Knowledge (XXG)

Rise of the Ottoman Empire

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1741:. Estimates of army sizes vary, with the Ottomans having greater numbers (27,000–40,000) than the Orthodox army (12,000–30,000). The battle resulted in a draw. Both armies were mostly wiped out. Both Lazar and Murad lost their lives. Although the Ottomans managed to annihilate the Serbian army, they also suffered high casualties which delayed their progress. The Serbs were left with too few men to effectively defend their lands, while the Turks had many more troops in the east. Consequently, one after the other, the Serbian principalities that were not already Ottoman vassals became so in the following years. The Battle of Kosovo is particularly important to modern Serbian history, tradition, and national identity. Lazar's young and weak successor 3133:
recovered from the sack of 1204, and suffering from Byzantium's two centuries of near poverty, Constantinople by the time of Mehmed's conquest was but a hollow shell of its former self. Its population had dwindled, and much property was either abandoned or in a state of disrepair. The sultan immediately began to repopulate the city. Civic and private properties were offered to the public to entice much-needed skilled artisans, craftsmen, and traders of all religions and ethnicities back to the city. Newly conquered Constantinople rapidly grew into a multiethnic, multicultured, and bustling economic, political, and cultural center for the Ottoman state, whose distant frontiers guaranteed it peace, security, and prosperity.
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remained in Christian hands, his enemies could use it as either a potential base for splitting the empire at its center or as an excuse for the Christian West's continued military efforts. Constantinople's location also made it the natural "middleman" center for both land and sea trade between the eastern Mediterranean and central Asia, possession of which would ensure immense wealth. Just as important, Constantinople was a fabled imperial city, and its capture and possession would bestow untold prestige on its conqueror, who would be seen by Muslims as a hero and by Muslims and Christians alike as a great and powerful emperor.
1706: 3217: 3022: 2576:. The remaining troops in Wallachia were crushed by the Hungarian army that was now moving south into Bulgaria where the Serbian and Ottoman armies battled each other. The Serbs were defeated and the Ottomans turned to face the Hungarians who fled back into Wallachia when they realized they were unable to attack the Ottomans from the back. Murad fortified his borders against Serbia and Hungary but did not try to retake Wallachia. Instead, he sent his armies to Anatolia where they defeated Karaman in 1428. 977:), meant to provide advice and guidance to the ruler with regard to statecraft. Thus rather than providing a factual account of the dynasty's history, Ahmedi's goal was to indirectly criticize the sultan by depicting his ancestors as model rulers, in contrast to the perceived deviance of Bayezid. Specifically, Ahmedi took issue with Bayezid's military campaigns against fellow Muslims in Anatolia, and thus depicted his ancestors as totally devoted to holy war against the Christian states of the Balkans. 1461:, bringing him into direct contact with Bulgaria and the southeastern Serbian lands ruled by Uglješa. Uglješa, the most powerful Serb regional ruler, unsuccessfully attempted to forge an anti-Ottoman alliance of Balkan states in 1371. Byzantium, vulnerable to the Turks because of its food supply situation, refused to cooperate. Bulgaria, following Ivan Aleksandar's death early that year, lay officially divided into the "Empire" of Vidin, ruled by Stratsimir (1370–96), and Aleksandar's direct successor 521:, and very little survives from the rest of the century. The Ottomans, furthermore, did not begin to record their own history until the fifteenth century, more than a hundred years after many of the events they describe. It is thus a great challenge for historians to differentiate between fact and myth in analyzing the stories contained in these later chronicles, so much so that one historian has even declared it impossible, describing the earliest period of Ottoman history as a "black hole". 3181: 1273:, kept open by the Italian maritime powers of Venice and Genoa. The weakened Byzantine Empire no longer possessed the resources to defeat Murad on its own. Concerted action on the part of the Byzantines, often divided by civil war, was impossible. The survival of Constantinople itself depended on its legendary defensive walls, the lack of an Ottoman navy, and the willingness of Murad to honor provisions in the 1356 treaty, which permitted the city to be provisioned. 2074: 716:
Ottoman rulers were either non-Muslims or recent converts. The idea of holy war existed during the fourteenth century, but it was only one of many factors influencing Ottoman behavior. It was only later, in the fifteenth century, that Ottoman writers retroactively began to portray the early Ottomans as zealous Islamic warriors, in order to provide a noble origin for their dynasty which, by then, had constructed an intercontinental Islamic empire.
3169: 1974: 542: 866:, cavalrymen who collected revenue from the land in exchange for serving in the Ottoman army. Timariots came from diverse backgrounds. Some achieved their position as a reward for military service, while others were descended from the Byzantine aristocracy and simply continued to collect revenue from their old lands, now serving in the Ottoman army as well. Of the latter, many were converts to Islam, while others remained Christian. 1613:(1371-89), with the support of powerful Bulgarian and Montenegrin nobles and the backing of the Serbian Orthodox Patriarchate of Pec, to consolidate control over much of the core Serbian lands. Most of the Serb regional rulers in Macedonia, including Marko, accepted vassalage under Murad to preserve their positions, and many of them led Serb forces in the sultan's army operating in Anatolia against his Turkish rivals. 6431: 3015: 6421: 2832: 2818:
European shore to prevent succor arriving from the Black Sea; and he meticulously concentrated in Thrace every available military unit in his lands. A trade agreement with Venice prevented the Venetians from intervening on behalf of the Byzantines, and the rest of Western Europe unwittingly cooperated with Mehmed's plans by being totally absorbed in internecine wars and political rivalries.
2784: 2717: 2447: 2229: 2113: 2013: 1913: 1759: 1491: 1397: 1167: 32: 2362:. Bedreddin preached such concepts as merging Islam, Christianity, and Judaism into a single faith and the social betterment of free peasants and nomads at the expense of the Ottoman bureaucratic and professional classes. Mehmed crushed the revolt and Bedreddin died. Mircea then occupied Dobruja, but Mehmed wrested the region back in 1419, capturing the Danubian fort of Giurgiu and forcing 991: 1578:
superior tactics (night raid on the allied camp), Şâhin Paşa was able to defeat the Christian army and kill King Vukašin and despot Uglješa. Macedonia and parts of Greece fell under Ottoman power after this battle. Both Uglješa and Vukašin perished in the carnage. So overwhelming was the Ottoman victory that the Turks referred to the battle as the Rout (or Destruction) of the Serbs.
1249:, Murad signaled his intentions to continue Ottoman expansion in Southeast Europe. Before the conquest of Edirne, most Christian Europeans regarded the Ottoman presence in Thrace as merely the latest unpleasant episode in a long string of chaotic events in the Balkans. After Murad I designated Edirne as his capital, they realized that the Ottomans intended to remain in Europe. 1076:(Prusa) was conquered in 1326 and the rest of the region's towns fell shortly thereafter. Already by 1324, the Ottomans were making use of Seljuk bureaucratic practices, and had developed the capacity to mint coins and utilize siege tactics. It was under Orhan that the Ottomans began to attract Islamic scholars from the east to act as administrators and judges, and the first 3001: 6441: 1605:
vassal status under Murad and sent his sister as the sultan's "wife" to the harem at Edirne. The arrangement did not prevent Ottoman raiders from continuing to plunder inside Shishman's borders. As for Byzantium, Emperor John V definitively accepted Ottoman vassalage soon after the battle, opening the door to Murad's direct interference in Byzantine domestic politics.
3145: 1558: 3157: 3205: 3193: 707:. Wittek's formulation, subsequently known as the "Gaza Thesis," was influential for much of the twentieth century, and led historians to portray the early Ottomans as zealous religious warriors dedicated to the spread of Islam. Beginning in the 1980s, historians increasingly criticized Wittek's thesis. Scholars now recognize that the terms 2966:, for a millennium considered by many Europeans the divinely ordained capital of the Christian Roman Empire, fell to Mehmed and was transformed into what many Muslims considered the divinely ordained capital of the Islamic Ottoman Empire. The fabled city's imperial legacy lived on. After the conquest, the sultan had his grand vizier 658:. The emergence of Osman as a leader is marked by him issuing coins in his name, unlike his predecessors in the last two centuries who issued coins in the name of the Illkhanates. Osman's principality was initially supported by the tribal manpower of nomadic Turkish groups, whom he led in raids against the 1675:
When Anatolian affairs forced Murad to leave the Balkans in 1387, his Serbian and Bulgarian vassals attempted to sever their ties to him. Lazar formed a coalition with Tvrtko I of Bosnia and Stratsimir of Vidin. After he refused an Ottoman demand that he live up to his vassal obligations, troops were
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did not have strictly religious connotations for the early Ottomans, and were often used in a secular sense to simply refer to raids. Additionally, the early Ottomans were neither strict orthodox Muslims nor were they unwilling to cooperate with non-Muslims, and several of the companions of the first
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Reliable information regarding Osman is scarce. His birth date is unknown and his symbolic significance as the father of the dynasty has encouraged the development of mythic tales regarding the ruler's life and origins, however, historians agree that before 1300, Osman was simply one among a number
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The Ottoman historical tradition maintains, with some exceptions, that the tribe that later represented the core of Osman's earliest base of power came to Asia Minor in his grandfather's generation in the wake of the Chingisid conquest in central Asia. This makes chronological and historical sense,
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was severely injured coupled with Ottoman troops breaching the walls through a sally port door left open, the Ottoman troops were able to breach the walls and rout the defenders. According to Christian sources, Emperor Constantine died bravely rushing into the oncoming Ottoman troops not to be seen
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At 1448, John Hunyadi saw the right moment to lead a campaign against the Ottoman Empire. After the Defeat of Varna (1444), he raised another army to attack the Ottomans. His strategy based on possible revolt of Balkan people and the surprise attack, also the assumption to destroy the main force of
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Concerned over the growing independence of his Balkan Christian vassals, Musa turned on them. Unfortunately, he alienated the Islamic bureaucratic and commercial classes in his Balkan lands by continually favoring the lower social elements to gain wide popular support. Alarmed, the Balkan Christian
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Murad captured Niš in 1386, perhaps forcing Lazar of Serbia to accept Ottoman vassalage soon afterward. While he pushed deeper into the north—central Balkans, Murad also had forces moving west along the ‘’Via Ingatia’’ into Macedonia, forcing vassal status on regional rulers who until that time had
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Osman's origins are extremely obscure, and almost nothing is known about his career before the beginning of the fourteenth century. The date of 1299 is frequently given as the beginning of his reign, however this date does not correspond with any historical event, and is purely symbolic. By 1300 he
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By the early fifteenth century, the Ottoman court was actively fostering literary output, much of it borrowing from the longstanding literary tradition of other Islamic courts further east. The first extant account of Ottoman history ever written was produced by the poet Ahmedi, originally meant to
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Political authority in western Anatolia was thus extremely fragmented by the end of the thirteenth century, split between locally established rulers, tribal groups, holy figures, and warlords, with Byzantine and Seljuk authority ever present but rapidly weakening. The fragmentation of authority has
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Bayezid, "the Thunderbolt", lost little time in expanding Ottoman Balkan conquests. He followed up on his victory by raiding throughout Serbia and southern Albania, forcing most of the local princes into vassalage. Both to secure the southern stretch of the Vardar-Morava highway and to establish a
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In the aftermath of the Ormenion battle, Ottoman raids into Serbia and Bulgaria intensified. The enormity of the victory and the incessant raids into his lands convinced Turnovo Bulgarian Tsar Shishman of the necessity for coming to terms with the Ottomans. By 1376 at the latest, Shishman accepted
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in 1301 or 1302. Osman's military activity was largely limited to raiding because, by the time of his death, in 1323-4, the Ottomans had not yet developed effective techniques for siege warfare. Although he is famous for his raids against the Byzantines, Osman also had many military confrontations
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During this early period, before the Ottomans were able to establish a centralized system of government in the middle of the fifteenth century, the rulers' powers were "far more circumscribed, and depended heavily upon coalitions of support and alliances reached" among various power-holders within
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In recent times, the word ghaza has been understood in the West as meaning "Holy War against the infidels" and as referring to religiously inspired military actions taken by the early Ottomans against their Christian neighbors. Despite being commonly used in this way, however, the meaning of this
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That they hailed from the Kayı branch of the Oğuz confederacy seems to be a creative "rediscovery" in the genealogical concoction of the fifteenth century. It is missing not only in Ahmedi but also, and more importantly, in the Yahşi Fakih-Aşıkpaşazade narrative, which gives its own version of an
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Older and a good deal wiser, he made capturing Constantinople his first priority, believing that it would solidify his power over the high military and administrative officials who had caused him such problems during his earlier reign. Good reasons underlay his decision. So long as Constantinople
2517:). The Ottoman army that laid siege to the city knew nothing of the transfer of power, and a number of Venetian soldiers were killed by Ottoman troops, believing them to be Greeks. Murad II had been on peaceful terms with Venice, so the Venetians deemed the act unacceptable and declared full war. 2202:
was returned, and with Venice in 1403 to bolster his position. Suleyman's imperious character, however, turned his Balkan vassals against him. In 1410 he was defeated and killed by his brother Musa, who won the Ottoman Balkans with the support of Byzantine Emperor Manuel II, Serbian Despot Stefan
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and the Serbs numbering some 70,000 men under the command of the Serbian king of Prilep Vukašin Mrnjavčević and his brother despot Uglješa. Despot Uglješa wanted to make a surprise attack in their capital city, Edirne, while Murad I was in Asia Minor. The Ottoman army was much smaller, but due to
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Osman was adept at forging political and commercial relationships with nearby groups, Muslim as well as Christian. Early on, he attracted several notable figures to his side, including Köse Mihal, a Byzantine village headman whose descendants (known as the Mihaloğulları) enjoyed primacy among the
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The early Ottomans were noteworthy for the low tax rates which they imposed on their subjects. This reflected both an ideological concern for the well-being of their subjects, and also a pragmatic need to earn the loyalty of newly conquered populations. In the fifteenth century, the Ottoman state
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In 1396 Hungarian King Sigismund finally pulled together a crusade against the Ottomans. The crusader army was composed primarily of Hungarian and French knights, but included some Wallachian troops. Though nominally led by Sigismund, it lacked command cohesion. The crusaders crossed the Danube,
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Murad returned from Anatolia in 1388 and launched a lightning campaign against the Bulgarian rulers Shishman and Sratsimir, who swiftly were forced into vassal submission. He then demanded that Lazar proclaim his vassalage and pay tribute. Confident because of the victory at Plocnik, the Serbian
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Following Nikopol, Bayezid contented himself with raiding Hungary, Wallachia, and Bosnia. He conquered most of Albania and forced the remaining northern Albanian lords into vassalage. A new, halfhearted siege of Constantinople was undertaken but lifted in 1397 after Emperor Manuel II, Bayezid's
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was overrun by Ottoman forces within a decade and was permanently brought under Orhan's control by means of heavy colonization. The initial Thracian conquests placed the Ottomans strategically astride all of the major overland communication routes linking Constantinople to the Balkan frontiers,
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after 1347. Urban centers and settled regions were devastated, while nomadic groups suffered less of an impact. The first Ottoman incursions into the Balkans began shortly thereafter. Depopulation resulting from the plague was thus almost certainly a major factor in the success of early Ottoman
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Murad acted swiftly, besieging Constantinople and sending his armies to Salonika. The Venetians had gained reinforcements by sea but, when the Ottomans stormed the city, the outcome was forgone and the Venetians fled to their ships. But when the Turks entered and began plundering the city, the
2099:, in 1402. The Ottomans were routed and Bayezid was taken prisoner, later dying in captivity. A civil war, lasting from 1402 to 1413, broke out among Bayezid's surviving sons. Known in Ottoman history as the Interregnum, that struggle temporarily halted active Ottoman expansion in the Balkans. 1869:
Having dealt harshly and effectively with his disloyal Bulgarian vassals, Bayezid then turned his attention south to Thessaly and the Morea, whose Greek lords had accepted Ottoman vassalage in the 1380s. Their incessant bickering among themselves, especially those of the Greek Morean magnates,
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has emphasized the importance of religious zeal—expressed through jihad—as a primary motivation for the conquests of the Ottomans: “The ideal of gaza, holy war, was an important factor in the foundation and development of the Ottoman state. Society in the frontier principalities conformed to a
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Mehmed spent two years preparing for his attempt on the Byzantine capital. He built a navy to cut the city off from outside help by sea; he purchased an arsenal of large cannons from the Hungarian gunsmith Urban; he sealed the Bosphorus north of the city by erecting a powerful fortress on its
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vassal rulers turned to Mehmed, as did the chief Ottoman military, religious, and commercial leaders. In 1412 Mehmed invaded the Balkans, took Sofia and Nis, and joined forces with Lazarevicys Serbs. In the following year, Mehmed decisively defeated Musa outside of Sofia. Musa was killed, and
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for the first time since 751. Justinian's cathedral of Hagia Sophia was converted into an imperial mosque, as eventually were numerous other churches and monasteries. The rights of non-Muslim inhabitants were protected to ensure continuity and stability for commercial activities. Never fully
605:. The power of these groups was largely dependent upon their ability to attract military manpower. Western Anatolia was then a hotbed of raiding activity, with warriors switching allegiance at will to whichever chief seemed most able to provide them with opportunities for plunder and glory. 1989:. Because Sratsimir had permitted the crusaders to pass through Vidin, Bayezid invaded his lands, took him prisoner, and annexed his territories. With Vidin's fall, Bulgaria ceased to exist, becoming the first major Balkan Christian state to disappear completely by direct Ottoman conquest. 662:
territories of the region. This Ottoman tribe was based not on blood-ties, but on political expedience. Thus it was inclusive of all who wished to join, including people of Byzantine origin. The Ottoman enterprise came to be led by several great warrior families, including the family of
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In 1430 a large Ottoman fleet attacked Salonika by surprise. The Venetians signed a peace treaty in 1432. The treaty gave the Ottomans the city of Salonika and the surrounding land. The war by Serbia and Hungary against the Ottoman Empire had come to a standstill in 1441, when the
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frontier warriors in Ottoman service. Köse Mihal was noteworthy for having been a Christian Greek; while he eventually converted to Islam, his prominent historical role indicates Osman's willingness to cooperate with non-Muslims and to incorporate them in his political enterprise.
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While Bayezid was occupied in Greece, Mircea of Wallachia conducted a series of raids across the Danube into Ottoman territory. In retaliation, Bayezid's forces, which included Serb vassal troops led by Lazarevic and Kralj Marko, struck into Wallachia in 1395 but were defeated at
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dynasty in 1261, which shifted Byzantine attention away from the Anatolian frontier. Mongol pressure pushed nomadic Turkish tribes to migrate westward, into the now poorly-defended Byzantine territory. For the next two centuries, Anatolian Beyliks were under the suzerainty of the
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was expanding and prosperous. However, at the end of his rule, the Bulgarian Tsar made the fatal mistake to divide the Second Bulgarian Empire into three appanages held by his sons. Bulgaria's cohesion was shattered further in the 1350s by a rivalry between the holder of
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Bayezid took with him an army composed primarily of Balkan vassal troops, including Serbs led by Lazarevic. He soon faced an invasion of Anatolia by the Central Asian ruler Timur Lenk. Around 1400, Timur entered the Middle East. Timur Lenk pillaged a few villages in
1317:. Although the Hungarians were repulsed and Ivan Sratsimir restored to his throne, Bulgaria emerged more intensely divided. Ivan Sratsimir proclaimed himself tsar of an "Empire" of Vidin in 1370, and Dobrotitsa received de facto recognition as independent despot in 2949:'s (1448–53) authority, put up a heroic defense, without the benefit of outside aid their efforts were doomed. The formerly impregnable land walls were breached after two months of constant pounding by Mehmed's heavy artillery. In the predawn hours of 29 May 1453, 2193:
brought a brief period of semi-independence to the vassal Christian Balkan states. Suleyman, one of the late sultan's sons, held the Ottoman capital at Edirne and proclaimed himself ruler, but his brothers refused to recognize him. He then concluded alliances with
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Osman's army at the beginning of the fourteenth century consisted largely of mounted warriors. These he used in raids, ambushes, and hit-and-run attacks, allowing him to control the countryside of Bithynia. However, he initially lacked the means to conduct sieges.
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The Ottomans began employing gunpowder weapons in the 1380s at the latest. By the 1420s they were regularly using cannons in siege warfare. Cannons were also used for fortress defense, and shore batteries allowed the Ottomans to bypass a Crusader blockade of the
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in Macedonia. Far from preserving Serb unity, Uroš's loosely amalgamated domains were wracked by constant civil war among the regional nobles, leaving Serbia vulnerable to the rising Ottoman threat. Murad I did rise to the power of the Ottoman Empire in 1362.
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An important factor in Ottoman success was their ability to preserve the empire across generations. Other Turkic groups frequently divided their realms between the sons of a deceased ruler. The Ottomans consistently kept the empire united under a single heir.
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and vassals (Beys) to maintain control over their realm. By the middle of the fifteenth century the Ottoman sultans were able to accumulate enough personal power and authority to establish a centralized imperial state, a process which was achieved by Sultan
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The Bulgarians and Serbs enjoyed a brief respite during the 1370s and into the 1380s when matters in Anatolia and increased meddling in Byzantium's political affairs kept Murad preoccupied. In Serbia, the lull permitted the northern Serb ‘’bojar’’ Prince
1309:, whose ruler Ivan Sratsimir was taken captive. Despite the concurrent loss of most Bulgarian Thracian holdings to Murad, Ivan Aleksandar became fixated on the Hungarians in Vidin. He formed a coalition against them with the Bulgarian ruler of Dobrudja 931:(raiders), they were attracted to his success and joined out of a desire to win plunder and glory. Most of Osman's early followers were Muslim Turks of tribal origin, while others were of Byzantine origin, either Christians or recent converts to Islam. 1359:, while the Hungarians encroached deeper into Serb lands in the north. Uros held only the core Serbian lands, whose nobles, although more powerful than their prince, generally remained loyal. These core lands consisted of: The western lands, including 1140:
In taking control over the passageways to Europe, the Ottomans gained a significant advantage over their rival Turkish principalities in Anatolia, as they now could gain immense prestige and wealth from conquests carried out on the Balkan frontier.
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accepted Ottoman overlordship when Turkish forces appeared on its border. Although a massive Ottoman punitive raid into the Peloponnese in 1395 netted much booty, events in the Balkans’ northeast saved Morea from further direct attack at the time.
650:) as the sources, none of them contemporary, provide many different and conflicting origin stories. What is certain is that at some point in the late thirteenth century Osman emerged as the leader of a small principality centered on the town of 3426:
Almost all the traditional tales about Osman Gazi are fictitious. The best thing a modern historian can do is to admit frankly that the earliest history of the Ottomans is a black hole. Any attempt to fill this hole will result simply in more
1895:, where Marko was killed. The victory saved Wallachia from Turkish occupation, but Mircea accepted vassalage under Bayezid to avert further Ottoman intervention. The sultan took consolation for his less than victorious efforts in annexing 1264:
were frightened by Ottoman conquests in Thrace, and were ill-prepared to deal with the threat. Byzantine territory was reduced and fragmented. It consisted mostly of the capital, Constantinople and its Thracian environs, the city of
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vassal, agreed that the sultan should confirm all future Byzantine emperors. Soon thereafter Bayezid was called back to Anatolia to deal with continuing problems with the Ottomans’ Turkish rivals and never returned to the Balkans.
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in 1345-6, thus placing all potential crossing points to Europe in Ottoman hands. The experienced Karesi warriors were incorporated into the Ottoman military, and were a valuable asset in subsequent campaigns into the Balkans.
745:, it had a tribal organization without a complex administrative apparatus. As Ottoman territory expanded, its rulers were faced with the challenge of administering an ever-larger population. Early on, the Ottomans adopted the 1881:
When the Moreans later reneged on their Serres agreement with Bayezid, the angered Ottoman ruler blockaded the Morean despot's imperial brother Manuel II in Constantinople and then marched southward and annexed Thessaly. The
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dispatched against him. Lazar and Tvrtko met the Turks and defeated them at Plocnik, west of Niš. The victory by his fellow Christian princes encouraged Shishman to shed Ottoman vassalage and reassert Bulgarian independence.
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escaped that fate. One contingent reached the Albanian Adriatic coast in 1385. Another took and occupied Thessaloniki in 1387. The danger to the continued independence of the Balkan Christian states grew alarmingly apparent.
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facilitating their expanded military operations. ln addition, control of the highways in Thrace isolated Byzantium from direct overland contact with any of its potential allies in the Balkans and in Western Europe. Byzantine
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followed a time of total chaos in the Empire. Mongols roamed free in Anatolia and the political power of the sultan was broken. After Beyazid was captured, his remaining sons, Suleiman Çelebi, İsa Çelebi, Mehmed Çelebi, and
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was forced to sign an unfavorable treaty with Orhan in 1356 that recognized his Thracian losses. For the next 50 years, the Ottomans went on to conquer vast territories in the Balkans, reaching as far north as modern-day
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on the frontier. Later Ottoman writers embellished this event by depicting Osman as having experienced a dream while staying with Edebali, in which it was foretold that his descendants would rule over a vast empire.
1866:. When that town fell to Bayezid, Shishman was captured and beheaded. All his lands were annexed by the sultan, and Sratsimir, whose Vidin holdings had escaped Bayezid's wrath, was forced to reaffirm his vassalage. 2521:
Venetian fleet started bombarding the city from the sea-side. The Ottomans fled and the fleet was able to hold off the Ottomans until new Venetian reinforcements arrived to recapture the city. The outcome of the
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is now thought to have been a much more fluid undertaking, sometimes referring to actions that were nothing more than raids, sometimes meaning a deliberate holy war, but most often combining a mixture of these
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in Serres, encompassing all of eastern Macedonia; and the central Serbian lands, stretching from the Danube south into central Macedonia, co-ruled by Uroš and the powerful noble Vukasin Mrnjavcevic, who held
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Schamiloglu, Uli (2004). "The Rise of the Ottoman Empire: The Black Death in Medieval Anatolia and its Impact on Turkish Civilization". In Yavari, Neguin; Lawrence G. Potter; Jean-Marc Ran Oppenheim (eds.).
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Schamiloglu, Uli (2004). "The Rise of the Ottoman Empire: The Black Death in Medieval Anatolia and its Impact on Turkish Civilization". In Yavari, Neguin; Lawrence G. Potter; Jean-Marc Ran Oppenheim (eds.).
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A term normally meaning "a warrior who fights in the name of Islam", but which had a variety of different meanings for the early Ottomans, not all of them strictly religious. On this see the above section,
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the closest comrades and fellow-fighters of the first two Ottoman rulers, Osman Ghazi (d. 1324) and Orhan I (r. 1324–62), included several Orthodox Christian Greeks and recent Christian converts to Islam.
1477:, protector of Uroš and Uglješa's brother, joined in the effort. The others either failed to recognize the Ottoman danger or refused to participate lest competitors attacked while they were in the field. 3324:
The conquest of Constantinople (Istanbul) in 1453 can be taken as a watershed moment for Ottoman power, ideology, and governance that is usually characterized as a transition from principality to empire.
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and commenced the conflict with the Ottoman Empire. In August, 1400, Timur and his horde burned the town of Sivas to the ground and advanced into the mainland. Their armies met outside of Ankara, at the
2347:(1404–09, 1421–45), along with many Bosnian regional nobles, to accept formal Ottoman vassalage, Mehmed conducted only one actual war with the Europeans — a short and indecisive conflict with Venice. 2203:
Lazarevic, Wallachian Voievod Mircea, and the two last Bulgarian rulers’ sons. Musa then was confronted for sole control of the Ottoman throne by his younger brother Mehmed, who had freed himself of
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particular cultural pattern imbued with the ideal of continuous Holy War and continuous expansion of the Dar ul Islam—the realms of Islam—until they covered the whole world.” This is known as the
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The earlier part of this period, the fourteenth century, is particularly difficult for historians to study due to the scarcity of sources. Not a single written document survives from the reign of
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prince refused and turned to Tvrtko of Bosnia and Vuk Brankovic, his son-in-law and independent ruler of northern Macedonia and Kosovo, for aid against the certain Ottoman retaliatory offensive.
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and its immediate surroundings, and the Despotate of the Morea in the Peloponnese. Contact between Constantinople and the two other regions was only feasible via a tenuous sea route through the
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The new sultan had grave domestic problems. Musa's former policies sparked discontent among the Ottoman Balkans’ lower classes. In 1416 a popular revolt of Muslims and Christians broke out in
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held numerous Balkan coastal possessions. Prior to Bayezid's death, Ottoman control of the Balkans appeared a certainty. At the end of the interregnum, that certainty seemed open to question.
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Mehmed generally resorted to diplomacy rather than militancy in dealing with the situation. While he did conduct raiding expeditions into neighboring European lands, which returned much of
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The process of centralization is closely connected with an influx of Muslim scholars from Central Anatolia, where a more urban and bureaucratic Turkish civilization had developed under the
1878:(1391–1425), and Serbian Prince Lazarevic. At the meeting, Bayezid acquired possession of all disputed territories, and all of the attendees were required to reaffirm their vassal status. 1469:. Young, his hold on the throne unsteady, threatened by Stratsimir, and probably pressured by the Turks, Shishman could not afford to participate in Uglješa's scheme. Of the regional Serb 4133:
Of we know nothing with certainty until the Battle of Bapheus, Osman's triumphant confrontation with a Byzantine force in 1301 (or 1302), which is the first datable incident in his life.
1745:(1389–1427) concluded a vassal agreement with Bayezid in 1390 to counter Hungarian moves into northern Serbia, while Vuk Branković, the last independent Serb prince, held out until 1392. 770:. Much of the state's centralization was carried out in opposition to these frontier warriors, who resented Ottoman efforts to control them. Ultimately, the Ottomans managed to harness 3596:
elaborate genealogical family tree going back to Noah. If there was a particularly significant claim to Kayı lineage, it is hard to imagine that Yahşi Fakih would not have heard of it.
1832:, "the Thunderbolt") succeeded to the sultanship upon the assassination of his father Murad. In a rage over the attack, he ordered all Serbian captives killed; Beyazid became known as 417: 5884: 1657:
Savra field battle was fought on 18 September 1385 between Ottoman and Serbian forces. The Ottomans were victorious and most of the local Serbian and Albanian lords became vassals.
6250: 4842: 2297:. His was the duty to restore the Ottoman Empire to its former glory. The Empire had suffered hard from the interregnum; the Mongols were still at large in the east, even though 1585:, and large areas of central Serbia broke away as independent principalities, reducing it to half of its former size. No future ruler ever again officially held the office of 869:
Of great symbolic importance for Ottoman centralization was the practice of Ottoman rulers to stand upon hearing martial music, indicating their willingness to participate in
511:
in 1453 is seen as the symbolic moment when the emerging Ottoman state shifted from a mere principality into an empire therefore marking a major turning point in its history.
6386: 5416: 514:
The cause of Ottoman success cannot be attributed to any single factor, and they varied throughout the period as the Ottomans continually adapted to changing circumstances.
155: 1037:
Osman I strengthened his legitimacy by marrying the daughter of Sheikh Edebali, a prominent local religious leader who was said to have been at the head of a community of
5286: 3404:
Modern historians attempt to sift historical fact from the myths contained in the later stories in which the Ottoman chroniclers accounted for the origins of the dynasty
881:
discontinued this practice, indicating that the Ottoman ruler was no longer a simple frontier warrior, but the sovereign of an empire. The empire's capital shifted from
2958:
again. However, according to Ottoman sources such as Tursun Beg he threw off his mantle and attempted to flee before being cut down by an injured Ottoman soldier. The
2301:
had died in 1405; many of the Christian kingdoms of the Balkans had broken free of Ottoman control; and the land, especially Anatolia, had suffered hard from the war.
1985:
marched through Vidin, and arrived at Nikopol, where they met the Turks. The headstrong French knights refused to follow Sigismund's battle plans, resulting in their
1899:
and in supporting a pretender, Vlad I (1395–97), to the Wallachian throne. Two years of civil war ensued before Mircea regained complete control of the principality.
826:, who sustained Ottoman military conquests, and created lasting tensions within the state. It was also during the reign of Murad I that the office of military judge ( 3608:
In fact, no matter how one were to try, the sources simply do not allow the recovery of a family tree linking the antecedents of Osman to the Kayı of the Oğuz tribe.
4805: 4712: 1850:
By early 1393 Turnovo Bulgaria's Ivan Shishman, hoping to throw off his onerous vassalage, was in secret negotiations with Sigismund, along with Wallachian Voievod
697:, in which he put forth the argument that the early Ottoman state was constructed upon an ideology of Islamic holy war against non-Muslims. Such a war was known as 286: 5899: 3124:", or "Roman Caesar", and modelled the state after the old Byzantine Empire, thinking of himself as the successor to the Roman throne. Later, when he invaded 1593:
enjoyed enough power or respect to gain recognition as a unifying leader. Vukasin's son, Marko, survived the slaughter and proclaimed himself Serbian "king" (
5976: 5528: 4869: 910:, the first major town conquered by the Ottomans, surrendered under threat of starvation following a long blockade rather than from an assault. It was under 5316: 6475: 6470: 5615: 2853: 2738: 2468: 2250: 2134: 2034: 1934: 1780: 1512: 1418: 1188: 410: 49: 4879: 1840:
firm base for permanent expansion westward to the Adriatic coast, Bayezid settled large numbers of ‘’yürüks’’ along the Vardar River valley in Macedonia.
5421: 671:, which was Bulgarian. Islam and Persian culture were part of Ottoman self-identity from the start, as evidenced by a land grant issued by Osman's son 5719: 5216: 4889: 1627:
By the mid-1380s Murad's attention once again focused on the Balkans. With his Bulgarian vassal Shishman preoccupied by a war with Wallachian Voievod
312: 1874:
in 1394 to settle these and other outstanding matters. Among the sultan's attending vassals were the Thessalian and Morean nobles, Byzantine Emperor
491:. Throughout most of this period, the Ottomans were merely one of many competing states in the region, and relied upon the support of local warlords 5684: 4953: 1328:, its rapid dissolution following his death in 1355 was dramatic. The powerful regional Serb nobles demonstrated little respect for his successor, 5025: 4864: 3007: 2369:
Mehmed spent the rest of his reign reorganizing Ottoman state structures disrupted by the interregnum. When Mehmed died in 1421, one of his sons,
1847:
of Luxemburg (1387–1437) to the danger that the Ottomans posed to his kingdom, and he sought out Balkan allies for a new anti-Ottoman coalition.
897:. This was seen, both symbolically and practically, as the moment of the empire's definitive shift from a frontier principality into an empire. 5768: 5560: 5548: 5465: 5147: 5020: 4884: 403: 133: 2508: 2433:
in 1423, which ended Murad's siege of Constantinople. Thessalonica continued to be under siege until 1430, with the Turkish sack of the city.
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to double the tribute for holding an Ottoman pretender for the throne, he used the request as a pretext for annulling all treaties with the
5157: 5132: 5101: 4776: 384: 234: 6465: 6444: 2426: 1581:
What little unity Serbia possessed collapsed after the catastrophe at Ormenion (Chernomen). Uroš died before the year was out, ending the
1325: 803: 96: 6310: 6285: 6225: 4943: 4764: 4705: 1601:, in central Macedonia. Serbia slipped into accelerated fragmentation and internecine warfare among the proliferating regional princes. 208: 68: 6401: 5813: 5773: 5747: 5701: 5442: 5189: 4837: 362: 5936: 836:) and the rest of society. Murad I also instituted the practice of appointing specific frontier warriors as "Lords of the Frontier" ( 6406: 5071: 4988: 4978: 4822: 4681: 4509: 4490: 4082: 3450: 2879: 2764: 2494: 2276: 2160: 2060: 1960: 1858:'s Ivan Sratsimir. Bayezid got wind of the talks and launched a devastating campaign against Shishman. Turnovo was captured after a 1806: 1538: 1444: 1214: 346: 328: 115: 5479: 3577:
but otherwise the details of their story, including the identity of the grandfather, are too mythological to be taken for granted.
2612:
to Hungary and gave western Bulgaria (including Sofia) to Serbia. It forced Murad to abdicate in favor of his twelve-year-old son
75: 5411: 4548: 3808: 2798:, the Conqueror) again came to the Ottoman throne following Murad's death in 1451. But by conquering and annexing the emirate of 1055: 862:. These surveys enabled the Ottoman state to organize the distribution of agricultural taxation rights to the military class of 561:
in the central plateau. Equilibrium between them was disrupted by the Mongol invasion and conquest of the Seljuks following the
5904: 5709: 5674: 5580: 5538: 4832: 354: 270: 2810:
proved his skills both on the military and the political front and was soon accepted by the noble class of the Ottoman court.
1005:
had become the leader of a group of Turkish pastoral tribes, through which he ruled over a small territory around the town of
6270: 6210: 6182: 5941: 5533: 5359: 5300: 4906: 4698: 2857: 2742: 2541:
encouraged other Christian states to join the war against the Ottomans, though only Austria ever sent troops to the Balkans.
2472: 2405: 2254: 2138: 2038: 1938: 1784: 1516: 1422: 1192: 729:
expansion into the Balkans, and contributed to the weakening of the Byzantine Empire and the depopulation of Constantinople.
163: 53: 6187: 4874: 82: 832:) was created, indicating an increasing level of social stratification between the emerging military-administrative class ( 6356: 5806: 5752: 5602: 5592: 5086: 4729: 3216: 3064: 2639: 1306: 1234: 142: 5370: 4284:"In 1363 the Ottoman capital moved from Bursa to Edirne, although Bursa retained its spiritual and economic importance." 3995:Ágoston, Gábor (2014). "Firearms and Military Adaptation: The Ottomans and the European Military Revolution, 1450–1800". 6480: 5152: 4901: 1355:
as well as Dušan's former Albanian holdings. A series of small independent principalities arose in western and southern
1474: 64: 6366: 5778: 5742: 5724: 5691: 5662: 5177: 1635:, the last remaining Bulgarian possession south of the Balkan Mountains, opening the way toward strategically located 814:. This gave the Ottoman rulers a source of manpower from which they could construct a new personal army, known as the 6059: 3180: 2922:, was against it and criticized the Sultan for being too rash and overconfident in his abilities. On April 15, 1452, 2842: 2727: 2457: 2239: 2123: 2023: 1923: 1769: 1501: 1407: 1177: 2692:
the Ottomans in a single battle. Hunyadi was totally immodest and led his forces without leaving any escort behind.
1705: 6361: 6351: 6315: 5437: 2967: 2946: 2919: 2340: 1333: 1329: 1286: 1277: 874: 370: 2861: 2846: 2746: 2731: 2476: 2461: 2258: 2243: 2142: 2127: 2042: 2027: 1942: 1927: 1788: 1773: 1520: 1505: 1426: 1411: 1196: 1181: 749:
as models for administration and the Illkhanates as models for military warfare, and by 1324 were able to produce
42: 6084: 5847: 4827: 1718: 1462: 1290: 338: 6335: 5585: 5344: 5333: 4815: 1314: 20: 2320:, and Byzantine vassals were virtually independent. The Albanian tribes were uniting into a single state, and 562: 636:
The origin of the Ottoman dynasty isn't known for sure but it is known that it was established by Turks from
6039: 6009: 5820: 5326: 5169: 4290:. Official website of Ministry of Culture and Tourism of the Republic of Turkey. Retrieved 19 December 2014. 2686: 2309: 1386: 1257: 593:
were established both in formerly Byzantine lands and in the territory of the fragmenting Seljuk Sultanate.
2953:
ordered an all-out assault on the battered ramparts. After a brief but vicious melee at the walls in which
1017:. Success attracted warriors to his following, particularly after his victory over a Byzantine army in the 844:. As a way of openly declaring this new status, Murad became the first Ottoman ruler to adopt the title of 597:
led several historians to describe the political entities of thirteenth and fourteenth-century Anatolia as
6396: 6152: 5926: 5640: 5394: 4995: 4781: 4757: 4521:
Exploring Ottoman Sovereignty: Tradition, Image, and Practice in the Ottoman Imperial Household, 1400-1800
3517:
Exploring Ottoman Sovereignty: Tradition, Image, and Practice in the Ottoman Imperial Household, 1400-1800
3421: 3295:
Exploring Ottoman Sovereignty: Tradition, Image, and Practice in the Ottoman Imperial Household, 1400-1800
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Exploring Ottoman Sovereignty: Tradition, Image, and Practice in the Ottoman Imperial Household, 1400-1800
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spent his early years on the throne disposing of rivals and rebellions, most notably the revolts of the
2359: 1875: 1717:, June 15, 1389, the Ottoman army, personally commanded by Sultan Murad, fought the Serbian army led by 89: 6107: 6034: 2605: 957: 795: 5496: 6434: 6376: 6172: 6079: 6049: 5840: 5625: 5610: 5354: 5111: 4345:
Disequilibrium, Polarization, and Crisis Model: An International Relations Theory Explaining Conflict
2954: 2942: 1622: 1364: 1092: 4786: 244: 6320: 6300: 6280: 6245: 6177: 6089: 5956: 5349: 4752: 3745:
term has come to be widely contested by scholars. The early Ottoman military activity described as
3496:
Kafadar, Cemal (2007). "A Rome of One's Own: Cultural Geography and Identity in the Lands of Rum".
3085: 3030: 2988: 2344: 2190: 2183: 1986: 1977: 1742: 1685: 1610: 1582: 1352: 1051: 968: 741:
When the Ottoman polity first emerged at the end of the thirteenth century under the leadership of
621:. According to later Ottoman tradition, he was descended from a Turkic tribe which migrated out of 550: 187: 6420: 6424: 6260: 6235: 6137: 6014: 5966: 5961: 5951: 5889: 5657: 4916: 4793: 4769: 4012: 2553: 2333: 2329: 1628: 1356: 1302: 1298: 1129: 1096: 1059: 939:
in 1444. By that time, handheld firearms had also come into use, and were adopted by some of the
766: 260: 218: 5182: 4285: 962: 2073: 6162: 6132: 6122: 6112: 6029: 6019: 6004: 5871: 5788: 5630: 4983: 4677: 4658: 4632: 4613: 4594: 4544: 4524: 4505: 4486: 4440: 4421: 4397: 4378: 4349: 4319: 4313: 4078: 3804: 3520: 3446: 3393: 3298: 3273: 3117: 2581: 2568:
attacked the Empire from the back. Murad had to split his army. The main force went to defend
2430: 2389: 2355: 2321: 2313: 1863: 1738: 1730: 1666: 1574: 1552: 1018: 756:
The early Ottoman state's expansion was fueled by the military activity of frontier warriors (
590: 2608:. On July 12, 1444, Murad signed a treaty which gave Wallachia and the Bulgarian province of 1321:. Bulgaria's efforts were squandered to little domestic purpose and against the wrong enemy. 6381: 6330: 6325: 6265: 6230: 6142: 6099: 6069: 5991: 5909: 5879: 5647: 5406: 5204: 5010: 4737: 4467: 4004: 3101: 2903: 2096: 2091: 1892: 1859: 1726: 1700: 1368: 1253: 1014: 894: 852: 802:
to the early Ottomans and influenced their institutional development. Some time after 1376,
791: 757: 750: 626: 558: 554: 468: 438: 2974:
origin. During the growth of the Empire Turks seldom were appointed to the high positions.
1973: 1297:
designated successor. In addition to internal problems, Bulgaria was further crippled by a
541: 6391: 6305: 6275: 5999: 5916: 5652: 5506: 5447: 5209: 4968: 3092: 2674: 2647: 2625: 2609: 1883: 1722: 1652: 702: 460: 182: 2513:
On the request of its inhabitants, Venetian troops took control of the city of Salonika (
1104: 1083:
In addition to fighting the Byzantines, Orhan also conquered the Turkish principality of
893:, a city with deeply imperial connotations due to its long history as the capital of the 3144: 3120:
in 1462 and moved the Ottoman capital there from Adrianople. Mehmed had himself titled "
778:
became more centralized and the tax burden increased, prompting criticism from writers.
6295: 6240: 6194: 6147: 6127: 5971: 5894: 5734: 5714: 5667: 4721: 3204: 3072: 3060: 2984: 2963: 2938: 2907: 2669:. After the Balkan front was secured, Murad turned east and defeated Timur Lenk's son, 2411: 2179: 1851: 1844: 1466: 1341: 1261: 1103:
in 1352, after which the Ottomans gained their first permanent stronghold in Europe at
1099:. When John VI became co-emperor (1347–1354) he allowed Orhan to raid the peninsula of 890: 746: 614: 587: 586:. From the 1260s onward Anatolia increasingly began to slip from Byzantine control, as 583: 566: 433: 296: 147: 1006: 651: 6459: 6054: 5635: 5575: 5389: 5272: 5060: 5047: 5015: 5005: 5000: 4016: 3192: 3156: 3077: 3046: 2643: 2538: 1566: 840:). Such power of appointment indicates that the Ottoman rulers were no longer merely 799: 664: 575: 525: 5106: 1870:
required Bayezid's intervention. He summoned a meeting of all his Balkan vassals at
1843:
The appearance of Turk raiders at Hungary's southern borders awakened the Hungarian
437:
is a period of history that started with the emergence of the Ottoman principality (
6220: 6117: 5921: 5521: 5491: 5381: 5221: 5199: 4798: 4747: 3129: 3121: 3034: 3014: 2959: 2915: 2604:
fell to the Christians in 1443. In 1444, the Empire suffered a major defeat in the
2514: 2199: 1266: 637: 622: 602: 484: 388: 2616:. Later the same year the Christians violated the peace treaty and attacked anew. 921:
The warriors in Osman's service came from diverse backgrounds. Known variously as
4415: 4343: 3440: 1111:
decided to pursue war against Europe, Anatolian Turks were settled in and around
487:. For this reason, this period in the empire's history has been described as the 6371: 6074: 5981: 5863: 5321: 5030: 4896: 4411: 4089:
The chronology of Osman's activities until 1302 cannot be accurately determined.
3783:Ágoston, Gábor (2009). "Ghaza (gaza)". In Ágoston, Gábor; Bruce Masters (eds.). 3762:Ágoston, Gábor (2009). "Ghaza (gaza)". In Ágoston, Gábor; Bruce Masters (eds.). 3738:Ágoston, Gábor (2009). "Ghaza (gaza)". In Ágoston, Gábor; Bruce Masters (eds.). 3042: 2831: 2783: 2716: 2446: 2228: 2112: 2012: 1912: 1758: 1490: 1396: 1270: 1166: 1124: 972: 940: 936: 851:
Beginning in the 1430s, but most likely earlier, the Ottomans conducted regular
725: 690: 684: 630: 570: 530: 480: 31: 1241:
and made it his new capital in 1363. By transferring his capital from Bursa in
990: 646:
Likewise, nothing is known about how Osman first established his principality (
5946: 5570: 5194: 5037: 4472: 4455: 2700: 2429:. Byzantine involvement in the war ended with the transfer of the city to the 1360: 1310: 1120: 633:, but beyond this the details "are too mythological to be taken for granted." 4060:
Kermeli, Eugenia (2009). "Osman I". In Ágoston, Gábor; Bruce Masters (eds.).
2596:
emirates (in violation of the peace treaty) intervened against the Ottomans.
6255: 6024: 5565: 5338: 5265: 5248: 5042: 3056: 3000: 2971: 2950: 2934: 2923: 2899: 2807: 2799: 2791: 2778: 2670: 2658: 2654: 2613: 2593: 2565: 2545: 2363: 2317: 2195: 2082: 1896: 1825: 1820: 1318: 1112: 1100: 1095:. In 1346 Orhan openly supported John VI in the overthrowing of the emperor 953: 878: 863: 815: 668: 659: 579: 497: 4921: 3357:
There is still not one authentic written document known from the time of ʿO
2414:
for several months and lifted it only after forcing the Byzantine emperor,
2308:
to Adrianople. He faced a delicate political situation in the Balkans. His
1557: 918:(r. 1362-1389) that the Ottomans mastered the techniques of siege warfare. 738:
the empire, including Turkic tribal leaders and Balkan allies and vassals.
4456:"A Rome of One's Own: Cultural Geography and Identity in the Lands of Rum" 4008: 629:. As evidenced by coins minted during his reign, Osman's father was named 459:. This period witnessed the foundation of a political entity ruled by the 6290: 6167: 6044: 5516: 5364: 5121: 5096: 4810: 2662: 2589: 2573: 2561: 2381: 2370: 2325: 2294: 2212: 1734: 1714: 1348: 1242: 1069: 1027: 1010: 828: 655: 476: 464: 304: 553:(1071) Anatolia was divided between two relatively powerful states: the 19:
This article is about the historical topic. For the 2020 TV series, see
5931: 5832: 5511: 5501: 5281: 5255: 4936: 4931: 3125: 2666: 2635: 2585: 2530: 2351: 1570: 1150: 1077: 1068:
succeeded him as leader of the Ottomans. Orhan oversaw the conquest of
1038: 999: 915: 807: 742: 618: 518: 472: 5783: 5260: 5243: 5091: 3105: 3038: 2803: 2787:
The Ottoman Empire at the beginning of the second reign of Mehmed II.
2696: 2631: 2534: 2526: 2422: 2290: 2204: 2174: 1871: 1640: 1598: 1458: 1373: 1246: 1238: 1134: 1116: 1084: 885:, the city symbolically connected with the frontier warrior ethos of 882: 856: 845: 810:
to institute a tax of one-fifth on slaves taken in war, known as the
724:
Anatolia and the Balkans were greatly impacted by the arrival of the
492: 2597: 2544:
The war in the Balkans began as the Ottoman army moved to recapture
1836:, the lightning bolt, for the speed with which his empire expanded. 1636: 3361:
mān, and there are not many from the fourteenth century altogether.
2657:
in 1446. Another peace treaty was signed in 1448 giving the Empire
2564:
and, at the same time, urged by the Pope, the Anatolian emirate of
2388:. He also had problems at home. He subdued the rebels of his uncle 855:
of the territory under their rule, producing record-books known as
601:, or "petty kings", a comparison with the history of late-medieval 2911: 2782: 2601: 2569: 2557: 2385: 2305: 2298: 2072: 2002: 1855: 1632: 1282: 1108: 1073: 1065: 1023: 989: 911: 907: 672: 598: 540: 4690: 2289:
When Mehmed Çelebi stood as victor in 1413 he crowned himself in
2215:(1413–21) emerged as the sole ruler of a reunited Ottoman state. 1336:
was incapable of ruling as his father had. The separatist-minded
5277: 640: 5836: 4694: 1347:
First to throw off Serbian control were the Greek provinces of
956:
but, following the latter's death in 1402, written for his son
2825: 2710: 2440: 2222: 2106: 2006: 1906: 1752: 1597:) but was unable to enforce his claim beyond his lands around 1484: 1390: 1289:, Ivan Aleksandar's sole surviving son by his first wife, and 1237:
of the Byzantine city of Adrianople in 1362. He renamed it to
1160: 617:
dynasty is named after the first ruler of the Ottoman polity,
533:, a now largely-criticised theory of early Ottoman expansion. 25: 643:, who migrated to Anatolia and were under Mongol suzerainty. 3242: 4067:
of Turkoman tribal leaders operating in the Sakarya region.
3984:(2 ed.). New York: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 262–4. 4541:
Views From the Edge: Essays in Honor of Richard W. Bulliet
3801:
Views From the Edge: Essays in Honor of Richard W. Bulliet
3116:
Following the capture of Constantinople, Mehmed built the
994:
An estimation of the territory under the control of Osman.
467:, and its transformation from a small principality on the 4655:
Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State
4610:
Osman's Dream: The Story of the Ottoman Empire, 1300-1923
4437:
Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State
4394:
Osman's Dream: The Story of the Ottoman Empire, 1300-1923
4272:
Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State
4242:
Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State
4226:(2 ed.). New York: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 8–9. 4209:
Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State
4194:
Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State
4179:
Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State
4164:
Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State
4129:
Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State
4105:
Osman's Dream: The Story of the Ottoman Empire, 1300-1923
4032:
Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State
3952:
Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State
3937:
Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State
3907:
Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State
3889:
Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State
3874:
Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State
3859:
Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State
3844:
Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State
3725:
Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State
3695:
Osman's Dream: The Story of the Ottoman Empire, 1300-1923
3678:
Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State
3591:
Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State
3572:
Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State
3557:
Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State
3542:
Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State
3483:
Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State
3470:(2 ed.). New York: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 6–7. 3390:
Osman's Dream: The Story of the Ottoman Empire, 1300-1923
3375:
Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State
3353:
Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State
3338:
Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State
2802:(May–June, 1451) and by renewing the peace treaties with 2556:
vassal state. As the Ottoman army entered Wallachia, the
1115:
to secure it as a springboard for military operations in
1091:
Orhan married Theodora, the daughter of Byzantine prince
3803:. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 270–2. 3320:
Scholars and Sultans in the Early Modern Ottoman Empire
2777:
Further information: the Sultan's personal information
2699:. Some have it that he was wounded in a battle against 1819:
Further information: the Sultan's personal information
667:, which had a Greek Christian origin and the family of 582:. All coins minted during this period in Anatolia show 4259:(2 ed.). New York: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 9. 4151:(2 ed.). New York: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 8. 4122:(2 ed.). New York: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 8. 3322:. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 212. 1293:, the product of Aleksandar's second marriage and the 971:") was part of a genre known as "mirror for princes" ( 774:
military power while increasingly subordinating them.
4629:
The Ottoman Empire, 1300-1650: The Structure of Power
4417:
The Ottoman Empire, 1300–1650: The Structure of Power
4257:
The Ottoman Empire, 1300-1650: The Structure of Power
4224:
The Ottoman Empire, 1300-1650: The Structure of Power
4149:
The Ottoman Empire, 1300-1650: The Structure of Power
4120:
The Ottoman Empire, 1300-1650: The Structure of Power
4077:. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. p. 23. 3982:
The Ottoman Empire, 1300-1650: The Structure of Power
3468:
The Ottoman Empire, 1300-1650: The Structure of Power
2354:, led by Musa's former confidant, the scholar-mystic 1573:
on September 26, 1371 with sultan Murad's lieutenant
4420:(Second ed.). Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. 675:
in 1324, describing him as "Champion of the Faith".
16:
Rise of the Ottoman Empire to prominence (1299-1453)
6344: 6203: 6098: 5990: 5870: 5761: 5733: 5700: 5601: 5547: 5464: 5430: 5380: 5308: 5299: 5236: 5168: 5130: 5069: 5058: 4961: 4952: 4853: 4728: 4298: 4296: 2332:retained territorial ambitions in the Balkans, and 1340:were quick to take advantage of the situation, and 56:. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. 4330:The outcome of the battle itself was inconclusive. 3416:Imber, Colin (1991). Elizabeth Zachariadou (ed.). 2906:. Nevertheless, when he proposed in 1452 to siege 764:), of whom the Ottoman ruler was initially merely 1324:Given Serbia's preeminence in the Balkans under 1026:groups and with the neighboring principality of 1013:. He led frequent raids against the neighboring 3900: 3898: 3442:The Ottoman Empire The Classical Age, 1300-1600 3128:, his goal was to capture Rome and reunite the 2970:killed. His following four granviziers were of 2343:to Ottoman control and forced Bosnian King-Ban 1561:The Ottoman advance after the Battle of Maritsa 1080:(University) was established in Iznik in 1331. 2182:fought each other in what became known as the 806:, the head of the Çandarlı family, encouraged 5848: 4706: 2985:The Conquest of Constantinople on 29 May 1453 926: 411: 8: 4631:(2 ed.). New York: Palgrave Macmillan. 4373:Ágoston, Gábor; Bruce Masters, eds. (2009). 4235: 4233: 753:bureaucratic documents in the Seljuk style. 701:, and a warrior fighting in it was called a 4348:. University Press of America. p. 88. 3969:. Indiana University Press. pp. 29–30. 2979: 2898:When in 1451 the bankrupt Byzantines asked 2860:. Unsourced material may be challenged and 2745:. Unsourced material may be challenged and 2475:. Unsourced material may be challenged and 2257:. Unsourced material may be challenged and 2141:. Unsourced material may be challenged and 2041:. Unsourced material may be challenged and 1941:. Unsourced material may be challenged and 1787:. Unsourced material may be challenged and 1519:. Unsourced material may be challenged and 1465:(1371–95), who ruled central Bulgaria from 1425:. Unsourced material may be challenged and 1195:. Unsourced material may be challenged and 545:A rough map of Anatolian beyliks in c. 1300 5855: 5841: 5833: 5553: 5305: 5066: 4958: 4857: 4713: 4699: 4691: 3822: 3820: 3641:. Indiana University Press. pp. 23–5. 3626:. Indiana University Press. pp. 20–1. 2653:Murad was reinstated with the help of the 2552:during the Interregnum and that now was a 1709:Battle on Kosovo, by Adam Stefanovic, 1870 418: 404: 127: 4593:. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 4485:. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. 4471: 3243:"Gaza and gazis in early Ottoman history" 3065:Jean-Joseph Benjamin-Constant (1845–1902) 2880:Learn how and when to remove this message 2806:(September 10) and Hungary (November 20) 2765:Learn how and when to remove this message 2630:On November 10, 1444, Murad defeated the 2495:Learn how and when to remove this message 2277:Learn how and when to remove this message 2161:Learn how and when to remove this message 2061:Learn how and when to remove this message 1961:Learn how and when to remove this message 1807:Learn how and when to remove this message 1725:, which also included contingents led by 1639:, the northern terminus of the important 1539:Learn how and when to remove this message 1445:Learn how and when to remove this message 1215:Learn how and when to remove this message 1009:in the north-western Anatolian region of 654:in the north-western Anatolian region of 116:Learn how and when to remove this message 4483:Nomads and Ottomans in Medieval Anatolia 4075:Nomads and Ottomans in Medieval Anatolia 3967:Nomads and Ottomans in Medieval Anatolia 3654:Nomads and Ottomans in Medieval Anatolia 3639:Nomads and Ottomans in Medieval Anatolia 3624:Nomads and Ottomans in Medieval Anatolia 3606:. Indiana University Press. p. 10. 3604:Nomads and Ottomans in Medieval Anatolia 3445:. Weidenfeld & Nicolson. p. 6. 2982: 2941:. Although the city's defenders, led by 2926:ordered preparations to be made for the 2324:remained completely independent, as did 1972: 1704: 1565:The Battle of Maritsa took place at the 1556: 463:in the northwestern Anatolian region of 4543:. New York: Columbia University Press. 3778: 3776: 3656:. Indiana University Press. p. 33. 3257: 3233: 3140: 2962:broke through and swept over the city. 1315:Voievod Vladislav I Vlaicu of Wallachia 693:published an influential work entitled 679:Gaza and gazis in early Ottoman history 141: 130: 3263: 3261: 2695:Murad died in the winter 1450–1451 in 2421:In 1422 the first regular war against 2358:, and supported by Wallachian voivode 1233:Murad's first major offensive was the 4674:The Nature of the Early Ottoman State 4502:The Nature of the Early Ottoman State 4047:The Nature of the Early Ottoman State 3922:The Nature of the Early Ottoman State 3829:The Nature of the Early Ottoman State 3669:The Nature of the Early Ottoman State 2572:and the reserves had to be called to 2207:vassalage and held Ottoman Anatolia. 471:frontier into an empire spanning the 7: 4571:. Rethymnon: Crete University Press. 4567:Zachariadou, Elizabeth, ed. (1991). 3297:. London: Continuum. pp. 41–3. 2858:adding citations to reliable sources 2743:adding citations to reliable sources 2473:adding citations to reliable sources 2255:adding citations to reliable sources 2139:adding citations to reliable sources 2039:adding citations to reliable sources 1939:adding citations to reliable sources 1785:adding citations to reliable sources 1517:adding citations to reliable sources 1423:adding citations to reliable sources 1193:adding citations to reliable sources 54:adding citations to reliable sources 6440: 5885:Decline of the Western Roman Empire 4312:Daniel Waley; Peter Denley (2013). 794:. Particularly influential was the 6476:15th century in the Ottoman Empire 6471:14th century in the Ottoman Empire 5977:Growth of the Eastern Roman Empire 5138:(reform and constitutional period) 4657:. University of California Press. 4439:. University of California Press. 4375:Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire 4062:Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire 3785:Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire 3764:Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire 3740:Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire 2991:( Fatih Sultan Mehmed Khan Ghazi ) 2077:Painting by Stanisław Chlebowski, 1631:(ca. 1383-86), in 1385 Murad took 1149:Soon after Orhan's death in 1362, 14: 6407:Historiography in the Middle Ages 5026:List of Ottoman sultans' consorts 4989:Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques 4342:Isabelle Dierauer (16 May 2013). 3519:. London: Continuum. p. 43. 3272:. London: Continuum. p. 41. 2673:, and the emirates of Candar and 2548:, which the Ottomans had lost to 2509:Siege of Thessalonica (1422–1430) 2081:, 1878, depicting the capture of 1457:By 1370 Murad controlled most of 960:instead. This work, entitled the 6439: 6430: 6429: 6419: 5021:List of Ottoman sultans' mothers 4315:Later Medieval Europe: 1250-1520 3215: 3203: 3191: 3179: 3167: 3155: 3143: 3020: 3013: 3006: 2999: 2830: 2715: 2445: 2410:In 1422, Murad II laid siege to 2227: 2111: 2079:Sultan Bayezid prisoned by Timur 2011: 1911: 1757: 1489: 1395: 1165: 822:). Such measures frustrated the 154: 30: 5905:Christianity in the Middle Ages 5900:Decline of Hellenistic religion 5102:Defterdars/Ministers of Finance 4591:A History of the Ottoman Empire 4569:The Ottoman Emirate (1300-1389) 3418:The Ottoman Emirate (1300-1389) 2427:Siege of Thessalonica (1422–30) 2103:Ottoman Interregnum (1402–1413) 1367:); the southern lands, held by 689:In 1938 the Austrian historian 565:in 1243, and the reconquest of 502: 41:needs additional citations for 6183:Crisis of the late Middle Ages 4843:Persecution of Ottoman Muslims 4560:The Rise of the Ottoman Empire 3710:The Rise of the Ottoman Empire 3073:The Conquest of Constantinople 2406:Siege of Constantinople (1422) 2304:Mehmed moved the capital from 947:Cultural and intellectual life 695:The Rise of the Ottoman Empire 1: 6357:Disability in the Middle Ages 6030:Rise of the Republic of Genoa 5962:Rise of the Venetian Republic 4049:. SUNY Press. pp. 15–25. 3697:. Basic Books. pp. 9–10. 1729:, and a contingent sent from 453: 446: 3924:. SUNY Press. pp. 90–1. 3831:. SUNY Press. pp. 72–3. 3027: 2997: 537:Anatolia before the Ottomans 65:"Rise of the Ottoman Empire" 5287:Vassal and tributary states 4589:Howard, Douglas A. (2017). 4377:. New York: Facts on File. 3965:Lindner, Rudi Paul (1983). 3652:Lindner, Rudi Paul (1983). 3637:Lindner, Rudi Paul (1983). 3622:Lindner, Rudi Paul (1983). 3602:Lindner, Rudi Paul (1983). 3318:Atçıl, Abdurrahman (2017). 2418:to pay additional tribute. 1854:(1386–1418) and, possibly, 1119:against the Byzantines and 1064:Upon Osman's death his son 1056:Siege of Nicaea (1328–1331) 609:Origin of the Ottoman state 287:Decline & Modernization 6497: 6158:Rise of the Ottoman Empire 4318:. Routledge. p. 255. 3392:. Basic Books. p. 6. 2947:Constantine XI Palaiologos 2891: 2776: 2684: 2623: 2506: 2403: 2000: 1818: 1698: 1683: 1664: 1650: 1620: 1550: 1384: 1245:to that newly won city in 1226: 1049: 997: 875:Conquest of Constantinople 682: 371:Abolition of the Caliphate 363:Abolition of the Sultanate 300:(late 18th and early 19th) 18: 6415: 6085:Mongol invasion of Europe 5801: 5556: 4860: 4806:Decline and modernization 4612:. New York: Basic Books. 4608:Finkel, Caroline (2005). 4481:Lindner, Rudi P. (1983). 4473:10.1163/22118993-90000108 4392:Finkel, Caroline (2005). 4073:Lindner, Rudi P. (1983). 3693:Finkel, Caroline (2005). 3671:. SUNY Press. p. 59. 3388:Finkel, Caroline (2005). 3078:Fausto Zonaro (1854–1929) 3033:’s Land Transport of The 2525:was a setback for Murad. 1828:(often given the epithet 798:, which supplied several 5334:Six Divisions of Cavalry 4870:Foreign Affairs Ministry 4562:. Royal Asiatic Society. 4519:Murphey, Rhoads (2008). 3997:Journal of World History 3712:. Royal Asiatic Society. 3515:Murphey, Rhoads (2008). 3439:i̇Nalcık, Halil (1973). 3293:Murphey, Rhoads (2008). 3268:Murphey, Rhoads (2008). 2640:Wladislaus III of Poland 986:Osman I (c. 1299–1323/4) 21:Rise of Empires: Ottoman 6040:Investiture Controversy 6010:Second Bulgarian Empire 5327:Agha of the Janissaries 4974:List of Ottoman sultans 4653:Kafadar, Cemal (1995). 4454:Kafadar, Cemal (2007). 4435:Kafadar, Cemal (1995). 4302:Fine (1994), pp. 409–11 4270:Kafadar, Cemal (1995). 4240:Kafadar, Cemal (1995). 4207:Kafadar, Cemal (1995). 4192:Kafadar, Cemal (1995). 4177:Kafadar, Cemal (1995). 4162:Kafadar, Cemal (1995). 4127:Kafadar, Cemal (1995). 4030:Kafadar, Cemal (1995). 3950:Kafadar, Cemal (1995). 3935:Kafadar, Cemal (1995). 3905:Kafadar, Cemal (1995). 3887:Kafadar, Cemal (1995). 3872:Kafadar, Cemal (1995). 3857:Kafadar, Cemal (1995). 3842:Kafadar, Cemal (1995). 3723:Kafadar, Cemal (1995). 3676:Kafadar, Cemal (1995). 3589:Kafadar, Cemal (1995). 3570:Kafadar, Cemal (1995). 3555:Kafadar, Cemal (1995). 3540:Kafadar, Cemal (1995). 3481:Kafadar, Cemal (1995). 3373:Kafadar, Cemal (1995). 3351:Kafadar, Cemal (1995). 3336:Kafadar, Cemal (1995). 2928:siege of Constantinople 2703:'s Albanian guerillas. 2687:Battle of Kosovo (1448) 2533:allied themselves with 1862:, and Shishman fled to 1387:Reconquest of Gallipoli 952:be presented to Sultan 505: 1451–1481–  6466:Byzantine–Ottoman wars 6397:Post-classical history 6153:Fall of Constantinople 6060:Capet–Plantagenet feud 5927:First Bulgarian Empire 5529:Science and technology 4979:Roman succession claim 4504:. Albany: SUNY Press. 3422:Crete University Press 2894:Fall of Constantinople 2788: 2086: 1981: 1710: 1562: 1303:Hungarian King Louis I 1229:Conquest of Adrianople 995: 927: 761: 546: 339:2nd Constitutional Era 313:1st Constitutional Era 196:Fall of Constantinople 5402:Dragoman of the Fleet 5117:Dragoman of the Porte 4907:Armenian Constitution 4794:Stagnation and reform 4672:Lowry, Heath (2003). 4627:Imber, Colin (2009). 4558:Wittek, Paul (1938). 4523:. London: Continuum. 4500:Lowry, Heath (2003). 4287:Ottoman Capital Bursa 4255:Imber, Colin (2009). 4222:Imber, Colin (2009). 4147:Imber, Colin (2009). 4118:Imber, Colin (2009). 4045:Lowry, Heath (2003). 4009:10.1353/jwh.2014.0005 3980:Imber, Colin (2009). 3920:Lowry, Heath (2003). 3827:Lowry, Heath (2003). 3708:Wittek, Paul (1938). 3667:Lowry, Heath (2003). 3466:Imber, Colin (2009). 3093:Gentile Bellini, 1479 3088:(Fatih Sultan Mehmed) 2989:Mehmed The Conqueror 2914:, and especially the 2786: 2707:Mehmed II (1451–1481) 2550:Mircea I of Wallachia 2416:Manuel II Palaiologos 2366:back into vassalage. 2076: 1976: 1876:Manuel II Palaiologos 1749:Bayezid I (1389–1402) 1708: 1560: 1307:seized Vidin province 1252:The Balkan states of 993: 914:(r. 1323/4-1362) and 544: 6377:Medieval reenactment 6173:Renaissance Humanism 6080:Medieval Warm Period 6050:Republic of Florence 5864:European Middle Ages 5122:Outer Palace Service 5038:Inner Palace Service 2968:Çandarlı Halil Pasha 2943:Giovanni Giustiniani 2920:Çandarlı Halil Pasha 2854:improve this section 2822:Constantinople, 1453 2739:improve this section 2469:improve this section 2400:Constantinople, 1422 2377:Murad II (1421–1451) 2345:Tvrtko II Kotromanić 2251:improve this section 2219:Mehmed I (1413–1421) 2173:After the defeat at 2135:improve this section 2035:improve this section 1935:improve this section 1781:improve this section 1623:Battle of Dubravnica 1569:near the village of 1513:improve this section 1419:improve this section 1278:Tsar Ivan Aleksandar 1189:improve this section 1093:John VI Cantacuzenus 873:. Shortly after the 786:State centralization 557:in the west and the 489:"Proto-Imperial Era" 50:improve this article 6481:Rises to prominence 6090:Kingdom of Portugal 5957:Old Church Slavonic 5942:Anglo-Saxon England 5317:Classic period army 5158:Chamber of Deputies 5133:Imperial Government 3031:Fatih Sultan Mehmed 2191:Ottoman Interregnum 2184:Ottoman Interregnum 1978:Battle of Nicopolis 1723:Lazar Hrebeljanović 1647:Saurian Field, 1385 1611:Lazar Hrebeljanovic 1145:Murad I (1362–1389) 1072:'s major towns, as 1052:Battle of Pelekanon 1046:Orhan (1323/4–1362) 625:in the wake of the 551:Battle of Manzikert 507:). The conquest of 6271:In popular culture 6236:Crusading movement 6108:Hundred Years' War 5967:Civitas Schinesghe 5952:Carolingian Empire 5937:Kingdom of Croatia 5890:Barbarian kingdoms 4944:Translation Office 4828:2nd Constitutional 4816:1st Constitutional 4770:Sultanate of Women 4103:Finkel, Caroline. 2789: 2560:started attacking 2523:Battle of Salonika 2437:Thessalonika, 1430 2087: 1982: 1711: 1629:Dan I of Wallachia 1563: 1463:Tsar Ivan Shishman 1097:John V Palaeologus 1060:Siege of Nicomedia 996: 842:primus inter pares 767:primus inter pares 563:Battle of Köse Dağ 547: 524:Turkish historian 219:Sultanate of Women 6453: 6452: 6362:Basic topics list 6163:Swiss mercenaries 6113:Wars of the Roses 6020:Kingdom of Poland 6005:Holy Roman Empire 5872:Early Middle Ages 5830: 5829: 5797: 5796: 5789:Star and crescent 5460: 5459: 5456: 5455: 5295: 5294: 5232: 5231: 4984:Ottoman Caliphate 4865:Foreign relations 4664:978-0-520-20600-7 4638:978-0-230-57451-9 4619:978-0-465-02396-7 4600:978-0-521-72730-3 4530:978-1-84725-220-3 4446:978-0-520-20600-7 4427:978-1-1370-1406-1 4403:978-0-465-02396-7 4384:978-0-8160-6259-1 4355:978-0-7618-6106-5 4325:978-1-317-89018-8 4166:. pp. 128–9. 3909:. pp. 142–3. 3891:. pp. 111–3. 3861:. pp. 131–2. 3787:. pp. 231–2. 3727:. p. xi-xii. 3526:978-1-84725-220-3 3485:. pp. 125–6. 3399:978-0-465-02396-7 3304:978-1-84725-220-3 3279:978-1-84725-220-3 3113: 3112: 3109: 3081: 3067: 3050: 2890: 2889: 2882: 2775: 2774: 2767: 2606:Battle of Jalowaz 2582:Holy Roman Empire 2505: 2504: 2497: 2431:Venetian Republic 2373:, became sultan. 2287: 2286: 2279: 2171: 2170: 2163: 2071: 2070: 2063: 1971: 1970: 1963: 1817: 1816: 1809: 1667:Battle of Plocnik 1643:-Morava highway. 1575:Lala Shahin Pasha 1553:Battle of Maritsa 1549: 1548: 1541: 1455: 1454: 1447: 1326:Tsar Stefan Dušan 1225: 1224: 1217: 1019:Battle of Bapheus 981:Political history 853:cadastral surveys 591:Anatolian beyliks 578:, especially the 569:by the Byzantine 559:Anatolian Seljuks 428: 427: 358:(1918–1922) 350:(1914–1918) 342:(1908–1920) 332:(1908–1922) 316:(1876–1878) 308:(1839–1876) 290:(1789–1908) 274:(1718–1730) 264:(1703–1789) 248:(1656–1703) 238:(1566–1703) 222:(1533–1656) 212:(1453–1566) 191:(1402–1413) 176:(1299–1453) 126: 125: 118: 100: 6488: 6443: 6442: 6433: 6432: 6423: 6382:Medieval studies 6226:Church and State 6100:Late Middle Ages 5992:High Middle Ages 5910:Christianization 5880:Migration Period 5857: 5850: 5843: 5834: 5561:Social structure 5554: 5407:Imperial Arsenal 5306: 5140: 5079: 5077:(classic period) 5072:Imperial Council 5067: 4959: 4858: 4715: 4708: 4701: 4692: 4687: 4668: 4642: 4623: 4604: 4572: 4563: 4554: 4534: 4515: 4496: 4477: 4475: 4450: 4431: 4407: 4388: 4360: 4359: 4339: 4333: 4332: 4309: 4303: 4300: 4291: 4282: 4276: 4275: 4267: 4261: 4260: 4252: 4246: 4245: 4237: 4228: 4227: 4219: 4213: 4212: 4204: 4198: 4197: 4189: 4183: 4182: 4174: 4168: 4167: 4159: 4153: 4152: 4144: 4138: 4135: 4123: 4115: 4109: 4108: 4100: 4094: 4091: 4069: 4057: 4051: 4050: 4042: 4036: 4035: 4034:. pp. 93–4. 4027: 4021: 4020: 3992: 3986: 3985: 3977: 3971: 3970: 3962: 3956: 3955: 3947: 3941: 3940: 3932: 3926: 3925: 3917: 3911: 3910: 3902: 3893: 3892: 3884: 3878: 3877: 3869: 3863: 3862: 3854: 3848: 3847: 3839: 3833: 3832: 3824: 3815: 3814: 3795: 3789: 3788: 3780: 3771: 3770: 3759: 3753: 3752: 3735: 3729: 3728: 3720: 3714: 3713: 3705: 3699: 3698: 3690: 3684: 3681: 3672: 3664: 3658: 3657: 3649: 3643: 3642: 3634: 3628: 3627: 3619: 3613: 3610: 3598: 3586: 3580: 3579: 3567: 3561: 3560: 3552: 3546: 3545: 3537: 3531: 3530: 3512: 3506: 3505: 3493: 3487: 3486: 3478: 3472: 3471: 3463: 3457: 3456: 3436: 3430: 3429: 3413: 3407: 3406: 3385: 3379: 3378: 3370: 3364: 3363: 3348: 3342: 3341: 3333: 3327: 3326: 3315: 3309: 3308: 3290: 3284: 3283: 3265: 3246: 3238: 3219: 3207: 3195: 3183: 3171: 3159: 3147: 3102:National Gallery 3084: 3071: 3054: 3029: 3024: 3017: 3010: 3003: 2980: 2904:Byzantine Empire 2885: 2878: 2874: 2871: 2865: 2834: 2826: 2770: 2763: 2759: 2756: 2750: 2719: 2711: 2500: 2493: 2489: 2486: 2480: 2449: 2441: 2293:(Adrianople) as 2282: 2275: 2271: 2268: 2262: 2231: 2223: 2166: 2159: 2155: 2152: 2146: 2115: 2107: 2097:Battle of Ankara 2092:eastern Anatolia 2066: 2059: 2055: 2052: 2046: 2015: 2007: 1966: 1959: 1955: 1952: 1946: 1915: 1907: 1812: 1805: 1801: 1798: 1792: 1761: 1753: 1743:Stefan Lazarević 1701:Battle of Kosovo 1686:Battle of Bileća 1617:Dubravnica, 1381 1589:, and no single 1583:Nemanjić dynasty 1544: 1537: 1533: 1530: 1524: 1493: 1485: 1450: 1443: 1439: 1436: 1430: 1399: 1391: 1301:attack. In 1365 1220: 1213: 1209: 1206: 1200: 1169: 1161: 1015:Byzantine Empire 930: 895:Byzantine Empire 751:Persian-language 627:Mongol Conquests 584:Ilkhanate rulers 555:Byzantine Empire 506: 504: 458: 455: 451: 448: 420: 413: 406: 375: 367: 359: 351: 343: 333: 317: 309: 301: 291: 275: 265: 249: 239: 223: 213: 192: 177: 158: 128: 121: 114: 110: 107: 101: 99: 58: 34: 26: 6496: 6495: 6491: 6490: 6489: 6487: 6486: 6485: 6456: 6455: 6454: 6449: 6411: 6392:Neo-medievalism 6340: 6276:Itinerant court 6199: 6094: 6015:Georgian Empire 6000:Norman Conquest 5986: 5932:Frankish Empire 5866: 5861: 5831: 5826: 5793: 5757: 5729: 5696: 5597: 5586:Ottoman Turkish 5543: 5452: 5426: 5376: 5371:Modernized army 5355:Sekban-i Djedid 5291: 5228: 5183:Shaykh al-Islām 5164: 5141: 5136: 5135: 5126: 5080: 5075: 5074: 5054: 4969:Ottoman dynasty 4948: 4849: 4724: 4719: 4684: 4671: 4665: 4652: 4649: 4647:State formation 4639: 4626: 4620: 4607: 4601: 4588: 4585: 4580: 4578:Further reading 4575: 4566: 4557: 4551: 4537: 4531: 4518: 4512: 4499: 4493: 4480: 4453: 4447: 4434: 4428: 4410: 4404: 4396:. Basic Books. 4391: 4385: 4372: 4368: 4363: 4356: 4341: 4340: 4336: 4326: 4311: 4310: 4306: 4301: 4294: 4283: 4279: 4269: 4268: 4264: 4254: 4253: 4249: 4239: 4238: 4231: 4221: 4220: 4216: 4206: 4205: 4201: 4191: 4190: 4186: 4176: 4175: 4171: 4161: 4160: 4156: 4146: 4145: 4141: 4131:. p. 129. 4126: 4117: 4116: 4112: 4102: 4101: 4097: 4085: 4072: 4064:. p. 444. 4059: 4058: 4054: 4044: 4043: 4039: 4029: 4028: 4024: 3994: 3993: 3989: 3979: 3978: 3974: 3964: 3963: 3959: 3949: 3948: 3944: 3934: 3933: 3929: 3919: 3918: 3914: 3904: 3903: 3896: 3886: 3885: 3881: 3871: 3870: 3866: 3856: 3855: 3851: 3841: 3840: 3836: 3826: 3825: 3818: 3811: 3797: 3796: 3792: 3782: 3781: 3774: 3766:. p. 231. 3761: 3760: 3756: 3742:. p. 231. 3737: 3736: 3732: 3722: 3721: 3717: 3707: 3706: 3702: 3692: 3691: 3687: 3675: 3666: 3665: 3661: 3651: 3650: 3646: 3636: 3635: 3631: 3621: 3620: 3616: 3601: 3593:. p. 122. 3588: 3587: 3583: 3574:. p. 122. 3569: 3568: 3564: 3554: 3553: 3549: 3539: 3538: 3534: 3527: 3514: 3513: 3509: 3495: 3494: 3490: 3480: 3479: 3475: 3465: 3464: 3460: 3453: 3438: 3437: 3433: 3415: 3414: 3410: 3400: 3387: 3386: 3382: 3372: 3371: 3367: 3355:. p. xii. 3350: 3349: 3345: 3335: 3334: 3330: 3317: 3316: 3312: 3305: 3292: 3291: 3287: 3280: 3267: 3266: 3259: 3255: 3250: 3249: 3239: 3235: 3230: 3223: 3220: 3211: 3208: 3199: 3196: 3187: 3184: 3175: 3172: 3163: 3160: 3151: 3148: 3139: 3115: 3095: 3076: 2977: 2933:In April 1453, 2896: 2886: 2875: 2869: 2866: 2851: 2835: 2824: 2781: 2771: 2760: 2754: 2751: 2736: 2720: 2709: 2689: 2683: 2648:Battle of Varna 2628: 2626:Battle of Varna 2622: 2511: 2501: 2490: 2484: 2481: 2466: 2450: 2439: 2425:began with the 2408: 2402: 2379: 2283: 2272: 2266: 2263: 2248: 2232: 2221: 2167: 2156: 2150: 2147: 2132: 2116: 2105: 2067: 2056: 2050: 2047: 2032: 2016: 2005: 1999: 1987:crushing defeat 1967: 1956: 1950: 1947: 1932: 1916: 1905: 1884:Duchy of Athens 1823: 1813: 1802: 1796: 1793: 1778: 1762: 1751: 1737:, commanded by 1703: 1697: 1688: 1682: 1669: 1663: 1655: 1653:Battle of Savra 1649: 1625: 1619: 1555: 1545: 1534: 1528: 1525: 1510: 1494: 1483: 1451: 1440: 1434: 1431: 1416: 1400: 1389: 1383: 1381:Gallipoli, 1366 1276:Bulgaria under 1231: 1221: 1210: 1204: 1201: 1186: 1170: 1159: 1153:became Sultan. 1147: 1062: 1048: 1002: 988: 983: 958:Süleyman Çelebi 949: 903: 796:Çandarlı family 788: 735: 722: 687: 681: 611: 539: 501: 461:Ottoman Dynasty 456: 449: 443:Osmanlı Beyliği 424: 379: 378: 373: 365: 357: 349: 341: 334: 331: 321: 320: 315: 307: 299: 292: 289: 279: 278: 273: 266: 263: 253: 252: 247: 240: 237: 227: 226: 221: 214: 211: 201: 200: 190: 183:Beylik of Osman 178: 175: 146: 137: 122: 111: 105: 102: 59: 57: 47: 35: 24: 17: 12: 11: 5: 6494: 6492: 6484: 6483: 6478: 6473: 6468: 6458: 6457: 6451: 6450: 6448: 6447: 6437: 6427: 6416: 6413: 6412: 6410: 6409: 6404: 6399: 6394: 6389: 6387:Misconceptions 6384: 6379: 6374: 6369: 6364: 6359: 6354: 6348: 6346: 6342: 6341: 6339: 6338: 6333: 6328: 6323: 6318: 6313: 6308: 6303: 6298: 6293: 6288: 6283: 6278: 6273: 6268: 6263: 6258: 6253: 6248: 6243: 6238: 6233: 6228: 6223: 6218: 6213: 6207: 6205: 6201: 6200: 6198: 6197: 6195:Little Ice Age 6192: 6191: 6190: 6180: 6175: 6170: 6165: 6160: 6155: 6150: 6148:Western Schism 6145: 6140: 6135: 6130: 6125: 6120: 6115: 6110: 6104: 6102: 6096: 6095: 6093: 6092: 6087: 6082: 6077: 6072: 6067: 6062: 6057: 6052: 6047: 6042: 6037: 6032: 6027: 6022: 6017: 6012: 6007: 6002: 5996: 5994: 5988: 5987: 5985: 5984: 5979: 5974: 5969: 5964: 5959: 5954: 5949: 5944: 5939: 5934: 5929: 5924: 5919: 5914: 5913: 5912: 5902: 5897: 5895:Late antiquity 5892: 5887: 5882: 5876: 5874: 5868: 5867: 5862: 5860: 5859: 5852: 5845: 5837: 5828: 5827: 5825: 5824: 5817: 5810: 5802: 5799: 5798: 5795: 5794: 5792: 5791: 5786: 5781: 5776: 5771: 5765: 5763: 5759: 5758: 5756: 5755: 5750: 5745: 5739: 5737: 5731: 5730: 5728: 5727: 5722: 5717: 5712: 5706: 5704: 5698: 5697: 5695: 5694: 5689: 5688: 5687: 5682: 5672: 5671: 5670: 5665: 5655: 5650: 5645: 5644: 5643: 5638: 5633: 5628: 5620: 5619: 5618: 5607: 5605: 5599: 5598: 5596: 5595: 5590: 5589: 5588: 5578: 5573: 5568: 5563: 5557: 5551: 5545: 5544: 5542: 5541: 5536: 5531: 5526: 5525: 5524: 5519: 5514: 5509: 5504: 5494: 5489: 5484: 5483: 5482: 5477: 5470: 5468: 5462: 5461: 5458: 5457: 5454: 5453: 5451: 5450: 5445: 5440: 5434: 5432: 5428: 5427: 5425: 5424: 5419: 5414: 5409: 5404: 5399: 5398: 5397: 5386: 5384: 5378: 5377: 5375: 5374: 5367: 5362: 5357: 5352: 5350:Nizam-i Djedid 5341: 5336: 5331: 5330: 5329: 5312: 5310: 5303: 5297: 5296: 5293: 5292: 5290: 5289: 5284: 5275: 5273:Mutasarrifates 5270: 5269: 5268: 5258: 5253: 5252: 5251: 5240: 5238: 5234: 5233: 5230: 5229: 5227: 5226: 5225: 5224: 5214: 5213: 5212: 5207: 5202: 5197: 5187: 5186: 5185: 5174: 5172: 5166: 5165: 5163: 5162: 5161: 5160: 5155: 5144: 5142: 5131: 5128: 5127: 5125: 5124: 5119: 5114: 5112:Reis ül-Küttab 5109: 5104: 5099: 5094: 5089: 5083: 5081: 5070: 5064: 5056: 5055: 5053: 5052: 5051: 5050: 5048:Palace Schools 5045: 5035: 5034: 5033: 5028: 5023: 5018: 5013: 5008: 5003: 4996:Imperial Harem 4993: 4992: 4991: 4986: 4981: 4976: 4965: 4963: 4962:House of Osman 4956: 4950: 4949: 4947: 4946: 4941: 4940: 4939: 4934: 4926: 4925: 4924: 4919: 4914: 4909: 4904: 4894: 4893: 4892: 4887: 4882: 4877: 4872: 4861: 4855: 4851: 4850: 4848: 4847: 4846: 4845: 4840: 4835: 4830: 4820: 4819: 4818: 4813: 4803: 4802: 4801: 4791: 4790: 4789: 4784: 4782:Decline thesis 4777:Transformation 4774: 4773: 4772: 4762: 4761: 4760: 4758:Constantinople 4755: 4750: 4740: 4734: 4732: 4726: 4725: 4722:Ottoman Empire 4720: 4718: 4717: 4710: 4703: 4695: 4689: 4688: 4682: 4676:. SUNY Press. 4669: 4663: 4648: 4645: 4644: 4643: 4637: 4624: 4618: 4605: 4599: 4584: 4581: 4579: 4576: 4574: 4573: 4564: 4555: 4549: 4535: 4529: 4516: 4510: 4497: 4491: 4478: 4451: 4445: 4432: 4426: 4408: 4402: 4389: 4383: 4369: 4367: 4364: 4362: 4361: 4354: 4334: 4324: 4304: 4292: 4277: 4274:. p. 138. 4262: 4247: 4229: 4214: 4211:. p. 128. 4199: 4196:. p. 127. 4184: 4181:. p. 126. 4169: 4154: 4139: 4137: 4136: 4110: 4095: 4093: 4092: 4083: 4052: 4037: 4022: 3987: 3972: 3957: 3954:. p. 148. 3942: 3939:. p. 146. 3927: 3912: 3894: 3879: 3876:. p. 136. 3864: 3849: 3846:. p. 121. 3834: 3816: 3809: 3790: 3772: 3754: 3730: 3715: 3700: 3685: 3683: 3682: 3680:. p. 127. 3659: 3644: 3629: 3614: 3612: 3611: 3581: 3562: 3547: 3544:. p. 130. 3532: 3525: 3507: 3488: 3473: 3458: 3451: 3431: 3424:. p. 75. 3408: 3398: 3380: 3365: 3343: 3340:. p. 120. 3328: 3310: 3303: 3285: 3278: 3256: 3254: 3251: 3248: 3247: 3232: 3231: 3229: 3226: 3225: 3224: 3221: 3214: 3212: 3209: 3202: 3200: 3197: 3190: 3188: 3185: 3178: 3176: 3173: 3166: 3164: 3161: 3154: 3152: 3149: 3142: 3138: 3135: 3118:Topkapı Palace 3111: 3110: 3086:The Conqueror 3082: 3069: 3061:Constantinople 3052: 3026: 3025: 3018: 3011: 3004: 2996: 2995: 2964:Constantinople 2945:under Emperor 2939:Constantinople 2937:laid siege to 2908:Constantinople 2888: 2887: 2870:September 2016 2838: 2836: 2829: 2823: 2820: 2773: 2772: 2755:September 2016 2723: 2721: 2714: 2708: 2705: 2682: 2679: 2665:and a part of 2621: 2618: 2503: 2502: 2485:September 2016 2453: 2451: 2444: 2438: 2435: 2412:Constantinople 2401: 2398: 2390:Mustafa Çelebi 2378: 2375: 2356:Şeyh Bedreddin 2285: 2284: 2267:September 2016 2235: 2233: 2226: 2220: 2217: 2169: 2168: 2151:September 2016 2119: 2117: 2110: 2104: 2101: 2069: 2068: 2019: 2017: 2010: 1998: 1995: 1969: 1968: 1919: 1917: 1910: 1904: 1901: 1852:Mircea the Old 1845:King Sigismund 1815: 1814: 1797:September 2016 1765: 1763: 1756: 1750: 1747: 1739:Vlatko Vuković 1715:St. Vitus' Day 1696: 1693: 1681: 1678: 1662: 1659: 1648: 1645: 1618: 1615: 1547: 1546: 1529:September 2016 1497: 1495: 1488: 1482: 1479: 1453: 1452: 1403: 1401: 1394: 1382: 1379: 1332:. Young, weak 1287:Ivan Sratsimir 1223: 1222: 1205:September 2016 1173: 1171: 1164: 1158: 1155: 1146: 1143: 1130:Emperor John V 1125:eastern Thrace 1047: 1044: 987: 984: 982: 979: 967:("The Book of 948: 945: 902: 899: 891:Constantinople 792:Seljuks of Rum 787: 784: 747:Seljuks of Rum 734: 731: 721: 718: 683:Main article: 680: 677: 610: 607: 567:Constantinople 538: 535: 509:Constantinople 434:Ottoman Empire 426: 425: 423: 422: 415: 408: 400: 397: 396: 385:Historiography 381: 380: 377: 376: 368: 360: 352: 344: 335: 327: 326: 323: 322: 319: 318: 310: 302: 297:Nizam-i Djedid 293: 285: 284: 281: 280: 277: 276: 267: 259: 258: 255: 254: 251: 250: 241: 235:Transformation 233: 232: 229: 228: 225: 224: 215: 207: 206: 203: 202: 199: 198: 193: 185: 179: 171: 170: 167: 166: 160: 159: 151: 150: 148:Ottoman Empire 139: 138: 131: 124: 123: 38: 36: 29: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 6493: 6482: 6479: 6477: 6474: 6472: 6469: 6467: 6464: 6463: 6461: 6446: 6438: 6436: 6428: 6426: 6422: 6418: 6417: 6414: 6408: 6405: 6403: 6400: 6398: 6395: 6393: 6390: 6388: 6385: 6383: 6380: 6378: 6375: 6373: 6370: 6368: 6365: 6363: 6360: 6358: 6355: 6353: 6350: 6349: 6347: 6343: 6337: 6334: 6332: 6329: 6327: 6324: 6322: 6319: 6317: 6314: 6312: 6309: 6307: 6304: 6302: 6299: 6297: 6294: 6292: 6289: 6287: 6284: 6282: 6279: 6277: 6274: 6272: 6269: 6267: 6264: 6262: 6259: 6257: 6254: 6252: 6249: 6247: 6244: 6242: 6239: 6237: 6234: 6232: 6229: 6227: 6224: 6222: 6219: 6217: 6214: 6212: 6209: 6208: 6206: 6202: 6196: 6193: 6189: 6186: 6185: 6184: 6181: 6179: 6176: 6174: 6171: 6169: 6166: 6164: 6161: 6159: 6156: 6154: 6151: 6149: 6146: 6144: 6141: 6139: 6136: 6134: 6131: 6129: 6126: 6124: 6121: 6119: 6116: 6114: 6111: 6109: 6106: 6105: 6103: 6101: 6097: 6091: 6088: 6086: 6083: 6081: 6078: 6076: 6073: 6071: 6068: 6066: 6063: 6061: 6058: 6056: 6055:Scholasticism 6053: 6051: 6048: 6046: 6043: 6041: 6038: 6036: 6033: 6031: 6028: 6026: 6023: 6021: 6018: 6016: 6013: 6011: 6008: 6006: 6003: 6001: 5998: 5997: 5995: 5993: 5989: 5983: 5980: 5978: 5975: 5973: 5970: 5968: 5965: 5963: 5960: 5958: 5955: 5953: 5950: 5948: 5945: 5943: 5940: 5938: 5935: 5933: 5930: 5928: 5925: 5923: 5920: 5918: 5917:Rise of Islam 5915: 5911: 5908: 5907: 5906: 5903: 5901: 5898: 5896: 5893: 5891: 5888: 5886: 5883: 5881: 5878: 5877: 5875: 5873: 5869: 5865: 5858: 5853: 5851: 5846: 5844: 5839: 5838: 5835: 5823: 5822: 5818: 5816: 5815: 5811: 5809: 5808: 5804: 5803: 5800: 5790: 5787: 5785: 5782: 5780: 5777: 5775: 5772: 5770: 5767: 5766: 5764: 5760: 5754: 5751: 5749: 5746: 5744: 5741: 5740: 5738: 5736: 5732: 5726: 5723: 5721: 5718: 5716: 5713: 5711: 5708: 5707: 5705: 5703: 5699: 5693: 5690: 5686: 5683: 5681: 5678: 5677: 5676: 5673: 5669: 5666: 5664: 5661: 5660: 5659: 5656: 5654: 5651: 5649: 5646: 5642: 5639: 5637: 5634: 5632: 5629: 5627: 5624: 5623: 5621: 5617: 5614: 5613: 5612: 5609: 5608: 5606: 5604: 5600: 5594: 5591: 5587: 5584: 5583: 5582: 5579: 5577: 5576:Ottoman court 5574: 5572: 5569: 5567: 5564: 5562: 5559: 5558: 5555: 5552: 5550: 5546: 5540: 5537: 5535: 5532: 5530: 5527: 5523: 5520: 5518: 5515: 5513: 5510: 5508: 5505: 5503: 5500: 5499: 5498: 5495: 5493: 5490: 5488: 5485: 5481: 5478: 5475: 5474: 5472: 5471: 5469: 5467: 5463: 5449: 5446: 5444: 5441: 5439: 5436: 5435: 5433: 5429: 5423: 5420: 5418: 5417:Naval battles 5415: 5413: 5410: 5408: 5405: 5403: 5400: 5396: 5393: 5392: 5391: 5390:Kapudan Pasha 5388: 5387: 5385: 5383: 5379: 5373: 5372: 5368: 5366: 5363: 5361: 5358: 5356: 5353: 5351: 5347: 5346: 5345:Reform period 5342: 5340: 5337: 5335: 5332: 5328: 5325: 5324: 5323: 5319: 5318: 5314: 5313: 5311: 5307: 5304: 5302: 5298: 5288: 5285: 5283: 5279: 5276: 5274: 5271: 5267: 5264: 5263: 5262: 5259: 5257: 5254: 5250: 5247: 5246: 5245: 5242: 5241: 5239: 5235: 5223: 5220: 5219: 5218: 5215: 5211: 5208: 5206: 5203: 5201: 5198: 5196: 5193: 5192: 5191: 5188: 5184: 5181: 5180: 5179: 5176: 5175: 5173: 5171: 5167: 5159: 5156: 5154: 5151: 5150: 5149: 5146: 5145: 5143: 5139: 5134: 5129: 5123: 5120: 5118: 5115: 5113: 5110: 5108: 5105: 5103: 5100: 5098: 5095: 5093: 5090: 5088: 5085: 5084: 5082: 5078: 5073: 5068: 5065: 5062: 5057: 5049: 5046: 5044: 5041: 5040: 5039: 5036: 5032: 5029: 5027: 5024: 5022: 5019: 5017: 5014: 5012: 5009: 5007: 5006:Haseki sultan 5004: 5002: 5001:Valide sultan 4999: 4998: 4997: 4994: 4990: 4987: 4985: 4982: 4980: 4977: 4975: 4972: 4971: 4970: 4967: 4966: 4964: 4960: 4957: 4955: 4951: 4945: 4942: 4938: 4935: 4933: 4930: 4929: 4927: 4923: 4920: 4918: 4915: 4913: 4910: 4908: 4905: 4903: 4900: 4899: 4898: 4895: 4891: 4888: 4886: 4883: 4881: 4880:United States 4878: 4876: 4873: 4871: 4868: 4867: 4866: 4863: 4862: 4859: 4856: 4852: 4844: 4841: 4839: 4836: 4834: 4831: 4829: 4826: 4825: 4824: 4821: 4817: 4814: 4812: 4809: 4808: 4807: 4804: 4800: 4797: 4796: 4795: 4792: 4788: 4785: 4783: 4780: 4779: 4778: 4775: 4771: 4768: 4767: 4766: 4765:Classical Age 4763: 4759: 4756: 4754: 4751: 4749: 4746: 4745: 4744: 4741: 4739: 4738:Osman's Dream 4736: 4735: 4733: 4731: 4727: 4723: 4716: 4711: 4709: 4704: 4702: 4697: 4696: 4693: 4685: 4683:0-7914-5636-6 4679: 4675: 4670: 4666: 4660: 4656: 4651: 4650: 4646: 4640: 4634: 4630: 4625: 4621: 4615: 4611: 4606: 4602: 4596: 4592: 4587: 4586: 4582: 4577: 4570: 4565: 4561: 4556: 4552: 4546: 4542: 4536: 4532: 4526: 4522: 4517: 4513: 4511:0-7914-5636-6 4507: 4503: 4498: 4494: 4492:0-933070-12-8 4488: 4484: 4479: 4474: 4469: 4465: 4461: 4457: 4452: 4448: 4442: 4438: 4433: 4429: 4423: 4419: 4418: 4413: 4409: 4405: 4399: 4395: 4390: 4386: 4380: 4376: 4371: 4370: 4365: 4357: 4351: 4347: 4346: 4338: 4335: 4331: 4327: 4321: 4317: 4316: 4308: 4305: 4299: 4297: 4293: 4289: 4288: 4281: 4278: 4273: 4266: 4263: 4258: 4251: 4248: 4244:. p. 16. 4243: 4236: 4234: 4230: 4225: 4218: 4215: 4210: 4203: 4200: 4195: 4188: 4185: 4180: 4173: 4170: 4165: 4158: 4155: 4150: 4143: 4140: 4134: 4130: 4125: 4124: 4121: 4114: 4111: 4106: 4099: 4096: 4090: 4086: 4084:0-933070-12-8 4080: 4076: 4071: 4070: 4068: 4063: 4056: 4053: 4048: 4041: 4038: 4033: 4026: 4023: 4018: 4014: 4010: 4006: 4002: 3998: 3991: 3988: 3983: 3976: 3973: 3968: 3961: 3958: 3953: 3946: 3943: 3938: 3931: 3928: 3923: 3916: 3913: 3908: 3901: 3899: 3895: 3890: 3883: 3880: 3875: 3868: 3865: 3860: 3853: 3850: 3845: 3838: 3835: 3830: 3823: 3821: 3817: 3812: 3806: 3802: 3794: 3791: 3786: 3779: 3777: 3773: 3769: 3765: 3758: 3755: 3751: 3748: 3741: 3734: 3731: 3726: 3719: 3716: 3711: 3704: 3701: 3696: 3689: 3686: 3679: 3674: 3673: 3670: 3663: 3660: 3655: 3648: 3645: 3640: 3633: 3630: 3625: 3618: 3615: 3609: 3605: 3600: 3599: 3597: 3592: 3585: 3582: 3578: 3573: 3566: 3563: 3559:. p. 60. 3558: 3551: 3548: 3543: 3536: 3533: 3528: 3522: 3518: 3511: 3508: 3503: 3499: 3492: 3489: 3484: 3477: 3474: 3469: 3462: 3459: 3454: 3452:9780297994909 3448: 3444: 3443: 3435: 3432: 3428: 3423: 3420:. Rethymnon: 3419: 3412: 3409: 3405: 3401: 3395: 3391: 3384: 3381: 3377:. p. 93. 3376: 3369: 3366: 3362: 3360: 3354: 3347: 3344: 3339: 3332: 3329: 3325: 3321: 3314: 3311: 3306: 3300: 3296: 3289: 3286: 3281: 3275: 3271: 3264: 3262: 3258: 3252: 3244: 3237: 3234: 3227: 3218: 3213: 3206: 3201: 3194: 3189: 3182: 3177: 3170: 3165: 3158: 3153: 3146: 3141: 3136: 3134: 3131: 3127: 3123: 3119: 3107: 3103: 3099: 3094: 3090: 3089: 3083: 3079: 3074: 3070: 3066: 3062: 3058: 3053: 3048: 3047:Fausto Zonaro 3044: 3040: 3036: 3032: 3028: 3023: 3019: 3016: 3012: 3009: 3005: 3002: 2998: 2994: 2993: 2992: 2986: 2981: 2978: 2975: 2973: 2969: 2965: 2961: 2956: 2952: 2948: 2944: 2940: 2936: 2931: 2929: 2925: 2921: 2917: 2913: 2909: 2905: 2901: 2895: 2884: 2881: 2873: 2863: 2859: 2855: 2849: 2848: 2844: 2839:This section 2837: 2833: 2828: 2827: 2821: 2819: 2815: 2811: 2809: 2805: 2801: 2797: 2793: 2785: 2780: 2769: 2766: 2758: 2748: 2744: 2740: 2734: 2733: 2729: 2724:This section 2722: 2718: 2713: 2712: 2706: 2704: 2702: 2698: 2693: 2688: 2680: 2678: 2677:in Anatolia. 2676: 2672: 2668: 2664: 2660: 2656: 2651: 2649: 2645: 2644:Janos Hunyadi 2641: 2637: 2633: 2627: 2619: 2617: 2615: 2611: 2607: 2603: 2599: 2595: 2591: 2587: 2583: 2577: 2575: 2571: 2567: 2563: 2559: 2555: 2551: 2547: 2542: 2540: 2539:Pope Martin V 2536: 2532: 2528: 2524: 2518: 2516: 2510: 2499: 2496: 2488: 2478: 2474: 2470: 2464: 2463: 2459: 2454:This section 2452: 2448: 2443: 2442: 2436: 2434: 2432: 2428: 2424: 2419: 2417: 2413: 2407: 2399: 2397: 2395: 2394:Küçük Mustafa 2391: 2387: 2383: 2376: 2374: 2372: 2367: 2365: 2361: 2357: 2353: 2348: 2346: 2342: 2337: 2335: 2331: 2327: 2323: 2319: 2315: 2311: 2307: 2302: 2300: 2296: 2292: 2281: 2278: 2270: 2260: 2256: 2252: 2246: 2245: 2241: 2236:This section 2234: 2230: 2225: 2224: 2218: 2216: 2214: 2208: 2206: 2201: 2197: 2192: 2187: 2185: 2181: 2176: 2165: 2162: 2154: 2144: 2140: 2136: 2130: 2129: 2125: 2120:This section 2118: 2114: 2109: 2108: 2102: 2100: 2098: 2093: 2084: 2080: 2075: 2065: 2062: 2054: 2044: 2040: 2036: 2030: 2029: 2025: 2020:This section 2018: 2014: 2009: 2008: 2004: 1996: 1994: 1990: 1988: 1979: 1975: 1965: 1962: 1954: 1944: 1940: 1936: 1930: 1929: 1925: 1920:This section 1918: 1914: 1909: 1908: 1902: 1900: 1898: 1894: 1888: 1885: 1879: 1877: 1873: 1867: 1865: 1861: 1860:lengthy siege 1857: 1853: 1848: 1846: 1841: 1837: 1835: 1831: 1827: 1822: 1811: 1808: 1800: 1790: 1786: 1782: 1776: 1775: 1771: 1766:This section 1764: 1760: 1755: 1754: 1748: 1746: 1744: 1740: 1736: 1732: 1728: 1727:Vuk Branković 1724: 1720: 1716: 1707: 1702: 1694: 1692: 1687: 1679: 1677: 1673: 1668: 1661:Plocnik, 1386 1660: 1658: 1654: 1646: 1644: 1642: 1638: 1634: 1630: 1624: 1616: 1614: 1612: 1606: 1602: 1600: 1596: 1592: 1588: 1584: 1579: 1576: 1572: 1568: 1567:Maritsa River 1559: 1554: 1543: 1540: 1532: 1522: 1518: 1514: 1508: 1507: 1503: 1498:This section 1496: 1492: 1487: 1486: 1481:Maritsa, 1371 1480: 1478: 1476: 1472: 1468: 1464: 1460: 1449: 1446: 1438: 1428: 1424: 1420: 1414: 1413: 1409: 1404:This section 1402: 1398: 1393: 1392: 1388: 1380: 1378: 1375: 1370: 1369:Jovan Uglješa 1366: 1362: 1358: 1354: 1350: 1345: 1343: 1339: 1335: 1331: 1330:Stefan Uroš V 1327: 1322: 1320: 1316: 1312: 1308: 1304: 1300: 1296: 1292: 1291:Ivan Shishman 1288: 1284: 1279: 1274: 1272: 1268: 1263: 1259: 1255: 1250: 1248: 1244: 1240: 1236: 1230: 1219: 1216: 1208: 1198: 1194: 1190: 1184: 1183: 1179: 1174:This section 1172: 1168: 1163: 1162: 1156: 1154: 1152: 1144: 1142: 1138: 1136: 1131: 1126: 1122: 1118: 1114: 1110: 1106: 1102: 1098: 1094: 1089: 1086: 1081: 1079: 1075: 1071: 1067: 1061: 1057: 1053: 1045: 1043: 1040: 1035: 1031: 1029: 1025: 1020: 1016: 1012: 1008: 1001: 992: 985: 980: 978: 976: 975: 970: 966: 964: 959: 955: 946: 944: 942: 938: 932: 929: 924: 919: 917: 913: 909: 900: 898: 896: 892: 888: 884: 880: 876: 872: 867: 865: 861: 859: 858:tahrir defter 854: 849: 847: 843: 839: 835: 831: 830: 825: 821: 817: 813: 809: 805: 801: 800:Grand Viziers 797: 793: 785: 783: 779: 775: 773: 769: 768: 763: 759: 754: 752: 748: 744: 739: 732: 730: 727: 719: 717: 714: 710: 706: 705: 700: 696: 692: 686: 678: 676: 674: 670: 666: 661: 657: 653: 649: 644: 642: 639: 634: 632: 628: 624: 620: 616: 608: 606: 604: 600: 594: 592: 589: 585: 581: 577: 572: 568: 564: 560: 556: 552: 543: 536: 534: 532: 527: 526:Halil Inalcik 522: 520: 515: 512: 510: 499: 494: 490: 486: 482: 478: 474: 470: 466: 462: 444: 440: 436: 435: 421: 416: 414: 409: 407: 402: 401: 399: 398: 394: 390: 386: 383: 382: 372: 369: 364: 361: 356: 353: 348: 345: 340: 337: 336: 330: 325: 324: 314: 311: 306: 303: 298: 295: 294: 288: 283: 282: 272: 269: 268: 262: 257: 256: 246: 243: 242: 236: 231: 230: 220: 217: 216: 210: 209:Classical Age 205: 204: 197: 194: 189: 186: 184: 181: 180: 174: 169: 168: 165: 162: 161: 157: 153: 152: 149: 144: 140: 135: 129: 120: 117: 109: 106:November 2007 98: 95: 91: 88: 84: 81: 77: 74: 70: 67: –  66: 62: 61:Find sources: 55: 51: 45: 44: 39:This article 37: 33: 28: 27: 22: 6216:Architecture 6188:Great Famine 6178:Universities 6157: 6118:Hussite Wars 6035:Great Schism 5922:Papal States 5819: 5814:Bibliography 5812: 5805: 5774:Coat of arms 5748:Christianity 5702:Demographics 5685:of Armenians 5626:Illumination 5611:Architecture 5492:Central bank 5443:Conscription 5369: 5360:Mansure Army 5343: 5315: 5222:Hakham Bashi 5190:Christianity 5137: 5087:Grand Vizier 5076: 4928:Civil codes 4902:Constitution 4748:Ghaza thesis 4742: 4673: 4654: 4628: 4609: 4590: 4568: 4559: 4550:0-23113472-X 4540: 4520: 4501: 4482: 4463: 4459: 4436: 4416: 4412:Imber, Colin 4393: 4374: 4366:Bibliography 4344: 4337: 4329: 4314: 4307: 4286: 4280: 4271: 4265: 4256: 4250: 4241: 4223: 4217: 4208: 4202: 4193: 4187: 4178: 4172: 4163: 4157: 4148: 4142: 4132: 4128: 4119: 4113: 4107:. p. 2. 4104: 4098: 4088: 4074: 4065: 4061: 4055: 4046: 4040: 4031: 4025: 4000: 3996: 3990: 3981: 3975: 3966: 3960: 3951: 3945: 3936: 3930: 3921: 3915: 3906: 3888: 3882: 3873: 3867: 3858: 3852: 3843: 3837: 3828: 3810:0-23113472-X 3800: 3793: 3784: 3767: 3763: 3757: 3746: 3743: 3739: 3733: 3724: 3718: 3709: 3703: 3694: 3688: 3677: 3668: 3662: 3653: 3647: 3638: 3632: 3623: 3617: 3607: 3603: 3594: 3590: 3584: 3575: 3571: 3565: 3556: 3550: 3541: 3535: 3516: 3510: 3501: 3497: 3491: 3482: 3476: 3467: 3461: 3441: 3434: 3425: 3417: 3411: 3403: 3389: 3383: 3374: 3368: 3358: 3356: 3352: 3346: 3337: 3331: 3323: 3319: 3313: 3294: 3288: 3269: 3236: 3130:Roman Empire 3122:Kaiser-i-Rum 3114: 3097: 3087: 3035:Ottoman Navy 2990: 2983: 2976: 2960:Ottoman Army 2932: 2916:Grand Vizier 2910:most of the 2897: 2876: 2867: 2852:Please help 2840: 2816: 2812: 2795: 2790: 2761: 2752: 2737:Please help 2725: 2694: 2690: 2681:Kosovo, 1448 2652: 2629: 2578: 2543: 2519: 2515:Thessaloniki 2512: 2491: 2482: 2467:Please help 2455: 2420: 2409: 2392:and brother 2380: 2368: 2349: 2338: 2303: 2288: 2273: 2264: 2249:Please help 2237: 2209: 2200:Thessaloniki 2188: 2172: 2157: 2148: 2133:Please help 2121: 2088: 2078: 2057: 2051:October 2016 2048: 2033:Please help 2021: 1997:Ankara, 1402 1991: 1983: 1957: 1951:October 2016 1948: 1933:Please help 1921: 1889: 1880: 1868: 1849: 1842: 1838: 1833: 1829: 1824: 1803: 1794: 1779:Please help 1767: 1712: 1695:Kosovo, 1389 1689: 1680:Bileća, 1388 1674: 1670: 1656: 1626: 1607: 1603: 1594: 1590: 1586: 1580: 1564: 1535: 1526: 1511:Please help 1499: 1470: 1456: 1441: 1435:October 2016 1432: 1417:Please help 1405: 1346: 1344:fragmented. 1337: 1323: 1305:invaded and 1294: 1275: 1267:Thessaloniki 1251: 1232: 1211: 1202: 1187:Please help 1175: 1157:Edirne, 1362 1148: 1139: 1105:Çimpe Castle 1090: 1082: 1063: 1036: 1032: 1003: 973: 963:İskendernāme 961: 950: 933: 922: 920: 904: 886: 870: 868: 857: 850: 841: 837: 833: 827: 823: 819: 811: 789: 780: 776: 771: 765: 755: 740: 736: 723: 712: 708: 703: 698: 694: 688: 647: 645: 635: 623:Central Asia 612: 603:Muslim Spain 595: 548: 523: 516: 513: 488: 485:North Africa 452:, and ended 442: 432:rise of the 431: 429: 355:Partitioning 305:Tanzimat Era 172: 112: 103: 93: 86: 79: 72: 60: 48:Please help 43:verification 40: 6445:WikiProject 6372:Medievalism 6211:Agriculture 6075:Manorialism 6070:Communalism 6065:Monasticism 5982:Reconquista 5972:Kievan Rus' 5641:Shadow play 5487:Agriculture 5480:Reformation 5476:Enlargement 5322:Janissaries 5031:Kizlar Agha 5016:Hanımefendi 5011:Kadınefendi 4823:Dissolution 4753:Interregnum 3049:(1854–1929) 3043:Golden Horn 2955:Giustiniani 2655:Janissaries 2620:Varna, 1444 2198:, to which 2180:Musa Çelebi 1271:Dardanelles 974:naṣīḥatnāme 941:janissaries 937:Dardanelles 816:Janissaries 726:Black Death 691:Paul Wittek 685:Gaza Thesis 571:Palaiologos 531:Gaza Thesis 481:Middle East 457: 1453 450: 1299 347:World War I 329:Dissolution 245:Köprülü Era 188:Interregnum 6460:Categories 6367:Land terms 6321:Technology 6301:Philosophy 6281:Literature 6246:Demography 5947:Viking Age 5658:Literature 5571:Ottomanism 5266:Sanjakbeys 5249:Beylerbeys 5237:Provincial 4954:Government 4917:Family law 3253:References 2892:See also: 2701:Skanderbeg 2685:See also: 2624:See also: 2588:, and the 2584:, Poland, 2507:See also: 2404:See also: 2318:Wallachian 2001:See also: 1699:See also: 1684:See also: 1665:See also: 1651:See also: 1621:See also: 1551:See also: 1385:See also: 1361:Montenegro 1311:Dobrotitsa 1227:See also: 1123:. Most of 1121:Bulgarians 1050:See also: 998:See also: 838:uc begleri 804:Kara Halil 733:Government 720:Demography 665:Köse Mihal 549:After the 261:Old Regime 76:newspapers 6352:Dark Ages 6261:Household 6256:Hastilude 6025:Feudalism 5710:Armenians 5675:Education 5631:Miniature 5581:Languages 5566:Devshirme 5539:Transport 5339:Timariots 5205:Bulgarian 5097:Kazaskers 5059:Central ( 5043:Kapi Agha 4912:Electoral 4838:Abolition 4833:Partition 4017:143042353 4003:: 88–94. 3750:elements. 3222:Mehmed II 3186:Bayezid I 3057:Mehmed II 3055:Entry of 2972:devshirme 2841:does not 2808:Mehmed II 2800:Karamanid 2792:Mehmed II 2779:Mehmed II 2726:does not 2671:Shah Rukh 2659:Wallachia 2636:Hungarian 2594:Karamanid 2566:Karamanid 2554:Hungarian 2546:Wallachia 2456:does not 2364:Wallachia 2310:Bulgarian 2238:does not 2196:Byzantium 2122:does not 2085:by Timur. 2022:does not 1922:does not 1903:Nicopolis 1897:Dobrudzha 1826:Bayezid I 1821:Bayezid I 1768:does not 1571:Chernomen 1500:does not 1406:does not 1357:Macedonia 1319:Dobrudzha 1299:Hungarian 1254:Byzantium 1176:does not 1113:Gallipoli 1107:in 1354. 1101:Gallipoli 1039:dervishes 969:Alexander 954:Bayezid I 879:Mehmed II 877:in 1453, 864:timariots 669:Hranislav 660:Byzantine 580:Ilkhanate 498:Mehmed II 469:Byzantine 271:Tulip Era 6435:Category 6402:Timeline 6291:Minstrel 6286:Medicine 6168:Chivalry 6123:Burgundy 6045:Crusades 5821:Category 5735:Religion 5648:Clothing 5534:Taxation 5497:Currency 5438:Aviation 5412:Admirals 5365:Hamidieh 5301:Military 5282:Kadiluks 5256:Vilayets 5210:Armenian 5148:Assembly 4885:Treaties 4854:Politics 4811:Tanzimat 4466:: 7–25. 4460:Muqarnas 4414:(2009). 3498:Muqarnas 3210:Murad II 3198:Mehmed I 2794:(called 2663:Bulgaria 2638:army of 2590:Jandarid 2574:Anatolia 2562:Bulgaria 2382:Murad II 2360:Mircea I 2326:Moldavia 2295:Mehmed I 2213:Mehmed I 1834:Yıldırım 1830:Yıldırım 1735:Tvrtko I 1733:by King 1349:Thessaly 1258:Bulgaria 1243:Anatolia 1235:conquest 1070:Bithynia 1028:Germiyan 1011:Bithynia 901:Military 829:Kazasker 820:yeniçeri 656:Bithynia 631:Ertuğrul 477:Anatolia 465:Bithynia 164:Timeline 134:a series 132:Part of 6345:Related 6331:Warfare 6326:Theatre 6316:Slavery 6311:Science 6266:Hunting 6231:Cuisine 6204:Culture 6143:Castile 6138:England 5807:Outline 5762:Symbols 5753:Judaism 5680:Schools 5653:Cuisine 5616:Mosques 5603:Culture 5593:Slavery 5549:Society 5512:Sultani 5473:By era 5466:Economy 5448:Weapons 5261:Sanjaks 5244:Eyalets 5217:Judaism 5170:Millets 5107:Nişancı 5092:Viziers 4937:Halakha 4932:Mecelle 4875:Safavid 4787:Köprülü 4730:History 4583:Surveys 3427:fables. 3174:Murad I 3150:Osman I 3137:Gallery 3126:Otranto 2862:removed 2847:sources 2747:removed 2732:sources 2675:Karaman 2667:Albania 2646:at the 2642:led by 2634:– 2586:Albania 2531:Hungary 2477:removed 2462:sources 2352:Dobruja 2341:Albania 2330:Hungary 2314:Serbian 2259:removed 2244:sources 2143:removed 2128:sources 2083:Bayezid 2043:removed 2028:sources 1943:removed 1928:sources 1864:Nikopol 1789:removed 1774:sources 1721:Prince 1719:Serbian 1521:removed 1506:sources 1475:Vukašin 1473:, only 1467:Turnovo 1427:removed 1412:sources 1197:removed 1182:sources 1151:Murad I 1078:medrese 1000:Osman I 928:akıncıs 916:Murad I 808:Murad I 758:Turkish 743:Osman I 638:Central 619:Osman I 615:Ottoman 588:Turkish 576:Mongols 519:Osman I 473:Balkans 439:Turkish 393:Decline 143:History 90:scholar 6425:Portal 6306:Poetry 6133:France 5784:Tughra 5769:Anthem 5715:Greeks 5668:Poetry 5153:Senate 4922:Düstur 4680:  4661:  4635:  4616:  4597:  4547:  4527:  4508:  4489:  4443:  4424:  4400:  4381:  4352:  4322:  4081:  4015:  3807:  3523:  3449:  3396:  3301:  3276:  3106:London 3039:Galata 2951:Mehmed 2935:Mehmed 2924:Mehmed 2900:Mehmed 2804:Venice 2697:Edirne 2632:Polish 2614:Mehmed 2535:Venice 2527:Serbia 2423:Venice 2334:Venice 2322:Bosnia 2291:Edirne 2205:Mongol 2175:Ankara 1980:(1396) 1893:Rovine 1872:Serres 1731:Bosnia 1641:Vardar 1599:Prilep 1471:bojars 1459:Thrace 1374:Prilep 1353:Epiros 1342:Serbia 1338:bojars 1295:tsar's 1262:Serbia 1260:, and 1247:Thrace 1239:Edirne 1135:Serbia 1117:Thrace 1085:Karesi 1058:, and 925:s and 883:Edirne 846:sultan 834:askeri 812:pençik 648:beylik 599:Taifas 493:Ghazis 374:(1924) 366:(1922) 145:of the 136:on the 92:  85:  78:  71:  63:  6336:Women 6296:Music 6251:Domes 6241:Dance 6128:Milan 5743:Islam 5725:Women 5692:Media 5663:Prose 5636:Music 5517:Kuruş 5431:Other 5422:Ships 5278:Kazas 5200:Ullah 5178:Islam 5061:Porte 4799:Tulip 4013:S2CID 3747:ghaza 3228:Notes 3162:Orhan 3059:into 3041:into 3037:from 2912:divan 2796:Fatih 2610:Varna 2602:Sofia 2570:Sofia 2558:Serbs 2386:Serbs 2371:Murad 2306:Bursa 2299:Timur 2003:Timur 1856:Vidin 1633:Sofia 1595:kralj 1591:bojar 1283:Vidin 1109:Orhan 1074:Bursa 1066:Orhan 1024:Tatar 1022:with 1007:Söğüt 912:Orhan 908:Bursa 889:, to 673:Orhan 652:Söğüt 445:) in 389:Ghaza 97:JSTOR 83:books 5779:Flag 5720:Jews 5622:Art 5522:Lira 5507:Para 5502:Akçe 5395:List 5382:Navy 5309:Army 4890:Wars 4743:Rise 4678:ISBN 4659:ISBN 4633:ISBN 4614:ISBN 4595:ISBN 4545:ISBN 4525:ISBN 4506:ISBN 4487:ISBN 4441:ISBN 4422:ISBN 4398:ISBN 4379:ISBN 4350:ISBN 4320:ISBN 4079:ISBN 3805:ISBN 3521:ISBN 3504:: 8. 3447:ISBN 3394:ISBN 3299:ISBN 3274:ISBN 3100:52; 3096:(70 2845:any 2843:cite 2730:any 2728:cite 2661:and 2600:and 2592:and 2529:and 2460:any 2458:cite 2242:any 2240:cite 2189:The 2126:any 2124:cite 2026:any 2024:cite 1926:any 1924:cite 1772:any 1770:cite 1504:any 1502:cite 1410:any 1408:cite 1365:Zeta 1351:and 1334:Uroš 1313:and 1180:any 1178:cite 923:gazi 887:gaza 871:gaza 824:gazi 772:gazi 762:gazi 713:gazi 711:and 709:gaza 704:gazi 699:gaza 641:Asia 613:The 483:and 430:The 173:Rise 69:news 6221:Art 5195:Rūm 4897:Law 4468:doi 4005:doi 3091:by 3063:by 3045:by 2987:by 2856:by 2741:by 2598:Niš 2471:by 2253:by 2137:by 2037:by 1937:by 1783:by 1713:On 1637:Niš 1587:car 1515:by 1421:by 1191:by 52:by 6462:: 5348:: 5320:: 4464:24 4462:. 4458:. 4328:. 4295:^ 4232:^ 4087:. 4011:. 4001:25 3999:. 3897:^ 3819:^ 3775:^ 3502:24 3500:. 3402:. 3260:^ 3108:). 3104:, 3075:by 3068:. 3051:. 2930:. 2918:, 2650:. 2537:. 2396:. 2328:. 2316:, 2312:, 2186:. 1285:, 1256:, 1137:. 1054:, 1030:. 943:. 848:. 760:: 503:r. 479:, 475:, 454:c. 447:c. 441:: 391:, 5856:e 5849:t 5842:v 5280:/ 5063:) 4714:e 4707:t 4700:v 4686:. 4667:. 4641:. 4622:. 4603:. 4553:. 4533:. 4514:. 4495:. 4476:. 4470:: 4449:. 4430:. 4406:. 4387:. 4358:. 4019:. 4007:: 3813:. 3529:. 3455:. 3359:s 3307:. 3282:. 3245:. 3098:x 3080:. 2883:) 2877:( 2872:) 2868:( 2864:. 2850:. 2768:) 2762:( 2757:) 2753:( 2749:. 2735:. 2498:) 2492:( 2487:) 2483:( 2479:. 2465:. 2280:) 2274:( 2269:) 2265:( 2261:. 2247:. 2164:) 2158:( 2153:) 2149:( 2145:. 2131:. 2064:) 2058:( 2053:) 2049:( 2045:. 2031:. 1964:) 1958:( 1953:) 1949:( 1945:. 1931:. 1810:) 1804:( 1799:) 1795:( 1791:. 1777:. 1542:) 1536:( 1531:) 1527:( 1523:. 1509:. 1448:) 1442:( 1437:) 1433:( 1429:. 1415:. 1363:( 1218:) 1212:( 1207:) 1203:( 1199:. 1185:. 965:, 860:s 818:( 500:( 419:e 412:t 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Rise of Empires: Ottoman

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