The document summarizes the rise of the Ottoman Empire from the 13th to 16th centuries. It details how Turkish ghazis (warriors for Islam) established emirates in Anatolia under Osman I, who founded the Ottoman state. His successors expanded the empire through alliances and conquests. Mehmed II conquered Constantinople in 1453, establishing Istanbul as the new capital. Later sultans like Selim I and Suleyman the Magnificent further expanded the empire to include the holy cities of Mecca and Medina as well as much of the Balkans and North Africa, making the Ottoman Empire the most powerful in the world.
The document summarizes the rise of the Ottoman Empire from the 13th to 16th centuries. It details how Turkish ghazis (warriors for Islam) established emirates in Anatolia under Osman I, who founded the Ottoman state. His successors expanded the empire through alliances and conquests. Mehmed II conquered Constantinople in 1453, establishing Istanbul as the new capital. Later sultans like Selim I and Suleyman the Magnificent further expanded the empire to include the holy cities of Mecca and Medina as well as much of the Balkans and North Africa, making the Ottoman Empire the most powerful in the world.
The document summarizes the rise of the Ottoman Empire from the 13th to 16th centuries. It details how Turkish ghazis (warriors for Islam) established emirates in Anatolia under Osman I, who founded the Ottoman state. His successors expanded the empire through alliances and conquests. Mehmed II conquered Constantinople in 1453, establishing Istanbul as the new capital. Later sultans like Selim I and Suleyman the Magnificent further expanded the empire to include the holy cities of Mecca and Medina as well as much of the Balkans and North Africa, making the Ottoman Empire the most powerful in the world.
The document summarizes the rise of the Ottoman Empire from the 13th to 16th centuries. It details how Turkish ghazis (warriors for Islam) established emirates in Anatolia under Osman I, who founded the Ottoman state. His successors expanded the empire through alliances and conquests. Mehmed II conquered Constantinople in 1453, establishing Istanbul as the new capital. Later sultans like Selim I and Suleyman the Magnificent further expanded the empire to include the holy cities of Mecca and Medina as well as much of the Balkans and North Africa, making the Ottoman Empire the most powerful in the world.
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Turks
o o o o o
Move into Byzantium
Anatolian Turks saw themselves as Ghazis (warriors for Islam) Formed military societies Followed an Emir (leader) Followed strict Islamic code of conduct Raided territories of infidels (people who dont believe in Islam) lived on frontiers of Byzantine Empire o Osman Establishes a State Most successful ghazi Aka Othman, called his followers Ottomans Built Muslim state in Anatolia between 1300 and 1326 Expanded by: buying land, forming alliances, conquering others Success: gunpowder, replaced archers with musket foot soldiers, cannons 2nd leader: Orkhan I, son of Osman Declared himself sultan (overlord) (one with power) 1361 captured Adrianople (2nd most important city in Byzantine Empire Kind to people they conquered Ruled through local officials appointed by Sultan Muslims required to serve in Turkish army but did not have to pay personal tax Non-Muslims did not have to serve in the army but had to pay tax o Timur the Lame Halts Expansion Rise interrupted in 1400s by rebellious warrior Timur the Lame Tamerlane from Samarkand Burned Baghdad and crushed the Ottoman force at Battle of Ankara in 1402 Powerful Sultans Spur Dramatic Expansion o Timur decided to invade China o Caused war between sons, Mehmed I defeated brothers, took throne o Murad II (son) defeated the Venetians, invaded Hungary, defeated Italian crusaders in Belkans First powerful sultan that lead expansion of Ottoman Empire through 1566 o Mehmed II Conquers Constantinople Son of Murad, Aka Mehmed the Conqueror Took power in 1451, age of 21 Controlled the Bosporus Strait Choke traffic between Ottomans territories in Asia and the Balkans Black sea and Mediterranean sea 1453, attacked Constantinople Cannons, one of which was a 26-foot gun that fired 1,200lbs boulders
Chain across the Golden horn between Bosporus Strait and
Sea of Marmara kept Turkish fleet out of the citys harbor Dragged 70 ships over a hill on greased runners from Bosporus Attacked now on two sides Held out for 7 weeks until Turks found a break in the wall and entered the city Constantinople is now called Istanbul Ottomans take Islams Holy Cities Selim the Grim (Mehmeds grandson) Came into power in 1512 1514 defeated the Safavids of Persia at the Battle of Chaldiran Captured Mecca and Medina (Holiest cities of Islam) Took Cairo (intellectual center of the Muslim world) Suleyman the Lawgiver Suleyman I (Selims son) Came to the throne in 1520 Ruled for 46 years Aka Suleyman the Lawgiver, Suleyman the Magnificent The Empire Reaches its limits o Conquered Belgrade in 1521 o 1522 captured island pf Rhodes in the Mediterranean o Captured Tripoli o 1526 advanced to Hungary and Austria (Vienna) Highly Structured Social Organization o Crowning achievement: binding the Ottoman Empire together in a workable social structure Required an efficient government structure and social organization o Created a law code: criminal and civil actions o Simplified taxation, reduced government bureaucracy o Devshirme system 20,000 personal slaves that staffed the palace bureaucracy Drafted boys from conquered Christian territories, which they educated and converted to Islam, trained as soldiers o Janissaries Soldiers loyal to the Sultan only o Millets: communities or nations Allowed each millet to follow its own religious laws and practices Kept religious conflicts to a minimum Cultural Flowering
Sinans Mosque of Suleyman largest mosque in the
Ottoman Empire The Empire Declines Slowly o Suleyman killed ablest son, drove another to exile, 3 rd son Selim II inherited the throne o Custom of to have brothers strangled o
MUGHUL M. Yakub THE OTTOMAN POLICY TOWARDS NON MUSLIM COMMUNITIES AND THEIR STATUS IN THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE DURING THE 15TH 16TH CENTURIES INTERACTION OF CIVILIZATIONS PDF