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Eyalet

Eyalets (Ottoman Turkish: ایالت, pronounced [ejaːˈlet], English: State), also known as beylerbeyliks or pashaliks, were a primary administrative division of the Ottoman Empire.

1730 map
1849 map
Two European maps of the Ottoman Empire. The first map describes the provinces as "beylerbeyliks", whereas the second describes them as "pashaliks"
The 1803 Cedid Atlas, showing the Middle Eastern eyalets
Eyalets of the Ottoman Empire in 1593

From 1453 to the beginning of the nineteenth century the Ottoman local government was loosely structured.[1] The empire was at first divided into states called eyalets, presided over by a beylerbey (title equivalent to duke in Turkish) of three tails (feathers borne on a state officer's ceremonial staff).[1] The grand vizier was responsible for nominating all the high officers of State, both in the capital and the states.[1] Between 1861 and 1866, these eyalets were abolished, and the territory was divided for administrative purposes into vilayets (provinces).[1]

The eyalets were subdivided into districts called livas or sanjaks,[2] each of which was under the charge of a pasha of one tail, with the title of mira-lira, or sanjak-bey.[3] These provinces were usually called pashaliks by Europeans.[3] The pasha was invested with powers of absolute government within his province, being the chief of both the military and financial departments, as well as police and criminal justice.[3]

At official functions, the order of precedence was Egypt, Baghdad, Abyssinia, Buda, Anatolia, "Mera'ish", and the Kapudan Pasha in Asia and Buda, Egypt, Abyssinia, Baghdad, and Rumelia in Europe, with the remainder arranged according to the chronological order of their conquest.[4]

Names

The term eyalet is sometimes translated province or governorate. Depending on the rank of the governor, they were also sometimes known as pashaliks (governed by a pasha), beylerbeyliks (governed by a bey or beylerbey), and kapudanliks (governed by a kapudan).

Pashaluk or Pashalik (Turkish: paşalık) is the abstract word derived from pasha, denoting the quality, office or jurisdiction of a pasha or the territory administered by him. In European sources, the word "pashalic" generally referred to the eyalets.[3]

The term 'eyalet' began to be applied to the largest administrative unit of the Ottoman Empire instead of beglerbegilik from the 1590s onward, and it continued to be used until 1867.[5]

History

 
Eyalets in 1609

Murad I instituted the great division of the sultanate into two beylerbeyiliks of Rumelia and Anatolia, in circa 1365.[6] With the eastward expansion of Bayezid's realms in the 1390s, a third eyalet, Rûm Eyalet, came into existence, with Amasya its chief town. This became the seat of government of Bayezid's youngest son, Mehmed I, and was to remain a residence of princely governors until the 16th century.[7]

In 1395, Bayezid I executed the last Shishmanid Tsar of Bulgaria, and annexed his realm to Rumelia Eyalet. In 1461, Mehmed II expelled the last of the Isfendyarid dynasty from Sinop, awarding him lands thus taxation authority near Bursa in exchange for his hereditary territory. The Isfendyarid principality became a district of Anatolia Eyalet.[7] In 1468, Karaman Eyalet was established, following the annexation of the formerly independent principality of Karaman; Mehmed II appointed his son Mustafa as governor of the new eyalet, with his seat at Konya.[7]

The 16th century saw the greatest increase in the number of eyalets, largely through the conquests of Selim I and Süleyman I, which created the need to incorporate the new territory into the structure of the Empire, and partly through the reorganisation of existing territory.[7] A list dated 1527 shows eight eyalets, with Egypt, Damascus, Diyarbekir and Kurdistan added to the original four. The last eyalet, however, did not survive as an administrative entity. Süleyman's conquests in eastern Turkey, Iraq and Hungary also resulted in the creation of new eyalets.[7]

The former principality of Dulkadir became the Dulkadir Eyalet at some time after its annexation in 1522. After the Iranian campaign of 1533–6, the new eyalets of Erzurum, Van, Sharazor and Baghdad guarded the frontier with Iran.[7] In 1541 came the creation of Budin Eyalet from part of the old Kingdom of Hungary.[7] The Eyalet of the Archipelago was created by Süleyman I especially for Hayreddin Barbarossa in 1533, by detaching districts from the shores and islands of the Aegean which had previously been part of the eyalets of Rumelia and Anatolia, and uniting them as an independent eyalet.[7]

In 1580, Bosnia, previously a district of Rumelia, became an eyalet in its own right, presumably in view of its strategically important position on the border with the Habsburgs. Similar considerations led to the creation of the Kanije Eyalet from the districts adjoining this border fortress, which had fallen to the Ottomans in 1600. In the same period, the annexation of the Rumelian districts on the lower Danube and the Black Sea coast, and their addition to territories between the Danube and the Dniepr along the Black Sea, created the Silistra Eyalet. At the same time, on the south-eastern shore of the Black Sea, Trebizond Eyalet came into being. The purpose of this reorganisation, and especially the creation of the eyalet of Özi was presumably to improve the defences of the Black Sea ports against the Cossacks.[7]

By 1609, according to the list of Ayn Ali, there were 32 eyalets. Some of these, such as Tripoli, Cyprus or Tunis, were the spoils of conquest. Others, however, were the products of administrative division.[7]

 
Eyalets in 1795

In 1795, the government launched a major reorganization of the provincial administration, with a law decreeing that there would be 28 provinces, each to be governed by a vizer. These were Adana, Aleppo, Anatolia, Baghdad, Basra, Bosnia, Childir, Crete, Damascus, Diyarbekir, Egypt, Erzurum, Habesh, Karaman, Kars, Dulkadir, the Archipelago, Morea, Mosul, Rakka, Rumelia, Sayda, Sharazor, Silistra, Sivas, Trebizond, Tripoli, Van. In practice, however, central control remained weak, and beylerbeyis continued to rule some provinces, instead of vizers.[8]

Government

The beglerbegiliks where the timar system was not applied, such as Abyssinia, Algiers, Egypt, Baghdad, Basra and Lahsa, were more autonomous than the others. Instead of collecting provincial revenues through sipahis, the beglerbegi transferred fixed annuals sums to Istanbul, known as the salyane.[5]

By 1500, the four central eyalets of the Empire, Rumelia, Anatolia, Rum and Karaman, were under direct rule. Wallachia, Moldavia and the Khanate of the Crimea, territories which Mehmed II had brought under his suzerainty, remained in the control of native dynasties tributary to the Sultan. So, too, did the Kingdom of Hungary after the battle of Mohács in 1526.[7]

Map

List

From the mid-14th century until the late 16th century, only one new beylerbeylik (Karaman) was established.

Disappeared before 1609

The eyalets that existed before 1609 but disappeared include the following:[9]

Province Name Ottoman Turkish Name and Transliteration (Modern Turkish) Existed for
Abkhazia Abhazya ? years (1578–?) also called Sukhum [Sohumkale] or Georgia [Gürcistan] and included Mingrelia and Imeretia as well as modern Abkhazia – nominally annexed but never fully conquered
Akhaltsikhe Ahıska ? years (1603–?) either split from or coextensive with Samtskhe
Dagestan Dağıstan ? years (1578–?) also called Demirkapı – assigned a serdar [chief] rather than a beylerbeyi
Dmanisi Tumanis ? years (1584–?)
Ganja Gence 16 years (1588–1604)
Gori Gori ? years (1588–?) probably replaced Tiflis after 1586
Győr Yanık 04 years (1594–1598)
Ibrim Ìbrīm 01 year (1584-1585) temporary promotion of the sanjak of Ibrim[10]
Kakheti Kaheti ? years (1578–?) Kakhetian king was appointed hereditary bey
Lazistan Lazistān ? years (1574–?)
Lorri Lori ? years (1584–?)
Nakhichevan Nahçivan 01 year (1603 only) possibly never separate from Yerevan[9]
Poti Faş ? years (1579–?) may have also been another name for Trabzon
Sanaa San'a 02 years (1567–1569) temporary division of Yemen
Shemakha Şamahı 01 year (1583 only) may have also been another name for Shervan
Szigetvár Zigetvar 04 years (1596–1600) later transferred to Kanizsa
Shervan Şirvan 26 years (1578–1604) overseen by a serdar [chief] rather than a beylerbeyi
Tabriz Tebriz 18 years (1585–1603)
Tiflis Tiflis 08 years (1578–1586) probably replaced by Gori after 1586
Wallachia Eflak 2 months (September–October 1595) the rest of the time Wallachia was a separate autonomous principality
Yerevan Erivan 21 years (1583–1604) sometimes also included Van
Zabid Zebit 02 years (1567–1569) temporary division of Yemen

Eyalets in 1609

Conquests of Selim I and Suleyman I in the 16th century required an increase in administrative units. By the end of the latter half of the century there were as many as 42 eyalets, as the beylerbeyliks came to be known. The chart below shows the administrative situation as of 1609.

Province Name Ottoman Turkish Name and Transliteration (Modern Turkish) Existed for
Habesh Habeş 313 years (1554–1867) Included areas on both sides of the Red Sea. Also called "Mecca and Medina"
Adana آضنه Ażana (Adana) 257 years (1608–1865)
Archipelago جزایر بحر سفید Cezayir-i Bahr-i Sefid 329 years (1535–1864) Domain of the Kapudan Pasha (Lord Admiral); Also called Denizi or Denizli, later Vilayet of the Archipelago
Aleppo حلب Ḥaleb (Halep) 330 years (1534–1864)
Algiers جزایر غرب Cezâyîr-i Ġarb (Cezayir Garp, Cezayir) 313 years (1517–1830)
Anatolia Anadolu 448 years (1393–1841) Second Eyalet
Baghdad بغداد Baġdâd (Bağdat) 326 years (1535–1861) Until the Treaty of Zuhab (1639), Ottoman rule was not consolidated.
Basra بصره Baṣra (Basra) 324 years (1538–1862)
Bosnia Bosna 284 years (1580–1864)
Budin Budin 145 years (1541–1686)
Kıbrıs قبرص Ḳıbrıṣ (Kıbrıs) 092 years (1571-1660; 1745-1748)
Diyarbekir دیار بكر Diyârbekir (Diyarbakır) 305 years (1541–1846)
Eger اكر Egir (Eğri) 065 years (1596–1661)
Egypt مصر Mıṣır (Mısır) 350 years (1517–1867)
Erzurum Erzurum 334 years (1533–1867) Until the Treaty of Zuhab (1639), Ottoman rule was not consolidated.
Al-Hasa Lahsa 110 years (1560–1670) Seldom directly ruled
Kefe (Theodosia) كفه Kefe 206 years (1568–1774)
Kanizsa Kanije 086 years (1600–1686)
Karaman Karaman 381 years (1483–1864)
Kars Kars 295 years (1580–1875) Until the Treaty of Zuhab (1639), Ottoman rule was not consolidated. Bounded to Erzurum Eyalet in 1875.
Dulkadir Maraş, Dulkadır 342 years (1522–1864)
Mosul Musul 329 years (1535–1864) Until the Treaty of Zuhab (1639), Ottoman rule was not consolidated.
Ar-Raqqah Rakka 278 years (1586–1864)
Rumelia Rumeli 502 years (1365–1867) First Eyalet
Childir Çıldır 267 years (1578–1845) Also called Meskheti, later possibly coextensive with Akhaltsikhe (Ahıska) Province. Most of eyalet passed to Russia in 1829. Remained parts of eyalet bounded to Erzurum in 1845.
Shahrizor Şehrizor 132 years (1554–1686) Also Shahrizor, Sheherizul, or Kirkuk. In 1830, this eyalet bounded to Mosul province as Kirkuk sanjak.
Silistria Silistre 271 years (1593–1864) Later sometimes called Ochakiv (Özi); First beylerbeyi was the Crimean khan
Sivas Sivas 466 years (1398–1864)
Syria شام Şam 348 years (1517–1865)
Temeşvar Tımışvar (Temeşvar) 164 years (1552–1716)
Trebizond, Lazistan Trabzon 403 years (1461–1864)
Tripoli (Tripoli-in-the-East) طرابلس شام Trablus-ı Şam (Trablusşam) 285 years (1579–1864)
Tripolitania (Tripoli-in-the-West) طرابلس غرب Trablus-ı Garb (Trablusgarp) 313 years (1551–1864)
Tunis Tunus 340 years (1524–1864)
Van وان Van 316 years (1548–1864) Until the Treaty of Zuhab (1639), Ottoman rule was not consolidated.
Yemen یمن Yemen 142 years (1517–1636; 1849–1872)

Sources:

  • Colin Imber. The Ottoman Empire, 1300-1650: The structure of Power. (Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire, UK: Palgrave Macmillan, 2002.)
  • Halil Inalcik. The Ottoman Empire: The Classical Age 1300–1600. Trans. Norman Itzkowitz and Colin Imber. (London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1973.)
  • Donald Edgar Pitcher. An Historical Geography of the Ottoman Empire (Leiden, Netherlands: E.J. Brill, 1972.)

Established 1609–1683

Province Name Ottoman Turkish Name and Transliteration (Modern Turkish) Existed for
Crete Girid 198 years (1669–1867)
Morea Mora 181 years (1620–1687) and (1715–1829) originally part of Aegean Archipelago Province
Podolia Podolya 027 years (1672–1699) overseen by several serdars (marshals) rather than by beylerbeyi (governors)
Sidon Sayda 181 years (1660–1841)
Uyvar Uyvar 022 years (1663–1685)
Varad Varad 031 years (1661–1692)

Established 1826–1864

Province Name Ottoman Turkish Name and Transliteration (Modern Turkish) Existed for
Adrianople Edirne 38 years (1826–1864)
Monastir Manastır 38 years (1826–1864)
Salonica Selanik 38 years (1826–1864)
Aidin Aydın 38 years (1826–1864)
Ankara Ankara 37 years (1827–1864)
Kastamonu Kastamonu 37 years (1827–1864)
Herzegovina Hersek 18 years (1833–1851)
Hüdavendigâr Hüdavendigâr 26 years (1841–1867)
Karasi Karesi 02 years (1845–1847)
Niš Niş 18 years (1846–1864)
Kurdistan Kurdistan 21 years (1846–1867)[11]
Vidin Vidin 18 years (1846–1864)

Maps

Modern usage of the term

Turkish Language Association defines the word eyalet as "an administrative division having some kind of administrative independence" and in modern Turkish, the word eyalet is used widely in the context of federalism, corresponding to the English word state. While the word eyalet is out of use in Turkish public administration, replaced long ago by ils under a unitary structure, top-level administrative subdivisions of numerous federal states are called eyalets in Turkish, such as the states of Australia, Austria, Brazil, Germany, India, Malaysia, Mexico and the United States, along with the provinces of Argentina, Canada and Pakistan, deferent to the modern definition of the word. Albeit China and Iran are legally unitary states, these countries' provinces are also referred to as eyalets in Turkish.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d A handbook of Asia Minor. Naval Staff. Intelligence Department. 1919. p. 203.
  2. ^ Raymond Detrez; Barbara Segaert (2008-01-01). Europe and the historical legacies in the Balkans. Peter Lang. p. 167. ISBN 978-90-5201-374-9. Retrieved 2013-06-01.
  3. ^ a b c d The empires and cities of Asia (1873) by Forbes, A. Gruar. Page 188
  4. ^ Çelebi, Evliya. Trans. by von Hammer, Joseph. Narrative of travels in Europe, Asia, and Africa in the seventeenth century, Vol. 1, p. 90 ff. Parbury, Allen, & Co. (London), 1834.
  5. ^ a b Selcuk Aksin Somel (2010-03-23). The A to Z of the Ottoman Empire. Scarecrow Press. p. 88. ISBN 978-1-4617-3176-4. Retrieved 2013-06-03.
  6. ^ D. E. Pitcher (1972). An Historical Geography of the Ottoman Empire: From Earliest Times to the End of the Sixteenth Century. Brill Archive. p. 125. Retrieved 2013-06-02.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Imber, Colin (2002). (PDF). pp. 177–200. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-07-26.
  8. ^ M. Sükrü Hanioglu (2010-03-08). A Brief History of the Late Ottoman Empire. Princeton University Press. p. 50. ISBN 978-1-4008-2968-2. Retrieved 2013-06-01.
  9. ^ a b D. E. Pitcher (1972). An Historical Geography of the Ottoman Empire: From Earliest Times to the End of the Sixteenth Century. Brill Archive. pp. 128–29. Retrieved 2013-06-02.
  10. ^ V. L. Menage (1988): "The Ottomans and Nubia in the sixteenth century". Annales Islamologiques 24. pp.152-153.
  11. ^ Aydın, Suavi; Verheij, Jelle (2012). Jongerden, Joost; Verheij, Jelle (eds.). Social Relations in Ottoman Diyarbekir, 1870-1915. Brill. p. 18. ISBN 9789004225183.

Further reading

  • Imber, Colin (2002). The Ottoman Empire, 1300–1650: The Structure of Power. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-3336-1386-3.
  • Halil Inalcik. The Ottoman Empire: The Classical Age 1300-1600. Trans. Norman Itzkowitz and Colin Imber. (London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1973.)
  • Paul Robert Magocsi. Historical Atlas of Central Europe. (2nd ed.) Seattle, WA, USA: Univ. of Washington Press, 2002)
  • Nouveau Larousse illustré, undated (early 20th century), passim (in French)
  • Donald Edgar Pitcher. An Historical Geography of the Ottoman Empire. (Leiden, Netherlands: E.J. Brill, 1972., includes 36 color maps)
  • Westermann, Großer Atlas zur Weltgeschichte (in German, includes maps)

External links

  • Francesco Sansovino (1583). Del governo et amministrazione di diversi regni libri XXII. p. 43. Retrieved 2013-06-02. Contains a list of eyalets, or 'beglerbei'.
  • Claudio Ptolomeo; Giovanni Antonio Magini (1598). Geografia cioè descrittione vniuersale della terra: partita in due volumi ... appresso Gio. Battista [et] Giorgio Galignani fratelli. p. 8. Retrieved 2013-06-02. Includes a list of provinces or 'beierbei'.
  • Turcici imperii status seu discursus varii de rebus turcarum. 1630. p. 198. Retrieved 2013-06-02. With a list of 'beglerbegatus'.
  • Paul Rycaut (1670). The Present state of the Ottoman empire: Containing the Maxims of... Starkey. p. 175. Retrieved 2013-06-02. With a list of 'beglerbeg' and 'sangiacks'.
  • Michel-Antoine Baudrand (1681). Geographia. p. 343. Retrieved 2013-06-02. With a list of 'beglerbeglics'.
  • Evliya Çelebi; Joseph von Hammer-Purgstall (1834). Narrative of Travels in Europe, Asia, and Africa in the Seventeenth Century. Oriental Translation Fund. p. 90. Retrieved 2013-06-02. Includes a list of beglerbegliks and sanjaks.
  • John Macgregor (1834). The resources and statistics of nations. p. 451. Retrieved 3 June 2013. With a list of Eyalets and livas.
  • Sir Grenville Temple (10th bart.) (1836). Travels in Greece and Turkey: Being the Second Part of Excursions in the Mediterranean. Saunders and Otley. p. 274. Retrieved 10 June 2013. The appendix includes a list of 'government-generals', sanjaks, and their governors.

eyalet, confused, with, eyelet, ayelet, disambiguation, ottoman, turkish, ایالت, pronounced, ejaːˈlet, english, state, also, known, beylerbeyliks, pashaliks, were, primary, administrative, division, ottoman, empire, 1730, map1849, maptwo, european, maps, ottom. Not to be confused with Eyelet or Ayelet disambiguation Eyalets Ottoman Turkish ایالت pronounced ejaːˈlet English State also known as beylerbeyliks or pashaliks were a primary administrative division of the Ottoman Empire 1730 map1849 mapTwo European maps of the Ottoman Empire The first map describes the provinces as beylerbeyliks whereas the second describes them as pashaliks The 1803 Cedid Atlas showing the Middle Eastern eyalets Eyalets of the Ottoman Empire in 1593 From 1453 to the beginning of the nineteenth century the Ottoman local government was loosely structured 1 The empire was at first divided into states called eyalets presided over by a beylerbey title equivalent to duke in Turkish of three tails feathers borne on a state officer s ceremonial staff 1 The grand vizier was responsible for nominating all the high officers of State both in the capital and the states 1 Between 1861 and 1866 these eyalets were abolished and the territory was divided for administrative purposes into vilayets provinces 1 The eyalets were subdivided into districts called livas or sanjaks 2 each of which was under the charge of a pasha of one tail with the title of mira lira or sanjak bey 3 These provinces were usually called pashaliks by Europeans 3 The pasha was invested with powers of absolute government within his province being the chief of both the military and financial departments as well as police and criminal justice 3 At official functions the order of precedence was Egypt Baghdad Abyssinia Buda Anatolia Mera ish and the Kapudan Pasha in Asia and Buda Egypt Abyssinia Baghdad and Rumelia in Europe with the remainder arranged according to the chronological order of their conquest 4 Contents 1 Names 2 History 3 Government 4 Map 5 List 5 1 Disappeared before 1609 5 2 Eyalets in 1609 5 3 Established 1609 1683 5 4 Established 1826 1864 6 Maps 7 Modern usage of the term 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksNames EditThe term eyalet is sometimes translated province or governorate Depending on the rank of the governor they were also sometimes known as pashaliks governed by a pasha beylerbeyliks governed by a bey or beylerbey and kapudanliks governed by a kapudan Pashaluk or Pashalik Turkish pasalik is the abstract word derived from pasha denoting the quality office or jurisdiction of a pasha or the territory administered by him In European sources the word pashalic generally referred to the eyalets 3 The term eyalet began to be applied to the largest administrative unit of the Ottoman Empire instead of beglerbegilik from the 1590s onward and it continued to be used until 1867 5 History Edit Eyalets in 1609 Murad I instituted the great division of the sultanate into two beylerbeyiliks of Rumelia and Anatolia in circa 1365 6 With the eastward expansion of Bayezid s realms in the 1390s a third eyalet Rum Eyalet came into existence with Amasya its chief town This became the seat of government of Bayezid s youngest son Mehmed I and was to remain a residence of princely governors until the 16th century 7 In 1395 Bayezid I executed the last Shishmanid Tsar of Bulgaria and annexed his realm to Rumelia Eyalet In 1461 Mehmed II expelled the last of the Isfendyarid dynasty from Sinop awarding him lands thus taxation authority near Bursa in exchange for his hereditary territory The Isfendyarid principality became a district of Anatolia Eyalet 7 In 1468 Karaman Eyalet was established following the annexation of the formerly independent principality of Karaman Mehmed II appointed his son Mustafa as governor of the new eyalet with his seat at Konya 7 The 16th century saw the greatest increase in the number of eyalets largely through the conquests of Selim I and Suleyman I which created the need to incorporate the new territory into the structure of the Empire and partly through the reorganisation of existing territory 7 A list dated 1527 shows eight eyalets with Egypt Damascus Diyarbekir and Kurdistan added to the original four The last eyalet however did not survive as an administrative entity Suleyman s conquests in eastern Turkey Iraq and Hungary also resulted in the creation of new eyalets 7 The former principality of Dulkadir became the Dulkadir Eyalet at some time after its annexation in 1522 After the Iranian campaign of 1533 6 the new eyalets of Erzurum Van Sharazor and Baghdad guarded the frontier with Iran 7 In 1541 came the creation of Budin Eyalet from part of the old Kingdom of Hungary 7 The Eyalet of the Archipelago was created by Suleyman I especially for Hayreddin Barbarossa in 1533 by detaching districts from the shores and islands of the Aegean which had previously been part of the eyalets of Rumelia and Anatolia and uniting them as an independent eyalet 7 In 1580 Bosnia previously a district of Rumelia became an eyalet in its own right presumably in view of its strategically important position on the border with the Habsburgs Similar considerations led to the creation of the Kanije Eyalet from the districts adjoining this border fortress which had fallen to the Ottomans in 1600 In the same period the annexation of the Rumelian districts on the lower Danube and the Black Sea coast and their addition to territories between the Danube and the Dniepr along the Black Sea created the Silistra Eyalet At the same time on the south eastern shore of the Black Sea Trebizond Eyalet came into being The purpose of this reorganisation and especially the creation of the eyalet of Ozi was presumably to improve the defences of the Black Sea ports against the Cossacks 7 By 1609 according to the list of Ayn Ali there were 32 eyalets Some of these such as Tripoli Cyprus or Tunis were the spoils of conquest Others however were the products of administrative division 7 Eyalets in 1795 In 1795 the government launched a major reorganization of the provincial administration with a law decreeing that there would be 28 provinces each to be governed by a vizer These were Adana Aleppo Anatolia Baghdad Basra Bosnia Childir Crete Damascus Diyarbekir Egypt Erzurum Habesh Karaman Kars Dulkadir the Archipelago Morea Mosul Rakka Rumelia Sayda Sharazor Silistra Sivas Trebizond Tripoli Van In practice however central control remained weak and beylerbeyis continued to rule some provinces instead of vizers 8 Government EditThe beglerbegiliks where the timar system was not applied such as Abyssinia Algiers Egypt Baghdad Basra and Lahsa were more autonomous than the others Instead of collecting provincial revenues through sipahis the beglerbegi transferred fixed annuals sums to Istanbul known as the salyane 5 By 1500 the four central eyalets of the Empire Rumelia Anatolia Rum and Karaman were under direct rule Wallachia Moldavia and the Khanate of the Crimea territories which Mehmed II had brought under his suzerainty remained in the control of native dynasties tributary to the Sultan So too did the Kingdom of Hungary after the battle of Mohacs in 1526 7 Map Edit Algiers Egypt Habesh Tripolitania Tunis Adana Aidin Anatolia Ankara Diyar i Bekr Dulkadir Erzurum Hudavendigar Karaman Karasi Kars Kastamonu Rum Trebizond Van Aleppo Baghdad Basra Cyprus Damascus Lahsa Mosul Rakka Samtskhe Sharazor Sidon Tripoli Yemen Adrianople Bosnia Budin Crete Egir Herzegovina Kanije Kefe Morea Nis Yanina Podolia Rumelia Salonica Silistra Temesvar Uyvar Varat Vidin ZigetvarList EditFrom the mid 14th century until the late 16th century only one new beylerbeylik Karaman was established Disappeared before 1609 Edit The eyalets that existed before 1609 but disappeared include the following 9 Province Name Ottoman Turkish Name and Transliteration Modern Turkish Existed forAbkhazia Abhazya years 1578 also called Sukhum Sohumkale or Georgia Gurcistan and included Mingrelia and Imeretia as well as modern Abkhazia nominally annexed but never fully conqueredAkhaltsikhe Ahiska years 1603 either split from or coextensive with SamtskheDagestan Dagistan years 1578 also called Demirkapi assigned a serdar chief rather than a beylerbeyiDmanisi Tumanis years 1584 Ganja Gence 16 years 1588 1604 Gori Gori years 1588 probably replaced Tiflis after 1586Gyor Yanik 04 years 1594 1598 Ibrim Ibrim 01 year 1584 1585 temporary promotion of the sanjak of Ibrim 10 Kakheti Kaheti years 1578 Kakhetian king was appointed hereditary beyLazistan Lazistan years 1574 Lorri Lori years 1584 Nakhichevan Nahcivan 01 year 1603 only possibly never separate from Yerevan 9 Poti Fas years 1579 may have also been another name for TrabzonSanaa San a 02 years 1567 1569 temporary division of YemenShemakha Samahi 01 year 1583 only may have also been another name for ShervanSzigetvar Zigetvar 04 years 1596 1600 later transferred to KanizsaShervan Sirvan 26 years 1578 1604 overseen by a serdar chief rather than a beylerbeyiTabriz Tebriz 18 years 1585 1603 Tiflis Tiflis 08 years 1578 1586 probably replaced by Gori after 1586Wallachia Eflak 2 months September October 1595 the rest of the time Wallachia was a separate autonomous principalityYerevan Erivan 21 years 1583 1604 sometimes also included VanZabid Zebit 02 years 1567 1569 temporary division of YemenEyalets in 1609 Edit Conquests of Selim I and Suleyman I in the 16th century required an increase in administrative units By the end of the latter half of the century there were as many as 42 eyalets as the beylerbeyliks came to be known The chart below shows the administrative situation as of 1609 Province Name Ottoman Turkish Name and Transliteration Modern Turkish Existed forHabesh Habes 313 years 1554 1867 Included areas on both sides of the Red Sea Also called Mecca and Medina Adana آضنه Azana Adana 257 years 1608 1865 Archipelago جزایر بحر سفید Cezayir i Bahr i Sefid 329 years 1535 1864 Domain of the Kapudan Pasha Lord Admiral Also called Denizi or Denizli later Vilayet of the ArchipelagoAleppo حلب Ḥaleb Halep 330 years 1534 1864 Algiers جزایر غرب Cezayir i Ġarb Cezayir Garp Cezayir 313 years 1517 1830 Anatolia Anadolu 448 years 1393 1841 Second EyaletBaghdad بغداد Baġdad Bagdat 326 years 1535 1861 Until the Treaty of Zuhab 1639 Ottoman rule was not consolidated Basra بصره Baṣra Basra 324 years 1538 1862 Bosnia Bosna 284 years 1580 1864 Budin Budin 145 years 1541 1686 Kibris قبرص Ḳibriṣ Kibris 092 years 1571 1660 1745 1748 Diyarbekir دیار بكر Diyarbekir Diyarbakir 305 years 1541 1846 Eger اكر Egir Egri 065 years 1596 1661 Egypt مصر Miṣir Misir 350 years 1517 1867 Erzurum Erzurum 334 years 1533 1867 Until the Treaty of Zuhab 1639 Ottoman rule was not consolidated Al Hasa Lahsa 110 years 1560 1670 Seldom directly ruledKefe Theodosia كفه Kefe 206 years 1568 1774 Kanizsa Kanije 086 years 1600 1686 Karaman Karaman 381 years 1483 1864 Kars Kars 295 years 1580 1875 Until the Treaty of Zuhab 1639 Ottoman rule was not consolidated Bounded to Erzurum Eyalet in 1875 Dulkadir Maras Dulkadir 342 years 1522 1864 Mosul Musul 329 years 1535 1864 Until the Treaty of Zuhab 1639 Ottoman rule was not consolidated Ar Raqqah Rakka 278 years 1586 1864 Rumelia Rumeli 502 years 1365 1867 First EyaletChildir Cildir 267 years 1578 1845 Also called Meskheti later possibly coextensive with Akhaltsikhe Ahiska Province Most of eyalet passed to Russia in 1829 Remained parts of eyalet bounded to Erzurum in 1845 Shahrizor Sehrizor 132 years 1554 1686 Also Shahrizor Sheherizul or Kirkuk In 1830 this eyalet bounded to Mosul province as Kirkuk sanjak Silistria Silistre 271 years 1593 1864 Later sometimes called Ochakiv Ozi First beylerbeyi was the Crimean khanSivas Sivas 466 years 1398 1864 Syria شام Sam 348 years 1517 1865 Temesvar Timisvar Temesvar 164 years 1552 1716 Trebizond Lazistan Trabzon 403 years 1461 1864 Tripoli Tripoli in the East طرابلس شام Trablus i Sam Trablussam 285 years 1579 1864 Tripolitania Tripoli in the West طرابلس غرب Trablus i Garb Trablusgarp 313 years 1551 1864 Tunis Tunus 340 years 1524 1864 Van وان Van 316 years 1548 1864 Until the Treaty of Zuhab 1639 Ottoman rule was not consolidated Yemen یمن Yemen 142 years 1517 1636 1849 1872 Sources Colin Imber The Ottoman Empire 1300 1650 The structure of Power Houndmills Basingstoke Hampshire UK Palgrave Macmillan 2002 Halil Inalcik The Ottoman Empire The Classical Age 1300 1600 Trans Norman Itzkowitz and Colin Imber London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 1973 Donald Edgar Pitcher An Historical Geography of the Ottoman Empire Leiden Netherlands E J Brill 1972 Established 1609 1683 Edit Province Name Ottoman Turkish Name and Transliteration Modern Turkish Existed forCrete Girid 198 years 1669 1867 Morea Mora 181 years 1620 1687 and 1715 1829 originally part of Aegean Archipelago ProvincePodolia Podolya 027 years 1672 1699 overseen by several serdars marshals rather than by beylerbeyi governors Sidon Sayda 181 years 1660 1841 Uyvar Uyvar 022 years 1663 1685 Varad Varad 031 years 1661 1692 Established 1826 1864 Edit Province Name Ottoman Turkish Name and Transliteration Modern Turkish Existed forAdrianople Edirne 38 years 1826 1864 Monastir Manastir 38 years 1826 1864 Salonica Selanik 38 years 1826 1864 Aidin Aydin 38 years 1826 1864 Ankara Ankara 37 years 1827 1864 Kastamonu Kastamonu 37 years 1827 1864 Herzegovina Hersek 18 years 1833 1851 Hudavendigar Hudavendigar 26 years 1841 1867 Karasi Karesi 02 years 1845 1847 Nis Nis 18 years 1846 1864 Kurdistan Kurdistan 21 years 1846 1867 11 Vidin Vidin 18 years 1846 1864 Maps Edit Eyalets in the 17th century 1855 map of Turkey in Asia by Joseph Hutchins Colton Map of European Turkey by Carl Ritter published in 1864Modern usage of the term EditTurkish Language Association defines the word eyalet as an administrative division having some kind of administrative independence and in modern Turkish the word eyalet is used widely in the context of federalism corresponding to the English word state While the word eyalet is out of use in Turkish public administration replaced long ago by ils under a unitary structure top level administrative subdivisions of numerous federal states are called eyalets in Turkish such as the states of Australia Austria Brazil Germany India Malaysia Mexico and the United States along with the provinces of Argentina Canada and Pakistan deferent to the modern definition of the word Albeit China and Iran are legally unitary states these countries provinces are also referred to as eyalets in Turkish See also EditSubdivisions of the Ottoman EmpireReferences Edit a b c d A handbook of Asia Minor Naval Staff Intelligence Department 1919 p 203 Raymond Detrez Barbara Segaert 2008 01 01 Europe and the historical legacies in the Balkans Peter Lang p 167 ISBN 978 90 5201 374 9 Retrieved 2013 06 01 a b c d The empires and cities of Asia 1873 by Forbes A Gruar Page 188 Celebi Evliya Trans by von Hammer Joseph Narrative of travels in Europe Asia and Africa in the seventeenth century Vol 1 p 90 ff Parbury Allen amp Co London 1834 a b Selcuk Aksin Somel 2010 03 23 The A to Z of the Ottoman Empire Scarecrow Press p 88 ISBN 978 1 4617 3176 4 Retrieved 2013 06 03 D E Pitcher 1972 An Historical Geography of the Ottoman Empire From Earliest Times to the End of the Sixteenth Century Brill Archive p 125 Retrieved 2013 06 02 a b c d e f g h i j k Imber Colin 2002 The Ottoman Empire 1300 1650 The Structure of Power PDF pp 177 200 Archived from the original PDF on 2014 07 26 M Sukru Hanioglu 2010 03 08 A Brief History of the Late Ottoman Empire Princeton University Press p 50 ISBN 978 1 4008 2968 2 Retrieved 2013 06 01 a b D E Pitcher 1972 An Historical Geography of the Ottoman Empire From Earliest Times to the End of the Sixteenth Century Brill Archive pp 128 29 Retrieved 2013 06 02 V L Menage 1988 The Ottomans and Nubia in the sixteenth century Annales Islamologiques 24 pp 152 153 Aydin Suavi Verheij Jelle 2012 Jongerden Joost Verheij Jelle eds Social Relations in Ottoman Diyarbekir 1870 1915 Brill p 18 ISBN 9789004225183 Further reading EditImber Colin 2002 The Ottoman Empire 1300 1650 The Structure of Power Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 3336 1386 3 Halil Inalcik The Ottoman Empire The Classical Age 1300 1600 Trans Norman Itzkowitz and Colin Imber London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 1973 Paul Robert Magocsi Historical Atlas of Central Europe 2nd ed Seattle WA USA Univ of Washington Press 2002 Nouveau Larousse illustre undated early 20th century passim in French Donald Edgar Pitcher An Historical Geography of the Ottoman Empire Leiden Netherlands E J Brill 1972 includes 36 color maps Westermann Grosser Atlas zur Weltgeschichte in German includes maps External links EditFrancesco Sansovino 1583 Del governo et amministrazione di diversi regni libri XXII p 43 Retrieved 2013 06 02 Contains a list of eyalets or beglerbei Claudio Ptolomeo Giovanni Antonio Magini 1598 Geografia cioe descrittione vniuersale della terra partita in due volumi appresso Gio Battista et Giorgio Galignani fratelli p 8 Retrieved 2013 06 02 Includes a list of provinces or beierbei Turcici imperii status seu discursus varii de rebus turcarum 1630 p 198 Retrieved 2013 06 02 With a list of beglerbegatus Paul Rycaut 1670 The Present state of the Ottoman empire Containing the Maxims of Starkey p 175 Retrieved 2013 06 02 With a list of beglerbeg and sangiacks Michel Antoine Baudrand 1681 Geographia p 343 Retrieved 2013 06 02 With a list of beglerbeglics Evliya Celebi Joseph von Hammer Purgstall 1834 Narrative of Travels in Europe Asia and Africa in the Seventeenth Century Oriental Translation Fund p 90 Retrieved 2013 06 02 Includes a list of beglerbegliks and sanjaks John Macgregor 1834 The resources and statistics of nations p 451 Retrieved 3 June 2013 With a list of Eyalets and livas Sir Grenville Temple 10th bart 1836 Travels in Greece and Turkey Being the Second Part of Excursions in the Mediterranean Saunders and Otley p 274 Retrieved 10 June 2013 The appendix includes a list of government generals sanjaks and their governors Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eyalet amp oldid 1123427026, 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