Defining Ottoman : Legacy of a Dream

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Transcription:

Defining Ottoman : Legacy of a Dream

Mehmet & Constantinople Issues to address 14 th -15 th c: - Succession - Borders - Administrative infrastructure

Mehmet & Constantinople Succession: - Traditional Mongol-Turk practices saw succession contested between most able - Death of leader invited challenges from vassals, lesser families - Osman passed power to Orhan during his lifetime to asure acceptance, avoid conflict - Orhan inherited territories without contest

Mehmet & Constantinople Mehmet I: - Battled three brothers appointed rulers by Mongols (after capture, death of Bayzid) - Used Byzantine assistance to gain back Anatolia - Empire nearly destroyed

Murat II : - also battled several claimants - Some supported by Byzantium, others by rival Turkish (Anatolian principalities) - Attempted not to provoke further resistance - Growing autonomy (eg Karaman)

Mehmet II ruled twice, once as child Returns to throne on death of Murat II (1451) Authority in question, cannot afford challenges Had surviving brother(s?) killed

Begins Ottoman practice of fratricide: And to whomsoever of my sons the Sultanate shall pass, it is fitting that for the order of the world he shall kill his brothers. Most of the ulema allow it. So let them act on this. - Practice rapidly normalized - Critiqued in Mongol sources for betraying traditional society seen as Ottoman

Borders: - Frontiers, with associated difficulties - West: Serbia; Byzantine, Venetian, Genoan colonies - Anatolia: local principalities (eg Karaman) - East: Usman Hasman - South East: Mamluk Sultanate

Serbia Hungary: - In spite of vassalage since 1398, constantly negotiated - Story of family connections, opposing factions: options to appeal to either Hungary or Ottomans - Murad II captured Serbian King: he became Ottoman - Leader pro-ottoman faction brother grand vizier

Underpinnings of Vassalage: - Tribute payments: often refused (eg Bosnia, Herzegovina), provoking interventions - Defense against Hungary as important as value of tribute - Flexibility: vassals can play patrons off against each other - Marriage used to stabilize relations

Examples: Herzegovina - Lord of realm converted, served as Grand Vizier under Mehmet s son (Bayzid II), married Mehmet s daughter Byzantine Eastern Colony (following submission): - Daughter of ruler entered Sultan s Harem - Treasurer who negotiated surrender was cousin of Ottoman Grand Vizier, entered administration

Eastern Strategies - Broadly defined: Mamluks, Karaman States, Usman Hasan - Eastern states offered alliances to Venice to capture position on Black Sea (Trebizond) - Mamluk s backing claimant to Karaman, Ottomans backing rival

- Mehmet planned attack into Syria, counting on Karaman support - Karamanids abstained, counting on Mamluks - Ottomans defeated Karamanids

- Major challenge remained in Usman Hasan - Intervening in eastern region as successor to Timurids: direct competitor to Ottomans - Drew on traditional symbols of legitimacy - Turkish lineage as ancient as Ottomans - Respect for Islamic law (Ottomans illegally taxing Muslims) - Respect for nomadic rights (Ottomans forcing sedentarization

Crimea: - Region connected directly to former rule Ghengis Khan - Annexation but special status client (rather than vassal) - Tatar horsemen valued; stipend paid to state to assure cavalry s role in Ottoman campaigns

Context in which conquest (fall?) of Constantinople took place, 1453 - Following on history of attempts 13 since 650 - grandfather Bayzid carried out 8 year siege - Key change in Ottoman strategy: Rumelo Hisari & cannon technology

Constantinople: - Repeated requests for help from Europe (Genoa and Venice, commercial interests; Pope, state leaders, political/religious interests) - tied aid offered: closer connection to Roman Christianity - refused

Story of the Conquest - Nicolo Barbaro (Venetian) - Kritovoulos (Greek) - Georges Sphrantzes (courtier Byzantine court)

Mehmet entering Constantinople after his Victory. [painting late 19 th -early 20 th C.]

Questions and Issues: - what are the biases we need to take into account and how do we see them reflected? - what aspects of society do we see reflected in these accounts? - how does understanding the conquest help us understand the process of becoming Ottoman?

Compare with an Ottoman view, Historian & Philosopher Tursun Beg, writing some years after the battle. [see Additional Readings ]

The Views from Europe: - varied (compare Wheatcroft s interpretation of the darkest day with contemporary response of Venetian) - [see Additional Readings ]

Video Excerpt Islam: empire of faith (The Ottomans Part 3/3) [on Youtube 10:50-21:40]

European Responses: - outrage followed by negotiation: Venice recovering investments, Genoa protecting position in Galata - no European state willing to engage in reconquest : Pope called for Holy War, proposal of new crusade collapsed for lack of support

Ottoman Responses: - Repopulation city first priority - Greek, Genoese traders enticed back - policies of colonization also pursued - Policy of building new institutions - Topkapi Palace

Topkapi Palace

Topkapi Palace (above) Map Istanbul (Right note Genoese Galata quarter)

Religious authorities placated by millet system: - each permitted own constituency - enjoyed same privileges as Muslim clerics - church property tax free - Jewish, Christian, Orthodox laws respected - colonization helped to maintain balance

Costs of Empire: - Campaigns in West and East, conquest of Constantinople costly - Demanded efficient, permanent army - Infrastructure of empire also costly - How to maintain loyalty, economic contributions new territories, peoples?

Economy: - Impact of Conquest: Black Sea became Ottoman Lake - Trade in basics grains, fruits, forest products, skins, hides, cotton - Luxury goods: silks, woolens, minerals, metals, spices, sugars, honey, dyes, alum, furs

Economy: - Slave trade also flourishing - Fed from Caucuses, raids in new European territories - Across Black Sea

Economy: - Role of Capitulations - Used to build commercial relations with Europe (especially Italian states) - Political tool for Ottomans? two-edged sword

Economy: - Government revenue derived from: - Customs on trade - Taxing and exacting tribute from slave trade - gifts (military, state officials) - Poll tax paid by non-muslims - Taxes on agriculture, livestock raising: still largest segment of economy

Military and Administration: - demands soon exceeded traditional role ghazi - Three principal systems supported new empire: janissaries, timar, devshirme - Each had economic, administrative and social impact, short and long term

Janissaries: - Reportedly some 12,000 in 1473 - Paid salaries (every three months) - Who were they? [observed by Barbaro, see additional rdgs; also du Busbeq, additional rdgs 16 th C. ]]

- Began under Murad I, late 14 th c - response to warriors seeking autonomy in region of Thrace - Fear of dependency on troops with local loyalties - tax levied on war booty 1/5 th of slaves became property of Sultan - first members of janissary young slaves totally dependent on court

Turkish term yeniçeri means new troops: - Original source from war captives soon supplemented with devshirme conscripts - Highly trained, disciplined force, called the scourge of Europe - Considered elite : class set apart - During 14 th -15 th centuries: forced celibacy

Devshirme: - Levy one in forty applied to Christian boys mostly in Balkan states - Became members not only of military but of administration - Bosnian recruits favoured for palace duties - Origins late 14 th century; important source of state personnel

Devshirme: - Few barriers to social mobility - Created class defined by, dependent upon the state - Also served function of integrating newly acquired Christian territories - Consistent with Christian-Muslim relations of Frontier, now urban

Devshirme [observed by Barbaros, see additional rdgs]

Timar: - Complicated system by which soldiers rewarded, ongoing cavalry assured, local territories administered - Sipahis (cavalry), janissaries received rights to land and peasants on it (in lieu of salary) - Rights continued as long as participation in military campaigns continued

Timar: - Grants both small (managed by provincial governor) and large (directly from Sultan) - Sometimes held by high-placed women as well - Careful records kept - In early years, timariots often moved so that none became too rooted in local region

Impact of Military and Administrative Changes: - Establishing of janissaries betrayal to traditional powers: - Creating tax on ghazi - creating competition (ultimately, replacement) for ghazi military power

Betrayal epitomized in two new offices: - kadi asker: judge specifically for the military administrator (askeri) class, demarcated clear boundary around ruling class as distinct from people - uc Beyleri: lords of the frontier, reflecting right of sultan to name (and remove) beys in the frontier regions

- Mehmed II s symbolic act: refused to stand at sound of martial ghazi music - Custom-honored power of the ghazi, vassalage of the state to the ghazi -- clearly no longer pertained

- Frontier of pastoralists, independent raiding clans became one of agriculturalists, dependent on central state, tied to fiefs ultimately owned by the sultan. - Conquest of Constantinople, making it into capital: crucial moment - Crystallized Ottoman political vision marginalizing ghazi, favouring new classes : janissaries, devshirme, timariots