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Rumelia Eyalet

The Eyalet of Rumeli, or Eyalet of Rumelia (Ottoman Turkish: ایالت روم ایلی, Eyālet-i Rūm-ėli),[2] known as the Beylerbeylik of Rumeli until 1591,[3] was a first-level province (beylerbeylik or eyalet) of the Ottoman Empire encompassing most of the Balkans ("Rumelia"). For most of its history, it was the largest and most important province of the Empire, containing key cities such as Edirne, Yanina (Ioannina), Sofia, Filibe (Plovdiv), Manastır/Monastir (Bitola), Üsküp (Skopje), and the major seaport of Selanik/Salonica (Thessaloniki). It was also among the oldest Ottoman eyalets, lasting more than 500 years with several territorial restructurings over the long course of its existence.

Eyalet of Rumelia
Eyalet-i Rumeli
1365–1867
The Rumelia Eyalet in 1609
StatusEyalet of the Ottoman Empire
CapitalEdirne (1362–1530)
Sofia (1530–1836)
Monastir (1836–1867)
41°1′N 21°20′E / 41.017°N 21.333°E / 41.017; 21.333
History 
• Established
1365
• Disestablished
1867
Area
1844[1]124,630 km2 (48,120 sq mi)
Population
• 1844[1]
2,700,000

The capital was in Adrianople (Edirne), Sofia, and finally Monastir (Bitola). Its reported area in an 1862 almanac was 48,119 square miles (124,630 km2).[4]

History edit

The first beylerbey of Rumelia was Lala Shahin Pasha, who was awarded the title by Sultan Murad I as a reward for his capture of Adrianople (Edirne) in the 1360s, and given military authority over the Ottoman territories in Europe, which he governed effectively as the Sultan's deputy while the Sultan returned to Anatolia.[3][5][6] Also, Silistra Eyalet was formed in 1593.

From its foundation, the province of Rumelia—initially termed beylerbeylik or generically vilayet ("province"), only after 1591 was the term eyalet used[3]—encompassed the entirety of the Ottoman Empire's European possessions, including the trans-Danubian conquests like Akkerman, until the creation of further eyalets in the 16th century, beginning with the Archipelago (1533), Budin (1541) and Bosnia (1580).[5][6]

The first capital of Rumelia was probably Edirne (Adrianople), which was also, until the Fall of Constantinople in 1453, the Ottomans' capital city. It was followed by Sofia for a while and again by Edirne until 1520, when Sofia once more became the seat of the beylerbey.[6] At the time, the beylerbey of Rumelia was the commander of the most important military force in the state in the form of the timariot sipahi cavalry, and his presence in the capital during this period made him a regular member of the Imperial Council (divan). For the same reason, powerful Grand Viziers like Mahmud Pasha Angelovic or Pargalı Ibrahim Pasha held the beylerbeylik in tandem with the grand vizierate.[5]

In the 18th century, Monastir emerged as an alternate residence of the governor, and in 1836, it officially became the capital of the eyalet. At about the same time, the Tanzimat reforms, aimed at modernizing the Empire, split off the new eyalets of Üsküb, Yanya and Selanik and reduced the Rumelia Eyalet to a few provinces around Monastir. The rump eyalet survived until 1867, when, as part of the transition to the more uniform vilayet system, it became part of the Salonica Vilayet.[5][7][8]

Governors edit

The governor of the Rumelia Eyalet was titled "Beylerbey of Rumelia" (Rumeli beylerbeyi) or "Vali of Rumelia" (Rumeli vali).

Governor Reign Notes
Lala Shahin Pasha the first beylerbey of Rumelia, the lala (tutor) of Murad I.[9][better source needed]
Timurtaş Bey fl. 1385
Süleyman Çelebi before 1411 son of Bayezid I[10]
Mihaloğlu Mehmed Bey 1411
Mustafa Bey 1421[11]
Sinan Pasha ( son of noble Bogdan) 1430
Hadım Şehabeddin 1439–42[12]
Kasım Pasha 1443[13]
Ömer Bey fl. 1453[14]
Turahan Bey before 1456
Mahmud Pasha before 1456
Ahmed after 1456[citation needed]
Hass Murad Pasha c. 1469–1473
Hadım Süleyman Pasha c. 1475[15]
Davud Pasha c. 1478[16]
Sinan Pasha c. 1481[17]
Mesih Pasha after 1481[18]
Hasan Pasha fl. 1514[19]
Ahmed Pasha fl. 1521[20]
Güzelce Kasım Pasha c. 1527[21]
Ibrahim fl. 1537[22]
Khusrow Pasha June 1538[23]–?
Ali Pasha fl. 1546[24]
Sokollu Mehmed Pasha fl. 1551[25]
Şemsi Ahmed Pasha 1564 – 1569[26]
Doğancı Mehmed Pasha [27]
Osman Yeğen Pasha 1687[28]
Sari Ahmed Pasha 1714[29]–1715[30]
Topal Osman Pasha 1721–27, 1729–30, 1731[31]
Hadji Mustafa Pasha summer of 1797[32]–?
Ahmed Kamil Pasazade Hakki Pasha [33]
Ali Pasha 1793[34]
Ali Pasha (2nd term) 1802[35])
Veli Pasha (son of Ali Pasha) 1804[36]
Hurshid Pasha fl. 1808[37]
Köse Ahmed Zekeriya Pasha 1836–March 1840
Mehmed Dilaver Pasha May–July 1840
Yusuf Muhlis Pasha Serezli July 1840–February 1842
Yakub Pasha Kara Osmanzade
Mustafa Nuri Paşa, Sırkatibi
Mehmed Said Paşa, Mirza/Tatar
Mehmed Ziyaeddin Paşa, Mezarcızade
Ömer Paşa, Kızılhisarlı
Mehmed Ziyaeddin Paşa, Mezarcızade
Mehmed Emin Pasha
Asaf Pasha
Mehmed Reşid Paşa, Boşnakzade
Ömer Paşa, Kızılhisarlı (2nd term)
Mehmed Hurshid Pasha Arnavud
Ahmed Nazır Paşa
İsmail Paşa, Çerkes
Abdülkerim Nadir Paşa, Çırpanlı
Ali Paşa, Hacı, Kütahyalı/Germiyanoğlu
Hüseyin Hüsnü Paşa
Mehmed Tevfik Paşa, Taşcızade

Administrative divisions edit

1475 edit

A list dated to 1475 lists seventeen subordinate sanjakbeys, who controlled sub-provinces or sanjaks, which also functioned as military commands:[5]

1520s edit

Another list, dating to the early reign of Suleiman the Magnificent (r. 1520–1566), lists the sanjakbeys of that period, in approximate order of importance.:[5]

  1. Bey of the Pasha-sanjak
  2. Bosnia
  3. Morea
  4. Semendire
  5. Vidin
  6. Hersek
  7. Silistre
  8. Ohri
  9. Avlonya
  10. Iskenderiyye
  11. Yanya
  12. Gelibolu
  13. Köstendil
  14. Nikebolu
  15. Sofia
  16. Inebahti
  17. Tirhala
  18. Alaca Hișar
  19. Vulcetrin
  20. Kefe
  21. Prizren
  22. Karli-eli
  23. Ağriboz
  24. Çirmen
  25. Vize
  26. Izvornik
  27. Florina
  28. Elbasan
  29. Sanjakbey of the Çingene ("Gypsies")
  30. Midilli
  31. Karadağ (Montenegro)
  32. Sanjakbey of the Müselleman-i Kirk Kilise ("Muslims of Kirk Kilise")
  33. Sanjakbey of the Voynuks

The Çingene, Müselleman-i Kirk Kilise and Voynuks were not territorial circumscriptions, but rather represented merely a sanjakbey appointed to control these scattered and often nomadic groups, and who acted as the commander of the military forces recruited among them.[5] The Pasha-sanjak in this period comprised a wide area in western Macedonia, including the towns of Üskub (Skopje), Pirlipe (Prilep), Manastir (Bitola) and Kesriye (Kastoria).[5]

A similar list compiled c. 1534 gives the same sanjaks, except for the absence of Sofia, Florina and Inebahti (among the provinces transferred to the new Archipelago Eyalet in 1533), and the addition of Selanik (Salonica).[5]

1538 edit

In 1538 there are listed 29 liva (sanjaks) during the reign of Sultan Suleiman I.[38]

  1. Sofya (Pasha Sanjak of Rumelia)
  2. Ağrıboz
  3. Alacahisar
  4. Avlonya
  5. Bosna
  6. Çirmen
  7. Gelibolu
  8. Hersek
  9. İlbasan
  10. İskenderiye
  11. İzvornik
  12. Karlıili
  13. Kefe
  14. Köstendil
  15. Mora
  16. Niğbolu
  17. Ohri
  18. Prizrin
  19. Rodos
  20. Semendire
  21. Silistre
  22. Tırhala
  23. Vidin
  24. Vize
  25. Vulçıtrın
  26. Yanya
  27. Müselleman-ı Kızılca
  28. Müselleman-ı Çingane
  29. Voynugan-ı Istabl-ı Amire

1644 edit

Further sanjaks were removed with the progressive creation of new eyalets, and an official register c. 1644 records only fifteen sanjaks for the Rumelia Eyalet:[5]

  1. Köstendil
  2. Tirhala
  3. Prizren
  4. Yanya
  5. Delvine
  6. Vulcetrin
  7. Üskub
  8. Elbasan
  9. Avlonya
  10. Dukagin
  11. Iskenderiyye
  12. Ohri
  13. Alaca Hișar
  14. Selanik
  15. Voynuks

1700/1730 edit

 
The Rumelia Eyalet in 1795

The administrative division of the beylerbeylik of Rumelia between 1700-1730 was as follows:[39]

  1. Pasha-sanjak, around Manastir
  2. Köstendil
  3. Tirhala
  4. Yanya
  5. Delvina
  6. Elbasan
  7. Iskenderiyye
  8. Avlonya
  9. Ohri
  10. Alaca Hisar
  11. Selanik
  12. Dukagin
  13. Prizren
  14. Üsküb
  15. Vulçıtrin
  16. Voynuks
  17. Çingene
  18. Yoruks

Early 19th century edit

Sanjaks in the early 19th century:[40]

  1. Manastir
  2. Selanik
  3. Tirhala
  4. Iskenderiyye
  5. Ohri
  6. Avlonya
  7. Köstendil
  8. Elbasan
  9. Prizren
  10. Dukagin
  11. Üsküb
  12. Delvina
  13. Vulcetrin
  14. Kavala
  15. Alaca Hișar
  16. Yanya
  17. Smederevo

Mid-19th century edit

 
The reduced eyalet in the 1850s

According to the state yearbook (salname) of the year 1847, the reduced Rumelia Eyalet, centred at Manastir, encompassed also the sanjaks of Iskenderiyye (Scutari), Ohri (Ohrid) and Kesrye (Kastoria).[5] In 1855, according to the French traveller A. Viquesnel, it comprised the sanjaks of Iskenderiyye, with 7 kazas or sub-provinces, Ohri with 8 kazas, Kesrye with 8 kazas and the pasha-sanjak of Manastir with 11 kazas.[41]

References edit

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  39. ^ Orhan Kılıç, XVII. Yüzyılın İlk Yarısında Osmanlı Devleti'nin Eyalet ve Sancak Teşkilatlanması, Osmanlı, Cilt 6: Teşkilât, Yeni Türkiye Yayınları, Ankara, 1999, ISBN 975-6782-09-9, p. 91. (in Turkish)
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rumelia, eyalet, eyalet, rumeli, eyalet, rumelia, ottoman, turkish, ایالت, روم, ایلی, eyālet, rūm, ėli, known, beylerbeylik, rumeli, until, 1591, first, level, province, beylerbeylik, eyalet, ottoman, empire, encompassing, most, balkans, rumelia, most, history. The Eyalet of Rumeli or Eyalet of Rumelia Ottoman Turkish ایالت روم ایلی Eyalet i Rum eli 2 known as the Beylerbeylik of Rumeli until 1591 3 was a first level province beylerbeylik or eyalet of the Ottoman Empire encompassing most of the Balkans Rumelia For most of its history it was the largest and most important province of the Empire containing key cities such as Edirne Yanina Ioannina Sofia Filibe Plovdiv Manastir Monastir Bitola Uskup Skopje and the major seaport of Selanik Salonica Thessaloniki It was also among the oldest Ottoman eyalets lasting more than 500 years with several territorial restructurings over the long course of its existence Eyalet of RumeliaEyalet i Rumeli1365 1867The Rumelia Eyalet in 1609StatusEyalet of the Ottoman EmpireCapitalEdirne 1362 1530 Sofia 1530 1836 Monastir 1836 1867 41 1 N 21 20 E 41 017 N 21 333 E 41 017 21 333History Established1365 Disestablished1867Area1844 1 124 630 km2 48 120 sq mi Population 1844 1 2 700 000Preceded by Succeeded byByzantine EmpireSecond Bulgarian EmpireDespotate of SerbiaDespotate of DobrujaLordship of PrilepGazaria Genoese colonies Principality of TheodoroKingdom of BosniaLeague of LezheVenetian AlbaniaLatinokratiaKingdom of Hungary Eyalet of the ArchipelagoKefe EyaletBosnia EyaletIoannina EyaletPrincipality of SerbiaSalonica EyaletAdrianople EyaletSilistra EyaletNis EyaletVidin EyaletHabsburg MonarchyThe capital was in Adrianople Edirne Sofia and finally Monastir Bitola Its reported area in an 1862 almanac was 48 119 square miles 124 630 km2 4 Contents 1 History 2 Governors 3 Administrative divisions 3 1 1475 3 2 1520s 3 3 1538 3 4 1644 3 5 1700 1730 3 6 Early 19th century 3 7 Mid 19th century 4 References 5 BibliographyHistory editThe first beylerbey of Rumelia was Lala Shahin Pasha who was awarded the title by Sultan Murad I as a reward for his capture of Adrianople Edirne in the 1360s and given military authority over the Ottoman territories in Europe which he governed effectively as the Sultan s deputy while the Sultan returned to Anatolia 3 5 6 Also Silistra Eyalet was formed in 1593 From its foundation the province of Rumelia initially termed beylerbeylik or generically vilayet province only after 1591 was the term eyalet used 3 encompassed the entirety of the Ottoman Empire s European possessions including the trans Danubian conquests like Akkerman until the creation of further eyalets in the 16th century beginning with the Archipelago 1533 Budin 1541 and Bosnia 1580 5 6 The first capital of Rumelia was probably Edirne Adrianople which was also until the Fall of Constantinople in 1453 the Ottomans capital city It was followed by Sofia for a while and again by Edirne until 1520 when Sofia once more became the seat of the beylerbey 6 At the time the beylerbey of Rumelia was the commander of the most important military force in the state in the form of the timariot sipahi cavalry and his presence in the capital during this period made him a regular member of the Imperial Council divan For the same reason powerful Grand Viziers like Mahmud Pasha Angelovic or Pargali Ibrahim Pasha held the beylerbeylik in tandem with the grand vizierate 5 In the 18th century Monastir emerged as an alternate residence of the governor and in 1836 it officially became the capital of the eyalet At about the same time the Tanzimat reforms aimed at modernizing the Empire split off the new eyalets of Uskub Yanya and Selanik and reduced the Rumelia Eyalet to a few provinces around Monastir The rump eyalet survived until 1867 when as part of the transition to the more uniform vilayet system it became part of the Salonica Vilayet 5 7 8 Governors editThe governor of the Rumelia Eyalet was titled Beylerbey of Rumelia Rumeli beylerbeyi or Vali of Rumelia Rumeli vali Governor Reign NotesLala Shahin Pasha the first beylerbey of Rumelia the lala tutor of Murad I 9 better source needed Timurtas Bey fl 1385Suleyman Celebi before 1411 son of Bayezid I 10 Mihaloglu Mehmed Bey 1411Mustafa Bey 1421 11 Sinan Pasha son of noble Bogdan 1430Hadim Sehabeddin 1439 42 12 Kasim Pasha 1443 13 Omer Bey fl 1453 14 Turahan Bey before 1456Mahmud Pasha before 1456Ahmed after 1456 citation needed Hass Murad Pasha c 1469 1473Hadim Suleyman Pasha c 1475 15 Davud Pasha c 1478 16 Sinan Pasha c 1481 17 Mesih Pasha after 1481 18 Hasan Pasha fl 1514 19 Ahmed Pasha fl 1521 20 Guzelce Kasim Pasha c 1527 21 Ibrahim fl 1537 22 Khusrow Pasha June 1538 23 Ali Pasha fl 1546 24 Sokollu Mehmed Pasha fl 1551 25 Semsi Ahmed Pasha 1564 1569 26 Doganci Mehmed Pasha 27 Osman Yegen Pasha 1687 28 Sari Ahmed Pasha 1714 29 1715 30 Topal Osman Pasha 1721 27 1729 30 1731 31 Hadji Mustafa Pasha summer of 1797 32 Ahmed Kamil Pasazade Hakki Pasha 33 Ali Pasha 1793 34 Ali Pasha 2nd term 1802 35 Veli Pasha son of Ali Pasha 1804 36 Hurshid Pasha fl 1808 37 Kose Ahmed Zekeriya Pasha 1836 March 1840Mehmed Dilaver Pasha May July 1840Yusuf Muhlis Pasha Serezli July 1840 February 1842Yakub Pasha Kara OsmanzadeMustafa Nuri Pasa SirkatibiMehmed Said Pasa Mirza TatarMehmed Ziyaeddin Pasa MezarcizadeOmer Pasa KizilhisarliMehmed Ziyaeddin Pasa MezarcizadeMehmed Emin PashaAsaf PashaMehmed Resid Pasa BosnakzadeOmer Pasa Kizilhisarli 2nd term Mehmed Hurshid Pasha ArnavudAhmed Nazir PasaIsmail Pasa CerkesAbdulkerim Nadir Pasa CirpanliAli Pasa Haci Kutahyali GermiyanogluHuseyin Husnu PasaMehmed Tevfik Pasa TascizadeAdministrative divisions edit1475 edit A list dated to 1475 lists seventeen subordinate sanjakbeys who controlled sub provinces or sanjaks which also functioned as military commands 5 Constantinople Gallipoli Edirne Nikebolu Nigbolu Vidin Sofia Serbia Laz ili Serbia Despot ili Vardar under the Evrenosogullari Uskub Arnavut ili under Iskender Bey i e Skanderbeg Arnavut ili under the Arianiti family Bosnia Bosnia under Stephen Arta Zituni and Athens Morea Monastir 1520s edit Another list dating to the early reign of Suleiman the Magnificent r 1520 1566 lists the sanjakbeys of that period in approximate order of importance 5 Bey of the Pasha sanjak Bosnia Morea Semendire Vidin Hersek Silistre Ohri Avlonya Iskenderiyye Yanya Gelibolu Kostendil Nikebolu Sofia Inebahti Tirhala Alaca Hișar Vulcetrin Kefe Prizren Karli eli Agriboz Cirmen Vize Izvornik Florina Elbasan Sanjakbey of the Cingene Gypsies Midilli Karadag Montenegro Sanjakbey of the Muselleman i Kirk Kilise Muslims of Kirk Kilise Sanjakbey of the Voynuks The Cingene Muselleman i Kirk Kilise and Voynuks were not territorial circumscriptions but rather represented merely a sanjakbey appointed to control these scattered and often nomadic groups and who acted as the commander of the military forces recruited among them 5 The Pasha sanjak in this period comprised a wide area in western Macedonia including the towns of Uskub Skopje Pirlipe Prilep Manastir Bitola and Kesriye Kastoria 5 A similar list compiled c 1534 gives the same sanjaks except for the absence of Sofia Florina and Inebahti among the provinces transferred to the new Archipelago Eyalet in 1533 and the addition of Selanik Salonica 5 1538 edit In 1538 there are listed 29 liva sanjaks during the reign of Sultan Suleiman I 38 Sofya Pasha Sanjak of Rumelia Agriboz Alacahisar Avlonya Bosna Cirmen Gelibolu Hersek Ilbasan Iskenderiye Izvornik Karliili Kefe Kostendil Mora Nigbolu Ohri Prizrin Rodos Semendire Silistre Tirhala Vidin Vize Vulcitrin Yanya Muselleman i Kizilca Muselleman i Cingane Voynugan i Istabl i Amire1644 edit Further sanjaks were removed with the progressive creation of new eyalets and an official register c 1644 records only fifteen sanjaks for the Rumelia Eyalet 5 Kostendil Tirhala Prizren Yanya Delvine Vulcetrin Uskub Elbasan Avlonya Dukagin Iskenderiyye Ohri Alaca Hișar Selanik Voynuks 1700 1730 edit nbsp The Rumelia Eyalet in 1795The administrative division of the beylerbeylik of Rumelia between 1700 1730 was as follows 39 Pasha sanjak around Manastir Kostendil Tirhala Yanya Delvina Elbasan Iskenderiyye Avlonya Ohri Alaca Hisar Selanik Dukagin Prizren Uskub Vulcitrin Voynuks Cingene Yoruks Early 19th century edit Sanjaks in the early 19th century 40 Manastir Selanik Tirhala Iskenderiyye Ohri Avlonya Kostendil Elbasan Prizren Dukagin Uskub Delvina Vulcetrin Kavala Alaca Hișar Yanya Smederevo Mid 19th century edit nbsp The reduced eyalet in the 1850sAccording to the state yearbook salname of the year 1847 the reduced Rumelia Eyalet centred at Manastir encompassed also the sanjaks of Iskenderiyye Scutari Ohri Ohrid and Kesrye Kastoria 5 In 1855 according to the French traveller A Viquesnel it comprised the sanjaks of Iskenderiyye with 7 kazas or sub provinces Ohri with 8 kazas Kesrye with 8 kazas and the pasha sanjak of Manastir with 11 kazas 41 References edit The Encyclopaedia Britannica or Dictionary of arts sciences Volume 19 1859 p 464 Some Provinces of the Ottoman Empire Geonames de Retrieved 25 February 2013 a b c Inalcik Halil 1965 Eyalet In Lewis B Pellat Ch amp Schacht J eds Encyclopaedia of Islam Volume II C G 2nd ed Leiden E J Brill pp 721 724 OCLC 495469475 The Popular encyclopedia or conversations lexicon Volume 6 p 698 at Google Books a b c d e f g h i j k Inalcik Halil 1995 Rumeli In Bosworth C E van Donzel E Heinrichs W P amp Lecomte G eds Encyclopaedia of Islam Volume VIII Ned Sam 2nd ed Leiden E J Brill pp 607 611 esp 610 611 ISBN 978 90 04 09834 3 a b c Birken Andreas 1976 Die Provinzen des Osmanischen Reiches Beihefte zum Tubinger Atlas des Vorderen Orients in German Vol 13 Reichert p 50 ISBN 9783920153568 Ursinus M 1991 Manastir In Bosworth C E van Donzel E amp Pellat Ch eds Encyclopaedia of Islam Volume VI Mahk Mid 2nd ed Leiden E J Brill pp 371 372 ISBN 978 90 04 08112 3 Birken Andreas 1976 Die Provinzen des Osmanischen Reiches Beihefte zum Tubinger Atlas des Vorderen Orients in German Vol 13 Reichert pp 50 52 ISBN 9783920153568 Smailagic Nerkez 1990 Leksikon Islama Sarajevo Svjetlost p 514 ISBN 978 86 01 01813 6 OCLC 25241734 Sjediste beglerbega Rumelije prvi namjesnik Lala Sahin pasa Kenneth M Setton Harry W Hazard Norman P Zacour 1 June 1990 A History of the Crusades The Impact of the Crusades on Europe Univ of Wisconsin Press pp 699 ISBN 978 0 299 10744 4 Vera P Mutafchieva 1988 Agrarian relations in the Ottoman Empire in the 15th and 16th centuries East European Monographs p 10 ISBN 978 0 88033 148 7 Retrieved 19 February 2013 Jefferson 2012 p 280 Babinger 1992 p 25 Aytac Ozkan 21 December 2015 Sultan Mehmed the Conqueror Great Eagle Isik Yayincilik Ticaret pp 43 ISBN 978 1 59784 397 3 Agoston amp Masters 2009 p 25 Marin Barleti 2012 The Siege of Shkodra Albania s Courageous Stand Against Ottoman Conquest 1478 David Hosaflook pp 19 ISBN 978 99956 87 77 9 John Freely 1 October 2009 The Grand Turk Sultan Mehmet II Conqueror of Constantinople and Master of an Empire The Overlook Press pp 159 ISBN 978 1 59020 449 8 Heath W Lowry 1 February 2012 Nature of the Early Ottoman State The SUNY Press pp 66 ISBN 978 0 7914 8726 6 Fatih Akce 22 December 2015 The Conqueror of the East Sultan Selim I Isik Yayincilik Ticaret pp 48 ISBN 978 1 68206 504 4 Stephen Turnbull 6 June 2014 The Ottoman Empire 1326 1699 Bloomsbury Publishing pp 41 ISBN 978 1 4728 1026 7 Gulru Necipoglu Julia Bailey 2008 Frontiers of Islamic Art and Architecture Essays in Celebration of Oleg Grabar s Eightieth Birthday the Aga Khan Program for Islamic Architecture Thirtieth Anniversary Special Volume BRILL pp 98 ISBN 978 90 04 17327 9 Lucette Valensi Arthur Denner 1 December 2008 The Birth of the Despot Venice and the Sublime Porte Cornell University Press pp 19 ISBN 978 0 8014 7543 6 Sir H A R Gibb 1954 The Encyclopaedia of Islam Brill Archive pp 35 GGKEY 1FSD5PNQ2DE Stephen Ortega 22 April 2016 Negotiating Transcultural Relations in the Early Modern Mediterranean Ottoman Venetian Encounters Taylor amp Francis pp 121 ISBN 978 1 317 08919 3 Setton 1984 p 574 Afyoncu Erhan 2010 SEMSI AHMED PASA Turkiye Diyanet Vakfi Islam Ansiklopedisi in Turkish Vol 38 TDV Islam Arastirmalari Merkezi pp 527 529 Agoston amp Masters 2009 p 153 Halil Inalcik Donald Quataert 1997 04 28 An Economic and Social History of the Ottoman Empire Cambridge University Press p 419 ISBN 978 0 521 57455 6 Retrieved 2013 06 07 Novak Viktor ed 1971 Istoriski casopis Volumes 18 19 Srpska akademija nauka Istoriski institut p 312 Kenneth Meyer Setton 1991 Venice Austria and the Turks in the Seventeenth Century American Philosophical Society pp 430 ISBN 978 0 87169 192 7 Mantran R 2000 Ṭopal ʿOt h man Pas h a 1 Grand Vizier 1663 1733 The Encyclopedia of Islam New Edition Volume X T U Leiden and New York BRILL pp 564 565 ISBN 90 04 11211 1 Corovic 2001 Robert W Zens 2004 The Ayanlik and Pasvanoglu Osman Pasa of Vidin in the age of Ottoman social change 1791 1815 University of Wisconsin Madison p 96 Charles Jelavich Barbara Jelavich 1 November 1986 The Establishment of the Balkan National States 1804 1920 University of Washington Press pp 18 ISBN 978 0 295 96413 3 Agoston amp Masters 2009 p 37 Michalis N Michael Matthias Kappler Eftihios Gavriel 2009 Archivum Ottomanicum Mouton p 175 ISBN 9783447057530 Retrieved 25 July 2013 Ali Yaycioglu 4 May 2016 Partners of the Empire The Crisis of the Ottoman Order in the Age of Revolutions Stanford University Press pp 220 ISBN 978 0 8047 9612 5 Osmanli Yer Adlari I Rumeli Eyaleti 1514 1550 Ankara Devlet Arsivleri Genel Mudurlugu Osmanli Arsivi Daire Baskanligi 2013 pp 17 32 Orhan Kilic XVII Yuzyilin Ilk Yarisinda Osmanli Devleti nin Eyalet ve Sancak Teskilatlanmasi Osmanli Cilt 6 Teskilat Yeni Turkiye Yayinlari Ankara 1999 ISBN 975 6782 09 9 p 91 in Turkish The Penny cyclopaedia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Volume 25 p 393 at Google Books by George Long Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge Viquesnel Auguste 1868 Voyage dans la Turquie d Europe description physique et geologique de la Thrace in French Vol Tome Premier Paris Arthus Betrand pp 107 114 115 Bibliography editBabinger Franz 1992 1978 Hickman William C ed Mehmed the Conqueror and His Time Translated by Manheim Ralph Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 01078 6 Corovic Vladimir 2001 1997 Pocetak ustanka u Srbiji Istorija srpskog naroda Ars Libri Jefferson John 2012 The Holy Wars of King Wladislas and Sultan Murad The Ottoman Christian Conflict from 1438 1444 BRILL p 84 ISBN 978 90 04 21904 5 Setton Kenneth M 1984 The Papacy and the Levant 1204 1571 Volume IV The Sixteenth Century from Julius III to Pius V Philadelphia The American Philosophical Society ISBN 0 87169 162 0 Agoston Gabor Masters Bruce eds 2009 Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire New York NY Facts On File ISBN 9780816062591 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rumelia Eyalet amp oldid 1169202988, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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