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Ottoman Empire

The Ottoman Empire,[k] historically and colloquially the Turkish Empire,[22] was an empire[l] that controlled much of Southeast Europe, Western Asia, and Northern Africa between the 14th and early 20th centuries. It was founded at the end of the 13th century in northwestern Anatolia in the town of Söğüt (modern-day Bilecik Province) by the Turkoman[23] tribal leader Osman I.[24] After 1354, the Ottomans crossed into Europe and, with the conquest of the Balkans, the Ottoman beylik was transformed into a transcontinental empire. The Ottomans ended the Byzantine Empire with the conquest of Constantinople in 1453 by Mehmed the Conqueror.[25]

Sublime Ottoman State
  • دولت عليه عثمانیه
  • Devlet-i ʿAlīye-i ʿOsmānīye
c. 1299–1922
Flag
(1844–1922)
Coat of arms
(1882–1922)
Motto: 
  • دولت ابد مدت
  • Devlet-i Ebed-müddet
  • "The Eternal State"[1]
Anthem: various
The Ottoman Empire in 1683
StatusEmpire
Capital
Common languages
Religion
Demonym(s)Ottoman
Government
Sultan 
• c. 1299–1323/4 (first)
Osman I
• 1918–1922 (last)
Mehmed VI
Caliph 
• 1517–1520 (first)
Selim I[16][g]
• 1922–1924 (last)
Abdulmejid II
Grand Vizier 
• 1320–1331 (first)
Alaeddin Pasha
• 1920–1922 (last)
Ahmet Tevfik Pasha
LegislatureImperial Council
(until 1876; 1878–1908)
General Assembly
(1876–1878; 1908–1920)
None, rule by decree
(1920–1922)
• Unelected upper house
Chamber of Notables
(1876–1878; 1908–1920)
• Elected lower house
Chamber of Deputies
(1876–1878; 1908–1920)
History 
• Founded
c. 1299[17]
1402–1413
29 May 1453
1876–1878
1908–1920
23 January 1913
1 November 1922
• Republic of Turkey established[i]
29 October 1923
3 March 1924
Area
1481[18]1,220,000 km2 (470,000 sq mi)
1521[18]3,400,000 km2 (1,300,000 sq mi)
1683[18][19]5,200,000 km2 (2,000,000 sq mi)
1913[18]2,550,000 km2 (980,000 sq mi)
Population
• 1912[20]
24,000,000
CurrencyVarious: akçe, para, sultani, kuruş (piastre), pound

Under the reign of Suleiman the Magnificent, the Ottoman Empire marked the peak of its power and prosperity, as well as the highest development of its governmental, social, and economic systems.[26] At the beginning of the 17th century, the empire contained 32 provinces and numerous vassal states. Some of these were later absorbed into the Ottoman Empire, while others were granted various types of autonomy over the course of centuries.[m] With Constantinople (modern-day Istanbul) as its capital and control of lands around the Mediterranean Basin, the Ottoman Empire was at the centre of interactions between the Middle East and Europe for six centuries.

While the empire was once thought to have entered a period of decline following the death of Suleiman the Magnificent, this view is no longer supported by the majority of academic historians.[28] The newer academic consensus posits that the empire continued to maintain a flexible and strong economy, society and military throughout the 17th and for much of the 18th century.[29] However, during a long period of peace from 1740 to 1768, the Ottoman military system fell behind that of its European rivals, the Habsburg and Russian empires.[30] The Ottomans consequently suffered severe military defeats in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. The successful Greek War of Independence concluded with decolonization of Greece following the London Protocol (1830) and Treaty of Constantinople (1832). This and other defeats prompted the Ottoman state to initiate a comprehensive process of reform and modernization known as the Tanzimat. Thus, over the course of the 19th century, the Ottoman state became vastly more powerful and organized internally, despite suffering further territorial losses, especially in the Balkans, where a number of new states emerged.[31]

The Committee of Union and Progress (CUP) established the Second Constitutional Era in the Young Turk Revolution in 1908, turning the Empire into a constitutional monarchy, which conducted competitive multi-party elections. However, after the disastrous Balkan Wars, the now radicalized and nationalistic CUP took over the government in the 1913 coup d'état, creating a one-party regime. The CUP allied the Empire with Germany, hoping to escape from the diplomatic isolation which had contributed to its recent territorial losses, and thus joined World War I on the side of the Central Powers.[32] While the Empire was able to largely hold its own during the conflict, it was struggling with internal dissent, especially with the Arab Revolt in its Arabian holdings. During this time, the Ottoman government engaged in genocide against the Armenians, Assyrians, and Greeks.[33] The Empire's defeat and the occupation of part of its territory by the Allied Powers in the aftermath of World War I resulted in its partitioning and the loss of its Middle Eastern territories, which were divided between the United Kingdom and France. The successful Turkish War of Independence, led by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk against the occupying Allies, led to the emergence of the Republic of Turkey in the Anatolian heartland and the abolition of the Ottoman monarchy.[34]

Name

The word Ottoman is a historical anglicisation of the name of Osman I, the founder of the Empire and of the ruling House of Osman (also known as the Ottoman dynasty). Osman's name in turn was the Turkish form of the Arabic name ʿUthmān (عثمان). In Ottoman Turkish, the empire was referred to as Devlet-i ʿAlīye-yi ʿOsmānīye (دولت عليه عثمانیه), literally "The Supreme Ottoman State", or alternatively ʿOsmānlı Devleti (عثمانلى دولتى). In Modern Turkish, it is known as Osmanlı İmparatorluğu ("The Ottoman Empire") or Osmanlı Devleti ("The Ottoman State").[citation needed]

The Turkish word for "Ottoman" (Osmanlı) originally referred to the tribal followers of Osman in the fourteenth century. The word subsequently came to be used to refer to the empire's military-administrative elite. In contrast, the term "Turk" (Türk) was used to refer to the Anatolian peasant and tribal population and was seen as a disparaging term when applied to urban, educated individuals.[35]: 26 [36] In the early modern period, an educated, urban-dwelling Turkish-speaker who was not a member of the military-administrative class would often refer to himself neither as an Osmanlı nor as a Türk, but rather as a Rūmī (رومى), or "Roman", meaning an inhabitant of the territory of the former Byzantine Empire in the Balkans and Anatolia. The term Rūmī was also used to refer to Turkish speakers by the other Muslim peoples of the empire and beyond.[37]: 11  As applied to Ottoman Turkish-speakers, this term began to fall out of use at the end of the seventeenth century, and instead of the word increasingly became associated with the Greek population of the empire, a meaning that it still bears in Turkey today.[38]: 51 

In Western Europe, the names Ottoman Empire, Turkish Empire and Turkey were often used interchangeably, with Turkey being increasingly favoured both in formal and informal situations. This dichotomy was officially ended in 1920–1923, when the newly established Ankara-based Turkish government chose Turkey as the sole official name. At present, most scholarly historians avoid the terms "Turkey", "Turks", and "Turkish" when referring to the Ottomans, due to the empire's multinational character.[39]

History

Rise (c. 1299–1453)

As the Rum Sultanate declined well into the 13th century, Anatolia was divided into a patchwork of independent Turkish principalities known as the Anatolian Beyliks. One of these beyliks, in the region of Bithynia on the frontier of the Byzantine Empire, was led by the Turkish tribal leader Osman I (d. 1323/4), a figure of obscure origins from whom the name Ottoman is derived.[40]: 444  Osman's early followers consisted both of Turkish tribal groups and Byzantine renegades, with many but not all converts to Islam.[41]: 59 [42]: 127  Osman extended the control of his principality by conquering Byzantine towns along the Sakarya River. A Byzantine defeat at the Battle of Bapheus in 1302 contributed to Osman's rise as well. It is not well understood how the early Ottomans came to dominate their neighbors, due to the lack of sources surviving from this period. The Ghaza thesis popular during the twentieth century credited their success to their rallying of religious warriors to fight for them in the name of Islam, but it is no longer generally accepted. No other hypothesis has attracted broad acceptance.[43]: 5, 10 [44]: 104 

 
The Battle of Nicopolis in 1396, as depicted in an Ottoman miniature from 1523

In the century after the death of Osman I, Ottoman rule had begun to extend over Anatolia and the Balkans. The earliest conflicts began during the Byzantine–Ottoman wars, waged in Anatolia in the late 13th century before entering Europe in the mid-14th century, followed by the Bulgarian–Ottoman wars and the Serbian–Ottoman wars waged beginning in the mid 14th century. Much of this period was characterised by Ottoman expansion into the Balkans. Osman's son, Orhan, captured the northwestern Anatolian city of Bursa in 1326, making it the new capital of the Ottoman state and supplanting Byzantine control in the region. The important port city of Thessaloniki was captured from the Venetians in 1387 and sacked. The Ottoman victory in Kosovo in 1389 effectively marked the end of Serbian power in the region, paving the way for Ottoman expansion into Europe.[45]: 95–96  The Battle of Nicopolis for the Bulgarian Tsardom of Vidin in 1396, widely regarded as the last large-scale crusade of the Middle Ages, failed to stop the advance of the victorious Ottoman Turks.[46]

As the Turks expanded into the Balkans, the conquest of Constantinople became a crucial objective. The Ottomans had already wrested control of nearly all former Byzantine lands surrounding the city, but the strong defense of Constantinople's strategic position on the Bosporus Strait made it difficult to conquer. In 1402, the Byzantines were temporarily relieved when the Turco-Mongol leader Timur, founder of the Timurid Empire, invaded Ottoman Anatolia from the east. In the Battle of Ankara in 1402, Timur defeated the Ottoman forces and took Sultan Bayezid I as a prisoner, throwing the empire into disorder. The ensuing civil war, also known as the Fetret Devri, lasted from 1402 to 1413 as Bayezid's sons fought over succession. It ended when Mehmed I emerged as the sultan and restored Ottoman power.[47]: 363 

The Balkan territories lost by the Ottomans after 1402, including Thessaloniki, Macedonia, and Kosovo, were later recovered by Murad II between the 1430s and 1450s. On 10 November 1444, Murad repelled the Crusade of Varna by defeating the Hungarian, Polish, and Wallachian armies under Władysław III of Poland (also King of Hungary) and John Hunyadi at the Battle of Varna, although Albanians under Skanderbeg continued to resist. Four years later, John Hunyadi prepared another army of Hungarian and Wallachian forces to attack the Turks, but was again defeated at the Second Battle of Kosovo in 1448.[48]: 29 

Expansion and peak (1453–1566)

 
Sultan Mehmed the Conqueror's entry into Constantinople; painting by Fausto Zonaro (1854–1929)
 
An Ottoman miniature of the Battle of Mohács in 1526[49]

The son of Murad II, Mehmed the Conqueror, reorganized both state and military, and on 29 May 1453 conquered Constantinople, ending the Byzantine Empire. Mehmed allowed the Eastern Orthodox Church to maintain its autonomy and land in exchange for accepting Ottoman authority.[50] Due to tension between the states of western Europe and the later Byzantine Empire, the majority of the Orthodox population accepted Ottoman rule as preferable to Venetian rule.[50] Albanian resistance was a major obstacle to Ottoman expansion on the Italian peninsula.[51] According to modern historiography, there is a direct connection between the fast Ottoman military advance and the consequences of the Black Death from the mid-fourteenth century onwards. Byzantine territories, where the initial Ottoman conquests were carried out, were exhausted demographically and militarily due to the plague outbreaks, which facilitated the Ottoman expansion.[52]

In the 15th and 16th centuries, the Ottoman Empire entered a period of expansion. The Empire prospered under the rule of a line of committed and effective Sultans. It also flourished economically due to its control of the major overland trade routes between Europe and Asia.[53]: 111 [n]

Sultan Selim I (1512–1520) dramatically expanded the Empire's eastern and southern frontiers by defeating Shah Ismail of Safavid Iran, in the Battle of Chaldiran.[54]: 91–105  Selim I established Ottoman rule in Egypt by defeating and annexing the Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt and created a naval presence on the Red Sea. After this Ottoman expansion, competition began between the Portuguese Empire and the Ottoman Empire to become the dominant power in the region.[55]: 55–76 

Suleiman the Magnificent (1520–1566) captured Belgrade in 1521, conquered the southern and central parts of the Kingdom of Hungary as part of the Ottoman–Hungarian Wars,[56][57][failed verification] and, after his historic victory in the Battle of Mohács in 1526, he established Ottoman rule in the territory of present-day Hungary (except the western part) and other Central European territories. He then laid siege to Vienna in 1529, but failed to take the city.[58]: 50  In 1532, he made another attack on Vienna, but was repulsed in the Siege of Güns.[59][60] Transylvania, Wallachia and, intermittently, Moldavia, became tributary principalities of the Ottoman Empire. In the east, the Ottoman Turks took Baghdad from the Persians in 1535, gaining control of Mesopotamia and naval access to the Persian Gulf. In 1555, the Caucasus became officially partitioned for the first time between the Safavids and the Ottomans, a status quo that would remain until the end of the Russo-Turkish War (1768–1774). By this partitioning of the Caucasus as signed in the Peace of Amasya, Western Armenia, western Kurdistan, and Western Georgia (including western Samtskhe) fell into Ottoman hands,[61] while southern Dagestan, Eastern Armenia, Eastern Georgia, and Azerbaijan remained Persian.[62]

In 1539, a 60,000-strong Ottoman army besieged the Spanish garrison of Castelnuovo on the Adriatic coast; the successful siege cost the Ottomans 8,000 casualties,[63] but Venice agreed to terms in 1540, surrendering most of its empire in the Aegean and the Morea. France and the Ottoman Empire, united by mutual opposition to Habsburg rule, became strong allies. The French conquests of Nice (1543) and Corsica (1553) occurred as a joint venture between the forces of the French king Francis I and Suleiman, and were commanded by the Ottoman admirals Hayreddin Barbarossa and Dragut.[64] A month before the siege of Nice, France supported the Ottomans with an artillery unit during the 1543 Ottoman conquest of Esztergom in northern Hungary. After further advances by the Turks, the Habsburg ruler Ferdinand officially recognized Ottoman ascendancy in Hungary in 1547. Suleiman I died of natural causes in his tent during the Siege of Szigetvár in 1566.

 
 
Suleiman the Magnificent and his wife Hürrem Sultan, two portraits by 16th century Venetian painter Titian

By the end of Suleiman's reign, the Empire spanned approximately 877,888 sq mi (2,273,720 km2), extending over three continents.[65]: 545  In addition, the Empire became a dominant naval force, controlling much of the Mediterranean Sea.[66]: 61  By this time, the Ottoman Empire was a major part of the European political sphere. The Ottomans became involved in multi-continental religious wars when Spain and Portugal were united under the Iberian Union. The Ottomans were holders of the Caliph title, meaning they were the leaders of all Muslims worldwide. The Iberians were leaders of the Christian crusaders, and so the two were locked in a worldwide conflict. There were zones of operations in the Mediterranean Sea[67] and Indian Ocean,[68] where Iberians circumnavigated Africa to reach India and, on their way, wage war upon the Ottomans and their local Muslim allies. Likewise, the Iberians passed through newly-Christianized Latin America and had sent expeditions that traversed the Pacific in order to Christianize the formerly Muslim Philippines and use it as a base to further attack the Muslims in the Far East.[69] In this case, the Ottomans sent armies to aid its easternmost vassal and territory, the Sultanate of Aceh in Southeast Asia.[70]: 84 [71] During the 1600s, the worldwide conflict between the Ottoman Caliphate and Iberian Union was a stalemate since both powers were at similar population, technology and economic levels. Nevertheless, the success of the Ottoman political and military establishment was compared to the Roman Empire, despite the difference in the size of their respective territories, by the likes of the contemporary Italian scholar Francesco Sansovino and the French political philosopher Jean Bodin.[72]

Stagnation and reform (1566–1827)

Revolts, reversals, and revivals (1566–1683)

In the second half of the sixteenth century, the Ottoman Empire came under increasing strain from inflation and the rapidly rising costs of warfare that were impacting both Europe and the Middle East. These pressures led to a series of crises around the year 1600, placing great strain upon the Ottoman system of government.[73]: 413–414  The empire underwent a series of transformations of its political and military institutions in response to these challenges, enabling it to successfully adapt to the new conditions of the seventeenth century and remain powerful, both militarily and economically.[28][74]: 10  Historians of the mid-twentieth century once characterised this period as one of stagnation and decline, but this view is now rejected by the majority of academics.[28]

The discovery of new maritime trade routes by Western European states allowed them to avoid the Ottoman trade monopoly. The Portuguese discovery of the Cape of Good Hope in 1488 initiated a series of Ottoman-Portuguese naval wars in the Indian Ocean throughout the 16th century. Despite the growing European presence in the Indian Ocean, Ottoman trade with the east continued to flourish. Cairo, in particular, benefitted from the rise of Yemeni coffee as a popular consumer commodity. As coffeehouses appeared in cities and towns across the empire, Cairo developed into a major center for its trade, contributing to its continued prosperity throughout the seventeenth and much of the eighteenth century.[75]: 507–508 

Under Ivan IV (1533–1584), the Tsardom of Russia expanded into the Volga and Caspian regions at the expense of the Tatar khanates. In 1571, the Crimean khan Devlet I Giray, commanded by the Ottomans, burned Moscow.[76] The next year, the invasion was repeated but repelled at the Battle of Molodi. The Ottoman Empire continued to invade Eastern Europe in a series of slave raids,[77] and remained a significant power in Eastern Europe until the end of the 17th century.[78]

The Ottomans decided to conquer Venetian Cyprus and on 22 July 1570, Nicosia was besieged; 50,000 Christians died, and 180,000 were enslaved.[79]: 67  On 15 September 1570, the Ottoman cavalry appeared before the last Venetian stronghold in Cyprus, Famagusta. The Venetian defenders would hold out for 11 months against a force that would come to number 200,000 men with 145 cannons; 163,000 cannonballs struck the walls of Famagusta before it fell to the Ottomans in August 1571. The Siege of Famagusta claimed 50,000 Ottoman casualties.[80]: 328  Meanwhile, the Holy league consisting of mostly Spanish and Venetian fleets won a victory over the Ottoman fleet at the Battle of Lepanto (1571), off southwestern Greece; Catholic forces killed over 30,000 Turks and destroyed 200 of their ships.[81]: 24  It was a startling, if mostly symbolic,[82] blow to the image of Ottoman invincibility, an image which the victory of the Knights of Malta over the Ottoman invaders in the 1565 Siege of Malta had recently set about eroding.[83] The battle was far more damaging to the Ottoman navy in sapping experienced manpower than the loss of ships, which were rapidly replaced.[84]: 53  The Ottoman navy recovered quickly, persuading Venice to sign a peace treaty in 1573, allowing the Ottomans to expand and consolidate their position in North Africa.[85]

By contrast, the Habsburg frontier had settled somewhat, a stalemate caused by a stiffening of the Habsburg defenses.[86] The Long Turkish War against Habsburg Austria (1593–1606) created the need for greater numbers of Ottoman infantry equipped with firearms, resulting in a relaxation of recruitment policy. This contributed to problems of indiscipline and outright rebelliousness within the corps, which were never fully solved.[87][obsolete source] Irregular sharpshooters (Sekban) were also recruited, and on demobilisation turned to brigandage in the Jelali revolts (1590–1610), which engendered widespread anarchy in Anatolia in the late 16th and early 17th centuries.[88]: 24  With the Empire's population reaching 30 million people by 1600, the shortage of land placed further pressure on the government.[89][obsolete source] In spite of these problems, the Ottoman state remained strong, and its army did not collapse or suffer crushing defeats. The only exceptions were campaigns against the Safavid dynasty of Persia, where many of the Ottoman eastern provinces were lost, some permanently. This 1603–1618 war eventually resulted in the Treaty of Nasuh Pasha, which ceded the entire Caucasus, except westernmost Georgia, back into Iranian Safavid possession.[90] The treaty ending the Cretan War (1645–1669) cost Venice much of Dalmatia, its Aegean island possessions, and Crete. (Losses from the war totalled 30,985 Venetian soldiers and 118,754 Turkish soldiers.)[91]: 33 

During his brief majority reign, Murad IV (1623–1640) reasserted central authority and recaptured Iraq (1639) from the Safavids.[92] The resulting Treaty of Zuhab of that same year decisively divided the Caucasus and adjacent regions between the two neighbouring empires as it had already been defined in the 1555 Peace of Amasya.[93][94]

The Sultanate of Women (1533–1656) was a period in which the mothers of young sultans exercised power on behalf of their sons. The most prominent women of this period were Kösem Sultan and her daughter-in-law Turhan Hatice, whose political rivalry culminated in Kösem's murder in 1651.[95] During the Köprülü era (1656–1703), effective control of the Empire was exercised by a sequence of Grand Viziers from the Köprülü family. The Köprülü Vizierate saw renewed military success with authority restored in Transylvania, the conquest of Crete completed in 1669, and expansion into Polish southern Ukraine, with the strongholds of Khotyn, and Kamianets-Podilskyi and the territory of Podolia ceding to Ottoman control in 1676.[96]

 
The Second Siege of Vienna in 1683, by Frans Geffels (1624–1694)

This period of renewed assertiveness came to a calamitous end in 1683 when Grand Vizier Kara Mustafa Pasha led a huge army to attempt a second Ottoman siege of Vienna in the Great Turkish War of 1683–1699. The final assault being fatally delayed, the Ottoman forces were swept away by allied Habsburg, German, and Polish forces spearheaded by the Polish king John III Sobieski at the Battle of Vienna. The alliance of the Holy League pressed home the advantage of the defeat at Vienna, culminating in the Treaty of Karlowitz (26 January 1699), which ended the Great Turkish War.[97] The Ottomans surrendered control of significant territories, many permanently.[98] Mustafa II (1695–1703) led the counterattack of 1695–1696 against the Habsburgs in Hungary, but was undone at the disastrous defeat at Zenta (in modern Serbia), 11 September 1697.[99]

Military defeats

Aside from the loss of the Banat and the temporary loss of Belgrade (1717–1739), the Ottoman border on the Danube and Sava remained stable during the eighteenth century. Russian expansion, however, presented a large and growing threat. [100] Accordingly, King Charles XII of Sweden was welcomed as an ally in the Ottoman Empire following his defeat by the Russians at the Battle of Poltava of 1709 in central Ukraine (part of the Great Northern War of 1700–1721).[100] Charles XII persuaded the Ottoman Sultan Ahmed III to declare war on Russia, which resulted in an Ottoman victory in the Pruth River Campaign of 1710–1711, in Moldavia. [101]

 
Austrian troops led by Prince Eugene of Savoy captured Belgrade in 1717. Austrian control in Serbia lasted until the Turkish victory in the Austro-Russian–Turkish War (1735–1739). With the 1739 Treaty of Belgrade, the Ottoman Empire regained northern Bosnia, Habsburg Serbia (including Belgrade), Oltenia and the southern parts of the Banat of Temeswar.

After the Austro-Turkish War, the Treaty of Passarowitz confirmed the loss of the Banat, Serbia, and "Little Walachia" (Oltenia) to Austria. The Treaty also revealed that the Ottoman Empire was on the defensive and unlikely to present any further aggression in Europe.[102] The Austro-Russian–Turkish War (1735–1739), which was ended by the Treaty of Belgrade in 1739, resulted in the Ottoman recovery of northern Bosnia, Habsburg Serbia (including Belgrade), Oltenia and the southern parts of the Banat of Temeswar; but the Empire lost the port of Azov, north of the Crimean Peninsula, to the Russians. After this treaty the Ottoman Empire was able to enjoy a generation of peace, as Austria and Russia were forced to deal with the rise of Prussia.[103]

Educational and technological reforms came about, including the establishment of higher education institutions such as the Istanbul Technical University.[104] In 1734 an artillery school was established to impart Western-style artillery methods, but the Islamic clergy successfully objected under the grounds of theodicy.[105] In 1754 the artillery school was reopened on a semi-secret basis.[105] In 1726, Ibrahim Muteferrika convinced the Grand Vizier Nevşehirli Damat Ibrahim Pasha, the Grand Mufti, and the clergy on the efficiency of the printing press, and Muteferrika was later granted by Sultan Ahmed III permission to publish non-religious books (despite opposition from some calligraphers and religious leaders).[106] Muteferrika's press published its first book in 1729 and, by 1743, issued 17 works in 23 volumes, each having between 500 and 1,000 copies.[106][107]

 
Ottoman troops attempting to halt the advancing Russians during the Siege of Ochakov in 1788

In North Africa, Spain conquered Oran from the autonomous Deylik of Algiers. The Bey of Oran received an army from Algiers, but it failed to recapture Oran; the siege caused the deaths of 1,500 Spaniards, and even more Algerians. The Spanish also massacred many Muslim soldiers.[108] In 1792, Spain abandoned Oran, selling it to the Deylik of Algiers.

In 1768 Russian-backed Ukrainian Haidamakas, pursuing Polish confederates, entered Balta, an Ottoman-controlled town on the border of Bessarabia in Ukraine, massacred its citizens, and burned the town to the ground. This action provoked the Ottoman Empire into the Russo-Turkish War of 1768–1774. The Treaty of Küçük Kaynarca of 1774 ended the war and provided freedom of worship for the Christian citizens of the Ottoman-controlled provinces of Wallachia and Moldavia.[109] By the late 18th century, after a number of defeats in the wars with Russia, some people in the Ottoman Empire began to conclude that the reforms of Peter the Great had given the Russians an edge, and the Ottomans would have to keep up with Western technology in order to avoid further defeats.[105]

Selim III (1789–1807) made the first major attempts to modernise the army, but his reforms were hampered by the religious leadership and the Janissary corps. Jealous of their privileges and firmly opposed to change, the Janissary revolted. Selim's efforts cost him his throne and his life, but were resolved in spectacular and bloody fashion by his successor, the dynamic Mahmud II, who eliminated the Janissary corps in 1826.

 
Selim III receiving dignitaries during an audience at the Gate of Felicity, Topkapı Palace. Painting by Konstantin Kapıdağlı

The Serbian revolution (1804–1815) marked the beginning of an era of national awakening in the Balkans during the Eastern Question. In 1811, the fundamentalist Wahhabis of Arabia, led by the al-Saud family, revolted against the Ottomans. Unable to defeat the Wahhabi rebels, the Sublime Porte had Muhammad Ali Pasha of Kavala, the vali (governor) of the Eyalet of Egypt, tasked with retaking Arabia, which ended with the destruction of the Emirate of Diriyah in 1818. The suzerainty of Serbia as a hereditary monarchy under its own dynasty was acknowledged de jure in 1830.[110][111] In 1821, the Greeks declared war on the Sultan. A rebellion that originated in Moldavia as a diversion was followed by the main revolution in the Peloponnese, which, along with the northern part of the Gulf of Corinth, became the first parts of the Ottoman Empire to achieve independence (in 1829). In 1830, the French invaded the Deylik of Algiers. The campaign that took 21 days, resulted in over 5,000 Algerian military casualties,[112] and about 2,600 French ones.[112][113] Before the French invasion the total population of Algeria was most likely between 3,000,000 and 5,000,000.[114] By 1873, the population of Algeria (excluding several hundred thousand newly arrived French settlers) decreased to a drastic 2,172,000.[115] In 1831, Muhammad Ali Pasha revolted against Sultan Mahmud II due to the latter's refusal to grant him the governorships of Greater Syria and Crete, which the Sultan had promised him in exchange for sending military assistance to put down the Greek revolt (1821–1829) that ultimately ended with the formal independence of Greece in 1830. It was a costly enterprise for Muhammad Ali Pasha, who had lost his fleet at the Battle of Navarino in 1827. Thus began the first Egyptian–Ottoman War (1831–1833), during which the French-trained army of Muhammad Ali Pasha, under the command of his son Ibrahim Pasha, defeated the Ottoman Army as it marched into Anatolia, reaching the city of Kütahya within 320 km (200 mi) of the capital, Constantinople.[116]: 95  In desperation, Sultan Mahmud II appealed to the empire's traditional arch-rival Russia for help, asking Emperor Nicholas I to send an expeditionary force to assist him.[116]: 96  In return for signing the Treaty of Hünkâr İskelesi, the Russians sent the expeditionary force which deterred Ibrahim Pasha from marching any further towards Constantinople.[116]: 96  Under the terms of the Convention of Kütahya, signed on 5 May 1833, Muhammad Ali Pasha agreed to abandon his campaign against the Sultan, in exchange for which he was made the vali (governor) of the vilayets (provinces) of Crete, Aleppo, Tripoli, Damascus and Sidon (the latter four comprising modern Syria and Lebanon), and given the right to collect taxes in Adana.[116]: 96  Had it not been for the Russian intervention, Sultan Mahmud II could have faced the risk of being overthrown and Muhammad Ali Pasha could have even become the new Sultan. These events marked the beginning of a recurring pattern where the Sublime Porte needed the help of foreign powers to protect itself.[116]: 95–96 

 
The siege of the Acropolis in 1826–1827 during the Greek War of Independence

In 1839, the Sublime Porte attempted to take back what it lost to the de facto autonomous, but de jure still Ottoman Eyalet of Egypt, but its forces were initially defeated, which led to the Oriental Crisis of 1840. Muhammad Ali Pasha had close relations with France, and the prospect of him becoming the Sultan of Egypt was widely viewed as putting the entire Levant into the French sphere of influence.[116]: 96  As the Sublime Porte had proved itself incapable of defeating Muhammad Ali Pasha, the British Empire and Austrian Empire provided military assistance, and the second Egyptian–Ottoman War (1839–1841) ended with Ottoman victory and the restoration of Ottoman suzerainty over Egypt Eyalet and the Levant.[116]: 96 

By the mid-19th century, the Ottoman Empire was called the "sick man of Europe". Three suzerain states – the Principality of Serbia, Wallachia and Moldavia – moved towards de jure independence during the 1860s and 1870s.

Decline and modernisation (1828–1908)

 
Opening ceremony of the First Ottoman Parliament at the Dolmabahçe Palace in 1876. The First Constitutional Era lasted only two years until 1878. The Ottoman Constitution and Parliament were restored 30 years later with the Young Turk Revolution in 1908.

During the Tanzimat period (1839–1876), the government's series of constitutional reforms led to a fairly modern conscripted army, banking system reforms, the decriminalization of homosexuality, the replacement of religious law with secular law[117] and guilds with modern factories. The Ottoman Ministry of Post was established in Istanbul in 1840. American inventor Samuel Morse received an Ottoman patent for the telegraph in 1847, which was issued by Sultan Abdülmecid who personally tested the new invention.[118] The reformist period peaked with the Constitution, called the Kanûn-u Esâsî. The empire's First Constitutional era was short-lived. The parliament survived for only two years before the sultan suspended it.

The Christian population of the empire, owing to their higher educational levels, started to pull ahead of the Muslim majority, leading to much resentment on the part of the latter.[119] In 1861, there were 571 primary and 94 secondary schools for Ottoman Christians with 140,000 pupils in total, a figure that vastly exceeded the number of Muslim children in school at the same time, who were further hindered by the amount of time spent learning Arabic and Islamic theology.[119] Author Norman Stone further suggests that the Arabic alphabet, in which Turkish was written until 1928, was very ill-suited to reflect the sounds of the Turkish language (which is a Turkic as opposed to Semitic language), which imposed a further difficulty on Turkish children.[119] In turn, the higher educational levels of the Christians allowed them to play a larger role in the economy, with the rise in prominence of groups such as the Sursock family indicative of this shift in influence.[120][119] In 1911, of the 654 wholesale companies in Istanbul, 528 were owned by ethnic Greeks.[119] In many cases, Christians and also Jews were able to gain protection from European consuls and citizenship, meaning they were protected from Ottoman law and not subject to the same economic regulations as their Muslim counterparts.[121]

 
Ottoman troops storming Fort Shefketil during the Crimean War of 1853–1856

The Crimean War (1853–1856) was part of a long-running contest between the major European powers for influence over territories of the declining Ottoman Empire. The financial burden of the war led the Ottoman state to issue foreign loans amounting to 5 million pounds sterling on 4 August 1854.[122]: 32 [123]: 71  The war caused an exodus of the Crimean Tatars, about 200,000 of whom moved to the Ottoman Empire in continuing waves of emigration.[124]: 79–108  Toward the end of the Caucasian Wars, 90% of the Circassians were ethnically cleansed[125] and exiled from their homelands in the Caucasus and fled to the Ottoman Empire,[126] resulting in the settlement of 500,000 to 700,000 Circassians in Turkey.[127][page needed][128][129] Some Circassian organisations give much higher numbers, totalling 1–1.5 million deported or killed. Crimean Tatar refugees in the late 19th century played an especially notable role in seeking to modernise Ottoman education and in first promoting both Pan-Turkism and a sense of Turkish nationalism.[130]

In this period, the Ottoman Empire spent only small amounts of public funds on education; for example in 1860–1861 only 0.2 percent of the total budget was invested in education.[131]: 50  As the Ottoman state attempted to modernize its infrastructure and army in response to threats from the outside, it also opened itself up to a different kind of threat: that of creditors. Indeed, as the historian Eugene Rogan has written, "the single greatest threat to the independence of the Middle East" in the nineteenth century "was not the armies of Europe but its banks".[132] The Ottoman state, which had begun taking on debt with the Crimean War, was forced to declare bankruptcy in 1875.[133] By 1881, the Ottoman Empire agreed to have its debt controlled by an institution known as the Ottoman Public Debt Administration, a council of European men with presidency alternating between France and Britain. The body controlled swaths of the Ottoman economy, and used its position to ensure that European capital continued to penetrate the empire, often to the detriment of local Ottoman interests.[133]

 
The Ottoman Empire in 1875 under Sultan Abdul-Aziz

The Ottoman bashi-bazouks brutally suppressed the Bulgarian uprising of 1876, massacring up to 100,000 people in the process.[134]: 139  The Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878) ended with a decisive victory for Russia. As a result, Ottoman holdings in Europe declined sharply: Bulgaria was established as an independent principality inside the Ottoman Empire; Romania achieved full independence; and Serbia and Montenegro finally gained complete independence, but with smaller territories. In 1878, Austria-Hungary unilaterally occupied the Ottoman provinces of Bosnia-Herzegovina and Novi Pazar.

British Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli advocated for restoring the Ottoman territories on the Balkan Peninsula during the Congress of Berlin, and in return, Britain assumed the administration of Cyprus in 1878.[135]: 228–254  Britain later sent troops to Egypt in 1882 to put down the Urabi Revolt – Sultan Abdul Hamid II was too paranoid to mobilize his own army, fearing this would result in a coup d'état – effectively gaining control in both territories. Abdul Hamid II, popularly known as "Abdul Hamid the Damned" on account of his cruelty and paranoia, was so fearful of the threat of a coup that he did not allow his army to conduct war games, lest this serves as the cover for a coup, but he did see the need for military mobilization. In 1883, a German military mission under General Baron Colmar von der Goltz arrived to train the Ottoman Army, leading to the so-called "Goltz generation" of German-trained officers who were to play a notable role in the politics of the last years of the empire.[136]: 24 

From 1894 to 1896, between 100,000 and 300,000 Armenians living throughout the empire were killed in what became known as the Hamidian massacres.[137]: 42 

In 1897 the population was 19 million, of whom 14 million (74%) were Muslim. An additional 20 million lived in provinces that remained under the sultan's nominal suzerainty but were entirely outside his actual power. One by one the Porte lost nominal authority. They included Egypt, Tunisia, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Bosnia-Herzegovina, and Lebanon.[138]

As the Ottoman Empire gradually shrank in size, some 7–9 million Muslims from its former territories in the Caucasus, Crimea, Balkans, and the Mediterranean islands migrated to Anatolia and Eastern Thrace.[139] After the Empire lost the First Balkan War (1912–1913), it lost all its Balkan territories except East Thrace (European Turkey). This resulted in around 400,000 Muslims fleeing with the retreating Ottoman armies (with many dying from cholera brought by the soldiers), and with some 400,000 non-Muslims fleeing territory still under Ottoman rule.[140] Justin McCarthy estimates that during the period 1821 to 1922, 5.5 million Muslims died in southeastern Europe, with the expulsion of 5 million.[141][142][143]

Defeat and dissolution (1908–1922)

Young Turk movement

 
Declaration of the Young Turk Revolution by the leaders of the Ottoman millets in 1908

The defeat and dissolution of the Ottoman Empire (1908—1922) began with the Second Constitutional Era, a moment of hope and promise established with the Young Turk Revolution. It restored the Constitution of the Ottoman Empire and brought in multi-party politics with a two-stage electoral system (electoral law) under the Ottoman parliament. The constitution offered hope by freeing the empire's citizens to modernise the state's institutions, rejuvenate its strength, and enable it to hold its own against outside powers. Its guarantee of liberties promised to dissolve inter-communal tensions and transform the empire into a more harmonious place.[144][full citation needed] Instead, this period became the story of the twilight struggle of the Empire.

Members of Young Turks movement who had once gone underground now established their parties.[145][full citation needed] Among them "Committee of Union and Progress", and "Freedom and Accord Party" were major parties. On the other end of the spectrum were ethnic parties, which included Poale Zion, Al-Fatat, and Armenian national movement organised under Armenian Revolutionary Federation. Profiting from the civil strife, Austria-Hungary officially annexed Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1908. The last of the Ottoman censuses was performed in 1914. Despite military reforms which reconstituted the Ottoman Modern Army, the Empire lost its North African territories and the Dodecanese in the Italo-Turkish War (1911) and almost all of its European territories in the Balkan Wars (1912–1913). The Empire faced continuous unrest in the years leading up to World War I, including the 31 March Incident and two further coups in 1912 and 1913.

World War I

 
Admiral Wilhelm Souchon, who commanded the Black Sea raid on 29 October 1914, and his officers in Ottoman naval uniforms

The Ottoman Empire entered World War I on the side of the Central Powers and was ultimately defeated. The Ottoman participation in the war began with the combined German-Ottoman surprise attack on the Black Sea coast of the Russian Empire on 29 October 1914. Following the attack, the Russian Empire (2 November 1914)[146] and its allies France (5 November 1914)[146] and the British Empire (5 November 1914)[146] declared war on the Ottoman Empire (also on 5 November 1914, the British government changed the status of the Khedivate of Egypt and Cyprus, which were de jure Ottoman territories prior to the war, as British protectorates.)

The Ottomans successfully defended the Dardanelles strait during the Gallipoli campaign (1915–1916) and achieved initial victories against British forces in the first two years of the Mesopotamian campaign, such as the Siege of Kut (1915–1916); but the Arab Revolt (1916–1918) turned the tide against the Ottomans in the Middle East. In the Caucasus campaign, however, the Russian forces had the upper hand from the beginning, especially after the Battle of Sarikamish (1914–1915). Russian forces advanced into northeastern Anatolia and controlled the major cities there until retreating from World War I with the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk following the Russian Revolution in 1917.

Genocides
 
The Armenian genocide was the result of the Ottoman government's deportation and ethnic cleansing policies regarding its Armenian citizens after the Battle of Sarikamish (1914–1915) and the collapse of the Caucasus Front against the Imperial Russian Army and Armenian volunteer units during World War I. An estimated 600,000 to more than 1 million,[147] or up to 1.5 million[148][149][150] people were killed.

In 1915 the Ottoman government and Kurdish tribes in the region started the extermination of its ethnic Armenian population, resulting in the death of up to 1.5 million Armenians in the Armenian genocide.[151][152] The genocide was carried out during and after World War I and implemented in two phases: the wholesale killing of the able-bodied male population through massacre and subjection of army conscripts to forced labour, followed by the deportation of women, children, the elderly and infirm on death marches leading to the Syrian desert. Driven forward by military escorts, the deportees were deprived of food and water and subjected to periodic robbery, rape, and systematic massacre.[153][154] Large-scale massacres were also committed against the Empire's Greek and Assyrian minorities as part of the same campaign of ethnic cleansing.[155]

Arab Revolt

The Arab Revolt began in 1916 with British support. It turned the tide against the Ottomans on the Middle Eastern front, where they seemed to have the upper hand during the first two years of the war. On the basis of the McMahon–Hussein Correspondence, an agreement between the British government and Hussein bin Ali, Sharif of Mecca, the revolt was officially initiated at Mecca on 10 June 1916.[o] The Arab nationalist goal was to create a single unified and independent Arab state stretching from Aleppo in Syria to Aden in Yemen, which the British had promised to recognise.

The Sharifian Army led by Hussein and the Hashemites, with military backing from the British Egyptian Expeditionary Force, successfully fought and expelled the Ottoman military presence from much of the Hejaz and Transjordan. The rebellion eventually took Damascus and set up a short-lived monarchy led by Faisal, a son of Hussein.

Following the Sykes–Picot Agreement, the Middle East was later partitioned by the British and French into mandate territories. There was no unified Arab state, much to the anger of Arab nationalists.

Treaty of Sèvres and Turkish War of Independence
 
Mehmed VI, the last Sultan of the Ottoman Empire, leaving the country after the abolition of the Ottoman sultanate, 17 November 1922

Defeated in World War I, the Ottoman Empire signed the Armistice of Mudros on 30 October 1918. Constantinople was occupied by combined British, French, Italian, and Greek forces. In May 1919, Greece also took control of the area around Smyrna (now İzmir).

The partition of the Ottoman Empire was finalized under the terms of the 1920 Treaty of Sèvres. This treaty, as designed in the Conference of London, allowed the Sultan to retain his position and title. The status of Anatolia was problematic given the occupied forces.

There arose a nationalist opposition in the Turkish national movement. It won the Turkish War of Independence (1919–1923) under the leadership of Mustafa Kemal (later given the surname "Atatürk"). The sultanate was abolished on 1 November 1922, and the last sultan, Mehmed VI (reigned 1918–1922), left the country on 17 November 1922. The Republic of Turkey was established in its place on 29 October 1923, in the new capital city of Ankara. The caliphate was abolished on 3 March 1924.[157]

Historiographical debate on the Ottoman state

Several historians such as British historian Edward Gibbon and the Greek historian Dimitri Kitsikis have argued that after the fall of Constantinople, the Ottoman state took over the machinery of the Byzantine (Roman) state and that in essence, the Ottoman Empire was a continuation of the Eastern Roman Empire under a Turkish Muslim guise.[158] The American historian Speros Vryonis wrote that the Ottoman state was centered on "a Byzantine-Balkan base with a veneer of the Turkish language and the Islamic religion".[159] The American historian Heath Lowry and Kitsikis posit that the early Ottoman state was a predatory confederacy open to both Byzantine Christians and Turkish Muslims, whose primary goal was attaining booty and slaves, rather than spreading Islam, and that only later Islam became the primary characteristic of the empire.[160][161][162] Other historians have followed the lead of the Austrian historian Paul Wittek who emphasized the Islamic character of the early Ottoman state, seeing the Ottoman state as a "Jihad state" dedicated to expanding the Muslim world.[159] Many historians led in 1937 by the Turkish historian Mehmet Fuat Köprülü championed the Ghaza thesis that saw the early Ottoman state as a continuation of the way of life of the nomadic Turkic tribes who had come from East Asia to Anatolia via Central Asia and the Middle East on a much larger scale. They argued that the most important cultural influences on the Ottoman state came from Persia.[163]

The British historian Norman Stone suggested many continuities between the Eastern Roman and Ottoman empires such as the zeugarion tax of Byzantium becoming the Ottoman Resm-i çift tax, the pronoia land-holding system that linked the amount of land one owned with one's ability to raise cavalry becoming the Ottoman timar system, and the Ottoman measurement for land the dönüm was the same as the Byzantine stremma. Stone also pointed out that despite the fact that Sunni Islam was the state religion, the Eastern Orthodox Church was supported and controlled by the Ottoman state, and in return to accepting that control became the largest land-holder in the Ottoman Empire. Despite the similarities, Stone argued that a crucial difference was that the land grants under the timar system were not hereditary at first. Even after land grants under the timar system became inheritable, land ownership in the Ottoman Empire remained highly insecure, and the sultan could and did revoke land grants whenever he wished. Stone argued this insecurity in land tenure strongly discouraged Timariots from seeking long-term development of their land, and instead led the timariots to adopt a strategy of short-term exploitation, which ultimately had deleterious effects on the Ottoman economy.[164]

Most of the Ottoman Sultans adhered to Sufism and followed Sufi orders, and believed Sufism was the correct way to reach God.[165] Because the matters of jurisprudence and shariah were state matters, the state-sponsored Sufi religious dominance came into play. Non-Sufi Muslims and Arabs were neglected and not given any position in the Hejaz.[166]

Government

 
 
Topkapı Palace and Dolmabahçe Palace were the primary residences of the Ottoman sultans in Istanbul between 1465 and 1856[167] and 1856 to 1922,[168] respectively.

Before the reforms of the 19th and 20th centuries, the state organisation of the Ottoman Empire was a system with two main dimensions, the military administration, and the civil administration. The Sultan was in the highest position in the system. The civil system was based on local administrative units based on the region's characteristics. The state had control over the clergy. Certain pre-Islamic Turkish traditions that had survived the adoption of administrative and legal practices from Islamic Iran remained important in Ottoman administrative circles.[169] According to Ottoman understanding, the state's primary responsibility was to defend and extend the land of the Muslims and to ensure security and harmony within its borders in the overarching context of orthodox Islamic practice and dynastic sovereignty.[170]

 
Ambassadors at the Topkapı Palace

The Ottoman Empire, or as a dynastic institution, the House of Osman, was unprecedented and unequaled in the Islamic world for its size and duration.[171] In Europe, only the House of Habsburg had a similarly unbroken line of sovereigns (kings/emperors) from the same family who ruled for so long, and during the same period, between the late 13th and early 20th centuries. The Ottoman dynasty was Turkish in origin. On eleven occasions, the sultan was deposed (replaced by another sultan of the Ottoman dynasty, who were either the former sultan's brother, son or nephew) because he was perceived by his enemies as a threat to the state. There were only two attempts in Ottoman history to unseat the ruling Ottoman dynasty, both failures, which suggests a political system that for an extended period was able to manage its revolutions without unnecessary instability.[170] As such, the last Ottoman sultan Mehmed VI (r. 1918–1922) was a direct patrilineal (male-line) descendant of the first Ottoman sultan Osman I (d. 1323/4), which was unparalleled in both Europe (e.g., the male line of the House of Habsburg became extinct in 1740) and in the Islamic world. The primary purpose of the Imperial Harem was to ensure the birth of male heirs to the Ottoman throne and secure the continuation of the direct patrilineal (male-line) power of the Ottoman sultans in the future generations.

The highest position in Islam, caliph, was claimed by the sultans starting with Murad I,[16] which was established as the Ottoman Caliphate. The Ottoman sultan, pâdişâh or "lord of kings", served as the Empire's sole regent and was considered to be the embodiment of its government, though he did not always exercise complete control. The Imperial Harem was one of the most important powers of the Ottoman court. It was ruled by the valide sultan. On occasion, the valide sultan would become involved in state politics. For a time, the women of the Harem effectively controlled the state in what was termed the "Sultanate of Women". New sultans were always chosen from the sons of the previous sultan.[dubious ] The strong educational system of the palace school was geared towards eliminating the unfit potential heirs and establishing support among the ruling elite for a successor. The palace schools, which would also educate the future administrators of the state, were not a single track. First, the Madrasa (Medrese) was designated for the Muslims, and educated scholars and state officials according to Islamic tradition. The financial burden of the Medrese was supported by vakifs, allowing children of poor families to move to higher social levels and income.[172] The second track was a free boarding school for the Christians, the Enderûn,[173] which recruited 3,000 students annually from Christian boys between eight and twenty years old from one in forty families among the communities settled in Rumelia or the Balkans, a process known as Devshirme (Devşirme).[174]

Though the sultan was the supreme monarch, the sultan's political and executive authority was delegated. The politics of the state had a number of advisors and ministers gathered around a council known as Divan. The Divan, in the years when the Ottoman state was still a Beylik, was composed of the elders of the tribe. Its composition was later modified to include military officers and local elites (such as religious and political advisors). Later still, beginning in 1320, a Grand Vizier was appointed to assume certain of the sultan's responsibilities. The Grand Vizier had considerable independence from the sultan with almost unlimited powers of appointment, dismissal, and supervision. Beginning with the late 16th century, sultans withdrew from politics and the Grand Vizier became the de facto head of state.[175]

 
Yusuf Ziya Pasha, Ottoman ambassador to the United States, in Washington DC, 1913

Throughout Ottoman history, there were many instances in which local governors acted independently, and even in opposition to the ruler. After the Young Turk Revolution of 1908, the Ottoman state became a constitutional monarchy. The sultan no longer had executive powers. A parliament was formed, with representatives chosen from the provinces. The representatives formed the Imperial Government of the Ottoman Empire.

This eclectic administration was apparent even in the diplomatic correspondence of the Empire, which was initially undertaken in the Greek language to the west.[176]

The Tughra were calligraphic monograms, or signatures, of the Ottoman Sultans, of which there were 35. Carved on the Sultan's seal, they bore the names of the Sultan and his father. The statement and prayer, "ever victorious", was also present in most. The earliest belonged to Orhan Gazi. The ornately stylized Tughra spawned a branch of Ottoman-Turkish calligraphy.

Law

The Ottoman legal system accepted the religious law over its subjects. At the same time the Qanun (or Kanun), dynastic law, co-existed with religious law or Sharia.[177][178] The Ottoman Empire was always organized around a system of local jurisprudence. Legal administration in the Ottoman Empire was part of a larger scheme of balancing central and local authority.[179] Ottoman power revolved crucially around the administration of the rights to land, which gave a space for the local authority to develop the needs of the local millet.[179] The jurisdictional complexity of the Ottoman Empire was aimed to permit the integration of culturally and religiously different groups.[179] The Ottoman system had three court systems: one for Muslims, one for non-Muslims, involving appointed Jews and Christians ruling over their respective religious communities, and the "trade court". The entire system was regulated from above by means of the administrative Qanun, i.e., laws, a system based upon the Turkic Yassa and Töre, which were developed in the pre-Islamic era.[180][181]

 
An Ottoman trial, 1877

These court categories were not, however, wholly exclusive; for instance, the Islamic courts, which were the Empire's primary courts, could also be used to settle a trade conflict or disputes between litigants of differing religions, and Jews and Christians often went to them to obtain a more forceful ruling on an issue. The Ottoman state tended not to interfere with non-Muslim religious law systems, despite legally having a voice to do so through local governors. The Islamic Sharia law system had been developed from a combination of the Qur'an; the Hadīth, or words of the prophet Muhammad; ijmā', or consensus of the members of the Muslim community; qiyas, a system of analogical reasoning from earlier precedents; and local customs. Both systems were taught at the Empire's law schools, which were in Istanbul and Bursa.

 
An unhappy wife complaining to the Qadi about her husband's impotence as depicted in an Ottoman miniature

The Ottoman Islamic legal system was set up differently from traditional European courts. Presiding over Islamic courts would be a Qadi, or judge. Since the closing of the ijtihad, or 'Gate of Interpretation', Qadis throughout the Ottoman Empire focused less on legal precedent, and more with local customs and traditions in the areas that they administered.[179] However, the Ottoman court system lacked an appellate structure, leading to jurisdictional case strategies where plaintiffs could take their disputes from one court system to another until they achieved a ruling that was in their favour.

In the late 19th century, the Ottoman legal system saw substantial reform. This process of legal modernisation began with the Edict of Gülhane of 1839.[182] These reforms included the "fair and public trial[s] of all accused regardless of religion", the creation of a system of "separate competences, religious and civil", and the validation of testimony on non-Muslims.[183] Specific land codes (1858), civil codes (1869–1876), and a code of civil procedure also were enacted.[183]

These reforms were based heavily on French models, as indicated by the adoption of a three-tiered court system. Referred to as Nizamiye, this system was extended to the local magistrate level with the final promulgation of the Mecelle, a civil code that regulated marriage, divorce, alimony, will, and other matters of personal status.[183] In an attempt to clarify the division of judicial competences, an administrative council laid down that religious matters were to be handled by religious courts, and statute matters were to be handled by the Nizamiye courts.[183]

Military

 
Ottoman sipahis in battle, holding the crescent banner, by Józef Brandt

The first military unit of the Ottoman State was an army that was organized by Osman I from the tribesmen inhabiting the hills of western Anatolia in the late 13th century. The military system became an intricate organization with the advance of the Empire. The Ottoman military was a complex system of recruiting and fief-holding. The main corps of the Ottoman Army included Janissary, Sipahi, Akıncı and Mehterân. The Ottoman army was once among the most advanced fighting forces in the world, being one of the first to use muskets and cannons. The Ottoman Turks began using falconets, which were short but wide cannons, during the Siege of Constantinople. The Ottoman cavalry depended on high speed and mobility rather than heavy armor, using bows and short swords on fast Turkoman and Arabian horses (progenitors of the Thoroughbred racing horse),[184][185] and often applied tactics similar to those of the Mongol Empire, such as pretending to retreat while surrounding the enemy forces inside a crescent-shaped formation and then making the real attack. The Ottoman army continued to be an effective fighting force throughout the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries,[186][187] falling behind the empire's European rivals only during a long period of peace from 1740 to 1768.[30]

 
Modernised Ertugrul Cavalry Regiment crossing the Galata Bridge in 1901

The modernization of the Ottoman Empire in the 19th century started with the military. In 1826 Sultan Mahmud II abolished the Janissary corps and established the modern Ottoman army. He named them as the Nizam-ı Cedid (New Order). The Ottoman army was also the first institution to hire foreign experts and send its officers for training in western European countries. Consequently, the Young Turks movement began when these relatively young and newly trained men returned with their education.

 

The Ottoman Navy vastly contributed to the expansion of the Empire's territories on the European continent. It initiated the conquest of North Africa, with the addition of Algeria and Egypt to the Ottoman Empire in 1517. Starting with the loss of Greece in 1821 and Algeria in 1830, Ottoman naval power and control over the Empire's distant overseas territories began to decline. Sultan Abdülaziz (reigned 1861–1876) attempted to reestablish a strong Ottoman navy, building the largest fleet after those of Britain and France. The shipyard at Barrow, England, built its first submarine in 1886 for the Ottoman Empire.[188]

However, the collapsing Ottoman economy could not sustain the fleet's strength for long. Sultan Abdülhamid II distrusted the admirals who sided with the reformist Midhat Pasha and claimed that the large and expensive fleet was of no use against the Russians during the Russo-Turkish War. He locked most of the fleet inside the Golden Horn, where the ships decayed for the next 30 years. Following the Young Turk Revolution in 1908, the Committee of Union and Progress sought to develop a strong Ottoman naval force. The Ottoman Navy Foundation was established in 1910 to buy new ships through public donations.

 
Ottoman pilots in early 1912

The establishment of Ottoman military aviation dates back to between June 1909 and July 1911.[189][190] The Ottoman Empire started preparing its first pilots and planes, and with the founding of the Aviation School (Tayyare Mektebi) in Yeşilköy on 3 July 1912, the Empire began to tutor its own flight officers. The founding of the Aviation School quickened advancement in the military aviation program, increased the number of enlisted persons within it, and gave the new pilots an active role in the Ottoman Army and Navy. In May 1913, the world's first specialized Reconnaissance Training Program was started by the Aviation School, and the first separate reconnaissance division was established.[citation needed] In June 1914 a new military academy, the Naval Aviation School (Bahriye Tayyare Mektebi) was founded. With the outbreak of World War I, the modernization process stopped abruptly. The Ottoman Aviation Squadrons fought on many fronts during World War I, from Galicia in the west to the Caucasus in the east and Yemen in the south.

Administrative divisions

 
Administrative divisions of the Ottoman Empire in 1899 (year 1317 Hijri)

The Ottoman Empire was first subdivided into provinces, in the sense of fixed territorial units with governors appointed by the sultan, in the late 14th century.[191]

The Eyalet (also Pashalik or Beylerbeylik) was the territory of office of a Beylerbey ("lord of lords" or governor), and was further subdivided in Sanjaks.[192] The Vilayets were introduced with the promulgation of the "Vilayet Law" (Teskil-i Vilayet Nizamnamesi)[193] in 1864, as part of the Tanzimat reforms.[194] Unlike the previous eyalet system, the 1864 law established a hierarchy of administrative units: the vilayet, liva/sanjak/mutasarrifate, kaza and village council, to which the 1871 Vilayet Law added the nahiye.[195]

Economy

Ottoman government deliberately pursued a policy for the development of Bursa, Edirne, and Istanbul, successive Ottoman capitals, into major commercial and industrial centers, considering that merchants and artisans were indispensable in creating a new metropolis.[196] To this end, Mehmed and his successor Bayezid, also encouraged and welcomed migration of the Jews from different parts of Europe, who were settled in Istanbul and other port cities like Salonica. In many places in Europe, Jews were suffering persecution at the hands of their Christian counterparts, such as in Spain, after the conclusion of Reconquista. The tolerance displayed by the Turks was welcomed by the immigrants.

 
A European bronze medal from the period of Sultan Mehmed the Conqueror, 1481

The Ottoman economic mind was closely related to the basic concepts of state and society in the Middle East in which the ultimate goal of a state was consolidation and extension of the ruler's power, and the way to reach it was to get rich resources of revenues by making the productive classes prosperous.[197] The ultimate aim was to increase the state revenues without damaging the prosperity of subjects to prevent the emergence of social disorder and to keep the traditional organization of the society intact. The Ottoman economy greatly expanded during the early modern period, with particularly high growth rates during the first half of the eighteenth century. The empire's annual income quadrupled between 1523 and 1748, adjusted for inflation.[198]

The organization of the treasury and chancery were developed under the Ottoman Empire more than any other Islamic government and, until the 17th century, they were the leading organization among all their contemporaries.[175] This organisation developed a scribal bureaucracy (known as "men of the pen") as a distinct group, partly highly trained ulama, which developed into a professional body.[175] The effectiveness of this professional financial body stands behind the success of many great Ottoman statesmen.[199]

 
The Ottoman Bank was founded in 1856 in Constantinople. On 26 August 1896, the bank was occupied by members of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation.

Modern Ottoman studies indicate that the change in relations between the Ottoman Turks and central Europe was caused by the opening of the new sea routes. It is possible to see the decline in the significance of the land routes to the East as Western Europe opened the ocean routes that bypassed the Middle East and the Mediterranean as parallel to the decline of the Ottoman Empire itself.[200][failed verification] The Anglo-Ottoman Treaty, also known as the Treaty of Balta Liman that opened the Ottoman markets directly to English and French competitors, would be seen as one of the staging posts along with this development.

By developing commercial centers and routes, encouraging people to extend the area of cultivated land in the country and international trade through its dominions, the state performed basic economic functions in the Empire. But in all this, the financial and political interests of the state were dominant. Within the social and political system they were living in, Ottoman administrators could not see the desirability of the dynamics and principles of the capitalist and mercantile economies developing in Western Europe.[201]

Economic historian Paul Bairoch argues that free trade contributed to deindustrialisation in the Ottoman Empire. In contrast to the protectionism of China, Japan, and Spain, the Ottoman Empire had a liberal trade policy, open to foreign imports. This has origins in capitulations of the Ottoman Empire, dating back to the first commercial treaties signed with France in 1536 and taken further with capitulations in 1673 and 1740, which lowered duties to 3% for imports and exports. The liberal Ottoman policies were praised by British economists, such as John Ramsay McCulloch in his Dictionary of Commerce (1834), but later criticized by British politicians such as Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli, who cited the Ottoman Empire as "an instance of the injury done by unrestrained competition" in the 1846 Corn Laws debate.[202]

Demographics

A population estimate for the empire of 11,692,480 for the 1520–1535 period was obtained by counting the households in Ottoman tithe registers, and multiplying this number by 5.[203] For unclear reasons, the population in the 18th century was lower than that in the 16th century.[204] An estimate of 7,230,660 for the first census held in 1831 is considered a serious undercount, as this census was meant only to register possible conscripts.[203]

 
Smyrna under Ottoman rule in 1900

Censuses of Ottoman territories only began in the early 19th century. Figures from 1831 onwards are available as official census results, but the censuses did not cover the whole population. For example, the 1831 census only counted men and did not cover the whole empire.[89][203] For earlier periods estimates of size and distribution of the population are based on observed demographic patterns.[205]

However, it began to rise to reach 25–32 million by 1800, with around 10 million in the European provinces (primarily in the Balkans), 11 million in the Asiatic provinces, and around 3 million in the African provinces. Population densities were higher in the European provinces, double those in Anatolia, which in turn were triple the population densities of Iraq and Syria and five times the population density of Arabia.[206]

 
View of Galata (Karaköy) and the Galata Bridge on the Golden Horn, c. 1880–1893

Towards the end of the empire's existence life expectancy was 49 years, compared to the mid-twenties in Serbia at the beginning of the 19th century.[207] Epidemic diseases and famine caused major disruption and demographic changes. In 1785 around one-sixth of the Egyptian population died from the plague and Aleppo saw its population reduced by twenty percent in the 18th century. Six famines hit Egypt alone between 1687 and 1731 and the last famine to hit Anatolia was four decades later.[208]

The rise of port cities saw the clustering of populations caused by the development of steamships and railroads. Urbanization increased from 1700 to 1922, with towns and cities growing. Improvements in health and sanitation made them more attractive to live and work in. Port cities like Salonica, in Greece, saw its population rise from 55,000 in 1800 to 160,000 in 1912 and İzmir which had a population of 150,000 in 1800 grew to 300,000 by 1914.[209][210] Some regions conversely had population falls—Belgrade saw its population drop from 25,000 to 8,000 mainly due to political strife.[209]

Economic and political migrations made an impact across the empire. For example, the Russian and Austria-Habsburg annexation of the Crimean and Balkan regions respectively saw large influxes of Muslim refugees—200,000 Crimean Tartars fleeing to Dobruja.[211] Between 1783 and 1913, approximately 5–7 million refugees flooded into the Ottoman Empire, at least 3.8 million of whom were from Russia. Some migrations left indelible marks such as political tension between parts of the empire (e.g., Turkey and Bulgaria), whereas centrifugal effects were noticed in other territories, simpler demographics emerging from diverse populations. Economies were also impacted by the loss of artisans, merchants, manufacturers, and agriculturists.[212] Since the 19th century, a large proportion of Muslim peoples from the Balkans emigrated to present-day Turkey. These people are called Muhacir.[213] By the time the Ottoman Empire came to an end in 1922, half of the urban population of Turkey was descended from Muslim refugees from Russia.[119]

Language

 
1911 Ottoman calendar shown in several different languages such as: Ottoman Turkish, Greek, Armenian, Hebrew, Bulgarian and French

Ottoman Turkish was the official language of the Empire. It was an Oghuz Turkic language highly influenced by Persian and Arabic, though lower registries spoken by the common people had fewer influences from other languages compared to higher varieties used by upper classes and governmental authorities.[214] Turkish, in its Ottoman variation, was a language of military and administration since the nascent days of the Ottomans. The Ottoman constitution of 1876 did officially cement the official imperial status of Turkish.[215]

The Ottomans had several influential languages: Turkish, spoken by the majority of the people in Anatolia and by the majority of Muslims of the Balkans except in Albania, Bosnia[216] and the Megleno-Romanian-inhabited Nânti;[217] Persian, only spoken by the educated;[216] Arabic, spoken mainly in Egypt, the Levant, Arabia, Iraq, North Africa, Kuwait and parts of the Horn of Africa and Berber in North Africa. In the last two centuries, usage of these became limited, though, and specific: Persian served mainly as a literary language for the educated,[216] while Arabic was used for Islamic prayers. In the post-Tanzimat period French became the common Western language among the educated.[14]

Because of a low literacy rate among the public (about 2–3% until the early 19th century and just about 15% at the end of the 19th century), ordinary people had to hire scribes as "special request-writers" (arzuhâlcis) to be able to communicate with the government.[218] Some ethnic groups continued to speak within their families and neighborhoods (mahalles) with their own languages, though many non-Muslim minorities such as Greeks and Armenians only spoke Turkish.[219] In villages where two or more populations lived together, the inhabitants would often speak each other's language. In cosmopolitan cities, people often spoke their family languages; many of those who were not ethnic Turks spoke Turkish as a second language.[citation needed]

Religion

 
Abdülmecid II was the last caliph of Islam and a member of the Ottoman dynasty.

Sunni Islam was the prevailing Dīn (customs, legal traditions, and religion) of the Ottoman Empire; the official Madh'hab (school of Islamic jurisprudence) was Hanafi.[220] From the early 16th century until the early 20th century, the Ottoman sultan also served as the caliph, or politico-religious leader, of the Muslim world.

Non-Muslims, particularly Christians and Jews, were present throughout the empire's history. The Ottoman imperial system was charactised by an intricate combination of official Muslim hegemony over non-Muslims and a wide degree of religious tolerance. While religious minorities were never equal under the law, they were granted recognition, protection, and limited freedoms under both Islamic and Ottoman tradition.[221]

Until the second half of the 15th century, the majority of Ottoman subjects were Christian.[179] Non-Muslims remained a significant and economically influential minority, albeit declining significantly by the 19th century, due largely to migration and secession.[221] The proportion of Muslims amounted to 60% in the 1820s, gradually increasing to 69% in the 1870s and 76% in the 1890s.[221] By 1914, less than a fifth of the empire's population (19.1%) was non-Muslim, mostly made up of Jews and Christian Greeks, Assyrians, and Armenians.[221]

Islam

Turkic peoples practiced a form of shamanism before adopting Islam. The Muslim conquest of Transoxiana under the Abbasids facilitated the spread of Islam into the Turkic heartland of Central Asia. Many Turkic tribes—including the Oghuz Turks, who were the ancestors of both the Seljuks and the Ottomans—gradually converted to Islam and brought religion to Anatolia through their migrations beginning in the 11th century. From its founding, the Ottoman Empire officially supported the Maturidi school of Islamic theology, which emphasized human reason, rationality, the pursuit of science and philosophy (falsafa).[222][223] The Ottomans were among the earliest and most enthusiastic adopters of the Hanafi school of Islamic jurisprudence,[224] which was comparatively more flexible and discretionary in its rulings.[225][226]

The Ottoman Empire had a wide variety of Islamic sects, including Druze, Ismailis, Alevis, and Alawites.[227] Sufism, a diverse body of Islamic mysticism, found fertile ground in Ottoman lands; many Sufi religious orders (tariqa), such as the Bektashi and Mevlevi, were either established, or saw significant growth, throughout the empire's history.[228] However, some heterodox Muslim groups were viewed as heretical and even ranked below Jews and Christians in terms of legal protection; Druze were frequent targets of persecution,[229] with Ottoman authorities often citing the controversial rulings of Ibn Taymiyya, a member of the conservative Hanbali school.[230] In 1514, Sultan Selim I ordered the massacre of 40,000 Anatolian Alevis (Qizilbash), whom he considered a fifth column for the rival Safavid Empire.

During Selim's reign, the Ottoman Empire saw an unprecedented and rapid expansion into the Middle East, particularly the conquest of the entire Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt on the early 16th century. These conquests further solidified the Ottoman claim of being an Islamic caliphate, although Ottoman sultans had been claiming the title of caliph since the reign of Murad I (1362–1389).[16] The caliphate was officially transferred from the Mamluks to the Ottoman sultanate in 1517, whose members would be recognized as caliphs until the office's abolition on 3 March 1924 by the Republic of Turkey (and the exile of the last caliph, Abdülmecid II, to France).

Christianity and Judaism

In accordance with the Muslim dhimmi system, the Ottoman Empire guaranteed limited freedoms to Christians, Jews, and other "people of the book", such as the right to worship, own property, and be exempt from the obligatory alms (zakat) required of Muslims. However, non-Muslims (or dhimmi) were subject to various legal restrictions, including being forbidden to carry weapons, ride on horseback, or have their homes overlook those of Muslims; likewise, they were required to pay higher taxes than Muslim subjects, including the jizya, which was a key source of state revenue.[231][232] Many Christians and Jews converted to Islam to secure full social and legal status, though most continued to practice their faith without restriction.[233]

The Ottomans developed a unique sociopolitical system known as the millet, which granted non-Muslim communities a large degree of political, legal, and religious autonomy; in essence, members of a millet were subjects of the empire but not subject to the Muslim faith or Islamic law. A millet could govern its own affairs, such as raising taxes and resolving internal legal disputes, with little or no interference from Ottoman authorities, so long as its members were loyal to the sultan and adhered to the rules concerning dhimmi. A quintessential example is the ancient Orthodox community of Mount Athos, which was permitted to retain its autonomy and was never subject to occupation or forced conversion; even special laws were enacted to protect it from outsiders.[234]

The Rum Millet, which encompassed most Eastern Orthodox Christians, was governed by the Byzantine-era Corpus Juris Civilis (Code of Justinian), with the Ecumenical Patriarch designated the highest religious and political authority (millet-bashi, or ethnarch). Likewise, Ottoman Jews came under the authority of the Haham Başı, or Ottoman Chief Rabbi, while Armenians were under the authority of the chief bishop of the Armenian Apostolic Church.[235] As the largest group of non-Muslim subjects, the Rum Millet enjoyed several special privileges in politics and commerce; however, Jews and Armenians were also well represented among the wealthy merchant class, as well as in public administration.[236][237]

Some modern scholars consider the millet system to be an early example of religious pluralism, as it accorded minority religious groups official recognition and tolerance.[238]

Social-political-religious structure

 
Ethnic map of the Ottoman Empire in 1917. Black = Bulgars and Turks, Red = Greeks, Light yellow = Armenians, Blue = Kurds, Orange = Lazes, Dark Yellow = Arabs, Green = Nestorians

Beginning in the early 19th century, society, government, and religion were interrelated in a complex, overlapping way that was deemed inefficient by Atatürk, who systematically dismantled it after 1922.[239][240] In Constantinople, the Sultan ruled two distinct domains: the secular government and the religious hierarchy. Religious officials formed the Ulama, who had control of religious teachings and theology, and also the Empire's judicial system, giving them a major voice in day-to-day affairs in communities across the Empire (but not including the non-Muslim millets). They were powerful enough to reject the military reforms proposed by Sultan Selim III. His successor Sultan Mahmud II (r. 1808–1839) first won ulama approval before proposing similar reforms.[241] The secularisation program brought by Atatürk ended the ulema and their institutions. The caliphate was abolished, madrasas were closed down, and the sharia courts were abolished. He replaced the Arabic alphabet with Latin letters, ended the religious school system, and gave women some political rights. Many rural traditionalists never accepted this secularisation, and by the 1990s they were reasserting a demand for a larger role for Islam.[242]

The Janissaries were a highly formidable military unit in the early years, but as Western Europe modernized its military organization technology, the Janissaries became a reactionary force that resisted all change. Steadily the Ottoman military power became outdated, but when the Janissaries felt their privileges were being threatened, or outsiders wanted to modernize them, or they might be superseded by the cavalrymen, they rose in rebellion. The rebellions were highly violent on both sides, but by the time the Janissaries were suppressed, it was far too late for Ottoman military power to catch up with the West.[243][244] The political system was transformed by the destruction of the Janissaries in the Auspicious Incident of 1826, who was a very powerful military/governmental/police force that revolted. Sultan Mahmud II crushed the revolt executed the leaders and disbanded the large organization. That set the stage for a slow process of modernization of government functions, as the government sought, with mixed success, to adopt the main elements of Western bureaucracy and military technology.

 
The original Church of St. Anthony of Padua, Istanbul was built in 1725 by the local Italian community of Istanbul.

The Janissaries had been recruited from Christians and other minorities; their abolition enabled the emergence of a Turkish elite to control the Ottoman Empire. The problem was that the Turkish element was very poorly educated, lacking higher schools of any sort, and locked into the Turkish language that used the Arabic alphabet that inhibited wider learning. A large number of ethnic and religious minorities were tolerated in their own separate segregated domains called millets.[245] They were primarily Greek, Armenian, or Jewish. In each locality, they governed themselves, spoke their own language, ran their own schools, cultural and religious institutions, and paid somewhat higher taxes. They had no power outside the millet. The Imperial government protected them and prevented major violent clashes between ethnic groups. However, the millets showed very little loyalty to the Empire. Ethnic nationalism, based on distinctive religion and language, provided a centripetal force that eventually destroyed the Ottoman Empire.[246] In addition, Muslim ethnic groups, which were not part of the millet system, especially the Arabs and the Kurds, were outside the Turkish culture and developed their own separate nationalism. The British sponsored Arab nationalism in the First World War, promising an independent Arab state in return for Arab support. Most Arabs supported the Sultan, but those near Mecca believed in and supported the British promise.[247]

At the local level, power was held beyond the control of the Sultan by the ayans or local notables. The ayan collected taxes, formed local armies to compete with other notables, took a reactionary attitude toward political or economic change, and often defied policies handed down by the Sultan.[248]

The economic system made little progress. Printing was forbidden until the 18th century, for fear of defiling the secret documents of Islam. The millets, however, were allowed their own presses, using Greek, Hebrew, Armenian and other languages that greatly facilitated nationalism. The religious prohibition on charging interest foreclosed most of the entrepreneurial skills among Muslims, although it did flourish among the Jews and Christians.

After the 18th century, the Ottoman Empire was clearly shrinking, as Russia put on heavy pressure and expanded to its south; Egypt became effectively independent in 1805, and the British later took it over, along with Cyprus. Greece became independent, and Serbia and other Balkan areas became highly restive as the force of nationalism pushed against imperialism. The French took over Algeria and Tunisia. The Europeans all thought that the empire was a sick man in rapid decline. Only the Germans seemed helpful, and their support led to the Ottoman Empire joining the central powers in 1915, with the result that they came out as one of the heaviest losers of the First World War in 1918.[249]

Culture

 
Depiction of a hookah shop in Lebanon

The Ottomans absorbed some of the traditions, art, and institutions of cultures in the regions they conquered and added new dimensions to them. Numerous traditions and cultural traits of previous empires (In fields such as architecture, cuisine, music, leisure, and government) were adopted by the Ottoman Turks, who developed them into new forms, resulting in a new and distinctively Ottoman cultural identity. Although the predominant literary language of the Ottoman Empire was Turkish, Persian was the preferred vehicle for the projection of an imperial image.[250]

Slavery was a part of Ottoman society,[251] with most slaves employed as domestic servants. Agricultural slavery, such as that which was widespread in the Americas, was relatively rare. Unlike systems of chattel slavery, slaves under Islamic law were not regarded as movable property, and the children of female slaves were born legally free. Female slaves were still sold in the Empire as late as 1908.[252] During the 19th century the Empire came under pressure from Western European countries to outlaw the practice. Policies developed by various sultans throughout the 19th century attempted to curtail the Ottoman slave trade but slavery had centuries of religious backing and sanction and so slavery was never abolished in the Empire.[235]

Plague remained a major scourge in Ottoman society until the second quarter of the 19th century. "Between 1701 and 1750, 37 larger and smaller plague epidemics were recorded in Istanbul, and 31 between 1751 and 1801."[253]

Ottomans adopted Persian bureaucratic traditions and culture. The sultans also made an important contribution in the development of Persian literature.[254]

Education

 
The Beyazıt State Library was founded in 1884.

In the Ottoman Empire, each millet established a schooling system serving its members.[255] Education, therefore, was largely divided on ethnic and religious lines: few non-Muslims attended schools for Muslim students and vice versa. Most institutions that did serve all ethnic and religious groups taught in French or other languages.[256]

Literature

The two primary streams of Ottoman written literature are poetry and prose. Poetry was by far the dominant stream. Until the 19th century, Ottoman prose did not contain any examples of fiction: there were no counterparts to, for instance, the European romance, short story, or novel. Analog genres did exist, though, in both Turkish folk literature and in Divan poetry.

Ottoman Divan poetry was a highly ritualized and symbolic art form. From the Persian poetry that largely inspired it, it inherited a wealth of symbols whose meanings and interrelationships—both of similitude (مراعات نظير mura'ât-i nazîr / تناسب tenâsüb) and opposition (تضاد tezâd) were more or less prescribed. Divan poetry was composed through the constant juxtaposition of many such images within a strict metrical framework, thus allowing numerous potential meanings to emerge. The vast majority of Divan poetry was lyric in nature: either gazels (which make up the greatest part of the repertoire of the tradition), or kasîdes. There were, however, other common genres, most particularly the mesnevî, a kind of verse romance and thus a variety of narrative poetry; the two most notable examples of this form are the Leyli and Majnun of Fuzûlî and the Hüsn ü Aşk of Şeyh Gâlib. The Seyahatnâme of Evliya Çelebi (1611–1682) is an outstanding example of travel literature.

 
Ahmet Nedîm Efendi, one of the most celebrated Ottoman poets

Until the 19th century, Ottoman prose did not develop to the extent that contemporary Divan poetry did. A large part of the reason for this was that much prose was expected to adhere to the rules of sec (سجع, also transliterated as seci), or rhymed prose,[257] a type of writing descended from the Arabic saj' and which prescribed that between each adjective and noun in a string of words, such as a sentence, there must be a rhyme. Nevertheless, there was a tradition of prose in the literature of the time, though exclusively non-fictional in nature. One apparent exception was Muhayyelât ("Fancies") by Giritli Ali Aziz Efendi, a collection of stories of the fantastic written in 1796, though not published until 1867. The first novel published in the Ottoman Empire was by an Armenian named Vartan Pasha. Published in 1851, the novel was entitled The Story of Akabi (Turkish: Akabi Hikyayesi) and was written in Turkish but with Armenian script.[258][259][260][261]

Due to historically close ties with France, French literature came to constitute the major Western influence on Ottoman literature throughout the latter half of the 19th century. As a result, many of the same movements prevalent in France during this period also had their Ottoman equivalents; in the developing Ottoman prose tradition, for instance, the influence of Romanticism can be seen during the Tanzimat period, and that of the Realist and Naturalist movements in subsequent periods; in the poetic tradition, on the other hand, it was the influence of the Symbolist and Parnassian movements that became paramount.

Many of the writers in the Tanzimat period wrote in several different genres simultaneously; for instance, the poet Namık Kemal also wrote the important 1876 novel İntibâh ("Awakening"), while the journalist İbrahim Şinasi is noted for writing, in 1860, the first modern Turkish play, the one-act comedy "Şair Evlenmesi" ("The Poet's Marriage"). An earlier play, a farce entitled "Vakâyi'-i 'Acibe ve Havâdis-i Garibe-yi Kefşger Ahmed" ("The Strange Events and Bizarre Occurrences of the Cobbler Ahmed"), dates from the beginning of the 19th century, but there remains some doubt about its authenticity. In a similar vein, the novelist Ahmed Midhat Efendi wrote important novels in each of the major movements: Romanticism (Hasan Mellâh yâhud Sırr İçinde Esrâr, 1873; "Hasan the Sailor, or The Mystery Within the Mystery"), Realism (Henüz on Yedi Yaşında, 1881; "Just Seventeen Years Old"), and Naturalism (Müşâhedât, 1891; "Observations"). This diversity was, in part, due to the Tanzimat writers' wish to disseminate as much of the new literature as possible, in the hopes that it would contribute to a revitalization of Ottoman social structures.[262]

Media

The media of the Ottoman Empire was diverse, with newspapers and journals published in various languages including French,[263] Greek,[264] and German.[235] Many of these publications were centered in Constantinople,[265] but there were also French-language newspapers produced in Beirut, Salonika, and Smyrna.[266] Non-Muslim ethnic minorities in the empire used French as a lingua franca and used French-language publications,[263] while some provincial newspapers were published in Arabic.[267] The use of French in the media persisted until the end of the empire in 1923 and for a few years thereafter in the Republic of Turkey.[263]

Architecture

 
Süleymaniye Mosque in Istanbul, designed by Mimar Sinan in the 16th century and a major example of the Classical Ottoman style

The architecture of the empire developed from earlier Seljuk Turkish architecture, with influences from Byzantine and Iranian architecture and other architectural traditions in the Middle East.[268][269][270] Early Ottoman architecture experimented with multiple building types over the course of the 13th to 15th centuries, progressively evolving into the Classical Ottoman style of the 16th and 17th centuries, which was also strongly influenced by the Hagia Sophia.[270][271] The most important architect of the Classical period is Mimar Sinan, whose major works include the Şehzade Mosque, Süleymaniye Mosque, and Selimiye Mosque.[272][273] The greatest of the court artists enriched the Ottoman Empire with many pluralistic artistic influences, such as mixing traditional Byzantine art with elements of Chinese art.[274] The second half of the 16th century also saw the apogee of certain decorative arts, most notably in the use of Iznik tiles.[275]

Beginning in the 18th century, Ottoman architecture was influenced by the Baroque architecture in Western Europe, resulting in the Ottoman Baroque style.[276] Nuruosmaniye Mosque is one of the most important examples from this period.[277][278] The last Ottoman period saw more influences from Western Europe, brought in by architects such as those from the Balyan family.[279] Empire style and Neoclassical motifs were introduced and a trend towards eclecticism was evident in many types of buildings, such as the Dolmabaçe Palace.[280] The last decades of the Ottoman Empire also saw the development of a new architectural style called neo-Ottoman or Ottoman revivalism, also known as the First National Architectural Movement,[281] by architects such as Mimar Kemaleddin and Vedat Tek.[279]

Ottoman dynastic patronage was concentrated in the historic capitals of Bursa, Edirne, and Istanbul (Constantinople), as well as in several other important administrative centers such as Amasya and Manisa. It was in these centers that most important developments in Ottoman architecture occurred and that the most monumental Ottoman architecture can be found.[282] Major religious monuments were typically architectural complexes, known as a külliye, that had multiple components providing different services or amenities. In addition to a mosque, these could include a madrasa, a hammam, an imaret, a sebil, a market, a caravanserai, a primary school, or others.[283] These complexes were governed and managed with the help of a vakif agreement (Arabic waqf).[283] Ottoman constructions were still abundant in Anatolia and in the Balkans (Rumelia), but in the more distant Middle Eastern and North African provinces older Islamic architectural styles continued to hold strong influence and were sometimes blended with Ottoman styles.[284][285]

Decorative arts

 
Ottoman miniature lost its function with the Westernization of Ottoman culture.

The tradition of Ottoman miniatures, painted to illustrate manuscripts or used in dedicated albums, was heavily influenced by the Persian art form, though it also included elements of the Byzantine tradition of illumination and painting.[286] A Greek academy of painters, the Nakkashane-i-Rum, was established in the Topkapi Palace in the 15th century, while early in the following century a similar Persian academy, the Nakkashane-i-Irani, was added. Surname-i Hümayun (Imperial Festival Books) were albums that commemorated celebrations in the Ottoman Empire in pictorial and textual detail.

Ottoman illumination covers non-figurative painted or drawn decorative art in books or on sheets in muraqqa or albums, as opposed to the figurative images of the Ottoman miniature. It was a part of the Ottoman Book Arts together with the Ottoman miniature (taswir), calligraphy (hat), Islamic calligraphy, bookbinding (cilt) and paper marbling (ebru). In the Ottoman Empire, illuminated and illustrated manuscripts were commissioned by the Sultan or the administrators of the court. In Topkapi Palace, these manuscripts were created by the artists working in Nakkashane, the atelier of the miniature and illumination artists. Both religious and non-religious books could be illuminated. Also, sheets for albums levha consisted of illuminated calligraphy (hat) of tughra, religious texts, verses from poems or proverbs, and purely decorative drawings.

The art of carpet weaving was particularly significant in the Ottoman Empire, carpets having an immense importance both as decorative furnishings, rich in religious and other symbolism and as a practical consideration, as it was customary to remove one's shoes in living quarters.[287] The weaving of such carpets originated in the nomadic cultures of central Asia (carpets being an easily transportable form of furnishing), and eventually spread to the settled societies of Anatolia. Turks used carpets, rugs, and kilims not just on the floors of a room but also as a hanging on walls and doorways, where they provided additional insulation. They were also commonly donated to mosques, which often amassed large collections of them.[288]

Music and performing arts

Ottoman classical music was an important part of the education of the Ottoman elite. A number of the Ottoman sultans have accomplished musicians and composers themselves, such as Selim III, whose compositions are often still performed today. Ottoman classical music arose largely from a confluence of Byzantine music, Armenian music, Arabic music, and Persian music. Compositionally, it is organized around rhythmic units called usul, which are somewhat similar to meter in Western music, and melodic units called makam, which bear some resemblance to Western musical modes.

The instruments used are a mixture of Anatolian and Central Asian instruments (the saz, the bağlama, the kemence), other Middle Eastern instruments (the ud, the tanbur, the kanun, the ney), and—later in the tradition—Western instruments (the violin and the piano). Because of a geographic and cultural divide between the capital and other areas, two broadly distinct styles of music arose in the Ottoman Empire: Ottoman classical music and folk music. In the provinces, several different kinds of folk music were created. The most dominant regions with their distinguished musical styles are Balkan-Thracian Türküs, North-Eastern (Laz) Türküs, Aegean Türküs, Central Anatolian Türküs, Eastern Anatolian Türküs, and Caucasian Türküs. Some of the distinctive styles were: Janissary music, Roma music, Belly dance, Turkish folk music.

The traditional shadow play called Karagöz and Hacivat was widespread throughout the Ottoman Empire and featured characters representing all of the major ethnic and social groups in that culture.[289][290] It was performed by a single puppet master, who voiced all of the characters, and accompanied by tambourine (def). Its origins are obscure, deriving perhaps from an older Egyptian tradition, or possibly from an Asian source.

Cuisine

 
Turkish women baking bread, 1790

Ottoman cuisine is the cuisine of the capital, Constantinople (Istanbul), and the regional capital cities, where the melting pot of cultures created a common cuisine that most of the population regardless of ethnicity shared. This diverse cuisine was honed in the Imperial Palace's kitchens by chefs brought from certain parts of the Empire to create and experiment with different ingredients. The creations of the Ottoman Palace's kitchens filtered to the population, for instance through Ramadan events, and through the cooking at the Yalıs of the Pashas, and from there on spread to the rest of the population.

Much of the cuisine of former Ottoman territories today is descended from a shared Ottoman cuisine, especially Turkish, and including Greek, Balkan, Armenian, and Middle Eastern cuisines.[291] Many common dishes in the region, descendants of the once-common Ottoman cuisine, include yogurt, döner kebab/gyro/shawarma, cacık/tzatziki, ayran, pita bread, feta cheese, baklava, lahmacun, moussaka, yuvarlak, köfte/keftés/kofta, börek/boureki, rakı/rakia/tsipouro/tsikoudia, meze, dolma, sarma, rice pilaf, Turkish coffee, sujuk, kashk, keşkek, manti, lavash, kanafeh, and more.

Sports

 
Members of Beşiktaş J.K. in 1903
 
Members of Galatasaray S.K. (football) in 1905

The main sports Ottomans were engaged in were Turkish wrestling, hunting, Turkish archery, horseback riding, equestrian javelin throw, arm wrestling, and swimming. European model sports clubs were formed with the spreading popularity of football matches in 19th century Constantinople. The leading clubs, according to timeline, were Beşiktaş Gymnastics Club (1903), Galatasaray Sports Club (1905), Fenerbahçe Sports Club (1907), MKE Ankaragücü (formerly Turan Sanatkaragücü) (1910) in Constantinople. Football clubs were formed in other provinces too, such as Karşıyaka Sports Club (1912), Altay Sports Club (1914) and Turkish Fatherland Football Club (later Ülküspor) (1914) of İzmir.

Science and technology

Over the course of Ottoman history, the Ottomans managed to build a large collection of libraries complete with translations of books from other cultures, as well as original manuscripts.[60] A great part of this desire for local and foreign manuscripts arose in the 15th century. Sultan Mehmet II ordered Georgios Amiroutzes, a Greek scholar from Trabzon, to translate and make available to Ottoman educational institutions the geography book of Ptolemy. Another example is Ali Qushji – an astronomer, mathematician and physicist originally from Samarkand – who became a professor in two madrasas and influenced Ottoman circles as a result of his writings and the activities of his students, even though he only spent two or three years in Constantinople before his death.[292]

Taqi al-Din built the Constantinople observatory of Taqi al-Din in 1577, where he carried out observations until 1580. He calculated the eccentricity of the Sun's orbit and the annual motion of the apogee.[293] However, the observatory's primary purpose was almost certainly astrological rather than astronomical, leading to its destruction in 1580 due to the rise of a clerical faction that opposed its use for that purpose.[294] He also experimented with steam power in Ottoman Egypt in 1551, when he described a steam jack driven by a rudimentary steam turbine.[295]

 
Girl Reciting the Qurān (Kuran Okuyan Kız), an 1880 painting by the Ottoman polymath Osman Hamdi Bey, whose works often showed women engaged in educational activities[296]

In 1660 the Ottoman scholar Ibrahim Efendi al-Zigetvari Tezkireci translated Noël Duret's French astronomical work (written in 1637) into Arabic.[297]

Şerafeddin Sabuncuoğlu was the author of the first surgical atlas and the last major medical encyclopaedia from the Islamic world. Though his work was largely based on Abu al-Qasim al-Zahrawi's Al-Tasrif, Sabuncuoğlu introduced many innovations of his own. Female surgeons were also illustrated for the first time.[298] Since, the Ottoman Empire is credited with the invention of several surgical instruments in use such as forceps, catheters, scalpels and lancets as well as pincers.[299][better source needed]

An example of a watch that measured time in minutes was created by an Ottoman watchmaker, Meshur Sheyh Dede, in 1702.[300]

In the early 19th century, Egypt under Muhammad Ali began using steam engines for industrial manufacturing, with industries such as ironworks, textile manufacturing, paper mills and hulling mills moving towards steam power.[301] Economic historian Jean Batou argues that the necessary economic conditions existed in Egypt for the adoption of oil as a potential energy source for its steam engines later in the 19th century.[301]

In the 19th century, Ishak Efendi is credited with introducing the then current Western scientific ideas and developments to the Ottoman and wider Muslim world, as well as the invention of a suitable Turkish and Arabic scientific terminology, through his translations of Western works.

See also

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ In Ottoman Turkish, the city was known by various names, among which were Kostantiniyye (قسطنطينيه) (replacing the suffix -polis with the Arabic nisba), Dersaadet (در سعادت) and Istanbul (استانبول). Names other than Istanbul became obsolete in Turkish after the proclamation of the Republic of Turkey in 1923,[5] and after Turkey's transition to Latin script in 1928,[6] the Turkish government in 1930 requested that foreign embassies and companies use Istanbul, and that name became widely accepted internationally.[7] Eldem Edhem, author of an entry on Istanbul in Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire, stated that the majority of the Turkish people circa 2010, including historians, believe using "Constantinople" to refer to the Ottoman-era city is "politically incorrect" despite any historical accuracy.[5]
  2. ^ Diplomacy, poetry, historiographical works, literary works, taught in state schools.[8][9][10][11][12]
  3. ^ Liturgical language; among Arabic-speaking citizens
  4. ^ Among Greek-speaking community; spoken by some sultans.
  5. ^ Decrees in the 15th century.[13]
  6. ^ Foreign language among educated people in the post-Tanzimat/late imperial period.[14]
  7. ^ The sultan from 1512 to 1520.
  8. ^ Mehmed VI, the last Sultan, was expelled from Constantinople on 17 November 1922.
  9. ^ The Treaty of Sèvres (10 August 1920) afforded a small existence to the Ottoman Empire. On 1 November 1922, the Grand National Assembly (GNAT) abolished the sultanate and declared that all the deeds of the Ottoman regime in Constantinople were null and void as of 16 March 1920, the date of the occupation of Constantinople under the terms of the Treaty of Sèvres. The international recognition of the GNAT and the Government of Ankara was achieved through the signing of the Treaty of Lausanne on 24 July 1923. The Grand National Assembly of Turkey promulgated the Republic on 29 October 1923, which ended the Ottoman Empire in history.
  10. ^ "Sublime Ottoman State" was not used in minority languages for Christians and Jews, nor in French,[21] the common Western language among the educated in the late Ottoman Empire.[14] Minority languages, which use the same name in French:[21] * Western Armenian: Օսմանյան տերութիւն, romanized: Osmanean Têrut'iwn, lit.'Ottoman Authority/Governance/Rule', Օսմանյան պետութիւն, Osmanean Petut'iwn, 'Ottoman State' and Օսմանյան կայսրություն, Osmanean Kaysrut, 'Ottoman Empire' * Bulgarian: Османска империя, romanizedOtomanskata Imperiya; Отоманска империя is an archaic version. The definite article forms Османската империя and Османска империя were synonymous * Greek: Оθωμανική Επικράτεια, romanizedOthōmanikē Epikrateia and Оθωμανική Αυτοκρατορία, Othōmanikē Avtokratoria * Ladino: Imperio otomano
  11. ^ (/ˈɒtəmən/; Ottoman Turkish: دولت عليه عثمانيه, romanized: Devlet-i ʿAlīye-i ʿOsmānīye; Turkish: Osmanlı İmparatorluğu or Osmanlı Devleti; French: Empire ottoman),[j][21]
  12. ^ The Ottoman dynasty also held the title "caliph" from the Ottoman victory over the Mamluk Sultanate of Cairo in the Battle of Ridaniya in 1517 to the abolition of the Caliphate by the Turkish Republic in 1924.
  13. ^ The empire also temporarily gained authority over distant overseas lands through declarations of allegiance to the Ottoman Sultan and Caliph, such as the declaration by the Sultan of Aceh in 1565, or through temporary acquisitions of islands such as Lanzarote in the Atlantic Ocean in 1585.[27]
  14. ^ A lock-hold on trade between western Europe and Asia is often cited as a primary motivation for Isabella I of Castile to fund Christopher Columbus's westward journey to find a sailing route to Asia and, more generally, for European seafaring nations to explore alternative trade routes (e.g., K.D. Madan, Life and travels of Vasco Da Gama (1998), 9; I. Stavans, Imagining Columbus: the literary voyage (2001), 5; W.B. Wheeler and S. Becker, Discovering the American Past. A Look at the Evidence: to 1877 (2006), 105). This traditional viewpoint has been attacked as unfounded in an influential article by A.H. Lybyer ("The Ottoman Turks and the Routes of Oriental Trade", English Historical Review, 120 (1915), 577–588), who sees the rise of Ottoman power and the beginnings of Portuguese and Spanish explorations as unrelated events. His view has not been universally accepted (cf. K.M. Setton, The Papacy and the Levant (1204–1571), Vol. 2: The Fifteenth Century (Memoirs of the American Philosophical Society, Vol. 127) (1978), 335).
  15. ^ Though the revolt was officially initiated on the 10 June, bin Ali's sons 'Ali and Faisal had already initiated operations at Medina starting on 5 June.[156]

Citations

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  12. ^ Yarshater, Ehsan; Melville, Charles, eds. (359). Persian Historiography: A History of Persian Literature. Vol. 10. p. 437. ISBN 9780857736574. Persian held a privileged place in Ottoman letters. Persian historical literature was first patronized during the reign of Mehmed II and continued unabated until the end of the 16th century.
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ottoman, empire, turkish, empire, redirects, here, empires, with, turkic, origins, list, turkic, dynasties, countries, this, article, about, empire, associated, caliphate, ottoman, caliphate, historically, colloquially, turkish, empire, empire, that, controlle. Turkish Empire redirects here For empires with Turkic origins see List of Turkic dynasties and countries This article is about the empire For the associated caliphate see Ottoman Caliphate The Ottoman Empire k historically and colloquially the Turkish Empire 22 was an empire l that controlled much of Southeast Europe Western Asia and Northern Africa between the 14th and early 20th centuries It was founded at the end of the 13th century in northwestern Anatolia in the town of Sogut modern day Bilecik Province by the Turkoman 23 tribal leader Osman I 24 After 1354 the Ottomans crossed into Europe and with the conquest of the Balkans the Ottoman beylik was transformed into a transcontinental empire The Ottomans ended the Byzantine Empire with the conquest of Constantinople in 1453 by Mehmed the Conqueror 25 Sublime Ottoman Stateدولت عليه عثمانیهDevlet i ʿAliye i ʿOsmaniyec 1299 1922Flag 1844 1922 Coat of arms 1882 1922 Motto دولت ابد مدتDevlet i Ebed muddet The Eternal State 1 Anthem variousThe Ottoman Empire in 1683StatusEmpireCapitalSogut 2 c 1299 1331 Nicaea Iznik 3 1331 1335 Bursa 4 1335 1363 Adrianople Edirne 4 1363 1453 Constantinople Istanbul a 1453 1922 Common languagesOttoman Turkish dynastic official Persian b Arabic c Greek d Chagatai e French f many othersReligionSunni Islam state School Hanafi Creed MaturidiDemonym s OttomanGovernmentAbsolute monarchy c 1299 1876 1878 1908 1920 1922 Caliphate 1517 1924 15 Unitary parliamentary constitutional monarchy 1876 1878 1908 1920 Under an authoritarian one party military dictatorship 1913 1918 Sultan c 1299 1323 4 first Osman I 1918 1922 last Mehmed VICaliph 1517 1520 first Selim I 16 g 1922 1924 last Abdulmejid IIGrand Vizier 1320 1331 first Alaeddin Pasha 1920 1922 last Ahmet Tevfik PashaLegislatureImperial Council until 1876 1878 1908 General Assembly 1876 1878 1908 1920 None rule by decree 1920 1922 Unelected upper houseChamber of Notables 1876 1878 1908 1920 Elected lower houseChamber of Deputies 1876 1878 1908 1920 History Foundedc 1299 17 Interregnum1402 1413 Conquest of Constantinople29 May 1453 1st Constitutional1876 1878 2nd Constitutional1908 1920 Raid on the Sublime Porte23 January 1913 Sultanate abolished h 1 November 1922 Republic of Turkey established i 29 October 1923 Caliphate abolished3 March 1924Area1481 18 1 220 000 km2 470 000 sq mi 1521 18 3 400 000 km2 1 300 000 sq mi 1683 18 19 5 200 000 km2 2 000 000 sq mi 1913 18 2 550 000 km2 980 000 sq mi Population 1912 20 24 000 000CurrencyVarious akce para sultani kurus piastre poundPreceded by Succeeded bySultanate of RumAnatolian beyliksByzantine EmpireKingdom of BosniaSecond Bulgarian EmpireDespotate of LovechSerbian DespotateKingdom of HungaryKingdom of CroatiaLeague of LezheMamluk SultanateHafsid KingdomAq QoyunluHospitaller TripoliKingdom of TlemcenEmpire of TrebizondPrincipality of SamtskheDespotate of the MoreaZetaPrincipality of Theodoro TurkeyHellenic RepublicCaucasus ViceroyaltyBosnia and HerzegovinaRevolutionary SerbiaAlbaniaKingdom of RomaniaPrincipality of BulgariaEastern RumeliaEmirate of AsirKingdom of HejazOETAMandatory IraqFrench AlgeriaBritish CyprusFrench TunisiaItalian TripolitaniaItalian CyrenaicaSheikhdom of KuwaitKingdom of YemenSultanate of EgyptUnder the reign of Suleiman the Magnificent the Ottoman Empire marked the peak of its power and prosperity as well as the highest development of its governmental social and economic systems 26 At the beginning of the 17th century the empire contained 32 provinces and numerous vassal states Some of these were later absorbed into the Ottoman Empire while others were granted various types of autonomy over the course of centuries m With Constantinople modern day Istanbul as its capital and control of lands around the Mediterranean Basin the Ottoman Empire was at the centre of interactions between the Middle East and Europe for six centuries While the empire was once thought to have entered a period of decline following the death of Suleiman the Magnificent this view is no longer supported by the majority of academic historians 28 The newer academic consensus posits that the empire continued to maintain a flexible and strong economy society and military throughout the 17th and for much of the 18th century 29 However during a long period of peace from 1740 to 1768 the Ottoman military system fell behind that of its European rivals the Habsburg and Russian empires 30 The Ottomans consequently suffered severe military defeats in the late 18th and early 19th centuries The successful Greek War of Independence concluded with decolonization of Greece following the London Protocol 1830 and Treaty of Constantinople 1832 This and other defeats prompted the Ottoman state to initiate a comprehensive process of reform and modernization known as the Tanzimat Thus over the course of the 19th century the Ottoman state became vastly more powerful and organized internally despite suffering further territorial losses especially in the Balkans where a number of new states emerged 31 The Committee of Union and Progress CUP established the Second Constitutional Era in the Young Turk Revolution in 1908 turning the Empire into a constitutional monarchy which conducted competitive multi party elections However after the disastrous Balkan Wars the now radicalized and nationalistic CUP took over the government in the 1913 coup d etat creating a one party regime The CUP allied the Empire with Germany hoping to escape from the diplomatic isolation which had contributed to its recent territorial losses and thus joined World War I on the side of the Central Powers 32 While the Empire was able to largely hold its own during the conflict it was struggling with internal dissent especially with the Arab Revolt in its Arabian holdings During this time the Ottoman government engaged in genocide against the Armenians Assyrians and Greeks 33 The Empire s defeat and the occupation of part of its territory by the Allied Powers in the aftermath of World War I resulted in its partitioning and the loss of its Middle Eastern territories which were divided between the United Kingdom and France The successful Turkish War of Independence led by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk against the occupying Allies led to the emergence of the Republic of Turkey in the Anatolian heartland and the abolition of the Ottoman monarchy 34 Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 Rise c 1299 1453 2 2 Expansion and peak 1453 1566 2 3 Stagnation and reform 1566 1827 2 3 1 Revolts reversals and revivals 1566 1683 2 3 2 Military defeats 2 4 Decline and modernisation 1828 1908 2 5 Defeat and dissolution 1908 1922 2 5 1 Young Turk movement 2 5 2 World War I 2 5 2 1 Genocides 2 5 2 2 Arab Revolt 2 5 2 3 Treaty of Sevres and Turkish War of Independence 3 Historiographical debate on the Ottoman state 4 Government 4 1 Law 4 2 Military 5 Administrative divisions 6 Economy 7 Demographics 7 1 Language 7 2 Religion 7 2 1 Islam 7 2 2 Christianity and Judaism 7 3 Social political religious structure 8 Culture 8 1 Education 8 2 Literature 8 3 Media 8 4 Architecture 8 5 Decorative arts 8 6 Music and performing arts 8 7 Cuisine 8 8 Sports 9 Science and technology 10 See also 11 References 11 1 Footnotes 11 2 Citations 11 3 Sources 12 Further reading 12 1 General surveys 12 2 Early Ottomans 12 3 Diplomatic and military 12 4 Specialty studies 12 5 Historiography 13 External linksNameMain article Names of the Ottoman Empire See also Osman I Name The word Ottoman is a historical anglicisation of the name of Osman I the founder of the Empire and of the ruling House of Osman also known as the Ottoman dynasty Osman s name in turn was the Turkish form of the Arabic name ʿUthman عثمان In Ottoman Turkish the empire was referred to as Devlet i ʿAliye yi ʿOsmaniye دولت عليه عثمانیه literally The Supreme Ottoman State or alternatively ʿOsmanli Devleti عثمانلى دولتى In Modern Turkish it is known as Osmanli Imparatorlugu The Ottoman Empire or Osmanli Devleti The Ottoman State citation needed The Turkish word for Ottoman Osmanli originally referred to the tribal followers of Osman in the fourteenth century The word subsequently came to be used to refer to the empire s military administrative elite In contrast the term Turk Turk was used to refer to the Anatolian peasant and tribal population and was seen as a disparaging term when applied to urban educated individuals 35 26 36 In the early modern period an educated urban dwelling Turkish speaker who was not a member of the military administrative class would often refer to himself neither as an Osmanli nor as a Turk but rather as a Rumi رومى or Roman meaning an inhabitant of the territory of the former Byzantine Empire in the Balkans and Anatolia The term Rumi was also used to refer to Turkish speakers by the other Muslim peoples of the empire and beyond 37 11 As applied to Ottoman Turkish speakers this term began to fall out of use at the end of the seventeenth century and instead of the word increasingly became associated with the Greek population of the empire a meaning that it still bears in Turkey today 38 51 In Western Europe the names Ottoman Empire Turkish Empire and Turkey were often used interchangeably with Turkey being increasingly favoured both in formal and informal situations This dichotomy was officially ended in 1920 1923 when the newly established Ankara based Turkish government chose Turkey as the sole official name At present most scholarly historians avoid the terms Turkey Turks and Turkish when referring to the Ottomans due to the empire s multinational character 39 HistoryMain article History of the Ottoman Empire See also Territorial evolution of the Ottoman Empire Rise c 1299 1453 Main article Rise of the Ottoman Empire Further information Osman I Ottoman dynasty and Gaza Thesis As the Rum Sultanate declined well into the 13th century Anatolia was divided into a patchwork of independent Turkish principalities known as the Anatolian Beyliks One of these beyliks in the region of Bithynia on the frontier of the Byzantine Empire was led by the Turkish tribal leader Osman I d 1323 4 a figure of obscure origins from whom the name Ottoman is derived 40 444 Osman s early followers consisted both of Turkish tribal groups and Byzantine renegades with many but not all converts to Islam 41 59 42 127 Osman extended the control of his principality by conquering Byzantine towns along the Sakarya River A Byzantine defeat at the Battle of Bapheus in 1302 contributed to Osman s rise as well It is not well understood how the early Ottomans came to dominate their neighbors due to the lack of sources surviving from this period The Ghaza thesis popular during the twentieth century credited their success to their rallying of religious warriors to fight for them in the name of Islam but it is no longer generally accepted No other hypothesis has attracted broad acceptance 43 5 10 44 104 The Battle of Nicopolis in 1396 as depicted in an Ottoman miniature from 1523 In the century after the death of Osman I Ottoman rule had begun to extend over Anatolia and the Balkans The earliest conflicts began during the Byzantine Ottoman wars waged in Anatolia in the late 13th century before entering Europe in the mid 14th century followed by the Bulgarian Ottoman wars and the Serbian Ottoman wars waged beginning in the mid 14th century Much of this period was characterised by Ottoman expansion into the Balkans Osman s son Orhan captured the northwestern Anatolian city of Bursa in 1326 making it the new capital of the Ottoman state and supplanting Byzantine control in the region The important port city of Thessaloniki was captured from the Venetians in 1387 and sacked The Ottoman victory in Kosovo in 1389 effectively marked the end of Serbian power in the region paving the way for Ottoman expansion into Europe 45 95 96 The Battle of Nicopolis for the Bulgarian Tsardom of Vidin in 1396 widely regarded as the last large scale crusade of the Middle Ages failed to stop the advance of the victorious Ottoman Turks 46 As the Turks expanded into the Balkans the conquest of Constantinople became a crucial objective The Ottomans had already wrested control of nearly all former Byzantine lands surrounding the city but the strong defense of Constantinople s strategic position on the Bosporus Strait made it difficult to conquer In 1402 the Byzantines were temporarily relieved when the Turco Mongol leader Timur founder of the Timurid Empire invaded Ottoman Anatolia from the east In the Battle of Ankara in 1402 Timur defeated the Ottoman forces and took Sultan Bayezid I as a prisoner throwing the empire into disorder The ensuing civil war also known as the Fetret Devri lasted from 1402 to 1413 as Bayezid s sons fought over succession It ended when Mehmed I emerged as the sultan and restored Ottoman power 47 363 The Balkan territories lost by the Ottomans after 1402 including Thessaloniki Macedonia and Kosovo were later recovered by Murad II between the 1430s and 1450s On 10 November 1444 Murad repelled the Crusade of Varna by defeating the Hungarian Polish and Wallachian armies under Wladyslaw III of Poland also King of Hungary and John Hunyadi at the Battle of Varna although Albanians under Skanderbeg continued to resist Four years later John Hunyadi prepared another army of Hungarian and Wallachian forces to attack the Turks but was again defeated at the Second Battle of Kosovo in 1448 48 29 Expansion and peak 1453 1566 Main article Classical Age of the Ottoman Empire Sultan Mehmed the Conqueror s entry into Constantinople painting by Fausto Zonaro 1854 1929 An Ottoman miniature of the Battle of Mohacs in 1526 49 The son of Murad II Mehmed the Conqueror reorganized both state and military and on 29 May 1453 conquered Constantinople ending the Byzantine Empire Mehmed allowed the Eastern Orthodox Church to maintain its autonomy and land in exchange for accepting Ottoman authority 50 Due to tension between the states of western Europe and the later Byzantine Empire the majority of the Orthodox population accepted Ottoman rule as preferable to Venetian rule 50 Albanian resistance was a major obstacle to Ottoman expansion on the Italian peninsula 51 According to modern historiography there is a direct connection between the fast Ottoman military advance and the consequences of the Black Death from the mid fourteenth century onwards Byzantine territories where the initial Ottoman conquests were carried out were exhausted demographically and militarily due to the plague outbreaks which facilitated the Ottoman expansion 52 In the 15th and 16th centuries the Ottoman Empire entered a period of expansion The Empire prospered under the rule of a line of committed and effective Sultans It also flourished economically due to its control of the major overland trade routes between Europe and Asia 53 111 n Sultan Selim I 1512 1520 dramatically expanded the Empire s eastern and southern frontiers by defeating Shah Ismail of Safavid Iran in the Battle of Chaldiran 54 91 105 Selim I established Ottoman rule in Egypt by defeating and annexing the Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt and created a naval presence on the Red Sea After this Ottoman expansion competition began between the Portuguese Empire and the Ottoman Empire to become the dominant power in the region 55 55 76 Suleiman the Magnificent 1520 1566 captured Belgrade in 1521 conquered the southern and central parts of the Kingdom of Hungary as part of the Ottoman Hungarian Wars 56 57 failed verification and after his historic victory in the Battle of Mohacs in 1526 he established Ottoman rule in the territory of present day Hungary except the western part and other Central European territories He then laid siege to Vienna in 1529 but failed to take the city 58 50 In 1532 he made another attack on Vienna but was repulsed in the Siege of Guns 59 60 Transylvania Wallachia and intermittently Moldavia became tributary principalities of the Ottoman Empire In the east the Ottoman Turks took Baghdad from the Persians in 1535 gaining control of Mesopotamia and naval access to the Persian Gulf In 1555 the Caucasus became officially partitioned for the first time between the Safavids and the Ottomans a status quo that would remain until the end of the Russo Turkish War 1768 1774 By this partitioning of the Caucasus as signed in the Peace of Amasya Western Armenia western Kurdistan and Western Georgia including western Samtskhe fell into Ottoman hands 61 while southern Dagestan Eastern Armenia Eastern Georgia and Azerbaijan remained Persian 62 In 1539 a 60 000 strong Ottoman army besieged the Spanish garrison of Castelnuovo on the Adriatic coast the successful siege cost the Ottomans 8 000 casualties 63 but Venice agreed to terms in 1540 surrendering most of its empire in the Aegean and the Morea France and the Ottoman Empire united by mutual opposition to Habsburg rule became strong allies The French conquests of Nice 1543 and Corsica 1553 occurred as a joint venture between the forces of the French king Francis I and Suleiman and were commanded by the Ottoman admirals Hayreddin Barbarossa and Dragut 64 A month before the siege of Nice France supported the Ottomans with an artillery unit during the 1543 Ottoman conquest of Esztergom in northern Hungary After further advances by the Turks the Habsburg ruler Ferdinand officially recognized Ottoman ascendancy in Hungary in 1547 Suleiman I died of natural causes in his tent during the Siege of Szigetvar in 1566 Suleiman the Magnificent and his wife Hurrem Sultan two portraits by 16th century Venetian painter Titian By the end of Suleiman s reign the Empire spanned approximately 877 888 sq mi 2 273 720 km2 extending over three continents 65 545 In addition the Empire became a dominant naval force controlling much of the Mediterranean Sea 66 61 By this time the Ottoman Empire was a major part of the European political sphere The Ottomans became involved in multi continental religious wars when Spain and Portugal were united under the Iberian Union The Ottomans were holders of the Caliph title meaning they were the leaders of all Muslims worldwide The Iberians were leaders of the Christian crusaders and so the two were locked in a worldwide conflict There were zones of operations in the Mediterranean Sea 67 and Indian Ocean 68 where Iberians circumnavigated Africa to reach India and on their way wage war upon the Ottomans and their local Muslim allies Likewise the Iberians passed through newly Christianized Latin America and had sent expeditions that traversed the Pacific in order to Christianize the formerly Muslim Philippines and use it as a base to further attack the Muslims in the Far East 69 In this case the Ottomans sent armies to aid its easternmost vassal and territory the Sultanate of Aceh in Southeast Asia 70 84 71 During the 1600s the worldwide conflict between the Ottoman Caliphate and Iberian Union was a stalemate since both powers were at similar population technology and economic levels Nevertheless the success of the Ottoman political and military establishment was compared to the Roman Empire despite the difference in the size of their respective territories by the likes of the contemporary Italian scholar Francesco Sansovino and the French political philosopher Jean Bodin 72 Stagnation and reform 1566 1827 Revolts reversals and revivals 1566 1683 Main article Transformation of the Ottoman Empire Further information Ottoman Decline Thesis In the second half of the sixteenth century the Ottoman Empire came under increasing strain from inflation and the rapidly rising costs of warfare that were impacting both Europe and the Middle East These pressures led to a series of crises around the year 1600 placing great strain upon the Ottoman system of government 73 413 414 The empire underwent a series of transformations of its political and military institutions in response to these challenges enabling it to successfully adapt to the new conditions of the seventeenth century and remain powerful both militarily and economically 28 74 10 Historians of the mid twentieth century once characterised this period as one of stagnation and decline but this view is now rejected by the majority of academics 28 The discovery of new maritime trade routes by Western European states allowed them to avoid the Ottoman trade monopoly The Portuguese discovery of the Cape of Good Hope in 1488 initiated a series of Ottoman Portuguese naval wars in the Indian Ocean throughout the 16th century Despite the growing European presence in the Indian Ocean Ottoman trade with the east continued to flourish Cairo in particular benefitted from the rise of Yemeni coffee as a popular consumer commodity As coffeehouses appeared in cities and towns across the empire Cairo developed into a major center for its trade contributing to its continued prosperity throughout the seventeenth and much of the eighteenth century 75 507 508 Under Ivan IV 1533 1584 the Tsardom of Russia expanded into the Volga and Caspian regions at the expense of the Tatar khanates In 1571 the Crimean khan Devlet I Giray commanded by the Ottomans burned Moscow 76 The next year the invasion was repeated but repelled at the Battle of Molodi The Ottoman Empire continued to invade Eastern Europe in a series of slave raids 77 and remained a significant power in Eastern Europe until the end of the 17th century 78 The Ottomans decided to conquer Venetian Cyprus and on 22 July 1570 Nicosia was besieged 50 000 Christians died and 180 000 were enslaved 79 67 On 15 September 1570 the Ottoman cavalry appeared before the last Venetian stronghold in Cyprus Famagusta The Venetian defenders would hold out for 11 months against a force that would come to number 200 000 men with 145 cannons 163 000 cannonballs struck the walls of Famagusta before it fell to the Ottomans in August 1571 The Siege of Famagusta claimed 50 000 Ottoman casualties 80 328 Meanwhile the Holy league consisting of mostly Spanish and Venetian fleets won a victory over the Ottoman fleet at the Battle of Lepanto 1571 off southwestern Greece Catholic forces killed over 30 000 Turks and destroyed 200 of their ships 81 24 It was a startling if mostly symbolic 82 blow to the image of Ottoman invincibility an image which the victory of the Knights of Malta over the Ottoman invaders in the 1565 Siege of Malta had recently set about eroding 83 The battle was far more damaging to the Ottoman navy in sapping experienced manpower than the loss of ships which were rapidly replaced 84 53 The Ottoman navy recovered quickly persuading Venice to sign a peace treaty in 1573 allowing the Ottomans to expand and consolidate their position in North Africa 85 By contrast the Habsburg frontier had settled somewhat a stalemate caused by a stiffening of the Habsburg defenses 86 The Long Turkish War against Habsburg Austria 1593 1606 created the need for greater numbers of Ottoman infantry equipped with firearms resulting in a relaxation of recruitment policy This contributed to problems of indiscipline and outright rebelliousness within the corps which were never fully solved 87 obsolete source Irregular sharpshooters Sekban were also recruited and on demobilisation turned to brigandage in the Jelali revolts 1590 1610 which engendered widespread anarchy in Anatolia in the late 16th and early 17th centuries 88 24 With the Empire s population reaching 30 million people by 1600 the shortage of land placed further pressure on the government 89 obsolete source In spite of these problems the Ottoman state remained strong and its army did not collapse or suffer crushing defeats The only exceptions were campaigns against the Safavid dynasty of Persia where many of the Ottoman eastern provinces were lost some permanently This 1603 1618 war eventually resulted in the Treaty of Nasuh Pasha which ceded the entire Caucasus except westernmost Georgia back into Iranian Safavid possession 90 The treaty ending the Cretan War 1645 1669 cost Venice much of Dalmatia its Aegean island possessions and Crete Losses from the war totalled 30 985 Venetian soldiers and 118 754 Turkish soldiers 91 33 During his brief majority reign Murad IV 1623 1640 reasserted central authority and recaptured Iraq 1639 from the Safavids 92 The resulting Treaty of Zuhab of that same year decisively divided the Caucasus and adjacent regions between the two neighbouring empires as it had already been defined in the 1555 Peace of Amasya 93 94 The Sultanate of Women 1533 1656 was a period in which the mothers of young sultans exercised power on behalf of their sons The most prominent women of this period were Kosem Sultan and her daughter in law Turhan Hatice whose political rivalry culminated in Kosem s murder in 1651 95 During the Koprulu era 1656 1703 effective control of the Empire was exercised by a sequence of Grand Viziers from the Koprulu family The Koprulu Vizierate saw renewed military success with authority restored in Transylvania the conquest of Crete completed in 1669 and expansion into Polish southern Ukraine with the strongholds of Khotyn and Kamianets Podilskyi and the territory of Podolia ceding to Ottoman control in 1676 96 The Second Siege of Vienna in 1683 by Frans Geffels 1624 1694 This period of renewed assertiveness came to a calamitous end in 1683 when Grand Vizier Kara Mustafa Pasha led a huge army to attempt a second Ottoman siege of Vienna in the Great Turkish War of 1683 1699 The final assault being fatally delayed the Ottoman forces were swept away by allied Habsburg German and Polish forces spearheaded by the Polish king John III Sobieski at the Battle of Vienna The alliance of the Holy League pressed home the advantage of the defeat at Vienna culminating in the Treaty of Karlowitz 26 January 1699 which ended the Great Turkish War 97 The Ottomans surrendered control of significant territories many permanently 98 Mustafa II 1695 1703 led the counterattack of 1695 1696 against the Habsburgs in Hungary but was undone at the disastrous defeat at Zenta in modern Serbia 11 September 1697 99 Military defeats Aside from the loss of the Banat and the temporary loss of Belgrade 1717 1739 the Ottoman border on the Danube and Sava remained stable during the eighteenth century Russian expansion however presented a large and growing threat 100 Accordingly King Charles XII of Sweden was welcomed as an ally in the Ottoman Empire following his defeat by the Russians at the Battle of Poltava of 1709 in central Ukraine part of the Great Northern War of 1700 1721 100 Charles XII persuaded the Ottoman Sultan Ahmed III to declare war on Russia which resulted in an Ottoman victory in the Pruth River Campaign of 1710 1711 in Moldavia 101 Austrian troops led by Prince Eugene of Savoy captured Belgrade in 1717 Austrian control in Serbia lasted until the Turkish victory in the Austro Russian Turkish War 1735 1739 With the 1739 Treaty of Belgrade the Ottoman Empire regained northern Bosnia Habsburg Serbia including Belgrade Oltenia and the southern parts of the Banat of Temeswar After the Austro Turkish War the Treaty of Passarowitz confirmed the loss of the Banat Serbia and Little Walachia Oltenia to Austria The Treaty also revealed that the Ottoman Empire was on the defensive and unlikely to present any further aggression in Europe 102 The Austro Russian Turkish War 1735 1739 which was ended by the Treaty of Belgrade in 1739 resulted in the Ottoman recovery of northern Bosnia Habsburg Serbia including Belgrade Oltenia and the southern parts of the Banat of Temeswar but the Empire lost the port of Azov north of the Crimean Peninsula to the Russians After this treaty the Ottoman Empire was able to enjoy a generation of peace as Austria and Russia were forced to deal with the rise of Prussia 103 Educational and technological reforms came about including the establishment of higher education institutions such as the Istanbul Technical University 104 In 1734 an artillery school was established to impart Western style artillery methods but the Islamic clergy successfully objected under the grounds of theodicy 105 In 1754 the artillery school was reopened on a semi secret basis 105 In 1726 Ibrahim Muteferrika convinced the Grand Vizier Nevsehirli Damat Ibrahim Pasha the Grand Mufti and the clergy on the efficiency of the printing press and Muteferrika was later granted by Sultan Ahmed III permission to publish non religious books despite opposition from some calligraphers and religious leaders 106 Muteferrika s press published its first book in 1729 and by 1743 issued 17 works in 23 volumes each having between 500 and 1 000 copies 106 107 Ottoman troops attempting to halt the advancing Russians during the Siege of Ochakov in 1788 In North Africa Spain conquered Oran from the autonomous Deylik of Algiers The Bey of Oran received an army from Algiers but it failed to recapture Oran the siege caused the deaths of 1 500 Spaniards and even more Algerians The Spanish also massacred many Muslim soldiers 108 In 1792 Spain abandoned Oran selling it to the Deylik of Algiers In 1768 Russian backed Ukrainian Haidamakas pursuing Polish confederates entered Balta an Ottoman controlled town on the border of Bessarabia in Ukraine massacred its citizens and burned the town to the ground This action provoked the Ottoman Empire into the Russo Turkish War of 1768 1774 The Treaty of Kucuk Kaynarca of 1774 ended the war and provided freedom of worship for the Christian citizens of the Ottoman controlled provinces of Wallachia and Moldavia 109 By the late 18th century after a number of defeats in the wars with Russia some people in the Ottoman Empire began to conclude that the reforms of Peter the Great had given the Russians an edge and the Ottomans would have to keep up with Western technology in order to avoid further defeats 105 Selim III 1789 1807 made the first major attempts to modernise the army but his reforms were hampered by the religious leadership and the Janissary corps Jealous of their privileges and firmly opposed to change the Janissary revolted Selim s efforts cost him his throne and his life but were resolved in spectacular and bloody fashion by his successor the dynamic Mahmud II who eliminated the Janissary corps in 1826 Selim III receiving dignitaries during an audience at the Gate of Felicity Topkapi Palace Painting by Konstantin Kapidagli The Serbian revolution 1804 1815 marked the beginning of an era of national awakening in the Balkans during the Eastern Question In 1811 the fundamentalist Wahhabis of Arabia led by the al Saud family revolted against the Ottomans Unable to defeat the Wahhabi rebels the Sublime Porte had Muhammad Ali Pasha of Kavala the vali governor of the Eyalet of Egypt tasked with retaking Arabia which ended with the destruction of the Emirate of Diriyah in 1818 The suzerainty of Serbia as a hereditary monarchy under its own dynasty was acknowledged de jure in 1830 110 111 In 1821 the Greeks declared war on the Sultan A rebellion that originated in Moldavia as a diversion was followed by the main revolution in the Peloponnese which along with the northern part of the Gulf of Corinth became the first parts of the Ottoman Empire to achieve independence in 1829 In 1830 the French invaded the Deylik of Algiers The campaign that took 21 days resulted in over 5 000 Algerian military casualties 112 and about 2 600 French ones 112 113 Before the French invasion the total population of Algeria was most likely between 3 000 000 and 5 000 000 114 By 1873 the population of Algeria excluding several hundred thousand newly arrived French settlers decreased to a drastic 2 172 000 115 In 1831 Muhammad Ali Pasha revolted against Sultan Mahmud II due to the latter s refusal to grant him the governorships of Greater Syria and Crete which the Sultan had promised him in exchange for sending military assistance to put down the Greek revolt 1821 1829 that ultimately ended with the formal independence of Greece in 1830 It was a costly enterprise for Muhammad Ali Pasha who had lost his fleet at the Battle of Navarino in 1827 Thus began the first Egyptian Ottoman War 1831 1833 during which the French trained army of Muhammad Ali Pasha under the command of his son Ibrahim Pasha defeated the Ottoman Army as it marched into Anatolia reaching the city of Kutahya within 320 km 200 mi of the capital Constantinople 116 95 In desperation Sultan Mahmud II appealed to the empire s traditional arch rival Russia for help asking Emperor Nicholas I to send an expeditionary force to assist him 116 96 In return for signing the Treaty of Hunkar Iskelesi the Russians sent the expeditionary force which deterred Ibrahim Pasha from marching any further towards Constantinople 116 96 Under the terms of the Convention of Kutahya signed on 5 May 1833 Muhammad Ali Pasha agreed to abandon his campaign against the Sultan in exchange for which he was made the vali governor of the vilayets provinces of Crete Aleppo Tripoli Damascus and Sidon the latter four comprising modern Syria and Lebanon and given the right to collect taxes in Adana 116 96 Had it not been for the Russian intervention Sultan Mahmud II could have faced the risk of being overthrown and Muhammad Ali Pasha could have even become the new Sultan These events marked the beginning of a recurring pattern where the Sublime Porte needed the help of foreign powers to protect itself 116 95 96 The siege of the Acropolis in 1826 1827 during the Greek War of Independence In 1839 the Sublime Porte attempted to take back what it lost to the de facto autonomous but de jure still Ottoman Eyalet of Egypt but its forces were initially defeated which led to the Oriental Crisis of 1840 Muhammad Ali Pasha had close relations with France and the prospect of him becoming the Sultan of Egypt was widely viewed as putting the entire Levant into the French sphere of influence 116 96 As the Sublime Porte had proved itself incapable of defeating Muhammad Ali Pasha the British Empire and Austrian Empire provided military assistance and the second Egyptian Ottoman War 1839 1841 ended with Ottoman victory and the restoration of Ottoman suzerainty over Egypt Eyalet and the Levant 116 96 By the mid 19th century the Ottoman Empire was called the sick man of Europe Three suzerain states the Principality of Serbia Wallachia and Moldavia moved towards de jure independence during the 1860s and 1870s Decline and modernisation 1828 1908 Main article Decline of the Ottoman Empire Opening ceremony of the First Ottoman Parliament at the Dolmabahce Palace in 1876 The First Constitutional Era lasted only two years until 1878 The Ottoman Constitution and Parliament were restored 30 years later with the Young Turk Revolution in 1908 During the Tanzimat period 1839 1876 the government s series of constitutional reforms led to a fairly modern conscripted army banking system reforms the decriminalization of homosexuality the replacement of religious law with secular law 117 and guilds with modern factories The Ottoman Ministry of Post was established in Istanbul in 1840 American inventor Samuel Morse received an Ottoman patent for the telegraph in 1847 which was issued by Sultan Abdulmecid who personally tested the new invention 118 The reformist period peaked with the Constitution called the Kanun u Esasi The empire s First Constitutional era was short lived The parliament survived for only two years before the sultan suspended it The Christian population of the empire owing to their higher educational levels started to pull ahead of the Muslim majority leading to much resentment on the part of the latter 119 In 1861 there were 571 primary and 94 secondary schools for Ottoman Christians with 140 000 pupils in total a figure that vastly exceeded the number of Muslim children in school at the same time who were further hindered by the amount of time spent learning Arabic and Islamic theology 119 Author Norman Stone further suggests that the Arabic alphabet in which Turkish was written until 1928 was very ill suited to reflect the sounds of the Turkish language which is a Turkic as opposed to Semitic language which imposed a further difficulty on Turkish children 119 In turn the higher educational levels of the Christians allowed them to play a larger role in the economy with the rise in prominence of groups such as the Sursock family indicative of this shift in influence 120 119 In 1911 of the 654 wholesale companies in Istanbul 528 were owned by ethnic Greeks 119 In many cases Christians and also Jews were able to gain protection from European consuls and citizenship meaning they were protected from Ottoman law and not subject to the same economic regulations as their Muslim counterparts 121 Ottoman troops storming Fort Shefketil during the Crimean War of 1853 1856 The Crimean War 1853 1856 was part of a long running contest between the major European powers for influence over territories of the declining Ottoman Empire The financial burden of the war led the Ottoman state to issue foreign loans amounting to 5 million pounds sterling on 4 August 1854 122 32 123 71 The war caused an exodus of the Crimean Tatars about 200 000 of whom moved to the Ottoman Empire in continuing waves of emigration 124 79 108 Toward the end of the Caucasian Wars 90 of the Circassians were ethnically cleansed 125 and exiled from their homelands in the Caucasus and fled to the Ottoman Empire 126 resulting in the settlement of 500 000 to 700 000 Circassians in Turkey 127 page needed 128 129 Some Circassian organisations give much higher numbers totalling 1 1 5 million deported or killed Crimean Tatar refugees in the late 19th century played an especially notable role in seeking to modernise Ottoman education and in first promoting both Pan Turkism and a sense of Turkish nationalism 130 In this period the Ottoman Empire spent only small amounts of public funds on education for example in 1860 1861 only 0 2 percent of the total budget was invested in education 131 50 As the Ottoman state attempted to modernize its infrastructure and army in response to threats from the outside it also opened itself up to a different kind of threat that of creditors Indeed as the historian Eugene Rogan has written the single greatest threat to the independence of the Middle East in the nineteenth century was not the armies of Europe but its banks 132 The Ottoman state which had begun taking on debt with the Crimean War was forced to declare bankruptcy in 1875 133 By 1881 the Ottoman Empire agreed to have its debt controlled by an institution known as the Ottoman Public Debt Administration a council of European men with presidency alternating between France and Britain The body controlled swaths of the Ottoman economy and used its position to ensure that European capital continued to penetrate the empire often to the detriment of local Ottoman interests 133 The Ottoman Empire in 1875 under Sultan Abdul Aziz The Ottoman bashi bazouks brutally suppressed the Bulgarian uprising of 1876 massacring up to 100 000 people in the process 134 139 The Russo Turkish War 1877 1878 ended with a decisive victory for Russia As a result Ottoman holdings in Europe declined sharply Bulgaria was established as an independent principality inside the Ottoman Empire Romania achieved full independence and Serbia and Montenegro finally gained complete independence but with smaller territories In 1878 Austria Hungary unilaterally occupied the Ottoman provinces of Bosnia Herzegovina and Novi Pazar British Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli advocated for restoring the Ottoman territories on the Balkan Peninsula during the Congress of Berlin and in return Britain assumed the administration of Cyprus in 1878 135 228 254 Britain later sent troops to Egypt in 1882 to put down the Urabi Revolt Sultan Abdul Hamid II was too paranoid to mobilize his own army fearing this would result in a coup d etat effectively gaining control in both territories Abdul Hamid II popularly known as Abdul Hamid the Damned on account of his cruelty and paranoia was so fearful of the threat of a coup that he did not allow his army to conduct war games lest this serves as the cover for a coup but he did see the need for military mobilization In 1883 a German military mission under General Baron Colmar von der Goltz arrived to train the Ottoman Army leading to the so called Goltz generation of German trained officers who were to play a notable role in the politics of the last years of the empire 136 24 From 1894 to 1896 between 100 000 and 300 000 Armenians living throughout the empire were killed in what became known as the Hamidian massacres 137 42 In 1897 the population was 19 million of whom 14 million 74 were Muslim An additional 20 million lived in provinces that remained under the sultan s nominal suzerainty but were entirely outside his actual power One by one the Porte lost nominal authority They included Egypt Tunisia Bulgaria Cyprus Bosnia Herzegovina and Lebanon 138 As the Ottoman Empire gradually shrank in size some 7 9 million Muslims from its former territories in the Caucasus Crimea Balkans and the Mediterranean islands migrated to Anatolia and Eastern Thrace 139 After the Empire lost the First Balkan War 1912 1913 it lost all its Balkan territories except East Thrace European Turkey This resulted in around 400 000 Muslims fleeing with the retreating Ottoman armies with many dying from cholera brought by the soldiers and with some 400 000 non Muslims fleeing territory still under Ottoman rule 140 Justin McCarthy estimates that during the period 1821 to 1922 5 5 million Muslims died in southeastern Europe with the expulsion of 5 million 141 142 143 Defeat and dissolution 1908 1922 Main articles Dissolution of the Ottoman Empire and History of the Ottoman Empire during World War I Young Turk movement Declaration of the Young Turk Revolution by the leaders of the Ottoman millets in 1908 The defeat and dissolution of the Ottoman Empire 1908 1922 began with the Second Constitutional Era a moment of hope and promise established with the Young Turk Revolution It restored the Constitution of the Ottoman Empire and brought in multi party politics with a two stage electoral system electoral law under the Ottoman parliament The constitution offered hope by freeing the empire s citizens to modernise the state s institutions rejuvenate its strength and enable it to hold its own against outside powers Its guarantee of liberties promised to dissolve inter communal tensions and transform the empire into a more harmonious place 144 full citation needed Instead this period became the story of the twilight struggle of the Empire Members of Young Turks movement who had once gone underground now established their parties 145 full citation needed Among them Committee of Union and Progress and Freedom and Accord Party were major parties On the other end of the spectrum were ethnic parties which included Poale Zion Al Fatat and Armenian national movement organised under Armenian Revolutionary Federation Profiting from the civil strife Austria Hungary officially annexed Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1908 The last of the Ottoman censuses was performed in 1914 Despite military reforms which reconstituted the Ottoman Modern Army the Empire lost its North African territories and the Dodecanese in the Italo Turkish War 1911 and almost all of its European territories in the Balkan Wars 1912 1913 The Empire faced continuous unrest in the years leading up to World War I including the 31 March Incident and two further coups in 1912 and 1913 World War I Main articles Ottoman entry into World War I and Ottoman Empire during World War I Admiral Wilhelm Souchon who commanded the Black Sea raid on 29 October 1914 and his officers in Ottoman naval uniforms The Ottoman Empire entered World War I on the side of the Central Powers and was ultimately defeated The Ottoman participation in the war began with the combined German Ottoman surprise attack on the Black Sea coast of the Russian Empire on 29 October 1914 Following the attack the Russian Empire 2 November 1914 146 and its allies France 5 November 1914 146 and the British Empire 5 November 1914 146 declared war on the Ottoman Empire also on 5 November 1914 the British government changed the status of the Khedivate of Egypt and Cyprus which were de jure Ottoman territories prior to the war as British protectorates The Ottomans successfully defended the Dardanelles strait during the Gallipoli campaign 1915 1916 and achieved initial victories against British forces in the first two years of the Mesopotamian campaign such as the Siege of Kut 1915 1916 but the Arab Revolt 1916 1918 turned the tide against the Ottomans in the Middle East In the Caucasus campaign however the Russian forces had the upper hand from the beginning especially after the Battle of Sarikamish 1914 1915 Russian forces advanced into northeastern Anatolia and controlled the major cities there until retreating from World War I with the Treaty of Brest Litovsk following the Russian Revolution in 1917 Genocides Main articles Late Ottoman genocides Armenian genocide Greek genocide and Seyfo The Armenian genocide was the result of the Ottoman government s deportation and ethnic cleansing policies regarding its Armenian citizens after the Battle of Sarikamish 1914 1915 and the collapse of the Caucasus Front against the Imperial Russian Army and Armenian volunteer units during World War I An estimated 600 000 to more than 1 million 147 or up to 1 5 million 148 149 150 people were killed In 1915 the Ottoman government and Kurdish tribes in the region started the extermination of its ethnic Armenian population resulting in the death of up to 1 5 million Armenians in the Armenian genocide 151 152 The genocide was carried out during and after World War I and implemented in two phases the wholesale killing of the able bodied male population through massacre and subjection of army conscripts to forced labour followed by the deportation of women children the elderly and infirm on death marches leading to the Syrian desert Driven forward by military escorts the deportees were deprived of food and water and subjected to periodic robbery rape and systematic massacre 153 154 Large scale massacres were also committed against the Empire s Greek and Assyrian minorities as part of the same campaign of ethnic cleansing 155 Arab Revolt Main articles Middle Eastern theatre of World War I and Arab Revolt The Arab Revolt began in 1916 with British support It turned the tide against the Ottomans on the Middle Eastern front where they seemed to have the upper hand during the first two years of the war On the basis of the McMahon Hussein Correspondence an agreement between the British government and Hussein bin Ali Sharif of Mecca the revolt was officially initiated at Mecca on 10 June 1916 o The Arab nationalist goal was to create a single unified and independent Arab state stretching from Aleppo in Syria to Aden in Yemen which the British had promised to recognise The Sharifian Army led by Hussein and the Hashemites with military backing from the British Egyptian Expeditionary Force successfully fought and expelled the Ottoman military presence from much of the Hejaz and Transjordan The rebellion eventually took Damascus and set up a short lived monarchy led by Faisal a son of Hussein Following the Sykes Picot Agreement the Middle East was later partitioned by the British and French into mandate territories There was no unified Arab state much to the anger of Arab nationalists Treaty of Sevres and Turkish War of Independence Mehmed VI the last Sultan of the Ottoman Empire leaving the country after the abolition of the Ottoman sultanate 17 November 1922 Defeated in World War I the Ottoman Empire signed the Armistice of Mudros on 30 October 1918 Constantinople was occupied by combined British French Italian and Greek forces In May 1919 Greece also took control of the area around Smyrna now Izmir The partition of the Ottoman Empire was finalized under the terms of the 1920 Treaty of Sevres This treaty as designed in the Conference of London allowed the Sultan to retain his position and title The status of Anatolia was problematic given the occupied forces There arose a nationalist opposition in the Turkish national movement It won the Turkish War of Independence 1919 1923 under the leadership of Mustafa Kemal later given the surname Ataturk The sultanate was abolished on 1 November 1922 and the last sultan Mehmed VI reigned 1918 1922 left the country on 17 November 1922 The Republic of Turkey was established in its place on 29 October 1923 in the new capital city of Ankara The caliphate was abolished on 3 March 1924 157 Historiographical debate on the Ottoman stateSee also Ghaza thesis This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Ottoman Empire news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Several historians such as British historian Edward Gibbon and the Greek historian Dimitri Kitsikis have argued that after the fall of Constantinople the Ottoman state took over the machinery of the Byzantine Roman state and that in essence the Ottoman Empire was a continuation of the Eastern Roman Empire under a Turkish Muslim guise 158 The American historian Speros Vryonis wrote that the Ottoman state was centered on a Byzantine Balkan base with a veneer of the Turkish language and the Islamic religion 159 The American historian Heath Lowry and Kitsikis posit that the early Ottoman state was a predatory confederacy open to both Byzantine Christians and Turkish Muslims whose primary goal was attaining booty and slaves rather than spreading Islam and that only later Islam became the primary characteristic of the empire 160 161 162 Other historians have followed the lead of the Austrian historian Paul Wittek who emphasized the Islamic character of the early Ottoman state seeing the Ottoman state as a Jihad state dedicated to expanding the Muslim world 159 Many historians led in 1937 by the Turkish historian Mehmet Fuat Koprulu championed the Ghaza thesis that saw the early Ottoman state as a continuation of the way of life of the nomadic Turkic tribes who had come from East Asia to Anatolia via Central Asia and the Middle East on a much larger scale They argued that the most important cultural influences on the Ottoman state came from Persia 163 The British historian Norman Stone suggested many continuities between the Eastern Roman and Ottoman empires such as the zeugarion tax of Byzantium becoming the Ottoman Resm i cift tax the pronoia land holding system that linked the amount of land one owned with one s ability to raise cavalry becoming the Ottoman timar system and the Ottoman measurement for land the donum was the same as the Byzantine stremma Stone also pointed out that despite the fact that Sunni Islam was the state religion the Eastern Orthodox Church was supported and controlled by the Ottoman state and in return to accepting that control became the largest land holder in the Ottoman Empire Despite the similarities Stone argued that a crucial difference was that the land grants under the timar system were not hereditary at first Even after land grants under the timar system became inheritable land ownership in the Ottoman Empire remained highly insecure and the sultan could and did revoke land grants whenever he wished Stone argued this insecurity in land tenure strongly discouraged Timariots from seeking long term development of their land and instead led the timariots to adopt a strategy of short term exploitation which ultimately had deleterious effects on the Ottoman economy 164 Most of the Ottoman Sultans adhered to Sufism and followed Sufi orders and believed Sufism was the correct way to reach God 165 Because the matters of jurisprudence and shariah were state matters the state sponsored Sufi religious dominance came into play Non Sufi Muslims and Arabs were neglected and not given any position in the Hejaz 166 GovernmentMain article State organisation of the Ottoman Empire Topkapi Palace and Dolmabahce Palace were the primary residences of the Ottoman sultans in Istanbul between 1465 and 1856 167 and 1856 to 1922 168 respectively Before the reforms of the 19th and 20th centuries the state organisation of the Ottoman Empire was a system with two main dimensions the military administration and the civil administration The Sultan was in the highest position in the system The civil system was based on local administrative units based on the region s characteristics The state had control over the clergy Certain pre Islamic Turkish traditions that had survived the adoption of administrative and legal practices from Islamic Iran remained important in Ottoman administrative circles 169 According to Ottoman understanding the state s primary responsibility was to defend and extend the land of the Muslims and to ensure security and harmony within its borders in the overarching context of orthodox Islamic practice and dynastic sovereignty 170 Ambassadors at the Topkapi Palace The Ottoman Empire or as a dynastic institution the House of Osman was unprecedented and unequaled in the Islamic world for its size and duration 171 In Europe only the House of Habsburg had a similarly unbroken line of sovereigns kings emperors from the same family who ruled for so long and during the same period between the late 13th and early 20th centuries The Ottoman dynasty was Turkish in origin On eleven occasions the sultan was deposed replaced by another sultan of the Ottoman dynasty who were either the former sultan s brother son or nephew because he was perceived by his enemies as a threat to the state There were only two attempts in Ottoman history to unseat the ruling Ottoman dynasty both failures which suggests a political system that for an extended period was able to manage its revolutions without unnecessary instability 170 As such the last Ottoman sultan Mehmed VI r 1918 1922 was a direct patrilineal male line descendant of the first Ottoman sultan Osman I d 1323 4 which was unparalleled in both Europe e g the male line of the House of Habsburg became extinct in 1740 and in the Islamic world The primary purpose of the Imperial Harem was to ensure the birth of male heirs to the Ottoman throne and secure the continuation of the direct patrilineal male line power of the Ottoman sultans in the future generations The highest position in Islam caliph was claimed by the sultans starting with Murad I 16 which was established as the Ottoman Caliphate The Ottoman sultan padisah or lord of kings served as the Empire s sole regent and was considered to be the embodiment of its government though he did not always exercise complete control The Imperial Harem was one of the most important powers of the Ottoman court It was ruled by the valide sultan On occasion the valide sultan would become involved in state politics For a time the women of the Harem effectively controlled the state in what was termed the Sultanate of Women New sultans were always chosen from the sons of the previous sultan dubious discuss The strong educational system of the palace school was geared towards eliminating the unfit potential heirs and establishing support among the ruling elite for a successor The palace schools which would also educate the future administrators of the state were not a single track First the Madrasa Medrese was designated for the Muslims and educated scholars and state officials according to Islamic tradition The financial burden of the Medrese was supported by vakifs allowing children of poor families to move to higher social levels and income 172 The second track was a free boarding school for the Christians the Enderun 173 which recruited 3 000 students annually from Christian boys between eight and twenty years old from one in forty families among the communities settled in Rumelia or the Balkans a process known as Devshirme Devsirme 174 Though the sultan was the supreme monarch the sultan s political and executive authority was delegated The politics of the state had a number of advisors and ministers gathered around a council known as Divan The Divan in the years when the Ottoman state was still a Beylik was composed of the elders of the tribe Its composition was later modified to include military officers and local elites such as religious and political advisors Later still beginning in 1320 a Grand Vizier was appointed to assume certain of the sultan s responsibilities The Grand Vizier had considerable independence from the sultan with almost unlimited powers of appointment dismissal and supervision Beginning with the late 16th century sultans withdrew from politics and the Grand Vizier became the de facto head of state 175 Yusuf Ziya Pasha Ottoman ambassador to the United States in Washington DC 1913 Throughout Ottoman history there were many instances in which local governors acted independently and even in opposition to the ruler After the Young Turk Revolution of 1908 the Ottoman state became a constitutional monarchy The sultan no longer had executive powers A parliament was formed with representatives chosen from the provinces The representatives formed the Imperial Government of the Ottoman Empire This eclectic administration was apparent even in the diplomatic correspondence of the Empire which was initially undertaken in the Greek language to the west 176 The Tughra were calligraphic monograms or signatures of the Ottoman Sultans of which there were 35 Carved on the Sultan s seal they bore the names of the Sultan and his father The statement and prayer ever victorious was also present in most The earliest belonged to Orhan Gazi The ornately stylized Tughra spawned a branch of Ottoman Turkish calligraphy Law Main article Ottoman law The Ottoman legal system accepted the religious law over its subjects At the same time the Qanun or Kanun dynastic law co existed with religious law or Sharia 177 178 The Ottoman Empire was always organized around a system of local jurisprudence Legal administration in the Ottoman Empire was part of a larger scheme of balancing central and local authority 179 Ottoman power revolved crucially around the administration of the rights to land which gave a space for the local authority to develop the needs of the local millet 179 The jurisdictional complexity of the Ottoman Empire was aimed to permit the integration of culturally and religiously different groups 179 The Ottoman system had three court systems one for Muslims one for non Muslims involving appointed Jews and Christians ruling over their respective religious communities and the trade court The entire system was regulated from above by means of the administrative Qanun i e laws a system based upon the Turkic Yassa and Tore which were developed in the pre Islamic era 180 181 An Ottoman trial 1877 These court categories were not however wholly exclusive for instance the Islamic courts which were the Empire s primary courts could also be used to settle a trade conflict or disputes between litigants of differing religions and Jews and Christians often went to them to obtain a more forceful ruling on an issue The Ottoman state tended not to interfere with non Muslim religious law systems despite legally having a voice to do so through local governors The Islamic Sharia law system had been developed from a combination of the Qur an the Hadith or words of the prophet Muhammad ijma or consensus of the members of the Muslim community qiyas a system of analogical reasoning from earlier precedents and local customs Both systems were taught at the Empire s law schools which were in Istanbul and Bursa An unhappy wife complaining to the Qadi about her husband s impotence as depicted in an Ottoman miniature The Ottoman Islamic legal system was set up differently from traditional European courts Presiding over Islamic courts would be a Qadi or judge Since the closing of the ijtihad or Gate of Interpretation Qadis throughout the Ottoman Empire focused less on legal precedent and more with local customs and traditions in the areas that they administered 179 However the Ottoman court system lacked an appellate structure leading to jurisdictional case strategies where plaintiffs could take their disputes from one court system to another until they achieved a ruling that was in their favour In the late 19th century the Ottoman legal system saw substantial reform This process of legal modernisation began with the Edict of Gulhane of 1839 182 These reforms included the fair and public trial s of all accused regardless of religion the creation of a system of separate competences religious and civil and the validation of testimony on non Muslims 183 Specific land codes 1858 civil codes 1869 1876 and a code of civil procedure also were enacted 183 These reforms were based heavily on French models as indicated by the adoption of a three tiered court system Referred to as Nizamiye this system was extended to the local magistrate level with the final promulgation of the Mecelle a civil code that regulated marriage divorce alimony will and other matters of personal status 183 In an attempt to clarify the division of judicial competences an administrative council laid down that religious matters were to be handled by religious courts and statute matters were to be handled by the Nizamiye courts 183 Military Main article Military of the Ottoman Empire Ottoman sipahis in battle holding the crescent banner by Jozef Brandt The first military unit of the Ottoman State was an army that was organized by Osman I from the tribesmen inhabiting the hills of western Anatolia in the late 13th century The military system became an intricate organization with the advance of the Empire The Ottoman military was a complex system of recruiting and fief holding The main corps of the Ottoman Army included Janissary Sipahi Akinci and Mehteran The Ottoman army was once among the most advanced fighting forces in the world being one of the first to use muskets and cannons The Ottoman Turks began using falconets which were short but wide cannons during the Siege of Constantinople The Ottoman cavalry depended on high speed and mobility rather than heavy armor using bows and short swords on fast Turkoman and Arabian horses progenitors of the Thoroughbred racing horse 184 185 and often applied tactics similar to those of the Mongol Empire such as pretending to retreat while surrounding the enemy forces inside a crescent shaped formation and then making the real attack The Ottoman army continued to be an effective fighting force throughout the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries 186 187 falling behind the empire s European rivals only during a long period of peace from 1740 to 1768 30 Modernised Ertugrul Cavalry Regiment crossing the Galata Bridge in 1901 The modernization of the Ottoman Empire in the 19th century started with the military In 1826 Sultan Mahmud II abolished the Janissary corps and established the modern Ottoman army He named them as the Nizam i Cedid New Order The Ottoman army was also the first institution to hire foreign experts and send its officers for training in western European countries Consequently the Young Turks movement began when these relatively young and newly trained men returned with their education The Ottoman fleet in the Bosphorous near Ortakoy The Ottoman Navy vastly contributed to the expansion of the Empire s territories on the European continent It initiated the conquest of North Africa with the addition of Algeria and Egypt to the Ottoman Empire in 1517 Starting with the loss of Greece in 1821 and Algeria in 1830 Ottoman naval power and control over the Empire s distant overseas territories began to decline Sultan Abdulaziz reigned 1861 1876 attempted to reestablish a strong Ottoman navy building the largest fleet after those of Britain and France The shipyard at Barrow England built its first submarine in 1886 for the Ottoman Empire 188 However the collapsing Ottoman economy could not sustain the fleet s strength for long Sultan Abdulhamid II distrusted the admirals who sided with the reformist Midhat Pasha and claimed that the large and expensive fleet was of no use against the Russians during the Russo Turkish War He locked most of the fleet inside the Golden Horn where the ships decayed for the next 30 years Following the Young Turk Revolution in 1908 the Committee of Union and Progress sought to develop a strong Ottoman naval force The Ottoman Navy Foundation was established in 1910 to buy new ships through public donations Ottoman pilots in early 1912 The establishment of Ottoman military aviation dates back to between June 1909 and July 1911 189 190 The Ottoman Empire started preparing its first pilots and planes and with the founding of the Aviation School Tayyare Mektebi in Yesilkoy on 3 July 1912 the Empire began to tutor its own flight officers The founding of the Aviation School quickened advancement in the military aviation program increased the number of enlisted persons within it and gave the new pilots an active role in the Ottoman Army and Navy In May 1913 the world s first specialized Reconnaissance Training Program was started by the Aviation School and the first separate reconnaissance division was established citation needed In June 1914 a new military academy the Naval Aviation School Bahriye Tayyare Mektebi was founded With the outbreak of World War I the modernization process stopped abruptly The Ottoman Aviation Squadrons fought on many fronts during World War I from Galicia in the west to the Caucasus in the east and Yemen in the south Administrative divisionsMain article Administrative divisions of the Ottoman Empire Administrative divisions of the Ottoman Empire in 1899 year 1317 Hijri The Ottoman Empire was first subdivided into provinces in the sense of fixed territorial units with governors appointed by the sultan in the late 14th century 191 The Eyalet also Pashalik or Beylerbeylik was the territory of office of a Beylerbey lord of lords or governor and was further subdivided in Sanjaks 192 The Vilayets were introduced with the promulgation of the Vilayet Law Teskil i Vilayet Nizamnamesi 193 in 1864 as part of the Tanzimat reforms 194 Unlike the previous eyalet system the 1864 law established a hierarchy of administrative units the vilayet liva sanjak mutasarrifate kaza and village council to which the 1871 Vilayet Law added the nahiye 195 EconomyMain article Economic history of the Ottoman Empire Ottoman government deliberately pursued a policy for the development of Bursa Edirne and Istanbul successive Ottoman capitals into major commercial and industrial centers considering that merchants and artisans were indispensable in creating a new metropolis 196 To this end Mehmed and his successor Bayezid also encouraged and welcomed migration of the Jews from different parts of Europe who were settled in Istanbul and other port cities like Salonica In many places in Europe Jews were suffering persecution at the hands of their Christian counterparts such as in Spain after the conclusion of Reconquista The tolerance displayed by the Turks was welcomed by the immigrants A European bronze medal from the period of Sultan Mehmed the Conqueror 1481 The Ottoman economic mind was closely related to the basic concepts of state and society in the Middle East in which the ultimate goal of a state was consolidation and extension of the ruler s power and the way to reach it was to get rich resources of revenues by making the productive classes prosperous 197 The ultimate aim was to increase the state revenues without damaging the prosperity of subjects to prevent the emergence of social disorder and to keep the traditional organization of the society intact The Ottoman economy greatly expanded during the early modern period with particularly high growth rates during the first half of the eighteenth century The empire s annual income quadrupled between 1523 and 1748 adjusted for inflation 198 The organization of the treasury and chancery were developed under the Ottoman Empire more than any other Islamic government and until the 17th century they were the leading organization among all their contemporaries 175 This organisation developed a scribal bureaucracy known as men of the pen as a distinct group partly highly trained ulama which developed into a professional body 175 The effectiveness of this professional financial body stands behind the success of many great Ottoman statesmen 199 The Ottoman Bank was founded in 1856 in Constantinople On 26 August 1896 the bank was occupied by members of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation Modern Ottoman studies indicate that the change in relations between the Ottoman Turks and central Europe was caused by the opening of the new sea routes It is possible to see the decline in the significance of the land routes to the East as Western Europe opened the ocean routes that bypassed the Middle East and the Mediterranean as parallel to the decline of the Ottoman Empire itself 200 failed verification The Anglo Ottoman Treaty also known as the Treaty of Balta Liman that opened the Ottoman markets directly to English and French competitors would be seen as one of the staging posts along with this development By developing commercial centers and routes encouraging people to extend the area of cultivated land in the country and international trade through its dominions the state performed basic economic functions in the Empire But in all this the financial and political interests of the state were dominant Within the social and political system they were living in Ottoman administrators could not see the desirability of the dynamics and principles of the capitalist and mercantile economies developing in Western Europe 201 Economic historian Paul Bairoch argues that free trade contributed to deindustrialisation in the Ottoman Empire In contrast to the protectionism of China Japan and Spain the Ottoman Empire had a liberal trade policy open to foreign imports This has origins in capitulations of the Ottoman Empire dating back to the first commercial treaties signed with France in 1536 and taken further with capitulations in 1673 and 1740 which lowered duties to 3 for imports and exports The liberal Ottoman policies were praised by British economists such as John Ramsay McCulloch in his Dictionary of Commerce 1834 but later criticized by British politicians such as Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli who cited the Ottoman Empire as an instance of the injury done by unrestrained competition in the 1846 Corn Laws debate 202 DemographicsA population estimate for the empire of 11 692 480 for the 1520 1535 period was obtained by counting the households in Ottoman tithe registers and multiplying this number by 5 203 For unclear reasons the population in the 18th century was lower than that in the 16th century 204 An estimate of 7 230 660 for the first census held in 1831 is considered a serious undercount as this census was meant only to register possible conscripts 203 Smyrna under Ottoman rule in 1900 Censuses of Ottoman territories only began in the early 19th century Figures from 1831 onwards are available as official census results but the censuses did not cover the whole population For example the 1831 census only counted men and did not cover the whole empire 89 203 For earlier periods estimates of size and distribution of the population are based on observed demographic patterns 205 However it began to rise to reach 25 32 million by 1800 with around 10 million in the European provinces primarily in the Balkans 11 million in the Asiatic provinces and around 3 million in the African provinces Population densities were higher in the European provinces double those in Anatolia which in turn were triple the population densities of Iraq and Syria and five times the population density of Arabia 206 View of Galata Karakoy and the Galata Bridge on the Golden Horn c 1880 1893 Towards the end of the empire s existence life expectancy was 49 years compared to the mid twenties in Serbia at the beginning of the 19th century 207 Epidemic diseases and famine caused major disruption and demographic changes In 1785 around one sixth of the Egyptian population died from the plague and Aleppo saw its population reduced by twenty percent in the 18th century Six famines hit Egypt alone between 1687 and 1731 and the last famine to hit Anatolia was four decades later 208 The rise of port cities saw the clustering of populations caused by the development of steamships and railroads Urbanization increased from 1700 to 1922 with towns and cities growing Improvements in health and sanitation made them more attractive to live and work in Port cities like Salonica in Greece saw its population rise from 55 000 in 1800 to 160 000 in 1912 and Izmir which had a population of 150 000 in 1800 grew to 300 000 by 1914 209 210 Some regions conversely had population falls Belgrade saw its population drop from 25 000 to 8 000 mainly due to political strife 209 Economic and political migrations made an impact across the empire For example the Russian and Austria Habsburg annexation of the Crimean and Balkan regions respectively saw large influxes of Muslim refugees 200 000 Crimean Tartars fleeing to Dobruja 211 Between 1783 and 1913 approximately 5 7 million refugees flooded into the Ottoman Empire at least 3 8 million of whom were from Russia Some migrations left indelible marks such as political tension between parts of the empire e g Turkey and Bulgaria whereas centrifugal effects were noticed in other territories simpler demographics emerging from diverse populations Economies were also impacted by the loss of artisans merchants manufacturers and agriculturists 212 Since the 19th century a large proportion of Muslim peoples from the Balkans emigrated to present day Turkey These people are called Muhacir 213 By the time the Ottoman Empire came to an end in 1922 half of the urban population of Turkey was descended from Muslim refugees from Russia 119 Language Main article Languages of the Ottoman Empire 1911 Ottoman calendar shown in several different languages such as Ottoman Turkish Greek Armenian Hebrew Bulgarian and French Ottoman Turkish was the official language of the Empire It was an Oghuz Turkic language highly influenced by Persian and Arabic though lower registries spoken by the common people had fewer influences from other languages compared to higher varieties used by upper classes and governmental authorities 214 Turkish in its Ottoman variation was a language of military and administration since the nascent days of the Ottomans The Ottoman constitution of 1876 did officially cement the official imperial status of Turkish 215 The Ottomans had several influential languages Turkish spoken by the majority of the people in Anatolia and by the majority of Muslims of the Balkans except in Albania Bosnia 216 and the Megleno Romanian inhabited Nanti 217 Persian only spoken by the educated 216 Arabic spoken mainly in Egypt the Levant Arabia Iraq North Africa Kuwait and parts of the Horn of Africa and Berber in North Africa In the last two centuries usage of these became limited though and specific Persian served mainly as a literary language for the educated 216 while Arabic was used for Islamic prayers In the post Tanzimat period French became the common Western language among the educated 14 Because of a low literacy rate among the public about 2 3 until the early 19th century and just about 15 at the end of the 19th century ordinary people had to hire scribes as special request writers arzuhalcis to be able to communicate with the government 218 Some ethnic groups continued to speak within their families and neighborhoods mahalles with their own languages though many non Muslim minorities such as Greeks and Armenians only spoke Turkish 219 In villages where two or more populations lived together the inhabitants would often speak each other s language In cosmopolitan cities people often spoke their family languages many of those who were not ethnic Turks spoke Turkish as a second language citation needed Religion See also Millet Ottoman Empire This section may be unbalanced towards certain viewpoints Please improve the article or discuss the issue on the talk page November 2010 Abdulmecid II was the last caliph of Islam and a member of the Ottoman dynasty Sunni Islam was the prevailing Din customs legal traditions and religion of the Ottoman Empire the official Madh hab school of Islamic jurisprudence was Hanafi 220 From the early 16th century until the early 20th century the Ottoman sultan also served as the caliph or politico religious leader of the Muslim world Non Muslims particularly Christians and Jews were present throughout the empire s history The Ottoman imperial system was charactised by an intricate combination of official Muslim hegemony over non Muslims and a wide degree of religious tolerance While religious minorities were never equal under the law they were granted recognition protection and limited freedoms under both Islamic and Ottoman tradition 221 Until the second half of the 15th century the majority of Ottoman subjects were Christian 179 Non Muslims remained a significant and economically influential minority albeit declining significantly by the 19th century due largely to migration and secession 221 The proportion of Muslims amounted to 60 in the 1820s gradually increasing to 69 in the 1870s and 76 in the 1890s 221 By 1914 less than a fifth of the empire s population 19 1 was non Muslim mostly made up of Jews and Christian Greeks Assyrians and Armenians 221 Islam Main articles Islam in the Ottoman Empire Ottoman Caliphate and Ottoman persecution of Alevis See also Islam in Turkey Turkic peoples practiced a form of shamanism before adopting Islam The Muslim conquest of Transoxiana under the Abbasids facilitated the spread of Islam into the Turkic heartland of Central Asia Many Turkic tribes including the Oghuz Turks who were the ancestors of both the Seljuks and the Ottomans gradually converted to Islam and brought religion to Anatolia through their migrations beginning in the 11th century From its founding the Ottoman Empire officially supported the Maturidi school of Islamic theology which emphasized human reason rationality the pursuit of science and philosophy falsafa 222 223 The Ottomans were among the earliest and most enthusiastic adopters of the Hanafi school of Islamic jurisprudence 224 which was comparatively more flexible and discretionary in its rulings 225 226 The Yildiz Hamidiye Mosque in Istanbul Turkey The Ottoman Empire had a wide variety of Islamic sects including Druze Ismailis Alevis and Alawites 227 Sufism a diverse body of Islamic mysticism found fertile ground in Ottoman lands many Sufi religious orders tariqa such as the Bektashi and Mevlevi were either established or saw significant growth throughout the empire s history 228 However some heterodox Muslim groups were viewed as heretical and even ranked below Jews and Christians in terms of legal protection Druze were frequent targets of persecution 229 with Ottoman authorities often citing the controversial rulings of Ibn Taymiyya a member of the conservative Hanbali school 230 In 1514 Sultan Selim I ordered the massacre of 40 000 Anatolian Alevis Qizilbash whom he considered a fifth column for the rival Safavid Empire During Selim s reign the Ottoman Empire saw an unprecedented and rapid expansion into the Middle East particularly the conquest of the entire Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt on the early 16th century These conquests further solidified the Ottoman claim of being an Islamic caliphate although Ottoman sultans had been claiming the title of caliph since the reign of Murad I 1362 1389 16 The caliphate was officially transferred from the Mamluks to the Ottoman sultanate in 1517 whose members would be recognized as caliphs until the office s abolition on 3 March 1924 by the Republic of Turkey and the exile of the last caliph Abdulmecid II to France Christianity and Judaism Main articles Christianity in the Ottoman Empire and History of the Jews in the Ottoman Empire Mehmed the Conqueror and Patriarch Gennadius II In accordance with the Muslim dhimmi system the Ottoman Empire guaranteed limited freedoms to Christians Jews and other people of the book such as the right to worship own property and be exempt from the obligatory alms zakat required of Muslims However non Muslims or dhimmi were subject to various legal restrictions including being forbidden to carry weapons ride on horseback or have their homes overlook those of Muslims likewise they were required to pay higher taxes than Muslim subjects including the jizya which was a key source of state revenue 231 232 Many Christians and Jews converted to Islam to secure full social and legal status though most continued to practice their faith without restriction 233 The Ottomans developed a unique sociopolitical system known as the millet which granted non Muslim communities a large degree of political legal and religious autonomy in essence members of a millet were subjects of the empire but not subject to the Muslim faith or Islamic law A millet could govern its own affairs such as raising taxes and resolving internal legal disputes with little or no interference from Ottoman authorities so long as its members were loyal to the sultan and adhered to the rules concerning dhimmi A quintessential example is the ancient Orthodox community of Mount Athos which was permitted to retain its autonomy and was never subject to occupation or forced conversion even special laws were enacted to protect it from outsiders 234 The Rum Millet which encompassed most Eastern Orthodox Christians was governed by the Byzantine era Corpus Juris Civilis Code of Justinian with the Ecumenical Patriarch designated the highest religious and political authority millet bashi or ethnarch Likewise Ottoman Jews came under the authority of the Haham Basi or Ottoman Chief Rabbi while Armenians were under the authority of the chief bishop of the Armenian Apostolic Church 235 As the largest group of non Muslim subjects the Rum Millet enjoyed several special privileges in politics and commerce however Jews and Armenians were also well represented among the wealthy merchant class as well as in public administration 236 237 Some modern scholars consider the millet system to be an early example of religious pluralism as it accorded minority religious groups official recognition and tolerance 238 Social political religious structure See also Rayah Ethnic map of the Ottoman Empire in 1917 Black Bulgars and Turks Red Greeks Light yellow Armenians Blue Kurds Orange Lazes Dark Yellow Arabs Green Nestorians Beginning in the early 19th century society government and religion were interrelated in a complex overlapping way that was deemed inefficient by Ataturk who systematically dismantled it after 1922 239 240 In Constantinople the Sultan ruled two distinct domains the secular government and the religious hierarchy Religious officials formed the Ulama who had control of religious teachings and theology and also the Empire s judicial system giving them a major voice in day to day affairs in communities across the Empire but not including the non Muslim millets They were powerful enough to reject the military reforms proposed by Sultan Selim III His successor Sultan Mahmud II r 1808 1839 first won ulama approval before proposing similar reforms 241 The secularisation program brought by Ataturk ended the ulema and their institutions The caliphate was abolished madrasas were closed down and the sharia courts were abolished He replaced the Arabic alphabet with Latin letters ended the religious school system and gave women some political rights Many rural traditionalists never accepted this secularisation and by the 1990s they were reasserting a demand for a larger role for Islam 242 The Janissaries were a highly formidable military unit in the early years but as Western Europe modernized its military organization technology the Janissaries became a reactionary force that resisted all change Steadily the Ottoman military power became outdated but when the Janissaries felt their privileges were being threatened or outsiders wanted to modernize them or they might be superseded by the cavalrymen they rose in rebellion The rebellions were highly violent on both sides but by the time the Janissaries were suppressed it was far too late for Ottoman military power to catch up with the West 243 244 The political system was transformed by the destruction of the Janissaries in the Auspicious Incident of 1826 who was a very powerful military governmental police force that revolted Sultan Mahmud II crushed the revolt executed the leaders and disbanded the large organization That set the stage for a slow process of modernization of government functions as the government sought with mixed success to adopt the main elements of Western bureaucracy and military technology The original Church of St Anthony of Padua Istanbul was built in 1725 by the local Italian community of Istanbul The Janissaries had been recruited from Christians and other minorities their abolition enabled the emergence of a Turkish elite to control the Ottoman Empire The problem was that the Turkish element was very poorly educated lacking higher schools of any sort and locked into the Turkish language that used the Arabic alphabet that inhibited wider learning A large number of ethnic and religious minorities were tolerated in their own separate segregated domains called millets 245 They were primarily Greek Armenian or Jewish In each locality they governed themselves spoke their own language ran their own schools cultural and religious institutions and paid somewhat higher taxes They had no power outside the millet The Imperial government protected them and prevented major violent clashes between ethnic groups However the millets showed very little loyalty to the Empire Ethnic nationalism based on distinctive religion and language provided a centripetal force that eventually destroyed the Ottoman Empire 246 In addition Muslim ethnic groups which were not part of the millet system especially the Arabs and the Kurds were outside the Turkish culture and developed their own separate nationalism The British sponsored Arab nationalism in the First World War promising an independent Arab state in return for Arab support Most Arabs supported the Sultan but those near Mecca believed in and supported the British promise 247 At the local level power was held beyond the control of the Sultan by the ayans or local notables The ayan collected taxes formed local armies to compete with other notables took a reactionary attitude toward political or economic change and often defied policies handed down by the Sultan 248 The economic system made little progress Printing was forbidden until the 18th century for fear of defiling the secret documents of Islam The millets however were allowed their own presses using Greek Hebrew Armenian and other languages that greatly facilitated nationalism The religious prohibition on charging interest foreclosed most of the entrepreneurial skills among Muslims although it did flourish among the Jews and Christians After the 18th century the Ottoman Empire was clearly shrinking as Russia put on heavy pressure and expanded to its south Egypt became effectively independent in 1805 and the British later took it over along with Cyprus Greece became independent and Serbia and other Balkan areas became highly restive as the force of nationalism pushed against imperialism The French took over Algeria and Tunisia The Europeans all thought that the empire was a sick man in rapid decline Only the Germans seemed helpful and their support led to the Ottoman Empire joining the central powers in 1915 with the result that they came out as one of the heaviest losers of the First World War in 1918 249 CultureMain article Culture of the Ottoman Empire Depiction of a hookah shop in Lebanon The Ottomans absorbed some of the traditions art and institutions of cultures in the regions they conquered and added new dimensions to them Numerous traditions and cultural traits of previous empires In fields such as architecture cuisine music leisure and government were adopted by the Ottoman Turks who developed them into new forms resulting in a new and distinctively Ottoman cultural identity Although the predominant literary language of the Ottoman Empire was Turkish Persian was the preferred vehicle for the projection of an imperial image 250 Slavery was a part of Ottoman society 251 with most slaves employed as domestic servants Agricultural slavery such as that which was widespread in the Americas was relatively rare Unlike systems of chattel slavery slaves under Islamic law were not regarded as movable property and the children of female slaves were born legally free Female slaves were still sold in the Empire as late as 1908 252 During the 19th century the Empire came under pressure from Western European countries to outlaw the practice Policies developed by various sultans throughout the 19th century attempted to curtail the Ottoman slave trade but slavery had centuries of religious backing and sanction and so slavery was never abolished in the Empire 235 Plague remained a major scourge in Ottoman society until the second quarter of the 19th century Between 1701 and 1750 37 larger and smaller plague epidemics were recorded in Istanbul and 31 between 1751 and 1801 253 Ottomans adopted Persian bureaucratic traditions and culture The sultans also made an important contribution in the development of Persian literature 254 Education Main article Education in the Ottoman Empire The Beyazit State Library was founded in 1884 In the Ottoman Empire each millet established a schooling system serving its members 255 Education therefore was largely divided on ethnic and religious lines few non Muslims attended schools for Muslim students and vice versa Most institutions that did serve all ethnic and religious groups taught in French or other languages 256 Literature Main article Ottoman literature The two primary streams of Ottoman written literature are poetry and prose Poetry was by far the dominant stream Until the 19th century Ottoman prose did not contain any examples of fiction there were no counterparts to for instance the European romance short story or novel Analog genres did exist though in both Turkish folk literature and in Divan poetry Ottoman Divan poetry was a highly ritualized and symbolic art form From the Persian poetry that largely inspired it it inherited a wealth of symbols whose meanings and interrelationships both of similitude مراعات نظير mura at i nazir تناسب tenasub and opposition تضاد tezad were more or less prescribed Divan poetry was composed through the constant juxtaposition of many such images within a strict metrical framework thus allowing numerous potential meanings to emerge The vast majority of Divan poetry was lyric in nature either gazels which make up the greatest part of the repertoire of the tradition or kasides There were however other common genres most particularly the mesnevi a kind of verse romance and thus a variety of narrative poetry the two most notable examples of this form are the Leyli and Majnun of Fuzuli and the Husn u Ask of Seyh Galib The Seyahatname of Evliya Celebi 1611 1682 is an outstanding example of travel literature Ahmet Nedim Efendi one of the most celebrated Ottoman poets Until the 19th century Ottoman prose did not develop to the extent that contemporary Divan poetry did A large part of the reason for this was that much prose was expected to adhere to the rules of sec سجع also transliterated as seci or rhymed prose 257 a type of writing descended from the Arabic saj and which prescribed that between each adjective and noun in a string of words such as a sentence there must be a rhyme Nevertheless there was a tradition of prose in the literature of the time though exclusively non fictional in nature One apparent exception was Muhayyelat Fancies by Giritli Ali Aziz Efendi a collection of stories of the fantastic written in 1796 though not published until 1867 The first novel published in the Ottoman Empire was by an Armenian named Vartan Pasha Published in 1851 the novel was entitled The Story of Akabi Turkish Akabi Hikyayesi and was written in Turkish but with Armenian script 258 259 260 261 Due to historically close ties with France French literature came to constitute the major Western influence on Ottoman literature throughout the latter half of the 19th century As a result many of the same movements prevalent in France during this period also had their Ottoman equivalents in the developing Ottoman prose tradition for instance the influence of Romanticism can be seen during the Tanzimat period and that of the Realist and Naturalist movements in subsequent periods in the poetic tradition on the other hand it was the influence of the Symbolist and Parnassian movements that became paramount Many of the writers in the Tanzimat period wrote in several different genres simultaneously for instance the poet Namik Kemal also wrote the important 1876 novel Intibah Awakening while the journalist Ibrahim Sinasi is noted for writing in 1860 the first modern Turkish play the one act comedy Sair Evlenmesi The Poet s Marriage An earlier play a farce entitled Vakayi i Acibe ve Havadis i Garibe yi Kefsger Ahmed The Strange Events and Bizarre Occurrences of the Cobbler Ahmed dates from the beginning of the 19th century but there remains some doubt about its authenticity In a similar vein the novelist Ahmed Midhat Efendi wrote important novels in each of the major movements Romanticism Hasan Mellah yahud Sirr Icinde Esrar 1873 Hasan the Sailor or The Mystery Within the Mystery Realism Henuz on Yedi Yasinda 1881 Just Seventeen Years Old and Naturalism Musahedat 1891 Observations This diversity was in part due to the Tanzimat writers wish to disseminate as much of the new literature as possible in the hopes that it would contribute to a revitalization of Ottoman social structures 262 Media Main article Media of the Ottoman Empire The media of the Ottoman Empire was diverse with newspapers and journals published in various languages including French 263 Greek 264 and German 235 Many of these publications were centered in Constantinople 265 but there were also French language newspapers produced in Beirut Salonika and Smyrna 266 Non Muslim ethnic minorities in the empire used French as a lingua franca and used French language publications 263 while some provincial newspapers were published in Arabic 267 The use of French in the media persisted until the end of the empire in 1923 and for a few years thereafter in the Republic of Turkey 263 Architecture Main article Ottoman architecture Suleymaniye Mosque in Istanbul designed by Mimar Sinan in the 16th century and a major example of the Classical Ottoman style The architecture of the empire developed from earlier Seljuk Turkish architecture with influences from Byzantine and Iranian architecture and other architectural traditions in the Middle East 268 269 270 Early Ottoman architecture experimented with multiple building types over the course of the 13th to 15th centuries progressively evolving into the Classical Ottoman style of the 16th and 17th centuries which was also strongly influenced by the Hagia Sophia 270 271 The most important architect of the Classical period is Mimar Sinan whose major works include the Sehzade Mosque Suleymaniye Mosque and Selimiye Mosque 272 273 The greatest of the court artists enriched the Ottoman Empire with many pluralistic artistic influences such as mixing traditional Byzantine art with elements of Chinese art 274 The second half of the 16th century also saw the apogee of certain decorative arts most notably in the use of Iznik tiles 275 Beginning in the 18th century Ottoman architecture was influenced by the Baroque architecture in Western Europe resulting in the Ottoman Baroque style 276 Nuruosmaniye Mosque is one of the most important examples from this period 277 278 The last Ottoman period saw more influences from Western Europe brought in by architects such as those from the Balyan family 279 Empire style and Neoclassical motifs were introduced and a trend towards eclecticism was evident in many types of buildings such as the Dolmabace Palace 280 The last decades of the Ottoman Empire also saw the development of a new architectural style called neo Ottoman or Ottoman revivalism also known as the First National Architectural Movement 281 by architects such as Mimar Kemaleddin and Vedat Tek 279 Ottoman dynastic patronage was concentrated in the historic capitals of Bursa Edirne and Istanbul Constantinople as well as in several other important administrative centers such as Amasya and Manisa It was in these centers that most important developments in Ottoman architecture occurred and that the most monumental Ottoman architecture can be found 282 Major religious monuments were typically architectural complexes known as a kulliye that had multiple components providing different services or amenities In addition to a mosque these could include a madrasa a hammam an imaret a sebil a market a caravanserai a primary school or others 283 These complexes were governed and managed with the help of a vakif agreement Arabic waqf 283 Ottoman constructions were still abundant in Anatolia and in the Balkans Rumelia but in the more distant Middle Eastern and North African provinces older Islamic architectural styles continued to hold strong influence and were sometimes blended with Ottoman styles 284 285 Decorative arts Further information Ottoman illumination and Ottoman miniature Ottoman miniature lost its function with the Westernization of Ottoman culture The tradition of Ottoman miniatures painted to illustrate manuscripts or used in dedicated albums was heavily influenced by the Persian art form though it also included elements of the Byzantine tradition of illumination and painting 286 A Greek academy of painters the Nakkashane i Rum was established in the Topkapi Palace in the 15th century while early in the following century a similar Persian academy the Nakkashane i Irani was added Surname i Humayun Imperial Festival Books were albums that commemorated celebrations in the Ottoman Empire in pictorial and textual detail Ottoman illumination covers non figurative painted or drawn decorative art in books or on sheets in muraqqa or albums as opposed to the figurative images of the Ottoman miniature It was a part of the Ottoman Book Arts together with the Ottoman miniature taswir calligraphy hat Islamic calligraphy bookbinding cilt and paper marbling ebru In the Ottoman Empire illuminated and illustrated manuscripts were commissioned by the Sultan or the administrators of the court In Topkapi Palace these manuscripts were created by the artists working in Nakkashane the atelier of the miniature and illumination artists Both religious and non religious books could be illuminated Also sheets for albums levha consisted of illuminated calligraphy hat of tughra religious texts verses from poems or proverbs and purely decorative drawings The art of carpet weaving was particularly significant in the Ottoman Empire carpets having an immense importance both as decorative furnishings rich in religious and other symbolism and as a practical consideration as it was customary to remove one s shoes in living quarters 287 The weaving of such carpets originated in the nomadic cultures of central Asia carpets being an easily transportable form of furnishing and eventually spread to the settled societies of Anatolia Turks used carpets rugs and kilims not just on the floors of a room but also as a hanging on walls and doorways where they provided additional insulation They were also commonly donated to mosques which often amassed large collections of them 288 Music and performing arts Further information Ottoman Music Ottoman classical music was an important part of the education of the Ottoman elite A number of the Ottoman sultans have accomplished musicians and composers themselves such as Selim III whose compositions are often still performed today Ottoman classical music arose largely from a confluence of Byzantine music Armenian music Arabic music and Persian music Compositionally it is organized around rhythmic units called usul which are somewhat similar to meter in Western music and melodic units called makam which bear some resemblance to Western musical modes The instruments used are a mixture of Anatolian and Central Asian instruments the saz the baglama the kemence other Middle Eastern instruments the ud the tanbur the kanun the ney and later in the tradition Western instruments the violin and the piano Because of a geographic and cultural divide between the capital and other areas two broadly distinct styles of music arose in the Ottoman Empire Ottoman classical music and folk music In the provinces several different kinds of folk music were created The most dominant regions with their distinguished musical styles are Balkan Thracian Turkus North Eastern Laz Turkus Aegean Turkus Central Anatolian Turkus Eastern Anatolian Turkus and Caucasian Turkus Some of the distinctive styles were Janissary music Roma music Belly dance Turkish folk music The traditional shadow play called Karagoz and Hacivat was widespread throughout the Ottoman Empire and featured characters representing all of the major ethnic and social groups in that culture 289 290 It was performed by a single puppet master who voiced all of the characters and accompanied by tambourine def Its origins are obscure deriving perhaps from an older Egyptian tradition or possibly from an Asian source Miniature from Surname i Vehbi showing the Mehteran the music band of the Janissaries The shadow play Karagoz and Hacivat was widespread throughout the Ottoman Empire Musicians and dancers entertaining the crowds from Surname i Humayun 1720 A musical gathering in the 18th century Acrobacy in Surname i HumayunCuisine Main article Ottoman cuisine Turkish women baking bread 1790 Ottoman cuisine is the cuisine of the capital Constantinople Istanbul and the regional capital cities where the melting pot of cultures created a common cuisine that most of the population regardless of ethnicity shared This diverse cuisine was honed in the Imperial Palace s kitchens by chefs brought from certain parts of the Empire to create and experiment with different ingredients The creations of the Ottoman Palace s kitchens filtered to the population for instance through Ramadan events and through the cooking at the Yalis of the Pashas and from there on spread to the rest of the population Much of the cuisine of former Ottoman territories today is descended from a shared Ottoman cuisine especially Turkish and including Greek Balkan Armenian and Middle Eastern cuisines 291 Many common dishes in the region descendants of the once common Ottoman cuisine include yogurt doner kebab gyro shawarma cacik tzatziki ayran pita bread feta cheese baklava lahmacun moussaka yuvarlak kofte keftes kofta borek boureki raki rakia tsipouro tsikoudia meze dolma sarma rice pilaf Turkish coffee sujuk kashk keskek manti lavash kanafeh and more Sports Members of Besiktas J K in 1903 Members of Galatasaray S K football in 1905 The main sports Ottomans were engaged in were Turkish wrestling hunting Turkish archery horseback riding equestrian javelin throw arm wrestling and swimming European model sports clubs were formed with the spreading popularity of football matches in 19th century Constantinople The leading clubs according to timeline were Besiktas Gymnastics Club 1903 Galatasaray Sports Club 1905 Fenerbahce Sports Club 1907 MKE Ankaragucu formerly Turan Sanatkaragucu 1910 in Constantinople Football clubs were formed in other provinces too such as Karsiyaka Sports Club 1912 Altay Sports Club 1914 and Turkish Fatherland Football Club later Ulkuspor 1914 of Izmir Science and technologyMain article Science and technology in the Ottoman Empire The Constantinople observatory of Taqi ad Din in 1577 Over the course of Ottoman history the Ottomans managed to build a large collection of libraries complete with translations of books from other cultures as well as original manuscripts 60 A great part of this desire for local and foreign manuscripts arose in the 15th century Sultan Mehmet II ordered Georgios Amiroutzes a Greek scholar from Trabzon to translate and make available to Ottoman educational institutions the geography book of Ptolemy Another example is Ali Qushji an astronomer mathematician and physicist originally from Samarkand who became a professor in two madrasas and influenced Ottoman circles as a result of his writings and the activities of his students even though he only spent two or three years in Constantinople before his death 292 Taqi al Din built the Constantinople observatory of Taqi al Din in 1577 where he carried out observations until 1580 He calculated the eccentricity of the Sun s orbit and the annual motion of the apogee 293 However the observatory s primary purpose was almost certainly astrological rather than astronomical leading to its destruction in 1580 due to the rise of a clerical faction that opposed its use for that purpose 294 He also experimented with steam power in Ottoman Egypt in 1551 when he described a steam jack driven by a rudimentary steam turbine 295 Girl Reciting the Quran Kuran Okuyan Kiz an 1880 painting by the Ottoman polymath Osman Hamdi Bey whose works often showed women engaged in educational activities 296 In 1660 the Ottoman scholar Ibrahim Efendi al Zigetvari Tezkireci translated Noel Duret s French astronomical work written in 1637 into Arabic 297 Serafeddin Sabuncuoglu was the author of the first surgical atlas and the last major medical encyclopaedia from the Islamic world Though his work was largely based on Abu al Qasim al Zahrawi s Al Tasrif Sabuncuoglu introduced many innovations of his own Female surgeons were also illustrated for the first time 298 Since the Ottoman Empire is credited with the invention of several surgical instruments in use such as forceps catheters scalpels and lancets as well as pincers 299 better source needed An example of a watch that measured time in minutes was created by an Ottoman watchmaker Meshur Sheyh Dede in 1702 300 In the early 19th century Egypt under Muhammad Ali began using steam engines for industrial manufacturing with industries such as ironworks textile manufacturing paper mills and hulling mills moving towards steam power 301 Economic historian Jean Batou argues that the necessary economic conditions existed in Egypt for the adoption of oil as a potential energy source for its steam engines later in the 19th century 301 In the 19th century Ishak Efendi is credited with introducing the then current Western scientific ideas and developments to the Ottoman and wider Muslim world as well as the invention of a suitable Turkish and Arabic scientific terminology through his translations of Western works See also Turkey portalTurkic History Outline of the Ottoman Empire Bibliography of the Ottoman Empire Gunpowder empires Historiography of the fall of the Ottoman Empire Index of Ottoman Empire related articles List of battles involving the Ottoman Empire List of Ottoman conquests sieges and landings List of Turkic dynasties and countries List of wars involving the Ottoman Empire Ottoman wars in Europe The Inspection Board of Finance of Turkey 1879 16 Great Turkic EmpiresReferencesFootnotes In Ottoman Turkish the city was known by various names among which were Kostantiniyye قسطنطينيه replacing the suffix polis with the Arabic nisba Dersaadet در سعادت and Istanbul استانبول Names other than Istanbul became obsolete in Turkish after the proclamation of the Republic of Turkey in 1923 5 and after Turkey s transition to Latin script in 1928 6 the Turkish government in 1930 requested that foreign embassies and companies use Istanbul and that name became widely accepted internationally 7 Eldem Edhem author of an entry on Istanbul in Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire stated that the majority of the Turkish people circa 2010 including historians believe using Constantinople to refer to the Ottoman era city is politically incorrect despite any historical accuracy 5 Diplomacy poetry historiographical works literary works taught in state schools 8 9 10 11 12 Liturgical language among Arabic speaking citizens Among Greek speaking community spoken by some sultans Decrees in the 15th century 13 Foreign language among educated people in the post Tanzimat late imperial period 14 The sultan from 1512 to 1520 Mehmed VI the last Sultan was expelled from Constantinople on 17 November 1922 The Treaty of Sevres 10 August 1920 afforded a small existence to the Ottoman Empire On 1 November 1922 the Grand National Assembly GNAT abolished the sultanate and declared that all the deeds of the Ottoman regime in Constantinople were null and void as of 16 March 1920 the date of the occupation of Constantinople under the terms of the Treaty of Sevres The international recognition of the GNAT and the Government of Ankara was achieved through the signing of the Treaty of Lausanne on 24 July 1923 The Grand National Assembly of Turkey promulgated the Republic on 29 October 1923 which ended the Ottoman Empire in history Sublime Ottoman State was not used in minority languages for Christians and Jews nor in French 21 the common Western language among the educated in the late Ottoman Empire 14 Minority languages which use the same name in French 21 Western Armenian Օսմանյան տերութիւն romanized Osmanean Terut iwn lit Ottoman Authority Governance Rule Օսմանյան պետութիւն Osmanean Petut iwn Ottoman State and Օսմանյան կայսրություն Osmanean Kaysrut Ottoman Empire Bulgarian Osmanska imperiya romanized Otomanskata Imperiya Otomanska imperiya is an archaic version The definite article forms Osmanskata imperiya and Osmanska imperiya were synonymous Greek O8wmanikh Epikrateia romanized Othōmanike Epikrateia and O8wmanikh Aytokratoria Othōmanike Avtokratoria Ladino Imperio otomano ˈ ɒ t e m e n Ottoman Turkish دولت عليه عثمانيه romanized Devlet i ʿAliye i ʿOsmaniye Turkish Osmanli Imparatorlugu or Osmanli Devleti French Empire ottoman j 21 The Ottoman dynasty also held the title caliph from the Ottoman victory over the Mamluk Sultanate of Cairo in the Battle of Ridaniya in 1517 to the abolition of the Caliphate by the Turkish Republic in 1924 The empire also temporarily gained authority over distant overseas lands through declarations of allegiance to the Ottoman Sultan and Caliph such as the declaration by the Sultan of Aceh in 1565 or through temporary acquisitions of islands such as Lanzarote in the Atlantic Ocean in 1585 27 A lock hold on trade between western Europe and Asia is often cited as a primary motivation for Isabella I of Castile to fund Christopher Columbus s westward journey to find a sailing route to Asia and more generally for European seafaring nations to explore alternative trade routes e g K D Madan Life and travels of Vasco Da Gama 1998 9 I Stavans Imagining Columbus the literary voyage 2001 5 W B Wheeler and S Becker Discovering the American Past A Look at the Evidence to 1877 2006 105 This traditional viewpoint has been attacked as unfounded in an influential article by A H Lybyer The Ottoman Turks and the Routes of Oriental Trade English Historical Review 120 1915 577 588 who sees the rise of Ottoman power and the beginnings of Portuguese and Spanish explorations as unrelated events His view has not been universally accepted cf K M Setton The Papacy and the Levant 1204 1571 Vol 2 The Fifteenth Century Memoirs of the American Philosophical Society Vol 127 1978 335 Though the revolt was officially initiated on the 10 June bin Ali s sons Ali and Faisal had already initiated operations at Medina starting on 5 June 156 Citations McDonald Sean Moore Simon 20 October 2015 Communicating Identity in the Ottoman Empire and Some Implications for Contemporary States Atlantic Journal of Communication 23 5 269 283 doi 10 1080 15456870 2015 1090439 ISSN 1545 6870 S2CID 146299650 Shaw Standford Shaw Ezel 1977 History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey Vol I Cambridge University Press p 13 ISBN 978 0 521 29166 8 Atasoy amp Raby 1989 p 19 20 a b In 1363 the Ottoman capital moved from Bursa to Edirne although Bursa retained its spiritual and economic importance Ottoman Capital Bursa Archived 5 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Official website of Ministry of Culture and Tourism of the Republic of Turkey Retrieved 26 June 2013 a b Edhem Eldem 21 May 2010 Gabor Agoston Masters Bruce Alan eds Istanbul Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire Infobase p 286 ISBN 978 1 438 11025 7 With the collapse of the Ottoman Empire and the establishment of the Republic of Turkey all previous names were abandoned and Istanbul came to designate the entire city Shaw 1977 sfn error no target CITEREFShaw1977 help Shaw 1977 p 386 volume 2harvnb error no target CITEREFShaw1977 help Robinson 1965 The First Turkish Republic p 298 Society 4 March 2014 Istanbul not Constantinople National Geographic Society Retrieved 28 March 2019 Flynn Thomas O 2017 The Western Christian Presence in the Russias and Qajar Persia c 1760 c 1870 BRILL p 30 ISBN 978 90 04 31354 5 Fortna B 2012 Learning to Read in the Late Ottoman Empire and the Early Turkish Republic p 50 ISBN 9780230300415 Although in the late Ottoman period Persian was taught in the state schools Spuler Bertold 2003 Persian Historiography and Geography p 68 ISBN 9789971774882 On the whole the circumstance in Turkey took a similar course in Anatolia the Persian language had played a significant role as the carrier of civilization where it was at time to some extent the language of diplomacy However Persian maintained its position also during the early Ottoman period in the composition of histories and even Sultan Salim I a bitter enemy of Iran and the Shi ites wrote poetry in Persian Besides some poetical adaptations the most important historiographical works are Idris Bidlisi s flowery Hasht Bihist or Seven Paradises begun in 1502 by the request of Sultan Bayazid II and covering the first eight Ottoman rulers Fetvaci Emine 2013 Picturing History at the Ottoman Court Indiana University Press p 31 ISBN 978 0253006783 Persian literature and belles lettres in particular were part of the curriculum a Persian dictionary a manual on prose composition and Sa dis Gulistan one of the classics of Persian poetry were borrowed All these titles would be appropriate in the religious and cultural education of the newly converted young men Yarshater Ehsan Melville Charles eds 359 Persian Historiography A History of Persian Literature Vol 10 p 437 ISBN 9780857736574 Persian held a privileged place in Ottoman letters Persian historical literature was first patronized during the reign of Mehmed II and continued unabated until the end of the 16th century Ayse Gul Sertkaya 2002 Seyhzade Abdurrezak Bahsi In Gyorgy Hazai ed Archivum Ottomanicum Vol 20 pp 114 115 As a result we can claim that Seyhzade Abdurrezak Bahsi was a scribe lived in the palaces of Sultan Mehmed the Conqueror and his son Bayezid i Veli in the 15th century wrote letters bitig and firmans yarlig sent to Eastern Turks by Mehmed II and Bayezid II in both Uighur and Arabic scripts and in East Turkestan Chagatai language a b c Strauss Johann 2010 A Constitution for a Multilingual Empire Translations of the Kanun i Esasi and Other Official Texts into Minority Languages In Herzog Christoph Malek Sharif eds The First Ottoman Experiment in Democracy Wurzburg Orient Institut Istanbul pp 21 51 info page on book Archived 20 September 2019 at the Wayback Machine at Martin Luther University CITED p 26 PDF p 28 French had become a sort of semi official language in the Ottoman Empire in the wake of the Tanzimat reforms It is true that French was not an ethnic language of the Ottoman Empire But it was the only Western language which would become increasingly widespread among educated persons in all linguistic communities Finkel Caroline 2005 Osman s Dream The Story of the Ottoman Empire 1300 1923 New York Basic Books pp 110 1 ISBN 978 0 465 02396 7 a b c Lambton Ann Lewis Bernard 1995 The Cambridge History of Islam The Indian sub continent South East Asia Africa and the Muslim west Vol 2 Cambridge University Press p 320 ISBN 978 0 521 22310 2 Pamuk Sevket 2000 A Monetary History of the Ottoman Empire Cambridge University Press pp 30 31 ISBN 0521441978 The Ottomans began to strike coins in the name of Orhan Bey in 1326 These earliest coins carried inscriptions such as the great Sultan Orhan son of Osman Ottoman historiography has adopted 1299 as the date for the foundation of the state 1299 might represent the date at which the Ottomans finally obtained their independence from the Seljuk sultan at Konya Probably they were forced at the same time or very soon thereafter to accept the overlordship of the Ilkhanids Numismatic evidence thus suggest that independence did not really occur until 1326 a b c d Rein Taagepera September 1997 Expansion and Contraction Patterns of Large Polities Context for Russia International Studies Quarterly 41 3 498 doi 10 1111 0020 8833 00053 JSTOR 2600793 Turchin Peter Adams Jonathan M Hall Thomas D December 2006 East West Orientation of Historical Empires Journal of World Systems Research 12 2 223 ISSN 1076 156X Retrieved 12 September 2016 Erickson Edward J 2003 Defeat in Detail The Ottoman Army in the Balkans 1912 1913 Greenwood Publishing Group p 59 ISBN 978 0 275 97888 4 a b c Strauss Johann 2010 A Constitution for a Multilingual Empire Translations of the Kanun i Esasi and Other Official Texts into Minority Languages In Herzog Christoph Malek Sharif eds The First Ottoman Experiment in Democracy Wurzburg Orient Institut Istanbul pp 21 51 info page on book Archived 20 September 2019 at the Wayback Machine at Martin Luther University CITED p 36 PDF p 38 338 P E A 1916 Review of The Caliph s Last Heritage A Short History of the Turkish Empire The Geographical Journal 47 6 470 472 doi 10 2307 1779249 ISSN 0016 7398 JSTOR 1779249 A goston Ga bor Masters Bruce Alan 2008 Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire Infobase Publishing NY p 444 ISBN 978 0 8160 6259 1 Osman was simply one among a number Turkoman tribal leaders operating in the Sakarya region 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 Finkel Caroline 13 February 2006 Osman s Dream The Story of the Ottoman Empire 1300 1923 Basic Books pp 2 7 ISBN 978 0 465 02396 7 Quataert Donald 2005 The Ottoman Empire 1700 1922 2 ed Cambridge University Press p 4 ISBN 978 0 521 83910 5 Ottoman Empire Oxford Islamic Studies Online 6 May 2008 Retrieved 26 August 2010 Turk Deniz Kuvvetleri Turkish Naval Forces 29 March 2010 Archived from the original on 29 March 2010 Retrieved 12 March 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link a b c Hathaway Jane 2008 The Arab Lands under Ottoman Rule 1516 1800 Pearson Education Ltd p 8 ISBN 978 0 582 41899 8 historians of the Ottoman Empire have rejected the narrative of decline in favor of one of crisis and adaptation Tezcan Baki 2010 The Second Ottoman Empire Political and Social Transformation in the Early Modern Period Cambridge University Press p 9 ISBN 978 1 107 41144 9 Ottomanist historians have produced several works in the last decades revising the traditional understanding of this period from various angles some of which were not even considered as topics of historical inquiry in the mid twentieth century Thanks to these works the conventional narrative of Ottoman history that in the late sixteenth century the Ottoman Empire entered a prolonged period of decline marked by steadily increasing military decay and institutional corruption has been discarded Woodhead Christine 2011 Introduction In Christine Woodhead ed The Ottoman World p 5 ISBN 978 0 415 44492 7 Ottomanist historians have largely jettisoned the notion of a post 1600 decline Agoston Gabor 2009 Introduction In Agoston Gabor Bruce Masters eds Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire p xxxii Faroqhi Suraiya 1994 Crisis and Change 1590 1699 In Inalcik Halil Donald Quataert eds An Economic and Social History of the Ottoman Empire 1300 1914 Vol 2 Cambridge University Press p 553 ISBN 978 0 521 57456 3 In the past fifty years scholars have frequently tended to view this decreasing participation of the sultan in political life as evidence for Ottoman decadence which supposedly began at some time during the second half of the sixteenth century But recently more note has been taken of the fact that the Ottoman Empire was still a formidable military and political power throughout the seventeenth century and that noticeable though limited economic recovery followed the crisis of the years around 1600 after the crisis of the 1683 1699 war there followed a longer and more decisive economic upswing Major evidence of decline was not visible before the second half of the eighteenth century a b Aksan Virginia 2007 Ottoman Wars 1700 1860 An Empire Besieged Pearson Education Ltd pp 130 135 ISBN 978 0 582 30807 7 Quataert Donald 1994 The Age of Reforms 1812 1914 In Inalcik Halil Donald Quataert eds An Economic and Social History of the Ottoman Empire 1300 1914 Vol 2 Cambridge University Press p 762 ISBN 978 0 521 57456 3 Findley Carter Vaughn 2010 Turkey Islam Nationalism and Modernity A History 1789 2007 New Haven Yale University Press p 200 ISBN 978 0 300 15260 9 Quataert Donald 2005 The Ottoman Empire 1700 1922 Cambridge University Press Kindle edition p 186 Schaller Dominik J Zimmerer Jurgen 2008 Late Ottoman genocides the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire and Young Turkish population and extermination policies introduction Journal of Genocide Research 10 1 7 14 doi 10 1080 14623520801950820 S2CID 71515470 Howard Douglas A 2016 A History of the Ottoman Empire Cambridge University Press p 318 ISBN 978 1 108 10747 1 Agoston Gabor 2009 Introduction In Agoston Gabor Bruce Masters eds Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire Imber Colin 2009 The Ottoman Empire 1300 1650 The Structure of Power 2 ed New York Palgrave Macmillan p 3 By the seventeenth century literate circles in Istanbul would not call themselves Turks and often in phrases such as senseless Turks used the word as a term of abuse Kafadar Cemal 2007 A Rome of One s Own Cultural Geography and Identity in the Lands of Rum Muqarnas 24 Greene Molly 2015 The Edinburgh History of the Greeks 1453 to 1768 Soucek Svat 2015 Ottoman Maritime Wars 1416 1700 Istanbul The Isis Press p 8 ISBN 978 975 428 554 3 The scholarly community specializing in Ottoman studies has of late virtually banned the use of Turkey Turks and Turkish from acceptable vocabulary declaring Ottoman and its expanded use mandatory and permitting its Turkish rival only in linguistic and philological contexts Kermeli Eugenia 2009 2008 Osman I In Agoston Gabor Masters Bruce eds Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 1 4381 1025 7 Lowry Heath 2003 The Nature of the Early Ottoman State SUNY Press ISBN 9780791456361 Kafadar Cemal 1995 Between Two Worlds The Construction of the Ottoman State Finkel Caroline 2005 Osman s Dream The History of the Ottoman Empire Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 00850 6 Lindner Rudi Paul 2009 Anatolia 1300 1451 In Fleet Kate ed The Cambridge History of Turkey Vol 1 Byzantium to Turkey 1071 1453 Cambridge Cambridge University Press Elsie Robert 2004 Historical Dictionary of Kosova Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 5309 6 Nicolle David 1999 Nicopolis 1396 The Last Crusade Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 85532 918 8 Agoston Gabor Bruce Alan Masters 2009 2008 Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 1 4381 1025 7 Uyar Mesut Edward J Erickson 2009 A Military History of the Ottomans From Osman to Ataturk ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 275 98876 0 Lokman 1588 Battle of Mohacs 1526 Archived from the original on 29 May 2013 a b Stone Norman 2005 Turkey in the Russian Mirror In Mark Erickson Ljubica Erickson ed Russia War Peace And Diplomacy Essays in Honour of John Erickson Weidenfeld amp Nicolson p 94 ISBN 978 0 297 84913 1 Hodgkinson 2005 p 240 Schmitt O J amp Kiprovska M 2022 Ottoman Raiders Akincis as a Driving Force of Early Ottoman Conquest of the Balkans and the Slavery Based Economy Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient 65 4 497 582 p 505 doi https doi org 10 1163 15685209 12341575 Karpat Kemal H 1974 The Ottoman state and its place in world history Leiden Brill ISBN 978 90 04 03945 2 Savory R M 1960 The Principal Offices of the Ṣafawid State during the Reign of Isma il I 907 930 1501 1524 Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies University of London 23 1 91 105 doi 10 1017 S0041977X00149006 JSTOR 609888 S2CID 154467531 Hess Andrew C January 1973 The Ottoman Conquest of Egypt 1517 and the Beginning of the Sixteenth Century World War International Journal of Middle East Studies 4 1 55 76 doi 10 1017 S0020743800027276 JSTOR 162225 S2CID 162219690 Origins of the Magyars Hungary Britannica Online Encyclopedia Retrieved 26 August 2010 Encyclopaedia Britannica Britannica Online Encyclopedia Archived from the original on 26 April 2012 Retrieved 26 August 2010 Imber Colin 2002 The Ottoman Empire 1300 1650 The Structure of Power Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 333 61386 3 Thompson Bard 1996 Humanists and Reformers A History of the Renaissance and Reformation Wm B Eerdmans Publishing p 442 ISBN 978 0 8028 6348 5 a b Agoston and Alan Masters Gabor and Bruce 2009 Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire Infobase Publishing p 583 ISBN 978 1 4381 1025 7 The Reign of Suleiman the Magnificent 1520 1566 V J Parry A History of the Ottoman Empire to 1730 ed M A Cook Cambridge University Press 1976 94 A Global Chronology of Conflict From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East Vol II ed Spencer C Tucker ABC CLIO 2010 516 Revival A History of the Art of War in the Sixteenth Century 1937 Routledge 2018 Imber Colin 2002 The Ottoman Empire 1300 1650 The Structure of Power Palgrave Macmillan p 53 ISBN 978 0 333 61386 3 Agoston Gabor 2009 Suleyman I In Masters Bruce ed Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire Mansel Philip 1997 Constantinople City of the World s Desire 1453 1924 London Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 026246 9 Crowley Roger Empires of the Sea The siege of Malta the battle of Lepanto and the contest for the center of the world Archived 1 November 2022 at the Wayback Machine Random House 2008 The Ottoman Discovery of the Indian Ocean in the Sixteenth Century The Age of Exploration from an Islamic Perspective historycooperative org Archived from the original on 29 July 2019 Retrieved 11 September 2019 Charles A Truxillo 2012 Jain Publishing Company Crusaders in the Far East The Moro Wars in the Philippines in the Context of the Ibero Islamic World War Archived 1 November 2022 at the Wayback Machine Palabiyik Hamit 2008 Turkish Public Administration From Tradition to the Modern Age Ankara Ismail Hakki Goksoy Ottoman Aceh Relations According to the Turkish Sources PDF Archived from the original PDF on 19 January 2008 Retrieved 16 December 2018 Deringil Selim September 2007 The Turks and Europe The Argument from History Middle Eastern Studies 43 5 709 723 doi 10 1080 00263200701422600 S2CID 144606323 Faroqhi Suraiya 1994 Crisis and Change 1590 1699 In Inalcik Halil Donald Quataert eds An Economic and Social History of the Ottoman Empire 1300 1914 Vol 2 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 57456 3 Sahin Kaya 2013 Empire and Power in the Reign of Suleyman Narrating the Sixteenth Century Ottoman World Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 03442 6 Faroqhi Suraiya 1994 Crisis and Change 1590 1699 In Inalcik Halil Quataert Donald eds An Economic and Social History of the Ottoman Empire 1300 1914 Vol 2 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 57456 3 Davies Brian L 2007 Warfare State and Society on the Black Sea Steppe 1500 1700 Routledge p 16 ISBN 978 0 415 23986 8 Orest Subtelny 2000 Ukraine University of Toronto Press p 106 ISBN 978 0 8020 8390 6 Retrieved 11 February 2013 Matsuki Eizo The Crimean Tatars and their Russian Captive Slaves PDF Mediterranean Studies Group at Hitotsubashi University Archived from the original PDF on 15 January 2013 Retrieved 11 February 2013 Christian Muslim Relations A Bibliographical History Volume 10 Ottoman and Safavid Empires 1600 1700 BRILL Tucker Spencer C 2019 Middle East Conflicts from Ancient Egypt to the 21st Century An Encyclopedia and Document Collection 4 volumes Hanlon Gregory The Twilight Of A Military Tradition Italian Aristocrats And European Conflicts 1560 1800 Routledge Kinross 1979 p 272 Braudel Fernand Braudel 1995 The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II Vol II Berkeley University of California Press Kunt Metin Woodhead Christine 1995 Suleyman the Magnificent and His Age the Ottoman Empire in the Early Modern World Longman ISBN 978 0 582 03827 1 Itzkowitz 1980 p 67 Itzkowitz 1980 p 71 Itzkowitz 1980 pp 90 92 Halil Inalcik 1997 An Economic And Social History of the Ottoman Empire Vol 1 1300 1600 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 57456 3 a b Kinross 1979 p 281 Gabor Agoston Bruce Alan Masters Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire Archived 1 November 2022 at the Wayback Machine pp 23 Infobase Publishing 1 January 2009 ISBN 1 4381 1025 1 Paoletti Ciro 2008 A Military History of Italy Itzkowitz 1980 p 73 Herzig Edmund Kurkchiyan Marina 10 November 2004 Armenians Past and Present in the Making of National Identity ISBN 978 1 135 79837 6 Retrieved 30 December 2014 Rubenstein Richard L 2000 Genocide and the Modern Age Etiology and Case Studies of Mass Death ISBN 978 0 8156 2828 6 Retrieved 30 December 2014 Itzkowitz 1980 pp 74 75 Itzkowitz 1980 pp 80 81 Kinross 1979 p 357 Itzkowitz 1980 p 84 Itzkowitz 1980 pp 83 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Eastern Europe in the Long 19th Century University of California Press p 127 ISBN 978 0 520 93209 8 a b De Quatrebarbes Theodore 1831 Souvenirs de la campagne d Afrique Dentu p 35 Conquete d Alger ou pieces sur la conquete d Alger et sur l Algerie in French 1831 Kateb Kamel 2001 Europeens indigenes et juifs en Algerie 1830 1962 representations et realites des populations in French INED ISBN 978 2 7332 0145 9 Guyot Yves 1885 Lettres sur la politique coloniale in French C Reinwald a b c d e f g Karsh Effraim 2006 Islamic Imperialism A History New Haven Yale University Press Ishtiaq Hussain The Tanzimat Secular Reforms in the Ottoman Empire PDF Faith Matters Yakup Bektas The sultan s messenger Cultural constructions of ottoman telegraphy 1847 1880 Archived 9 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine Technology and Culture 41 4 2000 669 696 a b c d e f Stone Norman 2005 Turkey in the Russian Mirror In Mark Erickson Ljubica Erickson ed Russia War Peace And Diplomacy Essays in Honour of John Erickson Weidenfeld amp Nicolson p 95 ISBN 978 0 297 84913 1 Sursock House Retrieved 29 May 2018 Rogan 2011 p 93 V Necla Geyikdagi 2011 Foreign Investment in the Ottoman Empire International Trade and Relations 1854 1914 I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 84885 461 1 Douglas Arthur Howard 2001 The History of Turkey Greenwood Publishing Group p 71 ISBN 978 0 313 30708 9 Retrieved 11 February 2013 Williams Bryan Glynn 2000 Hijra and forced migration from nineteenth century Russia to the Ottoman Empire Cahiers du Monde Russe 41 1 79 108 doi 10 4000 monderusse 39 Memoirs of Miliutin the plan of action decided upon for 1860 was to cleanse ochistit the mountain zone of its indigenous population per Richmond W The Northwest Caucasus Past Present and Future Routledge 2008 Richmond Walter 2008 The Northwest Caucasus Past Present Future Taylor amp Francis US p 79 ISBN 978 0 415 77615 8 the plan of action decided upon for 1860 was to cleanse ochistit the mountain zone of its indigenous population Amjad M Jaimoukha 2001 The Circassians A Handbook Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 312 23994 7 Charlotte Mathilde Louise Hille 2010 State building and conflict resolution in the Caucasus BRILL p 50 ISBN 978 90 04 17901 1 Daniel Chirot Clark McCauley 2010 Why Not Kill Them All The Logic and Prevention of Mass Political Murder New in Paper Princeton University Press p 23 ISBN 978 1 4008 3485 3 Stone Norman Turkey in the Russian Mirror pp 86 100 from Russia War Peace and Diplomacy edited by Mark amp Ljubica Erickson Weidenfeld amp Nicolson London 2004 p 95 Baten Jorg 2016 A History of the Global Economy From 1500 to the Present Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 50718 0 Rogan 2011 p 105 a b Rogan 2011 p 106 Jelavich Charles Jelavich Barbara 1986 The Establishment of the Balkan National States 1804 1920 ISBN 978 0 295 80360 9 Taylor A J P 1955 The Struggle for Mastery in Europe 1848 1918 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 822101 2 Akmeșe Handan Nezir The Birth of Modern Turkey The Ottoman Military and the March to World I London I B Tauris Akcam Taner 2006 A Shameful Act The Armenian Genocide and the Question of Turkish Responsibility New York Metropolitan Books ISBN 978 0 8050 7932 6 Shaw History of the Ottoman Empire 2 236 Kemal H Karpat 2004 Studies on Turkish politics and society selected articles and essays Brill ISBN 978 90 04 13322 8 Greek and Turkish refugees and deportees 1912 1924 PDF NL Universiteit Leiden 1 Archived from the original PDF on 16 July 2007 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Justin McCarthy 1995 Death and exile the ethnic cleansing of Ottoman Muslims 1821 1922 Darwin Press ISBN 978 0 87850 094 9 Carmichael Cathie 2012 Ethnic Cleansing in the Balkans Nationalism and the Destruction of Tradition Routledge p 21 ISBN 978 1 134 47953 5 During the period from 1821 to 1922 alone Justin McCarthy estimates that the ethnic cleansing of Ottoman Muslims led to the death of several million individuals and the expulsion of a similar number Buturovic Amila 2010 Islam in the Balkans Oxford Bibliographies Online Research Guide Oxford University Press p 9 ISBN 978 0 19 980381 1 Reynolds 2011 p 1harvnb error no target CITEREFReynolds2011 help Erickson 2013 p 32harvnb error no target CITEREFErickson2013 help a b c Timeline Ottoman Empire c 1285 1923 Oxford Reference 2012 ISBN 9780191737640 Armenian Genocide Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 23 April 2015 Fact Sheet Armenian Genocide University of Michigan Archived from the original on 18 August 2010 Retrieved 15 July 2010 Freedman Jeri 2009 The Armenian genocide 1st ed New York Rosen Pub Group ISBN 978 1 4042 1825 3 Totten Samuel Paul Robert Bartrop Steven L Jacobs eds Dictionary of Genocide Greenwood Publishing Group 2008 p 19 ISBN 0 313 34642 9 Bijak Jakub Lubman Sarah 2016 The Disputed Numbers In Search of the Demographic Basis for Studies of Armenian Population Losses 1915 1923 The Armenian Genocide Legacy Palgrave Macmillan UK p 39 ISBN 978 1 137 56163 3 Peter Balakian 2009 The Burning Tigris HarperCollins p xvii ISBN 978 0 06 186017 1 Walker Christopher J 1980 Armenia The Survival of A Nation London Croom Helm pp 200 203 Bryce Viscount James Toynbee Arnold 2000 Sarafian Ara ed The Treatment of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire 1915 1916 Documents Presented to Viscount Grey of Falloden uncensored ed Princeton Gomidas Institute pp 635 649 ISBN 978 0 9535191 5 6 Schaller Dominik J Zimmerer Jurgen 2008 Late Ottoman genocides the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire and Young Turkish population and extermination policies introduction PDF Journal of Genocide Research 10 1 7 14 doi 10 1080 14623520801950820 S2CID 71515470 Archived from the original PDF on 3 November 2013 The genocidal quality of the murderous campaigns against Greeks and Assyrians is obvious Eliezer Tauber The Arab Movements in World War I Routledge 2014 ISBN 978 1 135 19978 4 p 80 81 Hakan Ozoglu 2011 From Caliphate to Secular State Power Struggle in the Early Turkish Republic ABC CLIO p 8 ISBN 978 0 313 37957 4 Norman Stone Turkey in the Russian Mirror pp 86 100 from Russia War Peace and Diplomacy edited by Mark amp Ljubica Erickson Weidenfeld amp Nicolson London 2004 pp 92 93 a b Stone pp 86 100 Lowry Heath W 2003 The nature of the early Ottoman state SUNY Press Dariusz Kolodziejczyk Khan caliph tsar and imperator the multiple identities of the Ottoman sultan in Peter Fibiger Bang and Dariusz Kolodziejczyk eds Universal Empire A Comparative Approach to Imperial Culture and Representation in Eurasian History Cambridge University Press 2012 pp 175 193 Sinan Ed Kuneralp ed A Bridge Between Cultures 2006 p 9 Ronald C Jennings Some thoughts on the Gazi thesis Wiener Zeitschrift fur die Kunde des Morgenlandes 76 1986 151 161 online Archived 28 March 2020 at the Wayback Machine Stone pp 94 95 Yilmaz Huseyin 8 January 2018 Caliphate Redefined The Mystical Turn in Ottoman Political Thought Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1 4008 8804 7 The Uthmani State Shaykh Nasir al Fahd emaanlibrary com Retrieved 7 April 2020 Simons Marlise 22 August 1993 Center of Ottoman Power The New York Times Retrieved 4 June 2009 Dolmabahce Palace dolmabahcepalace com Retrieved 4 August 2014 Itzkowitz 1980 p 38 a b Naim Kapucu Hamit Palabiyik 2008 Turkish Public Administration From Tradition to the Modern Age USAK Books p 77 ISBN 978 605 4030 01 9 Retrieved 11 February 2013 Black Antony 2001 The History of Islamic Political Thought From the Prophet to the Present Psychology Press p 199 ISBN 978 0 415 93243 1 Lewis Bernard 1963 Istanbul and the Civilization of the Ottoman Empire University of Oklahoma Press p 151 ISBN 978 0 8061 1060 8 Retrieved 11 February 2013 The Ottoman Palace School Enderun and the Man with Multiple Talents Matrakci Nasuh Journal of the Korea Society of Mathematical Education Series D Research in Mathematical Education 14 1 19 31 March 2010 Karpat Kemal H 1973 Social Change and Politics in 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109 ISBN 978 1 315 61309 3 OCLC 1082195426 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Selcuk Aksin Somel Review of Ottoman Nizamiye Courts Law and Modernity PDF Sabanci Universitesi p 2 a b c d Epstein Lee O Connor Karen Grub Diana Middle East PDF Legal Traditions and Systems an International Handbook Greenwood Press pp 223 224 Archived from the original PDF on 25 May 2013 Milner Mordaunt 1990 The Godolphin Arabian The Story of the Matchem Line Robert Hale Limited pp 3 6 ISBN 978 0 85131 476 1 Wall John F Famous Running Horses Their Forebears and Descendants p 8 ISBN 978 1 163 19167 5 Murphey Rhoads 1999 Ottoman Warfare 1500 1700 UCL Press p 10 Agoston Gabor 2005 Guns for the Sultan Military Power and the Weapons Industry in the Ottoman Empire Cambridge University Press pp 200 02 Petition created for submarine name Ellesmere Port Standard Archived from the original on 23 April 2008 Retrieved 11 February 2013 Story of Turkish Aviation Turkey in the First World War Archived from the original on 12 May 2012 Retrieved 6 November 2011 Founding Turkish Air Force Archived from the original on 7 October 2011 Retrieved 6 November 2011 Imber Colin 2002 The Ottoman Empire 1300 1650 The Structure of Power PDF pp 177 200 Archived from the original PDF on 26 July 2014 Raymond Detrez Barbara Segaert 2008 Europe and the historical legacies in the Balkans Peter Lang p 167 ISBN 978 90 5201 374 9 Naim Kapucu Hamit Palabiyik 2008 Turkish Public Administration From Tradition to the Modern Age USAK Books p 164 ISBN 978 605 4030 01 9 Retrieved 1 June 2013 Maḥmud Yazbak 1998 Haifa in the Late Ottoman Period 1864 1914 A Muslim Town in Transition BRILL p 28 ISBN 978 90 04 11051 9 Mundy Martha Smith Richard Saumarez 2007 Governing Property Making the Modern State Law Administration and Production in Ottoman Syria I B Tauris p 50 ISBN 978 1 84511 291 2 Inalcik Halil 1970 The Ottoman Economic Mind and Aspects of the Ottoman Economy In Cook M A ed Studies in the Economic History of the Middle East from the Rise of Islam to the Present Day Oxford University Press p 209 ISBN 978 0 19 713561 7 Inalcik Halil 1970 The Ottoman Economic Mind and Aspects of the Ottoman Economy In Cook M A ed Studies in the Economic History of the Middle East from the Rise of Islam to the Present Day Oxford University Press p 217 ISBN 978 0 19 713561 7 Darling Linda 1996 Revenue Raising and Legitimacy Tax Collection and Finance Administration in the Ottoman Empire 1560 1660 E J Brill pp 238 239 ISBN 978 90 04 10289 7 Inalcik Halil Quataert Donald 1971 An Economic and Social History of the Ottoman Empire 1300 1914 p 120 Donald Quataert The Ottoman Empire 1700 1922 2005 p 24 Inalcik Halil 1970 The Ottoman Economic Mind and Aspects of the Ottoman Economy In Cook M A ed Studies in the Economic History of the Middle East from the Rise of Islam to the Present Day Oxford University Press p 218 ISBN 978 0 19 713561 7 Paul Bairoch 1995 Economics and World History Myths and Paradoxes University of Chicago Press pp 31 32 a b c Kabadayi M Erdem 28 October 2011 Inventory for the Ottoman Empire Turkish Republic PDF Istanbul Bilgi University Archived from the original PDF on 28 October 2011 Leila Erder and Suraiya Faroqhi October 1979 Population Rise and Fall in Anatolia 1550 1620 Middle Eastern Studies 15 3 322 345 doi 10 1080 00263207908700415 Shaw S J 1978 The Ottoman Census System and Population 1831 1914 International Journal of Middle East Studies Cambridge University Press p 325 The Ottomans developed an efficient system for counting the empire s population in 1826 a quarter of a century after such methods were introduced in Britain France and America Quataert amp Spivey 2000 pp 110 111 Quataert amp Spivey 2000 p 112 Quataert amp Spivey 2000 p 113 a b Quataert amp Spivey 2000 p 114 Pamuk S August 1991 The Ottoman Empire and the World Economy The Nineteenth Century International Journal of Middle East Studies Cambridge University Press 23 3 Quataert amp Spivey 2000 p 115 Quataert amp Spivey 2000 p 116 McCarthy Justin 1995 Death and exile the ethnic cleansing of Ottoman Muslims 1821 1922 Darwin Press p page needed ISBN 978 0 87850 094 9 Davison Roderic H 31 December 1964 Reform in the Ottoman Empire 1856 1876 doi 10 1515 9781400878765 ISBN 9781400878765 There was the ruling Ottoman group now largely concentrated in the bureaucracy centered on the Sublime Porte and the mass of the people mostly peasants The efendi looked down on the Turk which was a term of opprobrium indicating boorishness and preferred to think of himself as an Osmanli His country was not Turkey but the Ottoman State His language was also Ottoman though he might also call it Turkish in such a case he distinguished it from kaba turkce or coarse Turkish the common speech His writing included a minimum of Turkish words except for particles and auxiliary verbs The Ottoman Constitution promulgated the seventh Zilbridge 1293 11 23 December 1876 The American Journal of International Law 2 4 376 1908 doi 10 2307 2212668 JSTOR 2212668 S2CID 246006581 a b c Bertold Spuler 2003 Persian Historiography And Geography Pustaka Nasional Pte Ltd p 69 ISBN 978 9971 77 488 2 Kahl Thede 2006 The Islamisation of the Meglen Vlachs Megleno Romanians The Village of Nanti Notia and the Nantinets in Present Day Turkey Nationalities Papers 34 1 71 90 doi 10 1080 00905990500504871 S2CID 161615853 Kemal H Karpat 2002 Studies on Ottoman Social and Political History Selected Articles and Essays Brill p 266 ISBN a, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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