, literally "sergeant of the divan") who was a man entrusted by the sultan to various tasks, among others to inform people who would take part in meetings of the Divan.
The Harem was under the administration of the
eunuchs, of which there were two categories, Black and White Eunuchs. Black Eunuchs were Africans who served the concubines and officials in the Harem and together with chamber maidens of low rank. The White Eunuchs were Europeans from the
Balkans. They served the recruits at the Palace School (see below) and were from
1582 prohibited from entering the Harem. An important figure in the Ottoman court was the Chief Black Eunuch (
Kızlar Ağası or
Harem Ağası). In control of the Harem and a perfect net of spies in the Black Eunuchs, the Chief Eunuch was involved in almost every palace intrigue and could thereby gain power over either the sultan or one of his viziers, ministers or other court officials.
The
Harem was a small world in itself. Often the mother of the current sultan (
Valide Sultan) was a politically influential person. She also selected the concubines for her son. The concubines could live in or around the palace for their entire life, and it supported them with whatever they needed. Women not found suitable for the sultan were married off to eligible bachelors from the Ottoman nobility or sent back home. Female servants did all the chores such as serving food and making the beds. Male (sometimes
eunuch) white and black servants did the hard work such as shopping, guarding the palaces and maintaining the gardens and palaces.
Every prince has his own place. It is a tradition to take the bride from her house and take it to where she will be building her new familiy.
See also:
Seraglio.
The provincial capitals
Apart from the Ottoman court, there were also large metropolitan centers were the Ottoman influence expressed itself with a diversity similar to metropolises of today: Sarajevo, Skopje, Thessaloniki, Damascus, Baghdad, Beirut, Jerusalem, Mecca were other cities that tasted the Ottoman diversity with their own small versions of Provincial Administration replicating the culture of the Ottoman court locally.
Following the fall of Istanbul in 1453, Mehmed II did not disband the
Greek Orthodox Ecumenical Patriarchate, but instead brought it under close control by installing
Gennadius II Scholarius as the patriarch"after receiving from him a hefty fee
[Mansel, 10]"and thus establishing him as the
ethnarch of the
Millet of Rum; that is, the Orthodox Christian subjects of the empire, regardless of their ethnicity. Under the
millet system"which applied to other non-Muslim religious groups as well"people were considered subjects of the empire but were not subject to the Muslim faith or Muslim law. The Orthodox
millet, for instance, was still officially legally subject to
Justinian's Code, which had been in effect in the Byzantine Empire for 900 years. Also, as the largest group of non-Muslim subjects (ذمي
zimmi) of the Islamic Ottoman state, the Orthodox
millet was granted a number of special privileges in the fields of politics and commerce{citation needed}, in addition to having to pay higher taxes than Muslim subjects.
Similar
millets were established for the Ottoman Jewish community, who were under the authority of the
Haham Başı or Ottoman
Chief Rabbi; the
Armenian Orthodox community, who were under the authority of a head
bishop; and a number of other religious communities as well.
Adoption of Islam
Before adopting
Islam"a process that was greatly facilitated by the
Abbasid victory at the 751 CE
Battle of Talas, which ensured Abbasid influence in Central Asia"the Turkic peoples practised a variety of
shamanism. After this battle, many of the various Turkic tribes"including the Oghuz Turks, who were the ancestors of both the Seljuks and the Ottomans"gradually converted to Islam, and brought the religion with them to Anatolia beginning in the 11th century CE.
State and Religion
Largely for practical reasons, the Ottoman Empire was, in a broad sense, tolerant towards its non-Muslim subjects; it did not, for instance, forcibly convert all of them to Islam. The sultans took their primary duty to be service to the interests of the state, which could not survive without taxes and a strong administrative system. The state's relationship with the
Greek Orthodox Church, for example, was largely peaceful, and the church's structure was kept intact and largely left alone but under close control and scrutiny until the
Greek War of Independence of 1821"1831 and, later in the 19th and early 20th centuries, the rise of the Ottoman
constitutional monarchy, which was driven to some extent by nationalistic currents. Other churches, like the
Bulgarian Orthodox Church, were dissolved and placed under the jurisdiction of the Greek Orthodox Church. On the other hand, the empire often served as a refuge for the persecuted and exiled Jews of Europe, as for example following the expulsion of the Jews from Spain in 1492, when Sultan Beyazid II welcomed them into Ottoman lands.
The economic structure of the Empire was defined by the geopolitical structure. The Ottoman Empire stood in between West and East, thus blocking the route eastward and forcing Spanish and Portuguese navigators to set out in search of a new route to the Orient. The empire was controlling the route that
Marco Polo once used. When
Christopher Columbus first journeyed to America in 1492, the Ottoman Empire was at its highest position"an economic power which extended over three continents. Current Ottoman studies imply that the change in politics between Ottomans and central Europe did depend on the opening of the new sea routes. It is also possible to see the decay of the Ottoman Empire by measuring the diminishing significance of the land routes, as Western Europe opened the ocean routes that bypassed the Middle East and Mediterranean.
Legally, the Ottoman Empire was organised around a system of local
jurisprudence; that is, local legal systems which did not conflict with the state as a whole were largely left alone. The Ottoman system had three court systems: one for Muslims, which was run by the
kadıs, or Islamic judges; one for non-Muslims, involving appointed Jews and Christians ruling over their respective religious areas; and one which regulated trade and had its origins in the empire's
capitulation agreements with foreign powers. The entire system was regulated from above by means of the administrative
kanun (قانون) laws.
These court categories were not, however, wholly exclusive in nature: for instance, the Islamic courts"which were the empire's primary courts"could also be used to settle a trade conflict or disputes between litigants of differing religions, and Jews and Christians often went to them so as to obtain a more forceful ruling on an issue. Women nearly always choose the Islamic courts, as these courts tended to be fairer towards them and to give them more just recompense.
Throughout the empire, there were two systems of law in effect: one was the Islamic
sharia (شريعة) law system, and the other was the Turkish
kanun system. The Ottoman state tended not to interfere with non-Muslim religious law systems, despite legally having a voice to do so through local governors. The Islamic
sharia law system had been developed from a combination of the
Qur'ān (قرآن); the
Hadīth (حدیث), or sayings of the
prophet Muhammad;
ijmā' (اجماع), or
consensus of the members of the
Muslim community;
qiyas (قياس), a system of analogical reasoning from previous precedents; and local customs. The
kanun law system, on the other hand, was the secular law of the sultan, and dealt with issues not clearly addressed by the
sharia system. Both systems were taught at the empire's law schools, which were in Istanbul and Bursa.
The Ottoman military was a complex system of recruiting and fief-holding. In the Ottoman army, light cavalry long formed the core and they were given fiefs called
timars. Cavalry used bows and short swords and made use of nomad tactics similar to those of the
Mongol Empire. The Ottoman army was once among the most advanced fighting forces in the world, being one of the first to employ muskets.
The modernisation of the Ottoman empire in the 19th century started with the military. This was the first institution to hire foreign experts and which sent their officer corps for training in western European countries. Technology and new weapons were transferred to the empire, such as German and British guns, air force and a modern navy.
Janissary
The Janissaries comprised infantry units that formed the Ottoman sultan's household troops and bodyguard. The force originated in the 14th century; it was abolished by Sultan Mahmud II in 1826. The
Timar system, which organised the Janissary acquisition, was a land based system that extended through out the Empire. The Eurocentric view perceives that often young Christians converted to Islam.
Timar as a system of assimilation is questionable.
Nizamis
The Nizamis (
Nizam-ı Cedid) were the Ottoman soldiers who replaced the Janissaries. This army was established at the beginning of the year 1842.
Military Band
Ottoman military bands are thought to be the oldest variety of military marching band in the world. Though they are often known by the Persian-derived word mehter (مهتر) in the West, that word, properly speaking, refers only to a single musician in the band.
* Cleveland, William L. "The Ottoman and Safavid Empires: A New Imperial Synthesis" in A History of the Modern Middle East. Westview Press, 2004. pp. 37"56. ISBN 0813340489.
* Creasy, Sir Edward Shepherd. History of the Ottoman Turks: From the beginning of their empire to the present time. R. Bentley and Son, 1877.
* Finkel, Caroline. Osman's Dream: The Story of the Ottoman Empire, 1300"1923. John Murray, 2005. ISBN 0719555132.
* Imber, Colin. The Ottoman Empire, 1300"1650: The Structure of Power. Palgrave Macmillan, 2002. ISBN 0333613864.
* Jelavich, Barbara. History of the Balkans: Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries. Cambridge University Press, 1983. ISBN 0521252490.
* Lybyer, Albert Howe. The Government of the Ottoman Empire in the Time of Suleiman the Magnificent. AMS Press, 1978. ISBN 0404146813.
* Mansel, Philip. Istanbul: City of the World's Desire, 1453"1924. Gardners Books, 1997. ISBN 0140262466.
* McCarthy, Justin. The Ottoman Peoples and the End of Empire. Hodder Arnold, 2001. ISBN 0340706570.
* Necipoğlu, Gülru. Architecture, Ceremonial, and Power: The Topkapi Palace in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries. MIT Press, 1991. ISBN 0262140500.
* Quataert, Donald. The Ottoman Empire, 1700"1922. Cambridge University Press, 2005. ISBN 0521547822.
*
Notes
*
List of Ottoman Turkish dominated territories across Europe, Asia and Africa (1299-1922) *
Mustafa Kemal Ataturk*
History of the Balkans*
Turkish War of IndependenceIn English
*
The Ottoman Empire*
Royal Ark: Turkey"an extensive site with much detailed information
*
The Ottomans"covers various aspects of the Ottoman Empire in detail
*
World Civilizations: The Ottomans"a comprehensive site that covers much about the Ottoman state and government
*
Capitals of Ottoman Empire"covers the different Ottoman capitals
*
History of Turkish Empire- Gives detail timetable.
*
Ottoman Website*
Turkish Oral NarrativeIn Turkish
*
Everything about the Ottoman Empire"a detailed site covering many different aspects of the Ottoman Empire
*
Turkcebilgi.com Ottoman Empire Pages"a site covering various aspects of the Ottoman Empire
*
Flags of the Ottoman Empire"contains information about Ottoman flags
*
Everything About Ottoman Coins"a comprehensive site that covers much about Ottoman currency
*
Kutsal Emanetler Topkapi Palace"a comprehensive site that covers much about Kutsal Emanetler