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Osman I

Osman I or Osman Ghazi (Ottoman Turkish: عثمان غازى, romanized: ʿOsmān Ġāzī; Turkish: I. Osman or Osman Gazi; died 1323/4),[1][3] sometimes transliterated archaically as Othman, was the founder of the Ottoman Empire (first known as the Ottoman Beylik or Emirate). While initially a small Turkoman[6] principality during Osman's lifetime, his descendants transformed into a world empire in the centuries after his death.[7] It existed until shortly after the end of World War I.

Osman I
19th-century depiction of Osman, by Konstantin Kapıdağlı
Uch Bey of the Sultanate of Rum
Reignc. 1280c. 1299
PredecessorErtuğrul
SuccessorOffice disestablished
Sultan of the Ottoman Empire
Reignc. 1299 – 1323/4
PredecessorOffice established
SuccessorOrhan
BornUnknown,[1]
possibly c. 1254/5[2]
Died1323/4[3] (age 68–70)
Bursa, Ottoman Beylik
Burial
Tomb of Osman Gazi, Osmangazi, Bursa Province, Turkey
SpouseMalhun Hatun
Rabia Bala Hatun
IssueOrhan I
Alaeddin Pasha
Others
Names
Osman bin Ertuğrul bin Gündüz Alp[4]
عثمان بن ارطغرل بن گندز الپ
OR
Osman bin Ertuğrul bin Suleyman Shah
عثمان بن ارطغرل بن سلیمان شاہ
DynastyOttoman dynasty
FatherErtuğrul
MotherUnknown[5]
ReligionSunni Islam

Owing to the scarcity of historical sources dating from his lifetime, very little factual information about Osman has survived. Not a single written source survives from Osman's reign,[8] and the Ottomans did not record the history of Osman's life until the fifteenth century, more than a hundred years after his death.[9] Because of this, historians find it very challenging to differentiate between fact and myth in the many stories told about him.[10] One historian has even gone so far as to declare it impossible, describing the period of Osman's life as a "black hole".[11]

According to later Ottoman tradition, Osman's ancestors were descendants of the Kayı tribe of Oghuz Turks.[12] However, many scholars of the early Ottomans regard it as a later fabrication meant to reinforce dynastic legitimacy.[12]

The Ottoman principality was one of many Anatolian beyliks that emerged in the second half of the thirteenth century. Situated in the region of Bithynia in the north of Asia Minor, Osman's principality found itself particularly well placed to launch attacks on the vulnerable Byzantine Empire, which his descendants would eventually go on to conquer.

Name

Some scholars have argued that Osman's original name was Turkish, probably Atman or Ataman, and was only later changed to ʿOsmān, of Arabic origin. The earliest Byzantine sources, including Osman's contemporary and Greek historian George Pachymeres, spell his name as Ἀτουμάν (Atouman) or Ἀτμάν (Atman), whereas Greek sources regularly render both the Arabic form ʿUthmān and the Turkish version ʿOsmān with θ, τθ, or τσ. An early Arabic source mentioning him also writes ط rather than ث in one instance. Osman may thus have adopted the more prestigious Muslim name later in his life.[13] Turkish historian Halil İnalcık argued that the hypotheses that Osman was in fact named Ataman (per George Pachymeres), and that he came from the Desth-i Qipchaq north of the Black Sea, are both remote possibilities.[14]

Arab scholars like Shihab al-Umari and Ibn Khaldun used the name Othman, while Ibn Battuta, who visited the region during Orhan I's reign, called him Osmancık (also spelled Othmānjiq or Osmanjiq).[15] The suffix -cık (or -cuk), indicates the diminutive in Turkish, thus he was known by the name of Osmancik, which means "Osman the Little", in order to differentiate between him and the third Rashidun Caliph "Uthman the Great".[16]

Historical background

 
Ertuğrul's türbe (tomb) in Söğüt

Most sources agree that the Ottoman Turks belonged to the Kayı Oghuz Turkic clan, who, according to Ottoman traditions, fled their native homeland in Central Asia, during the early 13th century, due to the Mongol invasions. The clan settled in Anatolia, in a region belonging to the Seljuk Sultanate of Rûm.[17] Other sources claim that the Kayı clan moved to Anatolia two centuries earlier than the previously mentioned date, alongside the Seljuks, when they left Transoxiana to Khurasan around 1040 CE to reside near the city of Merv. Then, the Kayı clan moved towards eastern Anatolia after 1071 CE,[18] where it displaced alongside other Turkic clans. Later, it became involved in the army of Sultan Kayqubad I and fought against the Khwarazmians, Mongols and Byzantines, who were raiding Seljuk lands. According to several sources, the Kayı warriors were known for filling first lines in battles, and their fighting skills and bravery were among the major factors the Seljuks were victorious in many battles. This fact prompted Sultan Kayqubad to appoint Ertuğrul, the clan's Emir, as a Moqaddam (Lieutenant), and to reward the Kayıs some fertile lands near Ankara, where they settled and remained in the service of the Sultan for several years.[19][20]

Later, Ertuğrul was granted dominion over the town of Söğüt in northwestern Anatolia on the Byzantine frontier.[21] He also obtained the title of Uç beyliği or Uç bey (literally: marcher-lord). Granting this title was in line with the traditions of the Seljuk Sultanate, which is rewarding any clan chieftain who rises to power and is joined by a number of smaller clans, the title of marcher-lord. However, Ertuğrul had far-reaching political ambitions. He sought to expand beyond the lands rewarded to him. Thus, he started raiding the Byzantine possessions in the name of the Sultan successfully conquering several towns and villages, and slowly expanding his dominion during the half of the century he spent as a Seljuk governor. In 680 AH / 1281 CE, Ertuğrul died at nearly 90 years of age.[22]

Lineage

 
Osman's genealogy according to different Ottoman historians
 
Index of Behcetü't Tevârîh, one of the Ottoman sources that talks about Osman's origins

Although the exact date of Osman's birth is unspecified, some sources indicate that he was born on 8 Safar 656 AH / 13 February 1258 CE, the exact same day the Mongol hordes invaded Baghdad, killing its inhabitants and ravaging its landmarks.[23] Other sources, such as the 16th-century Ottoman historian Kemalpaşazâde, say that Osman was most likely born around the middle of the 13th century, possibly in 1254/5 CE.[24] Information related to the early life of Osman is limited. However, the few available sources agree that he was born in the town of Söğüt, which his father Ertuğrul took as the capital of his emirate.[25] The reason for the lack of information available about this stage of Osman's life is due to the fact that the oldest-known source about this time period was written about a hundred years after Osman's death. Among these sources are: Destan-ı Tevarih-i Al-i Osman (The Oral history of the Ottomans), written in the 14th century by the Ottoman poet and court physician Tâceddîn İbrâhîm bin Hızîr [tr] better known as Ahmedî (1334–1413 CE), Behcetü't Tevârîh [tr] (The Joy of histories) by Şükrullah (d. 1464 CE), and Tevarih-i Âl-i Osman [tr] (History of the Ottomans) by Derviş Ahmed Âşıkî, known as Âşıkpaşazâde (1400–1484 CE). Additionally, these remaining sources are not the originals, but rather copies, or copies of the copies that were rewritten over the years, leading to a probable loss or altering in the information.[26] In fact, it is accepted that Ottoman, European, and Byzantine sources are not very reliable when considering the origins of Osman and his clan. On one hand, the oldest known records originally written by the Ottomans all date back to the period that followed the conquest of Constantinople (1453 CE). On the other hand, none of the Byzantine historians did refer in their writings to the origin of the Ottomans. As for European historians, these Turkic Muslim peoples were outside of their interest. However, that changed after a century of this period, when the Ottomans began to pose a threat to Europe.[27] The Ottoman historian Kemalpaşazâde mentioned that Osman was Ertuğrul's youngest son and that he was raised in the traditional nomadic Turkic ways: he learned wrestling, swordsmanship, horse riding, arrow shooting, and falconry, from an early age. He quickly mastered the previously mentioned skills, outperforming all his brothers. He was also taught the principles of Islam, and was influenced by the teachings of Sufi sheikhs, mostly his mentor Sheikh Edebali, and this was reflected in his personality and lifestyle.[25]

 
An Ottoman miniature depicting Osman, 1563

In terms of proportions, the most popular and classic narration is that Osman is the grandson of Süleyman Şah, who died drowning while crossing the Euphrates River on horseback. The Turkish historian Yılmaz Öztuna [tr] considers that Osman's grandfather, and Ertuğrul's father, is called Gündüz Alp, saying that it is more likely that Süleyman Şah is a name stuck in Anatolian popular memory, and it actually refers to Süleyman bin Qutulmish who founded the Seljuk Sultanate of Rûm. Öztuna adds that it is possible that Ottoman historians tried forming a connection between the Ottomans and the Seljuks, especially since the Ottomans appeared on the stage of history claiming to be the legitimate successors of the Seljuks. Based on this, Osman's assumed lineage is as follows: Osman bin Ertuğrul bin Gündüz Alp bin Kaya Alp bin Gökalp bin Sarquk Alp bin Kayı Alp.[18] Other researchers agree that the connection between Ertuğrul, Osman, and the Seljuks may have been largely invented by court chroniclers a century later, and the true origins of the Ottomans thus remain obscure.[28] On the other hand, some Ottoman sources indicate further lineage to Osman and the Oghuz Turks, which is closer to myth than reality, saying that these people are descendants of Japheth, son of Noah, and that Osman's genealogical tree contains 52 ancestors or more and ends with the Prophet Noah himself. This lineage includes Gökalp and Oghuz Han (who is said to be the father of Gökalp), and all the Oghuz Turkic peoples, including the Seljuks.[27] In this claim, one can notice the features of some of what Yılmaz Öztuna pointed out in his hypothesis, that the Ottomans were always trying to connect or relate themselves to the Seljuks, and to appear as their heirs.

Origin of the Ottoman Empire

 
16th-century depiction of Osman I by Paolo Veronese

The exact date of Osman's birth is unknown, and very little is known about his early life and origins due to the scarcity of sources and the many myths and legends which came to be told about him by the Ottomans in later centuries.[1][29] He was most likely born around the middle of the thirteenth century, possibly in 1254/5, the date given by the sixteenth-century Ottoman historian Kemalpaşazade.[2] According to Ottoman tradition, Osman's father Ertuğrul led the Turkic Kayı tribe west from Central Asia into Anatolia, fleeing the Mongol onslaught. He then pledged allegiance to the Sultan of the Anatolian Seljuks, who granted him dominion over the town of Söğüt on the Byzantine frontier.[30] This connection between Ertuğrul and the Seljuks, however, was largely invented by court chroniclers a century later, and the true origins of the Ottomans thus remain obscure.[31] According to the Karamanid historian Shikari, Osman was a lowborn Yörük and shepherd.[32]

Nothing is known for certain about Osman's early activities, except that he controlled the region around the town of Söğüt and from there launched raids against the neighboring Byzantine Empire. The first datable event in Osman's life is the Battle of Bapheus in 1301 or 1302, in which he defeated a Byzantine force sent to counter him.[33]

Osman appears to have followed the strategy of increasing his territories at the expense of the Byzantines while avoiding conflict with his more powerful Turkish neighbors.[30] His first advances were through the passes which lead from the barren areas of northern Phrygia near modern Eskişehir into the more fertile plains of Bithynia; according to Stanford Shaw, these conquests were achieved against the local Byzantine nobles, "some of whom were defeated in battle, others being absorbed peacefully by purchase contracts, marriage contracts, and the like."[34]

Ascendance to leadership

 
Osman as the Kayı Emir, or Bey

Osman became Emir, or Bey, upon his father's death around 680 AH / 1281 CE.[21] According to some historians, Osman's accession to power wasn't peaceful as he had to fight his relatives before he got hold of his clan's leadership. One of Osman's major rivals was his uncle Dündar Bey, who might have plotted to kill his nephew or rebelled against him when the latter decided to attack a small Greek island. Dündar Bey saw that Osman's ambition as a threat that might put the whole clan in danger. However, Osman had to pull out his sword to kill his uncle for disobeying.[35]

In the Vilayetname, a book containing the narrations about Haji Bektash Veli, Osman's younger uncle, was the one who became Bey after Ertuğrul's death. During that time, Osman and several other warriors started organizing raids on Byzantine lands adjacent to Söğüt, such as Yarhisar, Bilecik, İnegöl, and İznik. As a result, the Byzantine Tekfur (governor) of Bursa was provoked, and he sent envoys to the Seljuk Sultan Alâeddin Kayqubad III, complaining about these constant assaults. Thus, the Sultan ordered Gündüz Alp to bring forth his young nephew to stand before him, and so Osman was arrested and sent to Konya. According to this narration, Sultan Kayqubad admired Osman's courage and deeds, and didn't wish to punish him, instead, Osman was sent to Ḥājī Baktāš Walī to consider his matter. Osman was warmly received by the Sufi mystic, who then ordered his release saying: "I have been waiting for someone like him for years". After that, Ḥājī Baktāš Walī wrapped Osman's head with the same Turban associated with Sufi sheikhs, and sent him back to Konya with a message to the sultan, asking that Osman to become the Kayı Emir. Thus, Osman became the clan's leader.[36]

Importance of the Osmanic Beylik location

 
Area of the Ottoman Beylik during the reign of Osman I

From a military point of view, the location of Osman's Beylik had a significant impact on his success as a conquering warrior. His capital Söğüt was located on a hill in a well-defended position, mediating the main road from Constantinople to Konya. The importance of this site emerged due to the political fragmentation of Anatolia that gave small states greater importance than they originally had.[37] Being an Emir to a beylik bordering Byzantine lands, Osman had the opportunity to direct all his efforts towards war and Jihad following the footsteps of the Seljuks with intentions to conquer all Byzantine territories, and absorb them into the Islamic Caliphate. Encouraged by the weakness of the ancient Empire and its ongoing wars in Europe, Osman had the chance to expand towards western Anatolia crossing the Dardanelles to southeastern Europe.[37] Commenting on these actions, some historians argue that Osman's strategy of increasing his territories at the expense of the Byzantines was due to his intention to avoid conflicts with his more powerful Turkic neighbours.[21]

Politically, Osman showed great skills forming and applying new administrative systems in his beylik. During his reign, the Ottomans made great strides towards transitioning from the Nomadic tribe system to settling down in permanent settlements. This helped them consolidate their position and rapidly develop into a major power. Moreover, the beylik's location in northwestern Anatolia, next to Christendom, imposed a military policy on the Ottomans, which gave them better chances to grow and expand compared to the beyliaks of the interior.[37] Osman's beylik was also relatively far from both the Mongol invasions and the influence of the powerful Turkoman beyliks in southern and southwestern Anatolia. Add to that, its proximity to the Silk Road linking Byzantine lands in the west to areas controlled by the Mongols in the east, gave it prominent strategic and economic characteristics. Also, the Osmanic beylik was the only Islamic base facing the yet unconquered Byzantine regions, which made it a magnet to many Turkomen farmers, warriors, and Dervishes fleeing the Mongols, and aspiring to conquer new lands for economic and religious reasons.[38]

Osman's Dream

Osman I had a close relationship with a local religious leader of dervishes named Sheikh Edebali, whose daughter he married. A story emerged among later Ottoman writers to explain the relationship between the two men, in which Osman had a dream while staying in the Sheikh's house.[39] The story appears in the late-fifteenth-century chronicle of Aşıkpaşazade as follows:

He saw that a moon arose from the holy man's breast and came to sink in his own breast. A tree then sprouted from his navel and its shade compassed the world. Beneath this shade there were mountains, and streams flowed forth from the foot of each mountain. Some people drank from these running waters, others watered gardens, while yet others caused fountains to flow. When Osman awoke he told the story to the holy man, who said 'Osman, my son, congratulations, for God has given the imperial office to you and your descendants and my daughter Malhun shall be your wife.[40]

The dream became an important foundational myth for the empire, imbuing the House of Osman with God-given authority over the earth and providing its fifteenth-century audience with an explanation for Ottoman success.[41] The dream story may also have served as a form of compact: just as God promised to provide Osman and his descendants with sovereignty, it was also implicit that it was the duty of Osman to provide his subjects with prosperity.[42]

Political relations at the beginning of Osman's reign

 
A map of independent Turkic beyliks in Anatolia during the 14th century, showing the neighbouring Ottoman and Germiyanid beyliks

According to the Bektashi narration, whose accuracy cannot be confirmed since it was only mentioned in Bektashi sources, plus the fact that it did not enjoy much support from the majority of researchers, Ḥājī Baktāš Walī was one of the Wafā'īyyah tariqah dervishes, a Murid of Bābā Eliyās al-Khorāsānī.[43] Once Bābā Eliyās died, both Ḥājī Baktāš Walī and Sheikh Edebali became among his 60 successors, and grandmasters of the Ahyan Rûm brotherhood of warriors and farmers, who enjoyed great influence among the people. When Osman married Sheikh Edebali's daughter, he secured his control over the brotherhood, and soon became their new grandmaster. As a result of this marriage, all the Ahyan sheikhs became under Ottoman control. This has a major impact on the establishment and development of the Osmanic beylik after Osman's death during the reign of his son Orhan.[36] Some argue that Osman's marriage to sheikh Edebali's daughter was his first brilliant political undertake.[44] On the other hand, Turkish historian Professor Cemal Kafadar considers that the intermarriage between the Osmanic and Edebali's houses, explains the hostilities that later rose between the Ottomans and the Germiyanids, since the Germiyanid Turkoman house was rewarded lands and titles by the Seljuks because of their services in subjugating the Bābā'ī revolt in 1240 CE, and because Sheikh Edebali was considered by his followers a leader and successor to Bābā Ishāq, they all became the focus of attention of the Germiyanids.[45]

Kafadar adds that early in Osman reign, the young Emir showed political ingenuity forming relations with his neighbours. Osman's alliances transcended tribal, ethnic, and religious lines. and he may have followed his instinct and the requirements of his political aspirations, not mistaking the future results of the family connections he created and secured for his son after him. Osman reconstituted the political culture of the Seljuk Sultanate of Rûm in line with the needs of his beylik. He was more creative than his Turkomen neighbours in combining Turkic, Islamic, and Byzantine traditions.

Additionally, the Emir also cooperated with the Byzantine Tekfurs of the neighbouring cities and villages. He forged an agreement, so his clan, whenever they move between grazing areas in the summer, leave their belongings in the Byzantine fortress of Bilecik, and upon their return, they give its governor a token of appreciation, in the form of cheese and butter made from sheep milk and preserved in animal skins, or a good carpet made from wool. This agreement reflects the coexistence between herders, farmers and urban dwellers, during Osman's reign.[45] Osman's friendship with Köse Mihal, governor of Chirmenkia (modern Harmanköy), was the culmination of this coexistence between Muslims and Byzantines. As for his relations with other peoples, such as the Mongols, most of whom moved to the borders of western Anatolia, and the Germiyanid Turkomen, it was hostile. That is because the Turks, in general, despised the Mongols, and the Germiyanids were probably of non-Oghuz origin.[45] Osman allied with the Ahyan Rûm brotherhood, they formed organized groups, members in each of which worked in a single trade. The brotherhood took the responsibility to preserve justice, prevent injustice, stop oppression, follow sharia law, dictate good morals, and carry out military duties if the need arises, to defend their rights and the rights of Muslims.[46][47]

 
Ilkhan Mahmud Ghazan (on horseback), higher ruler of Anatolia during the early years of Osman's reign. All Turkoman Beys, or Emirs, were subordinate to him despite the inherent hostility between Turks and Mongols.

The Emir also allied with newly arrived Turkomen clans to Anatolia. In general, the nomads have always had a strong militarized spirit compared to people installed in the cities. Thus, the clans were more active and effective than their city-dwelling kin. Soon enough, they become the beating heart of the Seljuk border provinces in total, and the Osmanic beylik in particular. Osman also enticed many Turkomen from the region of Paphlagonia to join his forces.[37] These Turkomen were fine warriors, eager for jihad and conquest, each of them followed a Tariqah (an order of Sufism) and was supervised by a sheikh who taught them the meaning of jihad alongside many Islamic principles. However, another section of these Turkomen did not have close ties to Islam for various reasons, thus Osman entrusted them to several sheikhs and dervishes to be given proper Islamic education and be satiated with the values that glorify conquests aiming to spread the word of Islam. In fact, these sheikhs and dervishes were very enthusiastic about promoting the Turuq of the Khorasani Walis, and Osman's request gave them this chance.[48]

As for the ruling hierarchy, Osman was firstly subordinate to the Chobanid Emir in Kastamonu, followed by the Seljuk Sultan through the Germiyanid Bey in Kütahya, who was in turn subordinate to the Mongol Ilkhan in Tabriz. During this period, the Seljuk Sultans had lost their power over their local Emirs, and the Mongol Ilkhan practised his authority in Anatolia through his appointed Generals, where he requested that every local governor, including Osman, sends him soldiers whenever he requests so.[49] As for the hierarchy of name delivering in khuṭbah, Imams used to pray for the guidance of the: Abbasid caliph in Egypt first, the Mongol Ilkhan in Tabriz, Seljuk Sultan in Konya, and finally the local Bey or Emir.[49]

Expansion of the beylik

Until the end of thirteenth century, Osman I's conquests include the areas of Bilecik (Belokomis), Yenişehir (Melangeia), İnegöl (Angelokomis) and Yarhisar [tr] (Köprühisar), and Byzantine castles in these areas.[50][51][52]

According to Shaw, Osman's first real conquests followed the collapse of Seljuk authority when he was able to occupy the fortresses of Kulucahisar and Eskişehir. Then he captured the first significant city in his territories, Yenişehir, which became the Ottoman capital.[34]

In 1302, after soundly defeating a Byzantine force near Nicaea, Osman began settling his forces closer to Byzantine controlled areas.[53]

Alarmed by Osman's growing influence, the Byzantines gradually fled the Anatolian countryside. Byzantine leadership attempted to contain Ottoman expansion, but their efforts were poorly organized and ineffectual. Meanwhile, Osman spent the remainder of his reign expanding his control in two directions, north along the course of the Sakarya River and southwest towards the Sea of Marmara, achieving his objectives by 1308.[34]

Osman's last campaign was against the city of Bursa.[54] Although Osman did not physically participate in the battle, the victory at Bursa proved to be extremely vital for the Ottomans as the city served as a staging ground against the Byzantines in Constantinople, and as a newly adorned capital for Osman's son, Orhan. Ottoman tradition holds that Osman died just after the capture of Bursa, but some scholars have argued that his death should be placed in 1324, the year of Orhan's accession.[55]

Conquest of Karacahisar

 
Illustration of Osman rallying his warriors into battle

After establishing his beylik, Osman had to fight on two fronts: one against the Byzantine, and the other against the Turkomen beyliks that opposed his rule, especially the Germiyanids. Osman focused on expanding at the expense of the Byzantines, and since that time, the primary Ottoman goal became the conquest of the remaining Byzantine lands.[56] Some accounts indicate that the first battle Osman launched against the Byzantines was aimed to revenge a defeat that he suffered in the spring of 683 or 684 AH / 1284 or 1285 CE, where the Byzantines, led by the Tekfur of Bursa, ambushed him and his men. It is in doubt that Osman knew about this ambush from one of his spies. Nevertheless, he chose to clash with the Byzantines and he was defeated and forced to withdraw with casualties, including his nephew Koca Saruhan bey, son of Savcı Bey.[25][57] Based on this, around 685 AH / 1286 CE, Osman went forward to Kulacahisar at the head of a military force of three hundred fighters, it was a fortress located two leagues away from İnegöl, within the scope of mount Uludağ. The Emir attacked the fort at night and managed to conquer it, extending his beylik northwards toward Lake İznik's proximity. The Ottoman victory at Kulacahisar triggered the fort's governor, who refused to be a subordinate subject to a Muslim ruler, especially a border Emir, so he allied himself with Karacahisar's governor, and both men agreed to fight the Muslims aiming at retaking all Byzantine lands that were lost recently. Thus, the Ottomans and the Byzantines met again in battle, somewhere between Bilecik and İnegöl, where fierce fighting took place in which Osman's brother Savcı Bey and the Byzantine commander Pilatos were killed. The Battle ended with an Ottoman victory. Then, the Ottomans entered Karacahisar where they, reportedly for the first time, converted the town's church into a mosque. Osman appointed a Qadi (magistrate) and a Subaşı (chief of police) for the newly conquered city. Historians differed in determining the date of this conquest, yet none made it prior to 685 AH / 1286 CE, or exceeding 691 AH / 1291 CE. Osman made his new city a staging base of his military campaigns against the Byzantines, and ordered that his name be delivered at the Friday khuṭbah, which was the first manifestation of his sovereignty and authority.[21][56]

 
A mehter war drum, similar to the one sent to Osman from the Seljuk Sultan

Osman's latest victory was his greatest up to that date. Seljuk Sultan Alâeddin Kayqubad III expressed his deep appreciation for Osman's accomplishments in the name of the Seljuks and Islam, giving him the title of Ḥaḍrat ʻUthmān ghāzī marzubān 'Âli Jâh ʻUthmān Shāh (the honourable conqueror and border guardian Osman Shāh).[58] The Sultan also bestowed upon Osman the governance of all the land he did conquered as well as the towns of Eskişehir and İnönü. Moreover, The Seljuk Sultan issued a decree exempting Osman from all types of taxes. Osman also received several gifts from the Sultan reflecting the new high stature to the Seljuk court. These gifts included: a golden war banner, a mehter (war drum), a tuğ (a pole with circularly arranged horse tail hairs), a tassel, a gilded sword, a loose saddle, and one hundred thousand dirhams.[49][59] The decree also included the recognition of Osman's right to be mentioned in the Friday khuṭbah in all areas subject to him, and was permitted to mint coins in his name.[60] Thus, Osman became a Sultan, but lacking only the title.[61]

It is narrated that when drums were beaten announcing Sultan's Kayqubad's arrival, Osman stood up in glorification, and remained so till the music halted. Since that day, Ottoman soldiers enacted standing in glorification for their Sultan whenever drums were beaten.[62][63]

Conquest of Bilecik, Yarhisar, and İnegöl

Soon after the conquest of Karacahisar, Osman marched with his soldiers north towards Sakarya River. Upon his arrival there, he raided and looted the forts of Göynük and Yenice Taraklı. Many argue that during this time, Osman received a message from his Byzantine friend Köse Mihal, warning him of a secret conspiracy that is being prepared to by tekfurs of Bilecik and Yarhisar. The two were aiming at killing Osman after inviting him to attend their children's wedding. Osman was disappointed in being betrayed by Bilecik's tekfur. That is because he considered the relationship with Bilecik to be built on trust and good faith, especially that his clan was used to leave their belongings in this fortress whenever they moved between grazing areas, as previously mentioned. Osman devised a plan to escape the trap and take over the fortress. He sent forty of his soldiers carrying some of the clan's belongings to be kept in Bilecik, while most of its inhabitants were outside attending the wedding. Once his men entered the fort, they quickly overpowered its small garrison, and it fell to the Ottomans. Then, Osman went the feast followed by some Byzantine knights who were easily ambushed by his men later. A short battle took place in which Osman was victorious, and most of the Byzantines were killed. After that, Osman rode towards Yarhisar and took it by surprise; A large part of the fort's garrison was killed, while the rest were taken prisoners. The tekfur's daughter Holophira, was also captured in this action, she soon became Osman's daughter in law, having married his son Orhan sometime later, and her name was changed to Nilüfer Hatun.[64][65] Afterwards, Osman and several of his men took over all towns and villages surrounding İnegöl, before laying siege on the fort itself and taking it with ease. Osman ordered the execution of İnegöl's tekfur since he was known for persecuting his Muslim neighbours, then placed a new garrison for the town, and distributed the loot among his men.[64]

Fall of the Seljuk Sultanate of Rûm, and the Osmanic Beylik's independence

 
The declining Sultanate of Rûm, vassal of the Mongols, and the emerging beyliks, c. 1300

Osman aspired, after his multiple victories, to expand on two axes, aiming to isolate the Byzantine cities he was looking to conquer. First, he blocked the road leading to İznik from the eastern side. Then, he advanced from the west towards Lopadion and Evrenos. After that Osman turned around Mount Uludağ from both north and south, avoiding the fortified city of Bursa, connecting with his Muslim neighbours in the southeast. During that time, the Byzantine Empire was preoccupied with ongoing clashes with its powerful enemies in Anatolia, such as the Germiyanids and the coastal beyliks, not to mention suppressing unrest and discord in Constantinople and the Balkans. The Empire was unable to face Osman's threats, thus, he felt free to expand at the Byzantines expense exploiting the current situation.[56][66] At the same time, the Seljuk Sultanate of Rûm was seeing its final days. The Sultanate grip was slowly weakened over its Turkoman Beyliks. Sultan Alâeddin Kayqubad III became deeply unpopular after he purged the Seljuk administration of his predecessor's men with extreme violence. This prompted the Mongol Ilkhan Mahmud Ghazan to call upon Kayqubad to appear before him, and once the latter did in 1302, he was executed and replaced with his predecessor Ghiyāth ad-Dīn Mas'ūd bin Kaykāwūs in order to keep the peace in Anatolia.[67] According to another account, Mongol and Tatar hordes raided Asia Minor in 699 AH / 1300 CE, and killed Sultan Kayqubad in his capital Konya. It was also said that Kaykāwūs himself killed his rival, coveting his own return on the throne. Another story suggests that Kayqubad escaped and sought refuge in the Byzantine court where he remained until his death.[61] In all cases, Kaykāwūs's rule was short-lived, lasting between 4 and 6 years at most, and when he died in 1308 CE, the Seljuk Sultanate of Rûm was no more to be mentioned in the historical records,[67] giving the way for the Turkoman beyliks to emerg as independent states.

 
Osman, an independent Emir, on his Takht

The demise of the Seljuk Sultanate of Rûm gave Osman autonomy over his dominion, he soon dubbed himself Padişah Āl-ıʿOsmān (sovereign of the house of Osman). After that, Osman set his sights towards conquering the last of the Byzantine cities, towns, and fortresses in Anatolia. According to one account, after Sultan Alâeddin Kayqubad III was killed by the Mongols, vizirs and notable leaders met and decided that since the late Sultan had no offspring, one of the local Emirs should take his place, and they found Osman perfect fitting the candidacy. Thus, the leaders offered the Emir the position, and Osman accepted becoming a Sultan since that date. It is likely that Kayqubad's and Kaykāwūs's deaths led to the Sultanate of Rûm falling into chaos, and promoted many of its regular soldiers to join the armies of local Emirs, including Osman. This gave the latter a great momentum and important military experiences enriching his army for the upcoming conquests.[68]

Battle of Bapheus

 
A section of the remaining Byzantine fortifications in Nicaea

Soon after Osman secured his independence and established control over all fortresses he conquered, he sent messages to all remaining Byzantine tekfurs in Anatolia asking them to choose between accepting Islam, Ottoman sovereignty and paying jizyah, or war. Some of these tekfurs ended up accepting Islam, including Osman's old friend Köse Mihal, who became the Turkic leader's companion, and would play a considerable part in the upcoming expansions of the Osmanic beylik. His descendants became known in Ottoman history as Mihaloğulları (children of Michael, plural of Mihaloğlu).[69][70] Other governors acknowledged Osman's sovereignty, while the rest kept their loyalty to the Byzantine Emperor. Thus, Osman started harassing their fortresses such as Bursa and Nicaea which was besieged in 1301 CE.[71] The Ottoman raids also threatened the port city of Nicomedia with famine, as the Ottomans roamed the countryside prohibiting peasants from harvesting wheat. This provoked Bursa's tekfur among others to unite their efforts in order to eliminate this new emerging Islamic power.[72]

In the spring of 1302 CE, Emperor Michael IX launched a campaign that reached south to Magnesia. The Ottomans, awed by his large army, avoided an open battle. The Emperor sought to confront The Ottomans, but he was dissuaded by his generals. Encouraged by that, The Ottomans resumed their raids, virtually isolating the Emperor at Magnesia. Soon, the imperial army started dissolving without engaging in a single battle, that is because the local troops left to defend their homes which were continuously raided by the Ottomans, and the Alan mercenaries left as well, aiming to rejoin with their families in Thrace. The Byzantine emperor was forced to withdraw by the sea, followed by a wave of refugees.[73][74][75] To counter the threat to Nicomedia, Michael's father, Andronikos II, sent a Byzantine force of some 2,000 men (half of whom were recently hired Alan mercenaries), under the megas hetaireiarches, Giorgios Mouzalon, to cross the Bosporus and relieve the city.[73][74]

The Byzantine response was a warning for the Islamic border villages and towns. However, when the locals noticed Osman's leadership and military strength, as well as his devotion to Islam, they rallied to support and stand with him in order to consolidate a new Islamic state that would unite them and form an impenetrable wall against the Byzantines.[60] Several Byzantine deserters joined Osman as well, some of which were liberated prisoners of war who chose to align with him, reportedly due to his good treatment during their custody. Many Islamic warrior brotherhoods also joined the Ottomans. For example, the Gazi Rûm's (Raiders of the Romans), they were stationed on the borders of the Byzantine Empire and repelled its attacks on Muslim lands since the Abbasid era, gaining great experiences and knowledge in Byzantine strategies and tactics. Another example is the Ḥajjian Rûm's (pilgrims of [the land of] the Romans), a brotherhood of Muslim clergy concerned with teaching local villagers and recent converts the basics and different aspects of Islam, and had a side objective of assisting the Mujahideen in combat.[76][77]

The Byzantine and Ottoman armies eventually met on 1 Ḏū al-Ḥijjah 701 AH / 27 July 1302 CE at the plain of Bapheus located between Nicomedia and Nicaea. The Ottoman army consisted of light cavalry under Osman himself, and they numbered around 5,000, while the Byzantines numbered around 2,000 men. The Muslim cavalry charged toward the Byzantines fast, whose Alan contingent did not participate in the battle. As a result of the attack, the Byzantine line was broken, forcing Giorgios Mouzalon to withdraw into Nicomedia under the cover of the Alan force.[73][74][75][78]

Bapheus was the first major victory for the nascent Osmanic Beylik, and of major significance for its future expansion: the Byzantines effectively lost control of the countryside of Bithynia, withdrawing to their forts, which became isolated and fell one by one eventually. The Byzantine defeat also sparked a mass exodus of the Christian population from the area into the European parts of the empire, further altering the region's demographic balance.[78] Coupled with the defeat at Magnesia, the Ottomans were able to reach the coasts of the Aegean Sea, threatening Byzantium with a final loss for their territory in Asia Minor.[75] According to Halil İnalcık, the battle allowed the Ottomans to achieve the characteristics and qualities of a true state.[79]

Byzantine-Mongol convergence attempt

 
Mongol soldiers, in Jāmiʿ al-tawārīkh by Rashīd al-Dīn al-Hamadānī BnF. MS. Supplément Persan 1113. 1430–1434 AD.
 
Mongol offensives in the Levant, 1299–1300. The decisive Mamluk victory at Marj al-Saffar played a major role in folding any Byzantine-Mongol allience.

After the victory in Bapheus, Osman divided the conquered lands among his kin and army leaders establishing Islamic hegemony and ending the Byzantine era in his new areas. He gave Eskişehir to his brother Gündüz bey, Karacahisar to his son Orhan, Yarhisar to Hasan Alp, and İnegöl to Turgut Alp.[25] By that time, Emperor Andronikos II felt the pressure of the Ottoman expansion. The Emperor watched in fear how the demographic changes were rapidly taking place in Anatolia, and he decided to stop it. Yet, being recently defeated, Andronikos II couldn't face the Ottomans in an open battle. To add insult to injury for the Byzantine, conflicts were taking place in the Balkans. Thus, Andronikos II had no choice but to try making an alliance with the Mongols in Persia, who were controlling central and eastern Anatolia. To achieve that, the Emperor sent a letter to Ilkhan Mahmud Ghazan offering him a family rapprochement through marriage and establishing an alliance between both Empires.[80]

At that time, The Mongols were passing through a period of high tension with the Mamluks in Egypt and Syria, this did overwhelm the relations with the Byzantines, especially that Ghazan was preparing for another campaign to Damascus and Palestine after his first invasion in 699 AH / 1299 CE, in which many civilians were massacred and where the Mamluk army suffered a massive defeat at the Battle of Wadi al-Khaznadar near Ḥimṣ. The Mamluks themselves were preparing for the upcoming war with the Mongols aiming to wash away the shame of their previous defeat. As a result, On 2 Ramaḍān 702 AH / 20 April 1303 CE, the Mongols and Mamluks engaged in a fierce battle on the outskirts of Damascus, known as the Battle of Shaqhab or Battle of Marj al-Saffar, in which the Mamluks won a decisive victory.[81] This devastating defeat had a heavy toll on Ghazan and seems to have contributed to deteriorating his health further more, until he died in Qazvin on Sunday 11 Shawwāl 703 AH / 17 May 1304 CE.[82] This eliminated any hope of a Byzantine-Mongol alliance, and allowed the Ottomans to continue on with their conquests.

Byzantine-Catalan alliance

 
Roger de Flor being received by the Byzantine emperor Andronikos II Palaiologos

After Ghazan's death, the Byzantine Emperor was forced to seek other solutions to the problem of Ottoman expansion. Thus, he hired a company of Catalan mercenaries led by Roger de Flor. The mercenaries had become unemployed after the signing of the Peace of Caltabellotta between the Crown of Aragon and the French dynasty of the Angevins in 1302 CE. The company arrived at Constantinople in January 1303 CE, where they were received by the Emperor himself, then, the mercenaries were housed in the district of Blachernae. The Emperor arranged the wedding of Roger de Flor to his niece, the 15-year-old princess Maria Asanina, daughter of the Tsar of Bulgaria Ivan Asen III and Irene Palaiologina. De Flor was named Megas doux (Great Dux, i.e., Commander of the Imperial forces), and was promised a four months payment for him and his men.[83][84]

The Catalans soon crossed to Asia Minor and fought against the Karasids and Germiyanids winning a fast victory. Afterward, they resolved to attack the maritime provinces of the Ottomans and moved to the town of Philadelphia which was besieged by Yakup I of Germiyan, who suffered a defeat at the hands of the Catalans and was forced to lift his siege and retreat. This victory proved that Byzantium had been able to gather sufficient military forces and material capabilities, it would have been able to eliminate the emerging Turkic power, but it had neither. It was not long before the Catalans abandoned fighting the Muslims and turned their attention towards the Byzantines themselves. The reason for that was that the local population of Magnesia beheaded the Catalan garrison and stole its treasure, which infuriated Roger de Flor and made him march towards that city intending on revenge. The Byzantines were horrified by the mercenaries' attacks, and became preoccupied in defending themselves.[84] Roger de Flor was soon killed by order of the emperor's son Michael IX, who saw the indiscipline of the Catalan mercenaries as a growing danger,[85] as did the people of Constantinople, who rose up against the Catalans and killed many of them. Once the news reached the main Catalan force in Gallipoli, they went on a killing spree of their own, killing all the local Byzantines.[86] Soon after this the Byzantines and the Catalans were at war with each other, giving way to Osman to move on with his conquests.

Conquest of Yenişehir and Its Surroundings

After securing his northern borders by reaching the Black and Marmara seas, Osman turned his attention towards the southern borders of his beylik. Thus, he attacked the Byzantine towns, villages, and fortresses surrounding the city of Yenişehir preparing to conquer it. Osman sent a large campaign to the fortress of Yāvandhisar and annexed it. Then, he attacked Yenişehir, took it with ease, and made it his temporary capital after fortifying and strengthening its defenses.[87] Soon after that Osman started sending more campaigns against the remaining Byzantine cities conquering several fortresses including Lefke, Akhisar, Koçhisar, Yenicehisar, Marmaracık, and Köprühisar. In fact, conquering the aforementioned forts aimed at imposing a security belt around Yenişehir, thus Osman surrounded it with a series of front forts to ward off any invasions.[80]

Conquest of Bursa

 
Gate of Bursa's Byzantine castle, which witnessed the long Ottoman siege

With Yenişehir in hands, Osman focused his efforts on isolated large cities starting with Bursa, unaware that this will be his last campaign.[88] He gave the orders to start building two forts overseeing and surrounding the city, then, when the construction was completed, Osman provided the forts with large garrisons. This allowed his men to tighten the blockade and prevent any provisions reaching Bursa.[89] The Ottoman siege lasted between six and nine years, this was due to the fact that the Ottomans had no Siege engines and they had never captured a large fortified city before.[90]

During the long siege, Osman and some of his military commanders conquered the smaller Byzantine fortresses on the vicinity of the beylik, in which Several tekfurs acknowledged Osman's sovereignty, and became among his subjects, some of them accepting Islam in the process. Soon after that, Osman started suffering from Gout, and couldn't accompany his men in any more campaigns or witness the Siege of Bursa, so he entrusted his son Orhan to complete this major task, while he retired in his capital. Orhan's continued the siege without any fighting, but he continued isolating Bursa from its surrounding forts, conquering Mudanya to cut off the city's connection to the sea. He also captured the city of Praenetos on the southern coast of İzmit, changing its name to Karamürsel, after the Muslim leader who took it "Karamürsel Bey". The last fort to fall was Beyce, which was considered Bursa's key as it overlooked it, and it was renamed Orhaneli.[89][61]

Orhan tightened the blockade around Bursa till its garrison fell into despair. Soon, the Byzantine emperor realized that the fall of the city into Muslim hands was inevitable, thus, he made a difficult decision ordering his governor to evacuate the city. Orhan entered Bursa on 2 Jumādā al-ʾŪlā 726 AH / 6 April 1326 CE, its people were not subjected to any harm after they recognized Ottoman sovereignty and pledged to pay jizyah.[91] Saroz, the garrison's leader, surrendered to Orhan and pledged allegiance to his father Osman. He also converted to Islam and was given the title of "Bey" out of respect to his courage and patience during the long siege.[92] According to some sources, Osman died just before the fall of the city,[90] while others suggest that he lived long enough to hear about the victory on his death-bed.[93][94][95]

Family

 
16th-century miniature of Osman I

Due to the scarcity of sources about his life, very little is known about Osman's family relations. According to certain fifteenth-century Ottoman writers, Osman was descended from the Kayı branch of the Oghuz Turks, a claim which later became part of the official Ottoman genealogy and was eventually enshrined in the Turkish Nationalist historical tradition with the writings of M. F. Köprülü.[96] However, the claim to Kayı lineage does not appear in the earliest extant Ottoman genealogies. Thus many scholars of the early Ottomans regard it as a later fabrication meant to shore up dynastic legitimacy with regard to the empire's Turkish rivals in Anatolia.[12] Yazıcıoğlu Ali, in the early 15th century, constructed a genealogy for Osman, tracing it back to Oghuz Khagan, the mythical ancestor of the Western Turks, through the eldest grandson of his eldest son, thereby lending legitimacy to the Ottoman sultans' claim of primacy among Turkish monarchs.[97]

It is very difficult for historians to determine what is factual and what is legendary about the many stories the Ottomans told about Osman and his exploits, and the Ottoman sources do not always agree with each other.[98] According to one story, Osman had an uncle named Dündar with whom he had a quarrel early in his career. Osman wished to attack the local Christian lord of Bilecik, while Dündar opposed it, arguing that they already had enough enemies. Interpreting this as a challenge to his leadership position, Osman shot and killed his uncle with an arrow.[99] This story first appears in Neşri's work but is missing in earlier Ottoman historical works. If it was true, it means that it was likely covered up in order to avoid tarnishing the reputation of the Ottoman dynasty's founder with the murder of a family member. It may also indicate an important change in the relationship of the Ottomans with their neighbors, shifting from relatively peaceful accommodation to a more aggressive policy of conquest.[100]

Consorts

Osman I had two know consorts:[101][102]

  • Malhun Hatun. Daughter of Ömer Abdülaziz Bey. According to tradition, she was the mother of Orhan I. Occasionally, she and Rabia Bala are considered to be the same person.
  • Rabia Bala Hatun. Also called Rabia Bala Malhun Hatun, therefore some historians believe that she and Malhun were the same person. She was the daughter of Sheikh Edebali and the mother of Alaeddin Ali Pasha. She spent the last years of her life with her father and died in Bilecik in 1324. She was buried next to her father’s tomb.

Sons

Osman I had at least eight sons:[103][104][105][106]

  • Fülan Bey. He was sent to the court of Gıyâsüddîn III Keyhusrev, Seljuk sultan, to be raised in his house when Ertuğrul Gazî signed peace with him. He had issue and his descendants were still alive at the time of the reign of Bayezid I.
  • Orhan I Gazi (1281-1362) - probably with Malhun Hatun. Second Ottoman ruler.
  • Alaeddin Ali Pasha (c. ? - 1331) - with Rabia Bala Hatun. Governor of Bilecik and founder of several mosques in Bursa. He had at least one son, Kılıç Bey, and his descendants were still alive in 16th century.
  • Savci Bey. He had at least one son, Süleyman Bey, who married his cousin Hatice Hatun, daughter of Orhan I. Buried in Söğüt, in the Türbe of Ertuğrul Gazî.
  • Melik Bey. He had at least one daughter, Melek Hatun. Buried in Söğüt, in the Türbe of Ertuğrul Gazî.
  • Çoban Bey. He built a mosque in Bursa. Buried in Söğüt, in the Türbe of Ertuğrul Gazî.
  • Hamid Bey. Buried in Söğüt, in the Türbe of Ertuğrul Gazî.
  • Pazarli Bey. General of his half-brother Orhan I. He had at least two sons, İlyas Bey and Murad Bey, and at least one daughter. Buried in Söğüt, in the Türbe of Ertuğrul Gazî.

Daughters

Osman I had at least a daughter:[101][106]

  • Fatma Hatun. Buried in Söğüt, in the Türbe of Ertuğrul Gazî.

Personality

Ottoman historiography depicts Osman as a semi-holy person.[107]

It is known that among the Turkoman tribes, the tribe or part of it was named after its leader. The fact that the Kayi tribe became known by the name of Osman, suggests that the tribe became powerful because of his excellent leadership.[108] Orientalist R. Rakhmanaliev writes that the historical role of Osman was that of a tribal leader, who enjoyed enormous success in uniting his people around him.[109]

The activities and personality of Osman as the founder of the state and dynasty are highly appreciated by historians of both the past and the present. The state and the dynasty of rulers are named after him. The population of the state was called Ottomans (Osmanlilar) until the beginning of the 20th century, that is until the collapse of the Ottoman Empire. Historian F. Uspensky notes that Osman relied not only on force, but also cunningness.[110] Historian and writer Lord Kinross writes that Osman was a wise, patient ruler, whom people sincerely respected and were ready to serve him faithfully. He had a natural sense of superiority, but he never sought to assert himself with the help of power, and therefore he was respected not only by those who were equal in position, but also those who exceeded his abilities on the battlefield or on wisdom. Osman did not arouse feelings of rivalry in his people—only loyalty.[111] Herbert Gibbons believed that Osman was "great enough to exploit masterful people".[112]

According to Cemal Kafadar, Osman for the Ottomans was the same as Romulus for the Romans.[113]

Death

 
The territorial extent of the Ottoman Beylik upon the death of Osman I
 
Türbe of Osman I, Bursa

According to the sources that say Osman lived to hear of the fall of Bursa, Orhan rushed back to Söğüt to inform his father of his great victory. Once he reached it, he was immediately summoned to Osman, who was on his death-bed. Soon after Osman heard the news, he died from natural causes. However, Osman managed to name Orhan to be his successor, although the latter was not Osman's first-born. Yet the dead Emir believed that Orhan was better fit to rule than his elder half-brother Alâeddin, who was more passive and pious than Orhan.[92] As for the exact cause of Osman's death, it is well known that he suffered from gout for several years, which seemingly caused his eventual death. This is confirmed by what Aşıkpaşazade mentioned in Tevarih-i Âl-i Osman when he talked about the late period of Osman's life, saying: "Osman had a bad foot from which he experienced severe pain". It is noted that Aşıkpaşazade used a similar expression when he talked about the death of Sultan Mehmed the Conqueror: "The cause of his death was the issue in his feet". It is now known that gout is a genetic disease in the Ottoman dynasty, and many sultans suffered from it.[114]

The exact date of Osman's death is debatable. It is said that he died on 21 Ramaḍān 726 AH / 21 August 1326 CE at 70 years old. The 15th-century Ottoman historian Rouhi Çelebi, who wrote down the history of the Ottoman Empire until 1481 CE, indicates that Osman died in 1320. However, Uruç adiloğlu, another Ottoman historian who lived during the time of Sultans Mehmed the Conqueror and Bayezid II up until 1502 CE, says that Osman died in 1327 CE. Contemporary Turkish historian Necdet Sakaoğlu [tr] states that, despite the absence of documents mentioning Osman's name after the year 1320 CE, there are documents confirming Orhan's ascension to the throne in 1324 CE. Based on this, Osman's death might have occurred in the previous year.[25][114] It is also certain that Osman's death was three or four months after the death of his father-in-law, Sheikh Edebali, and two months after the death of his wife, Rabia Bala Hatun, because it is known that Osman buried the two in Bilecik.[115]

Once Osman died, Orhan ordered the transfer of his body to Bursa, his new capital. Thus, Osman's body was laid there to rest.[116] His grave is located today in the neighbourhood of Tophane. The reason behind the transferring Osman's body was due to a will Osman did tell his son about during the early years of besieging Bursa: "My Son, when I die, bury me under that silver dome in Bursa". However, Osman's current tomb dates back to the time of Sultan ʻAbdü'l-ʻAzīz (1861–1876 CE), because the first tomb was completely destroyed in a severe earthquake that struck the region in 1855 CE, it was rebuilt by the aforementioned Sultan. Sultan Abdü'l-Ḥamīd II (1876–1909 CE) also constructed a shrine in Söğüt where Osman was buried for a while before he was moved to Bursa.[114]

According to some sources, Osman left a written will to his son Orhan instructing him to move on with conquests and jihad against the Byzantines, that he abides by the teachings of Islam, accompany the ʿUlamāʾ, amend his parish, and dedicates himself to spread the word of Islam.[117][118]

Legacy

Osman is considered the founder of the Ottoman dynasty who started an imperial line that would expand to include 35 sultans - rulers of one of the largest and most powerful empires in world history. The Ottoman Empire lasted until 1918 CE, when it disintegrated after defeat alongside other Central Powers in World War I. Osman is often referred to as the first in the line of Ottoman Sultans, although he himself never carried this title in his life, and was instead called "Bey" or "Emir". One endowment written in Persian and dating back to 1324 CE, indicates that Osman was given the titles Muḥiuddin (Reviver of the faith) and Fakhruddin (Pride of the faith).[49]

Osman's descendants are distributed today in several American, European and Arab countries after the royal Ottoman family was expelled from Turkey in 1924 CE shortly after the declaration of the Republic, by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk.[119] Eventually, several family members returned to Turkey, after the Turkish government allowed the females to return in 1951 CE.[119] However, male descendants had to wait until 1973 CE to be able to enter Turkey again.[120] Other members remained in the countries where their ancestors had sought refuge, such as England, France, the United States, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, among others. Osman's descendants are known today as the Osmanoğlu (son of Osman) family.

The Sword of Osman

The Sword of Osman (Turkish: Taklid-i Seyf) was an important sword of state used during the coronation ceremony of the Ottoman Sultans[121] starting with Sultan Murad II.[122] The practice started when Osman was girt with the sword of Islam by his father-in-law Sheik Edebali.[123] The girding of the sword of Osman was a vital ceremony which took place within two weeks of a sultan's accession to the throne. It was held at the tomb complex at Eyüp, on the Golden Horn waterway in the capital Constantinople. The fact that the emblem by which a sultan was enthroned consisted of a sword was highly symbolic: it showed that the office with which he was invested was first and foremost that of a warrior. The Sword of Osman was girded on to the new sultan by the Sharif of Konya, a Mevlevi dervish, who was summoned to Constantinople for that purpose.[124][better source needed]

In popular culture

Osman has been portrayed in the Turkish television series Kuruluş "Osmancık" [tr] (1988), adapted from a novel by the same name,[125] Diriliş: Ertuğrul (2014–2019)[126] and Kuruluş: Osman (2019–present).[127]

See also

References

  This article was adapted from the following source under a CC BY-SA 3.0 license (2021) (reviewer reports): Bassem Fleifel (30 January 2021). "Osman I, father of kings" (PDF). WikiJournal of Humanities. 4 (1): 1. doi:10.15347/WJH/2021.001. ISSN 2639-5347. OCLC 8897038424. Wikidata Q99519061.

  1. ^ a b c Kermeli, Eugenia (2009). "Osman I". In Ágoston, Gábor; Masters, Bruce (eds.). Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire. p. 444. Reliable information regarding Osman is scarce. His birth date is unknown and his symbolic significance as the father of the dynasty has encouraged the development of mythic tales regarding the ruler's life and origins; however, historians agree that before 1300, Osman was simply one among a number of Turkoman tribal leaders operating in the Sakarya region.
  2. ^ a b Murphey, Rhoads (2008). Exploring Ottoman Sovereignty: Tradition, Image, and Practice in the Ottoman Imperial Household, 1400–1800. London: Continuum. p. 24. ISBN 978-1-84725-220-3. A reasonable, plausible and, among its peers, probably most reliable account of the early career of Osman by the paragon of Ottoman historians, Kemal Paşa-zade (1468-1534), identifies the hijri year 652 (21 February 1254 to 9 February 1255) as the date of Osman's birth.
  3. ^ a b Kafadar, Cemal (1995). Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State. p. 16. By the time of Osman's death (1323 or 1324)...
  4. ^ Akgündüz, Ahmed; Öztürk, Said (2011). Ottoman History – Misperceptions and Truths. IUR Press. p. 35. ISBN 978-90-90-26108-9. Retrieved 28 December 2019.
  5. ^ Lowry, Heath W. (2003). The Nature of the Early Ottoman State. Albany: SUNY Press. p. 153. ISBN 978-0-7914-8726-6.
  6. ^ "Osman I". Encyclopedia Britannica. Osman I, also called Osman Gazi, (born c. 1258—died 1324 or 1326), ruler of a Turkmen principality in northwestern Anatolia who is regarded as the founder of the Ottoman Turkish state.
  7. ^ The Ottoman Empire, 1700–1999, Donald Quataert, page 4, 2005
  8. ^ Kafadar, Cemal (1995). Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State. p. xii. There is still not one authentic written document known from the time of ʿOsmān, and there are not many from the fourteenth century altogether.
  9. ^ Kafadar, Cemal (1995). Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State. p. 93.
  10. ^ Finkel, Caroline (2005). Osman's Dream: The Story of the Ottoman Empire, 1300–1923. Basic Books. p. 6. ISBN 978-0-465-02396-7. Modern historians attempt to sift historical fact from the myths contained in the later stories in which the Ottoman chroniclers accounted for the origins of the dynasty[.]
  11. ^ Imber, Colin (1991). Zachariadou, Elizabeth (ed.). The Ottoman Emirate (1300–1389). Rethymnon: Crete University Press. p. 75. Almost all the traditional tales about Osman Gazi are fictitious. The best thing a modern historian can do is to admit frankly that the earliest history of the Ottomans is a black hole. Any attempt to fill this hole will result simply in more fables.
  12. ^ a b c Kafadar, Cemal (1995). Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State. p. 122. That they hailed from the Kayı branch of the Oğuz confederacy seems to be a creative "rediscovery" in the genealogical concoction of the fifteenth century. It is missing not only in Ahmedi but also, and more importantly, in the Yahşi Fakih-Aşıkpaşazade narrative, which gives its own version of an elaborate genealogical family tree going back to Noah. If there was a particularly significant claim to Kayı lineage, it is hard to imagine that Yahşi Fakih would not have heard of it.
    • Lowry, Heath (2003). The Nature of the Early Ottoman State. SUNY Press. p. 78. ISBN 0-7914-5636-6. Based on these charters, all of which were drawn up between 1324 and 1360 (almost one hundred fifty years prior to the emergence of the Ottoman dynastic myth identifying them as members of the Kayı branch of the Oguz federation of Turkish tribes), we may posit that...
    • Rudi Paul Lindner (1983). Nomads and Ottomans in Medieval Anatolia. Indiana University Press. p. 10. In fact, no matter how one were to try, the sources simply do not allow the recovery of a family tree linking the antecedents of Osman to the Kayı of the Oğuz tribe.
  13. ^ Kafadar, Cemal (1995). Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State. p. 124.
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  31. ^ Fleet, Kate (2010). "The rise of the Ottomans". In Fierro, Maribel (ed.). The New Cambridge History of Islam, Volume 2: The Western Islamic World, Eleventh to Eighteenth Centuries. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 313. ISBN 978-0-521-83957-0. The origins of the Ottomans are obscure. According to legend, largely invented later as part of the process of legitimising Ottoman rule and providing the Ottomans with a suitably august past, it was the Saljuq ruler ʿAlāʾ al-Dīn who bestowed rule on the Ottomans.
  32. ^ Yıldırım, Rıza (12 September 2018). Aleviliğin Doğuşu: Kızılbaş Sufiliğinin Toplumsal ve Siyasal Temelleri 1300-1501. p. 121. ISBN 9789750525018. Retrieved 20 March 2023. Şikarî daha da ileriye giderek Osman'ı Selçuklunun bir çobanı olarak ifade eder. (...) Şikarî genellikle Osmanlıları soylu kanından olmamak, sadık olmamak, sözlerini tutmamak gibi şeylerle suçlar. (...) "[Karamanoğlu] Osman'ı bir gedā iken şah eyledi. [Osman] Aslı cinsi yok bir yürükoğlu iken bey oldı.
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    • Kafadar, Cemal (1995). Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State. p. 129. Of [military undertakings] we know nothing with certainty until the Battle of Bapheus, Osman's triumphant confrontation with a Byzantine force in 1301 (or 1302), which is the first datable incident in his life.
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    • Imber, Colin (1987). "The Ottoman Dynastic Myth". Turcica. 19: 7–27. doi:10.2143/TURC.19.0.2014268. The attraction of Aşıkpasazade's story was not only that it furnished an episode proving that God had bestowed rulership on the Ottomans, but also that it provided, side by side with the physical descent from Oguz Khan, a spiritual descent. [...] Hence the physical union of Osman with a saint's daughter gave the dynasty a spiritual legitimacy and became, after the 1480s, an integral feature of dynastic mythology.
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Further reading

  • Lindner, Rudi P. (1983). Nomads and Ottomans in Medieval Anatolia. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-933070-12-8.
  • Imber, Colin (1987). "The Ottoman Dynastic Myth". Turcica. 19: 7–27. doi:10.2143/TURC.19.0.2014268.
  • Zachariadou, Elizabeth, ed. (1991). The Ottoman Emirate (1300-1389). Rethymnon: Crete University Press.
  • Kafadar, Cemal (1995). Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-20600-7.
  • Lowry, Heath (2003). The Nature of the Early Ottoman State. Albany: SUNY Press. ISBN 0-7914-5636-6.
  • Finkel, Caroline (2005). Osman's Dream: The Story of the Ottoman Empire, 1300-1923. New York: Basic Books. ISBN 978-0-465-02396-7.
  • İnalcik, Halîl (2007). OSMAN I - An article published in 33rd volume of Turkish Encyclopedia of Islam (in Turkish). Vol. 33. Istanbul: TDV İslâm Ansiklopedisi. pp. 443–453. ISBN 978-975-38-94-55-5.
  • Murphey, Rhoads (2008). Exploring Ottoman Sovereignty: Tradition, Image, and Practice in the Ottoman Imperial Household, 1400-1800. London: Continuum. ISBN 978-1-84725-220-3.
  • Imber, Colin (2009). The Ottoman Empire, 1300-1650: The Structure of Power (2 ed.). New York: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-230-57451-9.
  • Kermeli, Eugenia (2009). "Osman I". In Ágoston, Gábor; Masters, Bruce (eds.). Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire. New York: Facts on File. pp. 444–6. ISBN 978-0-8160-6259-1.
  • Fleet, Kate (2010). "The rise of the Ottomans". In Fierro, Maribel (ed.). The New Cambridge History of Islam. Vol. 2. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 313–331. ISBN 978-0-521-83957-0.

External links

  Media related to Osman I at Wikimedia Commons

Osman I
Born: 1250s Died: 1323/4
Regnal titles
New title
Ottoman Sultan (Bey)
c. 1299 – 1323/4
Succeeded by

osman, osman, gazi, redirects, here, other, uses, osman, gazi, disambiguation, osman, ghazi, ottoman, turkish, عثمان, غازى, romanized, ʿosmān, Ġāzī, turkish, osman, osman, gazi, died, 1323, sometimes, transliterated, archaically, othman, founder, ottoman, empi. Osman Gazi redirects here For other uses see Osman Gazi disambiguation Osman I or Osman Ghazi Ottoman Turkish عثمان غازى romanized ʿOsman Ġazi Turkish I Osman or Osman Gazi died 1323 4 1 3 sometimes transliterated archaically as Othman was the founder of the Ottoman Empire first known as the Ottoman Beylik or Emirate While initially a small Turkoman 6 principality during Osman s lifetime his descendants transformed into a world empire in the centuries after his death 7 It existed until shortly after the end of World War I Osman IGazi Bey19th century depiction of Osman by Konstantin KapidagliUch Bey of the Sultanate of RumReignc 1280 c 1299PredecessorErtugrulSuccessorOffice disestablishedSultan of the Ottoman EmpireReignc 1299 1323 4PredecessorOffice establishedSuccessorOrhanBornUnknown 1 possibly c 1254 5 2 Died1323 4 3 age 68 70 Bursa Ottoman BeylikBurialTomb of Osman Gazi Osmangazi Bursa Province TurkeySpouseMalhun HatunRabia Bala HatunIssueOrhan IAlaeddin PashaOthersNamesOsman bin Ertugrul bin Gunduz Alp 4 عثمان بن ارطغرل بن گندز الپ OROsman bin Ertugrul bin Suleyman Shahعثمان بن ارطغرل بن سلیمان شاہDynastyOttoman dynastyFatherErtugrulMotherUnknown 5 ReligionSunni IslamThis article contains Ottoman Turkish text written from right to left with some Arabic letters and additional symbols joined Without proper rendering support you may see unjoined letters or other symbols Owing to the scarcity of historical sources dating from his lifetime very little factual information about Osman has survived Not a single written source survives from Osman s reign 8 and the Ottomans did not record the history of Osman s life until the fifteenth century more than a hundred years after his death 9 Because of this historians find it very challenging to differentiate between fact and myth in the many stories told about him 10 One historian has even gone so far as to declare it impossible describing the period of Osman s life as a black hole 11 According to later Ottoman tradition Osman s ancestors were descendants of the Kayi tribe of Oghuz Turks 12 However many scholars of the early Ottomans regard it as a later fabrication meant to reinforce dynastic legitimacy 12 The Ottoman principality was one of many Anatolian beyliks that emerged in the second half of the thirteenth century Situated in the region of Bithynia in the north of Asia Minor Osman s principality found itself particularly well placed to launch attacks on the vulnerable Byzantine Empire which his descendants would eventually go on to conquer Contents 1 Name 2 Historical background 3 Lineage 4 Origin of the Ottoman Empire 4 1 Ascendance to leadership 4 2 Importance of the Osmanic Beylik location 4 3 Osman s Dream 4 4 Political relations at the beginning of Osman s reign 5 Expansion of the beylik 5 1 Conquest of Karacahisar 5 2 Conquest of Bilecik Yarhisar and Inegol 5 3 Fall of the Seljuk Sultanate of Rum and the Osmanic Beylik s independence 5 4 Battle of Bapheus 5 5 Byzantine Mongol convergence attempt 5 6 Byzantine Catalan alliance 5 7 Conquest of Yenisehir and Its Surroundings 5 8 Conquest of Bursa 6 Family 6 1 Consorts 6 2 Sons 6 3 Daughters 7 Personality 8 Death 9 Legacy 9 1 The Sword of Osman 9 2 In popular culture 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksNameSome scholars have argued that Osman s original name was Turkish probably Atman or Ataman and was only later changed to ʿOsman of Arabic origin The earliest Byzantine sources including Osman s contemporary and Greek historian George Pachymeres spell his name as Ἀtoyman Atouman or Ἀtman Atman whereas Greek sources regularly render both the Arabic form ʿUthman and the Turkish version ʿOsman with 8 t8 or ts An early Arabic source mentioning him also writes ط rather than ث in one instance Osman may thus have adopted the more prestigious Muslim name later in his life 13 Turkish historian Halil Inalcik argued that the hypotheses that Osman was in fact named Ataman per George Pachymeres and that he came from the Desth i Qipchaq north of the Black Sea are both remote possibilities 14 Arab scholars like Shihab al Umari and Ibn Khaldun used the name Othman while Ibn Battuta who visited the region during Orhan I s reign called him Osmancik also spelled Othmanjiq or Osmanjiq 15 The suffix cik or cuk indicates the diminutive in Turkish thus he was known by the name of Osmancik which means Osman the Little in order to differentiate between him and the third Rashidun Caliph Uthman the Great 16 Historical background Ertugrul s turbe tomb in Sogut Most sources agree that the Ottoman Turks belonged to the Kayi Oghuz Turkic clan who according to Ottoman traditions fled their native homeland in Central Asia during the early 13th century due to the Mongol invasions The clan settled in Anatolia in a region belonging to the Seljuk Sultanate of Rum 17 Other sources claim that the Kayi clan moved to Anatolia two centuries earlier than the previously mentioned date alongside the Seljuks when they left Transoxiana to Khurasan around 1040 CE to reside near the city of Merv Then the Kayi clan moved towards eastern Anatolia after 1071 CE 18 where it displaced alongside other Turkic clans Later it became involved in the army of Sultan Kayqubad I and fought against the Khwarazmians Mongols and Byzantines who were raiding Seljuk lands According to several sources the Kayi warriors were known for filling first lines in battles and their fighting skills and bravery were among the major factors the Seljuks were victorious in many battles This fact prompted Sultan Kayqubad to appoint Ertugrul the clan s Emir as a Moqaddam Lieutenant and to reward the Kayis some fertile lands near Ankara where they settled and remained in the service of the Sultan for several years 19 20 Later Ertugrul was granted dominion over the town of Sogut in northwestern Anatolia on the Byzantine frontier 21 He also obtained the title of Uc beyligi or Uc bey literally marcher lord Granting this title was in line with the traditions of the Seljuk Sultanate which is rewarding any clan chieftain who rises to power and is joined by a number of smaller clans the title of marcher lord However Ertugrul had far reaching political ambitions He sought to expand beyond the lands rewarded to him Thus he started raiding the Byzantine possessions in the name of the Sultan successfully conquering several towns and villages and slowly expanding his dominion during the half of the century he spent as a Seljuk governor In 680 AH 1281 CE Ertugrul died at nearly 90 years of age 22 Lineage Osman s genealogy according to different Ottoman historians Index of Behcetu t Tevarih one of the Ottoman sources that talks about Osman s origins Although the exact date of Osman s birth is unspecified some sources indicate that he was born on 8 Safar 656 AH 13 February 1258 CE the exact same day the Mongol hordes invaded Baghdad killing its inhabitants and ravaging its landmarks 23 Other sources such as the 16th century Ottoman historian Kemalpasazade say that Osman was most likely born around the middle of the 13th century possibly in 1254 5 CE 24 Information related to the early life of Osman is limited However the few available sources agree that he was born in the town of Sogut which his father Ertugrul took as the capital of his emirate 25 The reason for the lack of information available about this stage of Osman s life is due to the fact that the oldest known source about this time period was written about a hundred years after Osman s death Among these sources are Destan i Tevarih i Al i Osman The Oral history of the Ottomans written in the 14th century by the Ottoman poet and court physician Taceddin Ibrahim bin Hizir tr better known as Ahmedi 1334 1413 CE Behcetu t Tevarih tr The Joy of histories by Sukrullah d 1464 CE and Tevarih i Al i Osman tr History of the Ottomans by Dervis Ahmed Asiki known as Asikpasazade 1400 1484 CE Additionally these remaining sources are not the originals but rather copies or copies of the copies that were rewritten over the years leading to a probable loss or altering in the information 26 In fact it is accepted that Ottoman European and Byzantine sources are not very reliable when considering the origins of Osman and his clan On one hand the oldest known records originally written by the Ottomans all date back to the period that followed the conquest of Constantinople 1453 CE On the other hand none of the Byzantine historians did refer in their writings to the origin of the Ottomans As for European historians these Turkic Muslim peoples were outside of their interest However that changed after a century of this period when the Ottomans began to pose a threat to Europe 27 The Ottoman historian Kemalpasazade mentioned that Osman was Ertugrul s youngest son and that he was raised in the traditional nomadic Turkic ways he learned wrestling swordsmanship horse riding arrow shooting and falconry from an early age He quickly mastered the previously mentioned skills outperforming all his brothers He was also taught the principles of Islam and was influenced by the teachings of Sufi sheikhs mostly his mentor Sheikh Edebali and this was reflected in his personality and lifestyle 25 An Ottoman miniature depicting Osman 1563 In terms of proportions the most popular and classic narration is that Osman is the grandson of Suleyman Sah who died drowning while crossing the Euphrates River on horseback The Turkish historian Yilmaz Oztuna tr considers that Osman s grandfather and Ertugrul s father is called Gunduz Alp saying that it is more likely that Suleyman Sah is a name stuck in Anatolian popular memory and it actually refers to Suleyman bin Qutulmish who founded the Seljuk Sultanate of Rum Oztuna adds that it is possible that Ottoman historians tried forming a connection between the Ottomans and the Seljuks especially since the Ottomans appeared on the stage of history claiming to be the legitimate successors of the Seljuks Based on this Osman s assumed lineage is as follows Osman bin Ertugrul bin Gunduz Alp bin Kaya Alp bin Gokalp bin Sarquk Alp bin Kayi Alp 18 Other researchers agree that the connection between Ertugrul Osman and the Seljuks may have been largely invented by court chroniclers a century later and the true origins of the Ottomans thus remain obscure 28 On the other hand some Ottoman sources indicate further lineage to Osman and the Oghuz Turks which is closer to myth than reality saying that these people are descendants of Japheth son of Noah and that Osman s genealogical tree contains 52 ancestors or more and ends with the Prophet Noah himself This lineage includes Gokalp and Oghuz Han who is said to be the father of Gokalp and all the Oghuz Turkic peoples including the Seljuks 27 In this claim one can notice the features of some of what Yilmaz Oztuna pointed out in his hypothesis that the Ottomans were always trying to connect or relate themselves to the Seljuks and to appear as their heirs Origin of the Ottoman EmpireFurther information Rise of the Ottoman Empire and Ghaza thesis 16th century depiction of Osman I by Paolo Veronese The exact date of Osman s birth is unknown and very little is known about his early life and origins due to the scarcity of sources and the many myths and legends which came to be told about him by the Ottomans in later centuries 1 29 He was most likely born around the middle of the thirteenth century possibly in 1254 5 the date given by the sixteenth century Ottoman historian Kemalpasazade 2 According to Ottoman tradition Osman s father Ertugrul led the Turkic Kayi tribe west from Central Asia into Anatolia fleeing the Mongol onslaught He then pledged allegiance to the Sultan of the Anatolian Seljuks who granted him dominion over the town of Sogut on the Byzantine frontier 30 This connection between Ertugrul and the Seljuks however was largely invented by court chroniclers a century later and the true origins of the Ottomans thus remain obscure 31 According to the Karamanid historian Shikari Osman was a lowborn Yoruk and shepherd 32 Nothing is known for certain about Osman s early activities except that he controlled the region around the town of Sogut and from there launched raids against the neighboring Byzantine Empire The first datable event in Osman s life is the Battle of Bapheus in 1301 or 1302 in which he defeated a Byzantine force sent to counter him 33 Osman appears to have followed the strategy of increasing his territories at the expense of the Byzantines while avoiding conflict with his more powerful Turkish neighbors 30 His first advances were through the passes which lead from the barren areas of northern Phrygia near modern Eskisehir into the more fertile plains of Bithynia according to Stanford Shaw these conquests were achieved against the local Byzantine nobles some of whom were defeated in battle others being absorbed peacefully by purchase contracts marriage contracts and the like 34 Ascendance to leadership Osman as the Kayi Emir or Bey Osman became Emir or Bey upon his father s death around 680 AH 1281 CE 21 According to some historians Osman s accession to power wasn t peaceful as he had to fight his relatives before he got hold of his clan s leadership One of Osman s major rivals was his uncle Dundar Bey who might have plotted to kill his nephew or rebelled against him when the latter decided to attack a small Greek island Dundar Bey saw that Osman s ambition as a threat that might put the whole clan in danger However Osman had to pull out his sword to kill his uncle for disobeying 35 In the Vilayetname a book containing the narrations about Haji Bektash Veli Osman s younger uncle was the one who became Bey after Ertugrul s death During that time Osman and several other warriors started organizing raids on Byzantine lands adjacent to Sogut such as Yarhisar Bilecik Inegol and Iznik As a result the Byzantine Tekfur governor of Bursa was provoked and he sent envoys to the Seljuk Sultan Alaeddin Kayqubad III complaining about these constant assaults Thus the Sultan ordered Gunduz Alp to bring forth his young nephew to stand before him and so Osman was arrested and sent to Konya According to this narration Sultan Kayqubad admired Osman s courage and deeds and didn t wish to punish him instead Osman was sent to Ḥaji Baktas Wali to consider his matter Osman was warmly received by the Sufi mystic who then ordered his release saying I have been waiting for someone like him for years After that Ḥaji Baktas Wali wrapped Osman s head with the same Turban associated with Sufi sheikhs and sent him back to Konya with a message to the sultan asking that Osman to become the Kayi Emir Thus Osman became the clan s leader 36 Importance of the Osmanic Beylik location Area of the Ottoman Beylik during the reign of Osman I From a military point of view the location of Osman s Beylik had a significant impact on his success as a conquering warrior His capital Sogut was located on a hill in a well defended position mediating the main road from Constantinople to Konya The importance of this site emerged due to the political fragmentation of Anatolia that gave small states greater importance than they originally had 37 Being an Emir to a beylik bordering Byzantine lands Osman had the opportunity to direct all his efforts towards war and Jihad following the footsteps of the Seljuks with intentions to conquer all Byzantine territories and absorb them into the Islamic Caliphate Encouraged by the weakness of the ancient Empire and its ongoing wars in Europe Osman had the chance to expand towards western Anatolia crossing the Dardanelles to southeastern Europe 37 Commenting on these actions some historians argue that Osman s strategy of increasing his territories at the expense of the Byzantines was due to his intention to avoid conflicts with his more powerful Turkic neighbours 21 Politically Osman showed great skills forming and applying new administrative systems in his beylik During his reign the Ottomans made great strides towards transitioning from the Nomadic tribe system to settling down in permanent settlements This helped them consolidate their position and rapidly develop into a major power Moreover the beylik s location in northwestern Anatolia next to Christendom imposed a military policy on the Ottomans which gave them better chances to grow and expand compared to the beyliaks of the interior 37 Osman s beylik was also relatively far from both the Mongol invasions and the influence of the powerful Turkoman beyliks in southern and southwestern Anatolia Add to that its proximity to the Silk Road linking Byzantine lands in the west to areas controlled by the Mongols in the east gave it prominent strategic and economic characteristics Also the Osmanic beylik was the only Islamic base facing the yet unconquered Byzantine regions which made it a magnet to many Turkomen farmers warriors and Dervishes fleeing the Mongols and aspiring to conquer new lands for economic and religious reasons 38 Osman s Dream Main article Osman s Dream Osman I had a close relationship with a local religious leader of dervishes named Sheikh Edebali whose daughter he married A story emerged among later Ottoman writers to explain the relationship between the two men in which Osman had a dream while staying in the Sheikh s house 39 The story appears in the late fifteenth century chronicle of Asikpasazade as follows He saw that a moon arose from the holy man s breast and came to sink in his own breast A tree then sprouted from his navel and its shade compassed the world Beneath this shade there were mountains and streams flowed forth from the foot of each mountain Some people drank from these running waters others watered gardens while yet others caused fountains to flow When Osman awoke he told the story to the holy man who said Osman my son congratulations for God has given the imperial office to you and your descendants and my daughter Malhun shall be your wife 40 The dream became an important foundational myth for the empire imbuing the House of Osman with God given authority over the earth and providing its fifteenth century audience with an explanation for Ottoman success 41 The dream story may also have served as a form of compact just as God promised to provide Osman and his descendants with sovereignty it was also implicit that it was the duty of Osman to provide his subjects with prosperity 42 Political relations at the beginning of Osman s reign A map of independent Turkic beyliks in Anatolia during the 14th century showing the neighbouring Ottoman and Germiyanid beyliks According to the Bektashi narration whose accuracy cannot be confirmed since it was only mentioned in Bektashi sources plus the fact that it did not enjoy much support from the majority of researchers Ḥaji Baktas Wali was one of the Wafa iyyah tariqah dervishes a Murid of Baba Eliyas al Khorasani 43 Once Baba Eliyas died both Ḥaji Baktas Wali and Sheikh Edebali became among his 60 successors and grandmasters of the Ahyan Rum brotherhood of warriors and farmers who enjoyed great influence among the people When Osman married Sheikh Edebali s daughter he secured his control over the brotherhood and soon became their new grandmaster As a result of this marriage all the Ahyan sheikhs became under Ottoman control This has a major impact on the establishment and development of the Osmanic beylik after Osman s death during the reign of his son Orhan 36 Some argue that Osman s marriage to sheikh Edebali s daughter was his first brilliant political undertake 44 On the other hand Turkish historian Professor Cemal Kafadar considers that the intermarriage between the Osmanic and Edebali s houses explains the hostilities that later rose between the Ottomans and the Germiyanids since the Germiyanid Turkoman house was rewarded lands and titles by the Seljuks because of their services in subjugating the Baba i revolt in 1240 CE and because Sheikh Edebali was considered by his followers a leader and successor to Baba Ishaq they all became the focus of attention of the Germiyanids 45 Kafadar adds that early in Osman reign the young Emir showed political ingenuity forming relations with his neighbours Osman s alliances transcended tribal ethnic and religious lines and he may have followed his instinct and the requirements of his political aspirations not mistaking the future results of the family connections he created and secured for his son after him Osman reconstituted the political culture of the Seljuk Sultanate of Rum in line with the needs of his beylik He was more creative than his Turkomen neighbours in combining Turkic Islamic and Byzantine traditions Additionally the Emir also cooperated with the Byzantine Tekfurs of the neighbouring cities and villages He forged an agreement so his clan whenever they move between grazing areas in the summer leave their belongings in the Byzantine fortress of Bilecik and upon their return they give its governor a token of appreciation in the form of cheese and butter made from sheep milk and preserved in animal skins or a good carpet made from wool This agreement reflects the coexistence between herders farmers and urban dwellers during Osman s reign 45 Osman s friendship with Kose Mihal governor of Chirmenkia modern Harmankoy was the culmination of this coexistence between Muslims and Byzantines As for his relations with other peoples such as the Mongols most of whom moved to the borders of western Anatolia and the Germiyanid Turkomen it was hostile That is because the Turks in general despised the Mongols and the Germiyanids were probably of non Oghuz origin 45 Osman allied with the Ahyan Rum brotherhood they formed organized groups members in each of which worked in a single trade The brotherhood took the responsibility to preserve justice prevent injustice stop oppression follow sharia law dictate good morals and carry out military duties if the need arises to defend their rights and the rights of Muslims 46 47 Ilkhan Mahmud Ghazan on horseback higher ruler of Anatolia during the early years of Osman s reign All Turkoman Beys or Emirs were subordinate to him despite the inherent hostility between Turks and Mongols The Emir also allied with newly arrived Turkomen clans to Anatolia In general the nomads have always had a strong militarized spirit compared to people installed in the cities Thus the clans were more active and effective than their city dwelling kin Soon enough they become the beating heart of the Seljuk border provinces in total and the Osmanic beylik in particular Osman also enticed many Turkomen from the region of Paphlagonia to join his forces 37 These Turkomen were fine warriors eager for jihad and conquest each of them followed a Tariqah an order of Sufism and was supervised by a sheikh who taught them the meaning of jihad alongside many Islamic principles However another section of these Turkomen did not have close ties to Islam for various reasons thus Osman entrusted them to several sheikhs and dervishes to be given proper Islamic education and be satiated with the values that glorify conquests aiming to spread the word of Islam In fact these sheikhs and dervishes were very enthusiastic about promoting the Turuq of the Khorasani Walis and Osman s request gave them this chance 48 As for the ruling hierarchy Osman was firstly subordinate to the Chobanid Emir in Kastamonu followed by the Seljuk Sultan through the Germiyanid Bey in Kutahya who was in turn subordinate to the Mongol Ilkhan in Tabriz During this period the Seljuk Sultans had lost their power over their local Emirs and the Mongol Ilkhan practised his authority in Anatolia through his appointed Generals where he requested that every local governor including Osman sends him soldiers whenever he requests so 49 As for the hierarchy of name delivering in khuṭbah Imams used to pray for the guidance of the Abbasid caliph in Egypt first the Mongol Ilkhan in Tabriz Seljuk Sultan in Konya and finally the local Bey or Emir 49 Expansion of the beylikUntil the end of thirteenth century Osman I s conquests include the areas of Bilecik Belokomis Yenisehir Melangeia Inegol Angelokomis and Yarhisar tr Kopruhisar and Byzantine castles in these areas 50 51 52 According to Shaw Osman s first real conquests followed the collapse of Seljuk authority when he was able to occupy the fortresses of Kulucahisar and Eskisehir Then he captured the first significant city in his territories Yenisehir which became the Ottoman capital 34 In 1302 after soundly defeating a Byzantine force near Nicaea Osman began settling his forces closer to Byzantine controlled areas 53 Alarmed by Osman s growing influence the Byzantines gradually fled the Anatolian countryside Byzantine leadership attempted to contain Ottoman expansion but their efforts were poorly organized and ineffectual Meanwhile Osman spent the remainder of his reign expanding his control in two directions north along the course of the Sakarya River and southwest towards the Sea of Marmara achieving his objectives by 1308 34 Osman s last campaign was against the city of Bursa 54 Although Osman did not physically participate in the battle the victory at Bursa proved to be extremely vital for the Ottomans as the city served as a staging ground against the Byzantines in Constantinople and as a newly adorned capital for Osman s son Orhan Ottoman tradition holds that Osman died just after the capture of Bursa but some scholars have argued that his death should be placed in 1324 the year of Orhan s accession 55 Conquest of Karacahisar Illustration of Osman rallying his warriors into battle After establishing his beylik Osman had to fight on two fronts one against the Byzantine and the other against the Turkomen beyliks that opposed his rule especially the Germiyanids Osman focused on expanding at the expense of the Byzantines and since that time the primary Ottoman goal became the conquest of the remaining Byzantine lands 56 Some accounts indicate that the first battle Osman launched against the Byzantines was aimed to revenge a defeat that he suffered in the spring of 683 or 684 AH 1284 or 1285 CE where the Byzantines led by the Tekfur of Bursa ambushed him and his men It is in doubt that Osman knew about this ambush from one of his spies Nevertheless he chose to clash with the Byzantines and he was defeated and forced to withdraw with casualties including his nephew Koca Saruhan bey son of Savci Bey 25 57 Based on this around 685 AH 1286 CE Osman went forward to Kulacahisar at the head of a military force of three hundred fighters it was a fortress located two leagues away from Inegol within the scope of mount Uludag The Emir attacked the fort at night and managed to conquer it extending his beylik northwards toward Lake Iznik s proximity The Ottoman victory at Kulacahisar triggered the fort s governor who refused to be a subordinate subject to a Muslim ruler especially a border Emir so he allied himself with Karacahisar s governor and both men agreed to fight the Muslims aiming at retaking all Byzantine lands that were lost recently Thus the Ottomans and the Byzantines met again in battle somewhere between Bilecik and Inegol where fierce fighting took place in which Osman s brother Savci Bey and the Byzantine commander Pilatos were killed The Battle ended with an Ottoman victory Then the Ottomans entered Karacahisar where they reportedly for the first time converted the town s church into a mosque Osman appointed a Qadi magistrate and a Subasi chief of police for the newly conquered city Historians differed in determining the date of this conquest yet none made it prior to 685 AH 1286 CE or exceeding 691 AH 1291 CE Osman made his new city a staging base of his military campaigns against the Byzantines and ordered that his name be delivered at the Friday khuṭbah which was the first manifestation of his sovereignty and authority 21 56 A mehter war drum similar to the one sent to Osman from the Seljuk Sultan Osman s latest victory was his greatest up to that date Seljuk Sultan Alaeddin Kayqubad III expressed his deep appreciation for Osman s accomplishments in the name of the Seljuks and Islam giving him the title of Ḥaḍrat ʻUthman ghazi marzuban Ali Jah ʻUthman Shah the honourable conqueror and border guardian Osman Shah 58 The Sultan also bestowed upon Osman the governance of all the land he did conquered as well as the towns of Eskisehir and Inonu Moreover The Seljuk Sultan issued a decree exempting Osman from all types of taxes Osman also received several gifts from the Sultan reflecting the new high stature to the Seljuk court These gifts included a golden war banner a mehter war drum a tug a pole with circularly arranged horse tail hairs a tassel a gilded sword a loose saddle and one hundred thousand dirhams 49 59 The decree also included the recognition of Osman s right to be mentioned in the Friday khuṭbah in all areas subject to him and was permitted to mint coins in his name 60 Thus Osman became a Sultan but lacking only the title 61 It is narrated that when drums were beaten announcing Sultan s Kayqubad s arrival Osman stood up in glorification and remained so till the music halted Since that day Ottoman soldiers enacted standing in glorification for their Sultan whenever drums were beaten 62 63 Conquest of Bilecik Yarhisar and Inegol Soon after the conquest of Karacahisar Osman marched with his soldiers north towards Sakarya River Upon his arrival there he raided and looted the forts of Goynuk and Yenice Tarakli Many argue that during this time Osman received a message from his Byzantine friend Kose Mihal warning him of a secret conspiracy that is being prepared to by tekfurs of Bilecik and Yarhisar The two were aiming at killing Osman after inviting him to attend their children s wedding Osman was disappointed in being betrayed by Bilecik s tekfur That is because he considered the relationship with Bilecik to be built on trust and good faith especially that his clan was used to leave their belongings in this fortress whenever they moved between grazing areas as previously mentioned Osman devised a plan to escape the trap and take over the fortress He sent forty of his soldiers carrying some of the clan s belongings to be kept in Bilecik while most of its inhabitants were outside attending the wedding Once his men entered the fort they quickly overpowered its small garrison and it fell to the Ottomans Then Osman went the feast followed by some Byzantine knights who were easily ambushed by his men later A short battle took place in which Osman was victorious and most of the Byzantines were killed After that Osman rode towards Yarhisar and took it by surprise A large part of the fort s garrison was killed while the rest were taken prisoners The tekfur s daughter Holophira was also captured in this action she soon became Osman s daughter in law having married his son Orhan sometime later and her name was changed to Nilufer Hatun 64 65 Afterwards Osman and several of his men took over all towns and villages surrounding Inegol before laying siege on the fort itself and taking it with ease Osman ordered the execution of Inegol s tekfur since he was known for persecuting his Muslim neighbours then placed a new garrison for the town and distributed the loot among his men 64 Fall of the Seljuk Sultanate of Rum and the Osmanic Beylik s independence The declining Sultanate of Rum vassal of the Mongols and the emerging beyliks c 1300 Osman aspired after his multiple victories to expand on two axes aiming to isolate the Byzantine cities he was looking to conquer First he blocked the road leading to Iznik from the eastern side Then he advanced from the west towards Lopadion and Evrenos After that Osman turned around Mount Uludag from both north and south avoiding the fortified city of Bursa connecting with his Muslim neighbours in the southeast During that time the Byzantine Empire was preoccupied with ongoing clashes with its powerful enemies in Anatolia such as the Germiyanids and the coastal beyliks not to mention suppressing unrest and discord in Constantinople and the Balkans The Empire was unable to face Osman s threats thus he felt free to expand at the Byzantines expense exploiting the current situation 56 66 At the same time the Seljuk Sultanate of Rum was seeing its final days The Sultanate grip was slowly weakened over its Turkoman Beyliks Sultan Alaeddin Kayqubad III became deeply unpopular after he purged the Seljuk administration of his predecessor s men with extreme violence This prompted the Mongol Ilkhan Mahmud Ghazan to call upon Kayqubad to appear before him and once the latter did in 1302 he was executed and replaced with his predecessor Ghiyath ad Din Mas ud bin Kaykawus in order to keep the peace in Anatolia 67 According to another account Mongol and Tatar hordes raided Asia Minor in 699 AH 1300 CE and killed Sultan Kayqubad in his capital Konya It was also said that Kaykawus himself killed his rival coveting his own return on the throne Another story suggests that Kayqubad escaped and sought refuge in the Byzantine court where he remained until his death 61 In all cases Kaykawus s rule was short lived lasting between 4 and 6 years at most and when he died in 1308 CE the Seljuk Sultanate of Rum was no more to be mentioned in the historical records 67 giving the way for the Turkoman beyliks to emerg as independent states Osman an independent Emir on his Takht The demise of the Seljuk Sultanate of Rum gave Osman autonomy over his dominion he soon dubbed himself Padisah Al iʿOsman sovereign of the house of Osman After that Osman set his sights towards conquering the last of the Byzantine cities towns and fortresses in Anatolia According to one account after Sultan Alaeddin Kayqubad III was killed by the Mongols vizirs and notable leaders met and decided that since the late Sultan had no offspring one of the local Emirs should take his place and they found Osman perfect fitting the candidacy Thus the leaders offered the Emir the position and Osman accepted becoming a Sultan since that date It is likely that Kayqubad s and Kaykawus s deaths led to the Sultanate of Rum falling into chaos and promoted many of its regular soldiers to join the armies of local Emirs including Osman This gave the latter a great momentum and important military experiences enriching his army for the upcoming conquests 68 Battle of Bapheus A section of the remaining Byzantine fortifications in Nicaea Soon after Osman secured his independence and established control over all fortresses he conquered he sent messages to all remaining Byzantine tekfurs in Anatolia asking them to choose between accepting Islam Ottoman sovereignty and paying jizyah or war Some of these tekfurs ended up accepting Islam including Osman s old friend Kose Mihal who became the Turkic leader s companion and would play a considerable part in the upcoming expansions of the Osmanic beylik His descendants became known in Ottoman history as Mihalogullari children of Michael plural of Mihaloglu 69 70 Other governors acknowledged Osman s sovereignty while the rest kept their loyalty to the Byzantine Emperor Thus Osman started harassing their fortresses such as Bursa and Nicaea which was besieged in 1301 CE 71 The Ottoman raids also threatened the port city of Nicomedia with famine as the Ottomans roamed the countryside prohibiting peasants from harvesting wheat This provoked Bursa s tekfur among others to unite their efforts in order to eliminate this new emerging Islamic power 72 In the spring of 1302 CE Emperor Michael IX launched a campaign that reached south to Magnesia The Ottomans awed by his large army avoided an open battle The Emperor sought to confront The Ottomans but he was dissuaded by his generals Encouraged by that The Ottomans resumed their raids virtually isolating the Emperor at Magnesia Soon the imperial army started dissolving without engaging in a single battle that is because the local troops left to defend their homes which were continuously raided by the Ottomans and the Alan mercenaries left as well aiming to rejoin with their families in Thrace The Byzantine emperor was forced to withdraw by the sea followed by a wave of refugees 73 74 75 To counter the threat to Nicomedia Michael s father Andronikos II sent a Byzantine force of some 2 000 men half of whom were recently hired Alan mercenaries under the megas hetaireiarches Giorgios Mouzalon to cross the Bosporus and relieve the city 73 74 The Byzantine response was a warning for the Islamic border villages and towns However when the locals noticed Osman s leadership and military strength as well as his devotion to Islam they rallied to support and stand with him in order to consolidate a new Islamic state that would unite them and form an impenetrable wall against the Byzantines 60 Several Byzantine deserters joined Osman as well some of which were liberated prisoners of war who chose to align with him reportedly due to his good treatment during their custody Many Islamic warrior brotherhoods also joined the Ottomans For example the Gazi Rum s Raiders of the Romans they were stationed on the borders of the Byzantine Empire and repelled its attacks on Muslim lands since the Abbasid era gaining great experiences and knowledge in Byzantine strategies and tactics Another example is the Ḥajjian Rum s pilgrims of the land of the Romans a brotherhood of Muslim clergy concerned with teaching local villagers and recent converts the basics and different aspects of Islam and had a side objective of assisting the Mujahideen in combat 76 77 The Byzantine and Ottoman armies eventually met on 1 Ḏu al Ḥijjah 701 AH 27 July 1302 CE at the plain of Bapheus located between Nicomedia and Nicaea The Ottoman army consisted of light cavalry under Osman himself and they numbered around 5 000 while the Byzantines numbered around 2 000 men The Muslim cavalry charged toward the Byzantines fast whose Alan contingent did not participate in the battle As a result of the attack the Byzantine line was broken forcing Giorgios Mouzalon to withdraw into Nicomedia under the cover of the Alan force 73 74 75 78 Bapheus was the first major victory for the nascent Osmanic Beylik and of major significance for its future expansion the Byzantines effectively lost control of the countryside of Bithynia withdrawing to their forts which became isolated and fell one by one eventually The Byzantine defeat also sparked a mass exodus of the Christian population from the area into the European parts of the empire further altering the region s demographic balance 78 Coupled with the defeat at Magnesia the Ottomans were able to reach the coasts of the Aegean Sea threatening Byzantium with a final loss for their territory in Asia Minor 75 According to Halil Inalcik the battle allowed the Ottomans to achieve the characteristics and qualities of a true state 79 Byzantine Mongol convergence attempt Mongol soldiers in Jamiʿ al tawarikh by Rashid al Din al Hamadani BnF MS Supplement Persan 1113 1430 1434 AD Mongol offensives in the Levant 1299 1300 The decisive Mamluk victory at Marj al Saffar played a major role in folding any Byzantine Mongol allience After the victory in Bapheus Osman divided the conquered lands among his kin and army leaders establishing Islamic hegemony and ending the Byzantine era in his new areas He gave Eskisehir to his brother Gunduz bey Karacahisar to his son Orhan Yarhisar to Hasan Alp and Inegol to Turgut Alp 25 By that time Emperor Andronikos II felt the pressure of the Ottoman expansion The Emperor watched in fear how the demographic changes were rapidly taking place in Anatolia and he decided to stop it Yet being recently defeated Andronikos II couldn t face the Ottomans in an open battle To add insult to injury for the Byzantine conflicts were taking place in the Balkans Thus Andronikos II had no choice but to try making an alliance with the Mongols in Persia who were controlling central and eastern Anatolia To achieve that the Emperor sent a letter to Ilkhan Mahmud Ghazan offering him a family rapprochement through marriage and establishing an alliance between both Empires 80 At that time The Mongols were passing through a period of high tension with the Mamluks in Egypt and Syria this did overwhelm the relations with the Byzantines especially that Ghazan was preparing for another campaign to Damascus and Palestine after his first invasion in 699 AH 1299 CE in which many civilians were massacred and where the Mamluk army suffered a massive defeat at the Battle of Wadi al Khaznadar near Ḥimṣ The Mamluks themselves were preparing for the upcoming war with the Mongols aiming to wash away the shame of their previous defeat As a result On 2 Ramaḍan 702 AH 20 April 1303 CE the Mongols and Mamluks engaged in a fierce battle on the outskirts of Damascus known as the Battle of Shaqhab or Battle of Marj al Saffar in which the Mamluks won a decisive victory 81 This devastating defeat had a heavy toll on Ghazan and seems to have contributed to deteriorating his health further more until he died in Qazvin on Sunday 11 Shawwal 703 AH 17 May 1304 CE 82 This eliminated any hope of a Byzantine Mongol alliance and allowed the Ottomans to continue on with their conquests Byzantine Catalan alliance Roger de Flor being received by the Byzantine emperor Andronikos II Palaiologos After Ghazan s death the Byzantine Emperor was forced to seek other solutions to the problem of Ottoman expansion Thus he hired a company of Catalan mercenaries led by Roger de Flor The mercenaries had become unemployed after the signing of the Peace of Caltabellotta between the Crown of Aragon and the French dynasty of the Angevins in 1302 CE The company arrived at Constantinople in January 1303 CE where they were received by the Emperor himself then the mercenaries were housed in the district of Blachernae The Emperor arranged the wedding of Roger de Flor to his niece the 15 year old princess Maria Asanina daughter of the Tsar of Bulgaria Ivan Asen III and Irene Palaiologina De Flor was named Megas doux Great Dux i e Commander of the Imperial forces and was promised a four months payment for him and his men 83 84 The Catalans soon crossed to Asia Minor and fought against the Karasids and Germiyanids winning a fast victory Afterward they resolved to attack the maritime provinces of the Ottomans and moved to the town of Philadelphia which was besieged by Yakup I of Germiyan who suffered a defeat at the hands of the Catalans and was forced to lift his siege and retreat This victory proved that Byzantium had been able to gather sufficient military forces and material capabilities it would have been able to eliminate the emerging Turkic power but it had neither It was not long before the Catalans abandoned fighting the Muslims and turned their attention towards the Byzantines themselves The reason for that was that the local population of Magnesia beheaded the Catalan garrison and stole its treasure which infuriated Roger de Flor and made him march towards that city intending on revenge The Byzantines were horrified by the mercenaries attacks and became preoccupied in defending themselves 84 Roger de Flor was soon killed by order of the emperor s son Michael IX who saw the indiscipline of the Catalan mercenaries as a growing danger 85 as did the people of Constantinople who rose up against the Catalans and killed many of them Once the news reached the main Catalan force in Gallipoli they went on a killing spree of their own killing all the local Byzantines 86 Soon after this the Byzantines and the Catalans were at war with each other giving way to Osman to move on with his conquests Conquest of Yenisehir and Its Surroundings After securing his northern borders by reaching the Black and Marmara seas Osman turned his attention towards the southern borders of his beylik Thus he attacked the Byzantine towns villages and fortresses surrounding the city of Yenisehir preparing to conquer it Osman sent a large campaign to the fortress of Yavandhisar and annexed it Then he attacked Yenisehir took it with ease and made it his temporary capital after fortifying and strengthening its defenses 87 Soon after that Osman started sending more campaigns against the remaining Byzantine cities conquering several fortresses including Lefke Akhisar Kochisar Yenicehisar Marmaracik and Kopruhisar In fact conquering the aforementioned forts aimed at imposing a security belt around Yenisehir thus Osman surrounded it with a series of front forts to ward off any invasions 80 Conquest of Bursa Gate of Bursa s Byzantine castle which witnessed the long Ottoman siege With Yenisehir in hands Osman focused his efforts on isolated large cities starting with Bursa unaware that this will be his last campaign 88 He gave the orders to start building two forts overseeing and surrounding the city then when the construction was completed Osman provided the forts with large garrisons This allowed his men to tighten the blockade and prevent any provisions reaching Bursa 89 The Ottoman siege lasted between six and nine years this was due to the fact that the Ottomans had no Siege engines and they had never captured a large fortified city before 90 During the long siege Osman and some of his military commanders conquered the smaller Byzantine fortresses on the vicinity of the beylik in which Several tekfurs acknowledged Osman s sovereignty and became among his subjects some of them accepting Islam in the process Soon after that Osman started suffering from Gout and couldn t accompany his men in any more campaigns or witness the Siege of Bursa so he entrusted his son Orhan to complete this major task while he retired in his capital Orhan s continued the siege without any fighting but he continued isolating Bursa from its surrounding forts conquering Mudanya to cut off the city s connection to the sea He also captured the city of Praenetos on the southern coast of Izmit changing its name to Karamursel after the Muslim leader who took it Karamursel Bey The last fort to fall was Beyce which was considered Bursa s key as it overlooked it and it was renamed Orhaneli 89 61 Orhan tightened the blockade around Bursa till its garrison fell into despair Soon the Byzantine emperor realized that the fall of the city into Muslim hands was inevitable thus he made a difficult decision ordering his governor to evacuate the city Orhan entered Bursa on 2 Jumada al ʾula 726 AH 6 April 1326 CE its people were not subjected to any harm after they recognized Ottoman sovereignty and pledged to pay jizyah 91 Saroz the garrison s leader surrendered to Orhan and pledged allegiance to his father Osman He also converted to Islam and was given the title of Bey out of respect to his courage and patience during the long siege 92 According to some sources Osman died just before the fall of the city 90 while others suggest that he lived long enough to hear about the victory on his death bed 93 94 95 Family 16th century miniature of Osman I Due to the scarcity of sources about his life very little is known about Osman s family relations According to certain fifteenth century Ottoman writers Osman was descended from the Kayi branch of the Oghuz Turks a claim which later became part of the official Ottoman genealogy and was eventually enshrined in the Turkish Nationalist historical tradition with the writings of M F Koprulu 96 However the claim to Kayi lineage does not appear in the earliest extant Ottoman genealogies Thus many scholars of the early Ottomans regard it as a later fabrication meant to shore up dynastic legitimacy with regard to the empire s Turkish rivals in Anatolia 12 Yazicioglu Ali in the early 15th century constructed a genealogy for Osman tracing it back to Oghuz Khagan the mythical ancestor of the Western Turks through the eldest grandson of his eldest son thereby lending legitimacy to the Ottoman sultans claim of primacy among Turkish monarchs 97 It is very difficult for historians to determine what is factual and what is legendary about the many stories the Ottomans told about Osman and his exploits and the Ottoman sources do not always agree with each other 98 According to one story Osman had an uncle named Dundar with whom he had a quarrel early in his career Osman wished to attack the local Christian lord of Bilecik while Dundar opposed it arguing that they already had enough enemies Interpreting this as a challenge to his leadership position Osman shot and killed his uncle with an arrow 99 This story first appears in Nesri s work but is missing in earlier Ottoman historical works If it was true it means that it was likely covered up in order to avoid tarnishing the reputation of the Ottoman dynasty s founder with the murder of a family member It may also indicate an important change in the relationship of the Ottomans with their neighbors shifting from relatively peaceful accommodation to a more aggressive policy of conquest 100 Consorts Osman I had two know consorts 101 102 Malhun Hatun Daughter of Omer Abdulaziz Bey According to tradition she was the mother of Orhan I Occasionally she and Rabia Bala are considered to be the same person Rabia Bala Hatun Also called Rabia Bala Malhun Hatun therefore some historians believe that she and Malhun were the same person She was the daughter of Sheikh Edebali and the mother of Alaeddin Ali Pasha She spent the last years of her life with her father and died in Bilecik in 1324 She was buried next to her father s tomb Sons Osman I had at least eight sons 103 104 105 106 Fulan Bey He was sent to the court of Giyasuddin III Keyhusrev Seljuk sultan to be raised in his house when Ertugrul Gazi signed peace with him He had issue and his descendants were still alive at the time of the reign of Bayezid I Orhan I Gazi 1281 1362 probably with Malhun Hatun Second Ottoman ruler Alaeddin Ali Pasha c 1331 with Rabia Bala Hatun Governor of Bilecik and founder of several mosques in Bursa He had at least one son Kilic Bey and his descendants were still alive in 16th century Savci Bey He had at least one son Suleyman Bey who married his cousin Hatice Hatun daughter of Orhan I Buried in Sogut in the Turbe of Ertugrul Gazi Melik Bey He had at least one daughter Melek Hatun Buried in Sogut in the Turbe of Ertugrul Gazi Coban Bey He built a mosque in Bursa Buried in Sogut in the Turbe of Ertugrul Gazi Hamid Bey Buried in Sogut in the Turbe of Ertugrul Gazi Pazarli Bey General of his half brother Orhan I He had at least two sons Ilyas Bey and Murad Bey and at least one daughter Buried in Sogut in the Turbe of Ertugrul Gazi Daughters Osman I had at least a daughter 101 106 Fatma Hatun Buried in Sogut in the Turbe of Ertugrul Gazi PersonalityOttoman historiography depicts Osman as a semi holy person 107 It is known that among the Turkoman tribes the tribe or part of it was named after its leader The fact that the Kayi tribe became known by the name of Osman suggests that the tribe became powerful because of his excellent leadership 108 Orientalist R Rakhmanaliev writes that the historical role of Osman was that of a tribal leader who enjoyed enormous success in uniting his people around him 109 The activities and personality of Osman as the founder of the state and dynasty are highly appreciated by historians of both the past and the present The state and the dynasty of rulers are named after him The population of the state was called Ottomans Osmanlilar until the beginning of the 20th century that is until the collapse of the Ottoman Empire Historian F Uspensky notes that Osman relied not only on force but also cunningness 110 Historian and writer Lord Kinross writes that Osman was a wise patient ruler whom people sincerely respected and were ready to serve him faithfully He had a natural sense of superiority but he never sought to assert himself with the help of power and therefore he was respected not only by those who were equal in position but also those who exceeded his abilities on the battlefield or on wisdom Osman did not arouse feelings of rivalry in his people only loyalty 111 Herbert Gibbons believed that Osman was great enough to exploit masterful people 112 According to Cemal Kafadar Osman for the Ottomans was the same as Romulus for the Romans 113 Death The territorial extent of the Ottoman Beylik upon the death of Osman I Turbe of Osman I Bursa According to the sources that say Osman lived to hear of the fall of Bursa Orhan rushed back to Sogut to inform his father of his great victory Once he reached it he was immediately summoned to Osman who was on his death bed Soon after Osman heard the news he died from natural causes However Osman managed to name Orhan to be his successor although the latter was not Osman s first born Yet the dead Emir believed that Orhan was better fit to rule than his elder half brother Alaeddin who was more passive and pious than Orhan 92 As for the exact cause of Osman s death it is well known that he suffered from gout for several years which seemingly caused his eventual death This is confirmed by what Asikpasazade mentioned in Tevarih i Al i Osman when he talked about the late period of Osman s life saying Osman had a bad foot from which he experienced severe pain It is noted that Asikpasazade used a similar expression when he talked about the death of Sultan Mehmed the Conqueror The cause of his death was the issue in his feet It is now known that gout is a genetic disease in the Ottoman dynasty and many sultans suffered from it 114 The exact date of Osman s death is debatable It is said that he died on 21 Ramaḍan 726 AH 21 August 1326 CE at 70 years old The 15th century Ottoman historian Rouhi Celebi who wrote down the history of the Ottoman Empire until 1481 CE indicates that Osman died in 1320 However Uruc adiloglu another Ottoman historian who lived during the time of Sultans Mehmed the Conqueror and Bayezid II up until 1502 CE says that Osman died in 1327 CE Contemporary Turkish historian Necdet Sakaoglu tr states that despite the absence of documents mentioning Osman s name after the year 1320 CE there are documents confirming Orhan s ascension to the throne in 1324 CE Based on this Osman s death might have occurred in the previous year 25 114 It is also certain that Osman s death was three or four months after the death of his father in law Sheikh Edebali and two months after the death of his wife Rabia Bala Hatun because it is known that Osman buried the two in Bilecik 115 Once Osman died Orhan ordered the transfer of his body to Bursa his new capital Thus Osman s body was laid there to rest 116 His grave is located today in the neighbourhood of Tophane The reason behind the transferring Osman s body was due to a will Osman did tell his son about during the early years of besieging Bursa My Son when I die bury me under that silver dome in Bursa However Osman s current tomb dates back to the time of Sultan ʻAbdu l ʻAziz 1861 1876 CE because the first tomb was completely destroyed in a severe earthquake that struck the region in 1855 CE it was rebuilt by the aforementioned Sultan Sultan Abdu l Ḥamid II 1876 1909 CE also constructed a shrine in Sogut where Osman was buried for a while before he was moved to Bursa 114 According to some sources Osman left a written will to his son Orhan instructing him to move on with conquests and jihad against the Byzantines that he abides by the teachings of Islam accompany the ʿUlamaʾ amend his parish and dedicates himself to spread the word of Islam 117 118 LegacyOsman is considered the founder of the Ottoman dynasty who started an imperial line that would expand to include 35 sultans rulers of one of the largest and most powerful empires in world history The Ottoman Empire lasted until 1918 CE when it disintegrated after defeat alongside other Central Powers in World War I Osman is often referred to as the first in the line of Ottoman Sultans although he himself never carried this title in his life and was instead called Bey or Emir One endowment written in Persian and dating back to 1324 CE indicates that Osman was given the titles Muḥiuddin Reviver of the faith and Fakhruddin Pride of the faith 49 Osman s descendants are distributed today in several American European and Arab countries after the royal Ottoman family was expelled from Turkey in 1924 CE shortly after the declaration of the Republic by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk 119 Eventually several family members returned to Turkey after the Turkish government allowed the females to return in 1951 CE 119 However male descendants had to wait until 1973 CE to be able to enter Turkey again 120 Other members remained in the countries where their ancestors had sought refuge such as England France the United States Egypt Saudi Arabia among others Osman s descendants are known today as the Osmanoglu son of Osman family The Sword of Osman Main article Sword of Osman The Sword of Osman Turkish Taklid i Seyf was an important sword of state used during the coronation ceremony of the Ottoman Sultans 121 starting with Sultan Murad II 122 The practice started when Osman was girt with the sword of Islam by his father in law Sheik Edebali 123 The girding of the sword of Osman was a vital ceremony which took place within two weeks of a sultan s accession to the throne It was held at the tomb complex at Eyup on the Golden Horn waterway in the capital Constantinople The fact that the emblem by which a sultan was enthroned consisted of a sword was highly symbolic it showed that the office with which he was invested was first and foremost that of a warrior The Sword of Osman was girded on to the new sultan by the Sharif of Konya a Mevlevi dervish who was summoned to Constantinople for that purpose 124 better source needed In popular culture Main article Osman Bey fictional character Osman has been portrayed in the Turkish television series Kurulus Osmancik tr 1988 adapted from a novel by the same name 125 Dirilis Ertugrul 2014 2019 126 and Kurulus Osman 2019 present 127 See alsoOsmanoglu family List of Ottoman conquests sieges and landings Kose Mihal Ghaza thesisReferences This article was adapted from the following source under a CC BY SA 3 0 license 2021 reviewer reports Bassem Fleifel 30 January 2021 Osman I father of kings PDF WikiJournal of Humanities 4 1 1 doi 10 15347 WJH 2021 001 ISSN 2639 5347 OCLC 8897038424 Wikidata Q99519061 a b c Kermeli Eugenia 2009 Osman I In Agoston Gabor Masters Bruce eds Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire p 444 Reliable information regarding Osman is scarce His birth date is unknown and his symbolic significance as the father of the dynasty has encouraged the development of mythic tales regarding the ruler s life and origins however historians agree that before 1300 Osman was simply one among a number of Turkoman tribal leaders operating in the Sakarya region a b Murphey Rhoads 2008 Exploring Ottoman Sovereignty Tradition Image and Practice in the Ottoman Imperial Household 1400 1800 London Continuum p 24 ISBN 978 1 84725 220 3 A reasonable plausible and among its peers probably most reliable account of the early career of Osman by the paragon of Ottoman historians Kemal Pasa zade 1468 1534 identifies the hijri year 652 21 February 1254 to 9 February 1255 as the date of Osman s birth a b Kafadar Cemal 1995 Between Two Worlds The Construction of the Ottoman State p 16 By the time of Osman s death 1323 or 1324 Akgunduz Ahmed Ozturk Said 2011 Ottoman History Misperceptions and Truths IUR Press p 35 ISBN 978 90 90 26108 9 Retrieved 28 December 2019 Lowry Heath W 2003 The Nature of the Early Ottoman State Albany SUNY Press p 153 ISBN 978 0 7914 8726 6 Osman I Encyclopedia Britannica Osman I also called Osman Gazi born c 1258 died 1324 or 1326 ruler of a Turkmen principality in northwestern Anatolia who is regarded as the founder of the Ottoman Turkish state The Ottoman Empire 1700 1999 Donald Quataert page 4 2005 Kafadar Cemal 1995 Between Two Worlds The Construction of the Ottoman State p xii There is still not one authentic written document known from the time of ʿOsman and there are not many from the fourteenth century altogether Kafadar Cemal 1995 Between Two Worlds The Construction of the Ottoman State p 93 Finkel Caroline 2005 Osman s Dream The Story of the Ottoman Empire 1300 1923 Basic Books p 6 ISBN 978 0 465 02396 7 Modern historians attempt to sift historical fact from the myths contained in the later stories in which the Ottoman chroniclers accounted for the origins of the dynasty Imber Colin 1991 Zachariadou Elizabeth ed The Ottoman Emirate 1300 1389 Rethymnon Crete University Press p 75 Almost all the traditional tales about Osman Gazi are fictitious The best thing a modern historian can do is to admit frankly that the earliest history of the Ottomans is a black hole Any attempt to fill this hole will result simply in more fables a b c Kafadar Cemal 1995 Between Two Worlds The Construction of the Ottoman State p 122 That they hailed from the Kayi branch of the Oguz confederacy seems to be a creative rediscovery in the genealogical concoction of the fifteenth century It is missing not only in Ahmedi but also and more importantly in the Yahsi Fakih Asikpasazade narrative which gives its own version of an elaborate genealogical family tree going back to Noah If there was a particularly significant claim to Kayi lineage it is hard to imagine that Yahsi Fakih would not have heard of it Lowry Heath 2003 The Nature of the Early Ottoman State SUNY Press p 78 ISBN 0 7914 5636 6 Based on these charters all of which were drawn up between 1324 and 1360 almost one hundred fifty years prior to the emergence of the Ottoman dynastic myth identifying them as members of the Kayi branch of the Oguz federation of Turkish tribes we may posit that Rudi Paul Lindner 1983 Nomads and Ottomans in Medieval Anatolia Indiana University Press p 10 In fact no matter how one were to try the sources simply do not allow the recovery of a family tree linking the antecedents of Osman to the Kayi of the Oguz tribe Kafadar Cemal 1995 Between Two Worlds The Construction of the Ottoman State p 124 Halil Inalcik 1988 2016 OSMAN I عثمان o 724 1324 Osmanli Devleti nin ve hanedaninin kurucusu 1302 1324 TDV Encyclopedia of Islam 44 2 vols in Turkish Istanbul Turkiye Diyanet Foundation Centre for Islamic Studies Ahmet Yasar Ocak 2000 Osmanli Devleti nin kurulusu efsaneler ve gercekler p 45 in Turkish Kenje Kara Daniel Prior 2004 Archivum Ottomanicum Volume 22 p 140 Hōca Efendi Saʿd al Din b Ḥasan 1863 Tacu t Tevarih The Crown of Histories in Ottoman Turkish Istanbul Matbaa i Amire pp 13 15 a b Oztuna Yilmaz 1988 Mawsuʻat tarikh al Imbaraṭuriyah al ʻUthmaniyah al siyasi wa al ʻaskari wa al ḥaḍari Encyclopedia of the political military and cultural history of the Ottoman Empire in Arabic Vol I Translated by Salman Adnan Mahmud 1st ed Istanbul Faisal Finance Institution pp 83 84 Farid Muḥammad 2006 Tarikh al Dawlah al ʻAliyah al ʻUthmaniyah History of the Exalted Ottoman State in Arabic 10th ed Beirut Dar al Nafa is pp 115 116 Archived from the original on 9 May 2019 al Qaramani Ahmed bin Yusuf bin Ahmed 1985 Tarikh salaṭin Al ʻUthman History of the Ottoman Sultans in Arabic 1st ed Damascus Dar al baṣaʼir pp 9 10 a b c d Shaw Stanford 1976 History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey illustrated reprinted ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 13 14 ISBN 9780521291637 Ṭaqqush Muḥammad Suhayl 2013 Tarikh al ʻuthmaniyin min qiyam al Dawlah ila al inqilab ʻala al khilafah History of the Ottomans from the rise of the Empire to the coup against the caliphate in Arabic 3rd ed Beirut Dar al Nafa is p 92 ISBN 9789953184432 Archived from the original on 28 April 2019 Retrieved 28 April 2019 Armagan Mustafa 2014 al tarikh al sirri lil Imbaraṭuriyah al ʻUthmaniyah Jawanib ghayr Maʻrufa min ḥayat Salaṭin Bani ʻUthman The Secret History of the Ottoman Empire Unrecognized Aspects of the Life of the Ottoman Sultans in Arabic Translated by Hamza Mustafa 1st ed Beirut al Dar al ʻArabiyah lil ʻUlum Nashirun p 11 ISBN 9786140111226 Murphey Rhoads 2008 Exploring Ottoman Sovereignty Tradition Image and Practice in the Ottoman Imperial Household 1400 1800 London Continuum p 24 ISBN 978 1 84725 220 3 a b c d e Sakaoglu Necdet 1999 Yasamlari ve Yapitlariyla Osmanlilar Ansiklopedisi C 2 Encyclopedia of the Lives and Works of the Ottomans in Turkish Yapi Kredi Kultur Sanat Yayincilik pp 392 395 ISBN 9789750800719 Zachariadou Elizabeth A 1997 Osmanli Beyligi 1300 1389 Ottoman Beylik 1300 1389 in Turkish Istanbul Turkiye Ekonomik ve Toplumsal Tarih Vakfi p 150 ISBN 9789753330671 a b Ḥallaq Ḥassan 2000 Tarikh al shuʻub al Islamiyah al ḥadith wa al muʻạṣir Modern and Contemporary History of the Muslim peoples in Arabic 1st ed Beirut Dar al nahḍah al ʻArabiyah pp 16 17 Archived from the original on 19 March 2020 Retrieved 23 December 2019 Fleet Kate The rise of the Ottomans The New Cambridge History of Islam Vol 2 The Western Islamic World Eleventh to Eighteenth Centuries Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 313 ISBN 9780521839570 The origins of the Ottomans are obscure According to legend largely invented later as part of the process of legitimising Ottoman rule and providing the Ottomans with a suitably august past it was the Saljuq ruler ʿAlaʾ al Din who bestowed rule on the Ottomans Finkel Caroline 2005 Osman s Dream The Story of the Ottoman Empire 1300 1923 Basic Books p 12 Beyond the likelihood that the first Ottoman sultan was a historical figure a Turcoman Muslim marcher lord of the Byzantine frontier in north west Anatolia whose father may have been called Ertugrul there is little other biographical information about Osman a b Stanford Shaw History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey Cambridge University Press 1976 vol 1 ISBN 9780521291637 p 13 Fleet Kate 2010 The rise of the Ottomans In Fierro Maribel ed The New Cambridge History of Islam Volume 2 The Western Islamic World Eleventh to Eighteenth Centuries Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 313 ISBN 978 0 521 83957 0 The origins of the Ottomans are obscure According to legend largely invented later as part of the process of legitimising Ottoman rule and providing the Ottomans with a suitably august past it was the Saljuq ruler ʿAlaʾ al Din who bestowed rule on the Ottomans Yildirim Riza 12 September 2018 Aleviligin Dogusu Kizilbas Sufiliginin Toplumsal ve Siyasal Temelleri 1300 1501 p 121 ISBN 9789750525018 Retrieved 20 March 2023 Sikari daha da ileriye giderek Osman i Selcuklunun bir cobani olarak ifade eder Sikari genellikle Osmanlilari soylu kanindan olmamak sadik olmamak sozlerini tutmamak gibi seylerle suclar Karamanoglu Osman i bir geda iken sah eyledi Osman Asli cinsi yok bir yurukoglu iken bey oldi Imber Colin 2009 The Ottoman Empire 1300 1650 The Structure of Power 2 ed New York Palgrave Macmillan p 8 Kafadar Cemal 1995 Between Two Worlds The Construction of the Ottoman State p 129 Of military undertakings we know nothing with certainty until the Battle of Bapheus Osman s triumphant confrontation with a Byzantine force in 1301 or 1302 which is the first datable incident in his life a b c Shaw Ottoman Empire p 14 Sakaoglu Necdet 2008 Bu mulkun kadin sultanlari Valide sultanlar hatunlar hasekiler kadinefendiler sultanefendiler The Queen Women of the Sultanate Valide sultans wives hasekis women s children sultan s children in Turkish Istanbul Oglak Yayincilik p 26 ISBN 978 9 753 29623 6 a b Ibrahim Aḥmad Maḥmud 2016 ẓuhur al Biktashiyah wa al ishraf ʻala al Inkishariyya al Islam al muwazi fi Turkiya al Biktashiyah wa jadal al taʼsis Parallel Islam in Turkey Bektashi Order and Janissary Supervision PDF in Arabic 1st ed Dubai Al Mesbar Studies and Research Center p 4 Archived from the original PDF on 20 September 2018 Retrieved 20 September 2018 a b c d Ṭaqqush Muḥammad Suhayl 2013 Tarikh al ʻuthmaniyin min qiyam al Dawlah ila al inqilab ʻala al khilafah History of the Ottomans from the rise of the Empire to the coup against the caliphate in Arabic 3rd ed Beirut Dar al Nafa is pp 25 28 ISBN 9789953184432 Archived from the original on 28 April 2019 Retrieved 28 April 2019 Collins Paul 1993 al Uthmaniyun fi urubba The Ottomans in Europe in Arabic Translated by al Shaykh ʻAbd al Raḥman Cairo General Egyptian Book Organization p 26 Retrieved 30 March 2020 Kermeli Eugenia 2009 Osman I In Agoston Gabor Masters Bruce eds Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire p 445 Apart from these chronicles there are later sources that begin to establish Osman as a mythic figure From the 16th century onward a number of dynastic myths are used by Ottoman and Western authors endowing the founder of the dynasty with more exalted origins Among these is recounted the famous dream of Osman which is supposed to have taken place while he was a guest in the house of a sheikh Edebali This highly symbolic narrative should be understood however as an example of eschatological mythology required by the subsequent success of the Ottoman emirate to surround the founder of the dynasty with supernatural vision providential success and an illustrious genealogy Imber Colin 1987 The Ottoman Dynastic Myth Turcica 19 7 27 doi 10 2143 TURC 19 0 2014268 The attraction of Asikpasazade s story was not only that it furnished an episode proving that God had bestowed rulership on the Ottomans but also that it provided side by side with the physical descent from Oguz Khan a spiritual descent Hence the physical union of Osman with a saint s daughter gave the dynasty a spiritual legitimacy and became after the 1480s an integral feature of dynastic mythology Finkel Caroline 2005 Osman s Dream The Story of the Ottoman Empire 1300 1923 Basic Books p 2 citing Lindner Rudi P 1983 Nomads and Ottomans in Medieval Anatolia Bloomington Indiana University Press p 37 ISBN 0 933070 12 8 Finkel Caroline 13 February 2006 Osman s Dream The Story of the Ottoman Empire 1300 1923 Basic Books p 2 ISBN 978 0 465 02396 7 First communicated in this form in the later fifteenth century a century and a half after Osman s death in about 1323 this dream became one of the most resilient founding myths of the empire Kafadar Cemal 1995 Between Two Worlds The Construction of the Ottoman State pp 132 3 Gul Mehmet Zahir 2014 al Taḥawwulat al fikriyah fi al ʻalam al Islami aʻlam wa kutub wa ḥarakat wa afkar min al qarn al ʻashir ila al thani ʻashar al Hijri Intellectual transformations in the Islamic world people books movements and ideas from the tenth to the twelfth century AH in Arabic 1st ed Herndon Virginia International Institute of Islamic Thought p 378 ISBN 9781565646216 Archived from the original on 8 January 2020 Retrieved 20 September 2018 Mantran Robert 1986 A Turkish or Mongolian Islam In Fossier Robert ed The Cambridge Illustrated History of the Middle Ages 1250 1520 Vol 3 trans Hanbury Tenison Sarah Cambridge UK New York New York USA Cambridge University Press p 298 ISBN 978 0 521 26646 8 a b c Kafadar Cemal 1999 Translated by al Ḥarith ʻAbd al Laṭif Takawwun al dawla al Uthmaniya Formation of the Ottoman Empire Al Ijtihad in Arabic Beirut Dar al Ijtihad lil Abḥath wa al Tarjamah wa al Nashr 16 41 42 65 66 Archived from the original on 28 February 2017 Retrieved 15 September 2015 al Duri ʻAbd al ʻAziz 12 May 1952 al aṣnaf wa al ḥiraf al Islamiyah Al Risalah in Arabic Beirut Maʻhad al Mursil 984 520 523 Archived from the original on 24 February 2020 Retrieved 15 September 2015 ibn Baṭuṭah Shams al Din ʾAbu ʿAbd al Lah Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd al Lah l Lawati ṭ Ṭanǧi 1987 Tuhfat al nuẓẓar fi gharaʼib al amṣar wa ʻajaʼib al asfar A Gift to Those Who Contemplate the Wonders of Cities and the Marvels of Traveling in Arabic 1st ed Beirut Dar Iḥyaʼ al ʻulum p 134 Archived from the original 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The Crown of Histories in Ottoman Turkish Istanbul Matbaa i Amire pp 28 29 a b Farid Muḥammad 2006 Tarikh al Dawlah al ʻAliyah al ʻUthmaniyah History of the Exalted Ottoman State in Arabic 10th ed Beirut Dar al Nafa is pp 120 122 Archived from the original on 9 May 2019 Rogers Clifford 2010 The Oxford Encyclopaedia of Medieval Warfare and Military Technology Vol 1 Oxford University Press p 261 ISBN 9780195334036 Hore A H 2003 Eighteen Centuries of the Orthodox Greek Church Gorgias Press LLC p 455 ISBN 9781593330514 Pitcher Donald Edgar 1972 An Historical Geography of the Ottoman Empire From Earliest Times to the End of the Sixteenth Century Brill Archive p 37 Kafadar Cemal 1995 Between Two Worlds The Construction of the Ottoman State pp 10 37 Colin Imber 2002 The Ottoman Empire 1300 1650 p 95 Kafadar Cemal 1995 Between Two Worlds The Construction of the Ottoman State p 105 Finkel Caroline 13 February 2006 Osman s Dream The Story of the Ottoman Empire 1300 1923 Basic Books p 6 ISBN 978 0 465 02396 7 Modern historians attempt to sift historical fact from the myths contained in the later stories in which the Ottoman chroniclers accounted for the origins of the dynasty Kafadar Cemal 1995 Between Two Worlds The Construction of the Ottoman State p 105 Kafadar Cemal 1995 Between Two Worlds The Construction of the Ottoman State pp 107 8 a b Pierce Leslie 1993 The Imperial Harem Women and Sovereignty in the Ottoman Empire London Oxford University Press p 33 ISBN 9780195086775 Duducu Jem 15 January 2018 The Sultans The Rise and Fall of the Ottoman Rulers and Their World A 600 Year History Amberley Publishing ISBN 9781445668611 Halil Inalcik 1973 The Ottoman Empire The Classical Age 1300 1600 The Ottoman Empire p 204 205 Lowry Heath 2003 The Nature of the Early Ottoman State SUNY Press p 153 Lowry Heath 2003 The Nature of the Early Ottoman State SUNY Press p 73 a b Ertugrul Gazi ve Halime Sultan Turbesi 3 June 2016 Ihsanoglu E History of the Ottoman state society and civilization in 2 volumes translated from Turkish by Feonova ed by M S Meyer Eastern Literature 2006 V 1 p 6 ISBN 5 02 018511 6 Ihsanoglu E History of the Ottoman state society and civilization in 2 volumes Translation from Turkish by V B Feonova ed by M S Meyer Eastern Literature 2006 V 1 p 6 ISBN 5 02 018511 6 R Rakhmanaliev Empire of the Turks Great civilization Turkic peoples in World History since the 10th century B C to the 20th century Ripol Classic 2008 ISBN 5386008471 9785386008475 Uspensky F History of the Byzantine Empire XI XV centuries Eastern question Moscow Mysl 1996 ISBN 524400882X 9785244008821 Kinross Lord The Ottoman Centuries The Rise and Fall of the Turkish Empire Harper Collins 1979 Gibbons Herbert Adams The Foundation of the Ottoman Empire A History of the Osmanlis Up To the Death of Bayezid I 1300 1403 Routledge 2013 p 27 ISBN 1135029822 9781135029821 Kafadar Cemal Between Two Worlds The Construction of the Ottoman State University of California Press 1995 p 1 ISBN 0520206002 9780520206007 a b c Armagan Mustafa 2014 al tarikh al sirri lil Imbaraṭuriyah al ʻUthmaniyah Jawanib ghayr Maʻrufa min ḥayat Salaṭin Bani ʻUthman The Secret History of the Ottoman Empire Unrecognized Aspects of the Life of the Ottoman Sultans in Arabic Translated by Hamza Mustafa 1st ed Beirut al Dar al ʻArabiyah lil ʻUlum Nashirun pp 11 17 ISBN 9786140111226 Osman Gazi ikinci esi Bala Hatun kimdir turbesi nerede Who is Osman Gazi s second wife Bala Hatun where is her tomb InternetHaber in Turkish 2 June 2021 Retrieved 13 August 2021 Sarhank Ismaʻil 1988 Tarikh al Dawlah al ʻUthmaniyah History of the Ottoman Empire in Arabic Beirut Dar al Fikr al Ḥadith p 14 Abu Ghunaymah Ziyad 1983 Jawanib Muḍiʼah fi tarikh al ʻUthmaniyin al Atrak Luminous aspects of the history of the Ottoman Turks in Arabic 1st ed Amman Dar al Furqan li al nashr wa al tawziʻ pp 21 22 Ḥarb Muḥammad 1994 al Uthmaniyun fi al Tarikh wa al Ḥaḍarah The Ottomans in history and civilization in Arabic Cairo Egyptian Center for Ottoman Studies and Turkish World Researches p 12 Retrieved 22 April 2020 a b Brookes Douglas 2008 The concubine the princess and the teacher voices from the Ottoman harem University of Texas Press pp 278 285 ISBN 9780292783355 Retrieved 14 April 2011 Opfell Olga 2001 Royalty who wait the 21 heads of formerly regnant houses of Europe McFarland pp 146 151 ISBN 9780786450572 Retrieved 14 April 2011 Frederick William Hasluck First published 1929 XLVI The Girding of the Sultan in Margaret Hasluck Christianity and Islam Under the Sultans II pp 604 622 ISBN 978 1 4067 5887 0 Topbas Osman Nuri 2016 al ʻUthmaniyun rijaluhum al ʻiẓam wa muʼassasatihim al shamikhah The Ottomans their great men and their majestic institutions PDF in Arabic Translated by Muḥammad Ḥarb 1st ed Istanbul Dar al arqam p 95 ISBN 9789944835251 Archived from the original PDF on 17 April 2018 Retrieved 13 May 2019 Frank R C Bagley The Last Great Muslim Empires Leid Brill 1969 p 2 ISBN 978 90 04 02104 4 Girding on the Sword of Osman PDF The New York Times 18 September 1876 p 2 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 19 April 2009 KUTAY UGUR 10 February 2020 Osmancik tan ve Osman a BirGun in Turkish Retrieved 12 June 2020 Dirilis Ertugrul un Osman i Emre Uctepe kimdir Kac yasinda ve nereli www sozcu com tr Retrieved 27 February 2021 Kurulus Osman oyunculari isimleri Kurulus Osman dizisinde kim kimdir www sozcu com tr in Turkish Retrieved 29 November 2020 Further readingLindner Rudi P 1983 Nomads and Ottomans in Medieval Anatolia Bloomington Indiana University Press ISBN 0 933070 12 8 Imber Colin 1987 The Ottoman Dynastic Myth Turcica 19 7 27 doi 10 2143 TURC 19 0 2014268 Zachariadou Elizabeth ed 1991 The Ottoman Emirate 1300 1389 Rethymnon Crete University Press Kafadar Cemal 1995 Between Two Worlds The Construction of the Ottoman State Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 20600 7 Lowry Heath 2003 The Nature of the Early Ottoman State Albany SUNY Press ISBN 0 7914 5636 6 Finkel Caroline 2005 Osman s Dream The Story of the Ottoman Empire 1300 1923 New York Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 02396 7 Inalcik Halil 2007 OSMAN I An article published in 33rd volume of Turkish Encyclopedia of Islam in Turkish Vol 33 Istanbul TDV Islam Ansiklopedisi pp 443 453 ISBN 978 975 38 94 55 5 Murphey Rhoads 2008 Exploring Ottoman Sovereignty Tradition Image and Practice in the Ottoman Imperial Household 1400 1800 London Continuum ISBN 978 1 84725 220 3 Imber Colin 2009 The Ottoman Empire 1300 1650 The Structure of Power 2 ed New York Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 57451 9 Kermeli Eugenia 2009 Osman I In Agoston Gabor Masters Bruce eds Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire New York Facts on File pp 444 6 ISBN 978 0 8160 6259 1 Fleet Kate 2010 The rise of the Ottomans In Fierro Maribel ed The New Cambridge History of Islam Vol 2 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 313 331 ISBN 978 0 521 83957 0 External links Media related to Osman I at Wikimedia Commons Osman IHouse of OsmanBorn 1250s Died 1323 4Regnal titlesNew titleDynasty founded Ottoman Sultan Bey c 1299 1323 4 Succeeded byOrhan I Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Osman I amp oldid 1149934925, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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