Ottoman Empire in 16. Sultans of the Ottoman Empire and years of government. Gone empty handed

P The last sultan of Ottoman origin was the mother of Suleiman I the Magnificent, her name was Aishe Sultan Hafsa (December 5, 1479 - March 19, 1534), according to sources, she was from the Crimea and was the daughter of Khan Mengli Giray. However, this information is controversial, has not yet been fully verified.

After Aisha, the era of the "women's sultanate" (1550-1656) begins, when women influenced state affairs. Naturally, they cannot be compared with European rulers (Catherine II, or Elizabeth I of England), because these women had disproportionately less power, personal freedom and were further from absolutism. It is believed that this era began with Anastasia (Alexandra) Lisovskaya, or Roksolana known to us. She was the wife of Suleiman I the Magnificent and the mother of Selim II, and she became the first sultana taken from the harem.

After Roksolana, two relatives, two beautiful Venetians from the Baffo family, Cecilia and Sofia, became the main women of the country. And one and the other came to the top through the harem. Cecilia Baffo became Roksolana's daughter-in-law.

So, Cecilia Vernier-Baffo, or Nurbanu Sultan, was born on the island of Paros around 1525. Her father was a noble Venetian, the governor of the island of Paros, Nicolo Venier, and her mother was Violanta Baffo. The girl's parents were not married, so the girl was named Cecilia Baffo, giving her mother's surname.

According to another, less popular version based on Ottoman sources, Nurbanu's real name was Rachel, and she was the daughter of Violanta Baffo and an unknown Spanish Jew.

Little is known about Cecilia's history.

It is known that in 1537 the pirate and admiral of the Turkish flotilla Khair ad-din Barbarossa captured Paros and 12-year-old Cecilia was enslaved. She was sold to the Sultan's harem, where Alexandra Anastasia Lisowska Sultan was noticed for her intelligence. . Alexandra Anastasia Lisowska gave her the name Nurbanu, which means "Queen exuding divine light" and sent her into the service of her son, Prince Selim.

According to the chronicles, having reached the age of majority in 1543, Selim was sent to Konya to take the post assigned to him as heir, Cecilia-Nurbanu accompanied him. At this time, the young prince burned with love for his beautiful accompanying odalisque.

Soon, Nurbanu had a daughter, Shah Sultan, and later, in 1546, a son, Murad, who at that time was the only son of Selim. Later, Nurbanu Sultan gave birth to Selim four more daughters. And after Selim's accession to the throne, Nurbanu becomes Haseki.

Selim in the Ottoman Empire itself was nicknamed "The Drunkard", because of his passion for wine, but he was not a drunkard in the literal sense of the word. Nevertheless, state affairs were handled by Mehmed Sokollu (Grand Vizier of Bosnian origin Boyko Sokolovic), who fell under the influence of Nurbanu.

As a ruler, Nurbanu corresponded with many ruling dynasties, pursued a pro-Venetian policy, for which the Genoese hated her and, judging by the rumors, the Genoese ambassador poisoned her.

In honor of Nurbanu, the Attik Valide mosque was built near the capital, where she was buried in 1583, bitterly mourned by her son Murad III, who often relied on her mother in her politics.

Safiye Sultan (translated from Turkish as "Pure"), born Sophia Baffo, was a Venetian by birth, and was related to her mother-in-law, Nurbanu Sultan. She was born around 1550, was the daughter of the ruler of the Greek island of Corfu and a relative of the Venetian senator and poet Giorgio Baffo.

Sophia, like Cecilia, was captured by corsairs, sold into a harem, where she then attracted Crown Prince Murad, for whom she became the only favorite for a long time. It was rumored that the reason for such constancy was the problems in the intimate life of the prince, which only Safiye knew how to somehow overcome. These rumors are very close to the truth, because before Murad became Sultan (in 1574, at 28, after the death of his father, Sultan Selim II), he had children only from Safiye.

Having become the ruler of the Ottoman Empire, Murad III apparently recovered after some time from his intimate illness, since he switched from forced monogamy to sexual excesses, and practically devoted his future life exclusively to the pleasures of the flesh, to the detriment of state affairs. So 20 sons and 27 daughters (however, one should not forget that in the 15th-16th centuries infant mortality was very high and out of 10 newborn babies 7 died in childhood, 2 - in youth and youth, and only one had any chances to live at least to 40 years old), which Sultan Murad III left after his death is a completely natural result of his lifestyle.

in the XV-XVI centuries, infant mortality was very high and out of 10 newborn babies, 7 died in childhood, 2 died in youth and youth, and only one had any chance of living at least up to 40 years

Despite the fact that Murad never married his beloved Safiye, this did not prevent her from becoming one of the most influential women of that time.

For the first nine years of his reign, Murad completely shared Nurban with his mother, obeyed her in everything. And it was Nurbanu who played an important role in his attitude towards Safiye. Despite family ties, both in state affairs and in the affairs of the harem, Venetians constantly fought each other for leadership. Nevertheless, as they say, youth won.

In 1583, after the death of Nurbanu Sultan, Safiye Sultan began to strengthen the position of her son Mehmed as the heir to Murad III. Mehmed was already 15 years old and he was very popular with the Janissaries, which greatly frightened his father. Murad III even prepared conspiracies, but Safiyya always managed to warn his son. This struggle continued for 12 years, until the death of Murad.

Safiye Sultan received almost unlimited power at the age of 45, simultaneously with the title of valid sultan, after the death of Sultan Murad III in 1595. Her son, the bloodthirsty Mehmed III, immediately after his accession to the throne, the Ottomans ordered to kill not only his 20 younger brothers, but also all pregnant concubines of the father. It was he who introduced the pernicious custom in the Brilliant Porte not to allow the princes to take part in government during the life of their father, but to keep them locked up in the seraglio, in the Kafes pavilion (cage).

Yesterday, it turns out, in Turkey they commemorated the mother of Suleiman the Magnificent - valide sultan ayse hafsa sultan who died on this day ... 5 (!!) centuries ago - March 19, 1534. On this occasion, a mevlid was read in the mosque - a religious "poem" about the life of the Prophet Muhammad. It is simply amazing - what respect for history and the memory of it! We don’t even remember Russian tsars on the day of their death, especially their mothers.

I’m watching this maman now in the same TV series Luxurious Age, I really like the actress Nebahat Çehre herself, who looks great at her 66 years old (of course, she couldn’t do without plastic surgery, but still :)), and how she plays regally.


From the film, I realized that the mother of the Sultan originally from Crimea(although there is another version - from Polish Jews). In the first series, she calmed down Alexandra-Roksolana, still rebellious against her future brilliant fate, in broken Russian: shut up, shut up! :) Hee hee. :)

Naturally, I immediately climbed in to see how things were with heredity among the sultans.

So here it is of 35 wives of sultans(from the 14th to the 20th century, throughout the history of the Ottoman Empire), those hand sons became sultans,only four (at the very beginning of the empire) were Turkish women. And for some reason, two of them had completely non-Turkish names - Olga and Veronica. So I think it's messed up here too. The rest are all foreigners! They poured fresh blood into the ruling dynasty. :) Most of all - Serbian and Greek origin, there are Italians, Georgians, Circassians, Bulgarians, Romanian ... And all these "Turkish" Alife, Hatice, Saliha, Aisha (...) once, in their "past" life were Cecilia, Helena, Maria, Anastasia, Olga, Katharina, Agnes, Sonya...

Here it is, in fact, a list found on the Internet and shoveled by me with the help of the Turkish Wikipedia:

List of all mothers of the sultans of the Ottoman Empire:

1. Khaima Khatun- wife of Ertugrul Gazi, mother of Osman I - the first sultan of the Ottoman Empire (since 1299), Turkish.

2. 1324: Mal Khatun- wife of Osman I, mother of Orhan the Victorious, Turkish, daughter of Omer Bey, although according to some assumptions, she was the daughter of Sheikh Edebali.

3. 1359 - unknown: Nilufer Khatun- wife of Orhan Gazi, mother of Murad I (Godlike). Possibly of Greek origin. The first name is Holofira.

4. 1389 - unknown: Gulchichek Khatun- wife of Murad I, mother of Bayezid I (Lightning). Greek origin. The first name is Maria.

5. Devlet Khatun- wife of Bayezid I, mother of Mehmed I, Turkish. At the same time, Turkish Wikipedia writes that her first name is Olga. Such a good Turkish name. :)

6. 1421-1449: Emine (Amina) Khatun- the third wife of Mehmed I, mother of Murad II. Daughter of Nasreddin Mehmed Bey, Turkish. The same situation as with the previous Devlet Khatun-Olga, this Turkish woman was Veronica.

7 . 1432-unknown: Hyuma Hatun- concubine of Murad II (not one of the official wives), mother of Mehmed II (the Conqueror). Pabout assumptions - Greek.

8. 1481-1492:Amina Gul-Bahar (or Gulbagare Khatun) The first is the wife of Mehmed II, the mother of Bayezid II. Albanian or Serbian origin. The first name is Comelia.

9. 1453-1510: Gul Bahar Sultan II- wife of Bayezid II, mother of Selim I. Greek.

10. 1520-1534:Ayisha Hâfize Sultan- wife of Selim I and mother of Suleiman I (the Magnificent) - daughter of Mengli I Giray from Crimean Khanate. Most likely from Crimean Tatars. According to another version - from Polish Jews.

11. Alexandra Anastasia Lisowska Haseki Sultan- wife of Suleiman I, mother of Selim II. The famous Roksolana, Ukrainian.

12. 1574-1583: Afife Nur-Banu- wife of Selim II, mother of Murad III. Born Cecilia Vernier-Baffo

13. 1594-1603: Safiye- wife of Murad III, mother of Mehmed III. Born Sofia Baffo, and like her predecessor and cousin, was noble Venetian origin.

14. 1603-1603: Handan- wife of Mehmed III, mother of Ahmed I. Greek woman, first name - Elena.

15. Fuldan- wife of Mehmed III, mother of Mustafa I. Abkhazian.

16. 1617-1621: Max Firyuze Hatice- wife of Ahmed I, mother of Osman II. Serbian origin, the first name is Maria, or Maritsa.

17. 1623-1648: Mah Peiker Kösem- another wife of Ahmed I, mother of Murad IV and Ibrahim I. Gof river Bosnian origin, the first name is Anastasia.

18. 1648-1683: Turhan Hatice- wife of Ibrahim I, mother of Mehmed IV. Ruthenian origin (people in Ukraine). The first name is Nadia.

19. 1687-1689: Saliha Dilyashub- another wife of Ibrahim I, mother of Suleiman II. Serbian origin. The first name is Katharina.

20. Hatice Muazzez- Another wife of Ibrahim I, mother of Ahmed II. from Polish Jews. The first name is Eve.

21. 1695-1715: Mah Pare Ummatullah Rabiya Gul-Nush (well, and a name - you will say hell!)- wife of Mehmed IV, mother of Mustafa II and Ahmed III. Greek from Crete.

22. 1730-1739: Saliha Sebkati- wife of Mustafa II, mother of Mahmud I. Turkish Wikipedia: Greek, first name - Alexandra.

23. 1754-1756: Shehsuvar- another wife of Mustafa II, mother of Osman III. Serbian origin. The first name is Maria.

2 4. 1789-1807: Emine Mihr-i-Shah- wife of Ahmed III, mother of Mustafa III. Georgian. The first name is Janet.

25. Rabia Shermi Sultan- another wife of Ahmet III, mother of Abdul-Hamid I. Georgian. The first name is Ida.

26. Mihr-i-Shah Valide Sulta n - wife of Mustafa III, mother of Selim III. Genoese, first name - Agnes.

27. 1807-1808: Aishe Seniyeperver- wife of Abdul Hamid I, mother of Mustafa IV. Bulgarian origin. The first name is Sonija.

28. 1808-1817: Naqsh-i-Dil Haseki- another wife of Abdul Hamid I and mother of Mahmud II. F little rancher. Legends stubbornly attribute to her a relationship with Napoleon's wife Josephine.

29. 1839-1852: Bezm-i-Alem- The first wife of Mahmud II, mother of Abdul-Mejid. Russian-Jewish or Georgian-Jewish origin. The first name is Suzy.

30. 1861-1876: Pertav Nihal- wife of Mahmud II, mother of Abdulaziz. Romanian origin.

31. 1876-1876: Shevkefza- wife of Abdulmejid, mother of Murad V. Mingrelian origin (ethnographic group of Georgians).

32. Tir-i-Muzhgan Kadynefendi- another wife of Abdul-Mejid, mother of Abdulhamid II. Armenian.

33. 1876-1904: Rahime Piristu- another wife of Abdul-Mejid, FOSTER mother of Abdul-Hamid II. Circassian origin.

34. Guljemal Kadynefendi- another wife of Abdul-Mejid (He gives a man! He was married five times!) mother of Mehmet V. Albanian or Circassian, it is not known exactly.

35. Gulustu Kadynefendi- the last wife of Abdul-Mejid, the mother of the last Sultan of the Ottoman Empire Mehmet VI. Circassian.


On April 27, 1494, the 10th ruler of the Ottoman Empire, Sultan Suleiman I the Magnificent, was born, during whose reign one of the most popular Turkish TV series “The Magnificent Age” is dedicated. His release on the screens caused an ambiguous reaction from the public: ordinary viewers followed the twists and turns of the plot with interest, historians indignantly commented on the large number of deviations from historical truth. What was Sultan Suleiman really like?


The main characters of the series *The Magnificent Century*

The series is designed primarily for a female audience, so the relationship between the Sultan and the numerous inhabitants of the harem became the central storyline in it. A descendant of the 33rd Sultan of the Ottoman Empire, Murad V, Osman Salahaddin objects to this emphasis: “He ruled for 46 years. Over the years, I have traveled almost 50,000 kilometers on campaigns. Not in a Mercedes, but on horseback. This took a lot of time. Therefore, the Sultan simply physically could not visit his harem so often.


Francis I and Sultan Suleiman

Of course, the film initially did not claim the status of documentary historical cinema, so the share of fiction in it is really large. Series Consultant, Dr. historical sciences E. Afyondzhi explains: “We shoveled a lot of sources. They translated records of Venetian, German, French ambassadors who visited the Ottoman Empire at that time. In The Magnificent Century, events and personalities are taken from historical sources. However, due to lack of information, the personal life of the padishah had to be thought out by ourselves.”

Sultan Suleiman receives the ruler of Transylvania, Janos II Zapolya. antique miniature

Sultan Suleiman was not accidentally called the Magnificent - he was the same figure as Peter I in Russia: he initiated many progressive reforms. Even in Europe he was called the Great. The empire during the time of Sultan Suleiman conquered vast territories.


Engraving fragment *Turkish Sultan's Bath*

The series softened the true picture of the mores of that time: society is shown to be more secular and less cruel than it really was. Suleiman was a tyrant, according to G. Weber, neither kinship nor merit saved him from suspicion and cruelty. At the same time, he fought against bribery and severely punished officials for abuse. At the same time, he patronized poets, artists, architects and wrote poetry himself.


Left - A. Hickel. Roksolana and the Sultan, 1780. On the right - Halit Ergench as Sultan Suleiman and Meryem Uzerli as Alexandra Anastasia Lisowska

Of course, screen heroes look much more attractive than their historical prototypes. The surviving portraits of Sultan Suleiman captured a man with delicate features of a European type, who can hardly be called handsome. The same can be said about Alexandra Anastasia Lisowska, known in Europe as Roksolana. Women's outfits in the series reflect European fashion rather than Ottoman - there were no such deep necklines during the "Magnificent Age".


Meryem Uzerli as Alexandra Anastasia Lisowska and traditional Ottoman outfit


Intrigues and squabbles between Alexandra Anastasia Lisowska and the third wife of Sultan Mahidevran, who are given great attention in the film, also took place in real life: if the heir to the throne, the son of Mahidevran Mustafa came to power, he would have killed the children of Alexandra Anastasia Lisowska to get rid of competitors. Therefore, Alexandra Anastasia Lisowska was ahead of her rival and was not slow to give the order to kill Mustafa.



S. Oreshkova, an employee of the Institute of Oriental Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences, draws attention to the fact that the harem is shown not quite the way it really was: “It is surprising that in the series the concubines and wives of Suleiman roam so freely. There was a garden at the harem, and only eunuchs could be with them! In addition, the series does not show that the harem in those days was not only the place where the sultan's wives with children, servants and concubines lived. Then the harem was partly like an institution of noble maidens - it contained many pupils who were not marked as the wife of the ruler. They studied music, dance, poetry.” Therefore, it is not surprising that some girls dreamed of getting into the harem of the Sultan.

Since the creation of the Ottoman Empire, the state has been continuously ruled by the descendants of Osman in the male line. But despite the fecundity of the dynasty, there were those who ended their lives childless.

The founder of the dynasty Osman Gazi (ruled 1299-1326) was the father of 7 sons and 1 daughter.

The second ruler was the son of Osman Orkhan Gazi (pr.1326-59) had 5 sons and 1 daughter.

God did not deprive Murad 1 Khyudavendigyur of offspring (son of Orkhan, pr. 1359-89) - 4 sons and 2 daughters.

The famous Bayazid the Lightning (son of Murad 1, born in 1389-1402) was the father of 7 sons and 1 daughter.


Bayazid's son Mehmet 1 (1413-21) left behind 5 sons and 2 daughters.

Murad 2 the Great (son of Mehmet 1, pr. 1421-51) - 6 sons and 2 daughters.

The conqueror of Constantinople Fatih Mehmet 2 (r. 1451-1481) was the father of 4 sons and 1 daughter.

Bayazid 2 (son of Mehmet 2, born 1481-1512) - 8 sons and 5 daughters.

The first Caliph from the Ottoman dynasty, Yavuz Sultan Selim-Selim the Terrible (prob. 1512-20) had only one son and 4 daughters.

2.

The famous Suleiman the Magnificent (Legislator), the husband of the no less famous Roxola (Hyurrem Sultan, 4 sons, 1 daughter), was the father of 8 sons and 2 daughters from 4 wives. He reigned so long (1520-1566) that he outlived almost all of his children. The eldest son Mustafa (Makhidervan) and the 4th son Bayazid (Roksolana) were strangled on the orders of Suleiman 1 on charges of plotting against their father.

The third son of Suleiman and the second son of Roksolana Selim 2 (Red Selim or Selim the Drunkard, pr.1566-1574) had 8 sons and 2 daughters from 2 wives. Despite his love for wine, he was able to expand his holdings from 14.892.000 km2 to 15.162.000 km2.

And now let's welcome the record holder - Murad 3 (project 1574-1595). He had one official wife Safiye Sultan (Sofia Baffo, daughter of the ruler of Corfu, was kidnapped by pirates) and many concubines, from whom 22 sons and 4 daughters survived (they write that at the time of his death, the heir Mehmet 3 ordered to strangle all his pregnant wives). But despite the love for the weaker sex, he was able to expand his possessions to 24.534.242 km2.

Mehmet 3 (pr.1595-1603) was a champion in another part - on the night of his father's death, he ordered all his brothers and sisters to be strangled. In terms of fertility, he was much inferior to his father - only 3 sons from 2 wives

The eldest son of Mehmet 3 Ahmet 1 (pr.1603-1617, died of typhus at the age of 27), having ascended the throne, introduced a new dynastic law, according to which the eldest son of the deceased ruler became the ruler.

Mustafa1, who sat on the throne due to the infancy of his son Ahmet 1 (r. 1617-1623, d. fall into madness, and according to the fatwa of Sheikh-ul-Islam was removed from the throne.

Little-known facts from the life of the sultans ...

When they start talking about the Ottoman rulers, then people automatically have an image of formidable, cruel conquerors who carried out their free time in a harem among half-naked concubines. But everyone forgets that they were mere mortal people with their own shortcomings and hobbies...

OSMAN 1.

They describe that when he stood, his lowered hands reached his knees, based on this, it was believed that he had either very long arms or short legs. Another distinguishing feature of his character was that he never wore outerwear again. And not because that he was a dude, he just liked to give his clothes to commoners. If someone looked at his caftan for a long time, he took it off and gave it to that person. Osman was very fond of listening to music before a meal, was a good wrestler and skillfully wielded weapons. The Turks had a very interesting old custom - once a year, ordinary members of the tribe took everything that they liked in this house from the leader's house. Osman and his wife left the house empty-handed and opened the doors for their relatives.

ORHAN.

Orkhan's reign lasted 36 years. He owned 100 fortresses and spent all his time driving around them. He did not stay in any of them for more than one month. He was a big fan of Mevlana-Jalaleddin Rumi.

MURAD 1.

In European sources, a brilliant ruler, a tireless hunter, a very gallant knight and was a symbol of honesty. He was the first Ottoman ruler to create a private library. He was killed in the Battle of Kosovo.

BAEZIT 1.

For the ability to quickly cover long distances with his army, and to appear in front of the enemy at the most unexpected moment, he received the nickname Lightning. He was very fond of hunting and was an avid hunter, often participated in wrestling competitions. Historians also note his mastery of weapons and horsemanship. He was one of the first rulers to compose poetry. He was the first to besiege Constantinople, and more than once. He died in captivity with Timur.

MEHMET CHELEBI.

It is considered the revival of the Ottoman state as a result of the victory over the Timurils. When he was with him, he was called the wrestler Mhemet. During his reign, he introduced the custom of sending gifts to Mecca and Medina every year, which was not canceled even in the most difficult times until the First World War. Every Friday evening he cooked food with his own money and distributed it to the poor. Like his father, he loved to hunt. While hunting for a boar, he fell off his horse and broke his hip bone, which is why he soon died.

And tell us how it happened that there are portraits, because Islam forbids images of a person.
Did you find Italian infidels to perpetuate yourself, the great ones?

    • Mothers of the Padishahs
      Murat, the 1st and 3rd ruler of the Ottoman Empire, was the son of Orhan and the Byzantine Holofira (Nilüfer Hatun).

Bayezid 1 Lightning, the 4th ruler ruled from 1389 to 1403. His father was Murat 1, and his mother was Bulgarian Maria, after the adoption of Islam Gulchichek Khatun.


    • Mehmet 1 Celebi, 5th Sultan. His mother was also Bulgarian, Olga Khatun.

      1382-1421

      Murat 2 (1404-1451) was born from the marriage of Mehmet Celebi and the daughter of the ruler of the beylik Dulkadiroglu Emine Hatun. According to some unconfirmed sources, his mother was Veronica.

      Mehmet 2 the Conqueror (1432-1481)

      Son of Murat 2 and Hyum Khatun, daughter of a bey from the Jandaroglu clan. It was believed that his mother was Serbian Despina.

      Bayezid 2 was no exception either - his mother was also a Christian Cornelia (Albanian, Serbian or French). After the adoption of Islam, her name was Gulbahar Khatun. Father was Fatih Sultan Mehmet 2.

      SELIM 1.(1470-1520)

      Selim 1 or Yavuz Sultan Selim, the conqueror of Egypt, Baghdad, Damascus and Mecca, the 9th padish of the Ottoman state and the 74th Caliph was born from Bayezid 2nd and the daughter of an influential bey in western Anatolia from the Dulkadiroglu clan Gulbahar Khatun.

      SULEMAN 1 (1495-1566).

      Suleiman Kanuni was born on April 27, 1495. He became sultan when he was 25 years old. An uncompromising fighter against bribery, Suleiman won the favor of the people with good deeds, built schools. Suleiman Kanuni patronized poets, artists, architects, wrote poetry himself, and was considered a skilled blacksmith.

      Suleiman was not as bloodthirsty as his father, Selim I, but he loved conquest no less than his father. In addition, neither kinship nor merit saved him from his suspicion and cruelty.

      Suleiman personally led 13 campaigns. A significant part of the wealth received from military booty, tribute and taxes was spent by Suleiman I on the construction of palaces, mosques, caravanserais, and tombs.

      Also under him, laws (qanun-name) were drawn up on the administrative structure and position of individual provinces, on finances and forms of land tenure, the duties of the population and attaching peasants to the land, and on the regulation of the military system.

      Suleiman Kanuni died on September 6, 1566 during the next campaign in Hungary - during the siege of the fortress of Szigetvar. He was buried in a mausoleum at the cemetery of the Suleymaniye Mosque along with his beloved wife Roksolana.

      Suleman the Magnificent, the 10th Ottoman ruler and the 75th Caliph of Muslims, also known for being the husband of Roksolana, was born from Selim 1 and a Polish Jewess Helga, later Khavza Sultan.

      Khavza Sultan.

      SELIM 2. (1524-1574)

      The son of the famous Roksolana (Hyurrem Sultan) Selim 2 ascended the throne after her death. Her real name was Alexandra Anastasia Lisovska, she was Suleiman's beloved wife.

      MURAT 3 (1546-1595).

      Born from Selim the 2nd and the Jewess Rachel (Nurbanu Sultan) Murat 3, was their eldest son and heir to the throne.

      MEHMET 3 (1566-1603).

      He ascended the throne in 1595 and ruled until his death. His mother was no exception either, she was also kidnapped and sold into the harem. She was the daughter of a wealthy Baffo family (Venice). She was taken prisoner while traveling on a ship when she was 12 years old. In the harem, the father of Mehmet III fell in love with Cecilia Baffo and married her, her name became Safiye Sultan.

        Here I am for the friendship of peoples and confessions. Now is the 21st century and people should not be distinguished by race or confession. See how many sultans had Christian women? By the way, the last sultan, if I am not mistaken, had an Armenian grandmother. Russian tsars also have German, Danish and English parents.

        Son of Murat 2 and Hyum Khatun, daughter of a bey from the Jandaroglu clan. It was believed that his mother was a Serbian Despina -
        And I read that the mother of Mehmet II was an Armenian concubine.

      Palace intrigues of the wives of the padishahs

      Khyurem Sultan (Roksolana 1500-1558): thanks to her beauty and intelligence, she not only managed to attract the attention of Suleiman the Magnificent, but also became his beloved woman. Her struggle with Suleiman's first wife, Mahidervan, was the most famous intrigue of that time, such a struggle was not for life, but for death. Roksolana bypassed her in all respects and finally became his official wife. As her influence on the ruler increased, her influence in state affairs also increased. Soon she succeeded in deposing both the viziri-i-azam (prime minister) Ibrahim Pasha, who was married to Suleiman's sister. He was executed for adultery. She married the next vizier and azam Rustem Pasha to her daughter and with the help of which she managed to discredit, by substituting letters, to accuse Suleiman's eldest son Shahzade Mustafa of hostile relations with the main enemies of the Iranians. For his intelligence and great abilities, Mustafa was predicted to be the next padishah, but on the orders of his father, he was strangled during a campaign against Iran.

      Over time, during the meetings, being in the secret department of Khyurem Sultan, she listened and shared her opinion with her husband after the advice. From the poems dedicated by Suleiman to Roksolana, it becomes obvious that his love for her was dearer to him than anything in the world.

      Nurbanu Sultan (1525-1587):

      At the age of 10, she was kidnapped by corsairs and sold at the famous market of Pera in Istanbul to slave traders. Merchants, noting her beauty and intelligence, sent her to the harem, where she managed to attract the attention of Khyurem Sultan, who sent her to Manisa for education. From there she returned a real beauty and managed to win the heart of her son Alexandra Anastasia Lisowska Sultan Selim 2, who soon married her. Poems written by Selim in her honor entered as excellent examples of lyrics. Selim was the youngest son, but as a result of the death of all his brothers, he becomes the sole heir to the throne, to which he ascended. Nurbanu became the only mistress of his heart and, accordingly, the harem. There were other women in Selim's life, but none of them could win his heart like Nurbanu. After the death of Selim (1574), her son Murat 3 became padishah, she became Valide Sultan (royal mother) and for a long time held the threads of government in her hands, despite the fact that this time her rival was Murat 3's wife Safie Sultan.

      Safiye Sultan

      A life of intrigue became the subject of many novels after her death. Just like Nurbanu Sultan, she was kidnapped by corsairs and sold to a harem, where Nurbanu Sultan bought her for a lot of money for her son Murat 3.

      The son's ardent love for her shook the mother's influence over her son. Then Nurbanu Sultan begins to introduce other women into the life of the son, but the love for Safiye Sultan was unshakable. Soon after the death of her mother-in-law, she actually ruled the state.

      Kosem Sultan.

      Murad's mother 4 (1612-1640) Kosem Sultan became a widow when he was still small. In 1623, at the age of 11, he was enthroned and Kosem Sultan became regent under him. In fact, they ruled the state.

      As her son grew older, she faded into the shadows, but continued to influence her son until his death. Her other son, Ibrahim (1615-1648), was elevated to the throne. The beginning of his reign was the beginning of the struggle between Kosem Sultan and his wife Turhan Sultan. Both of these women sought to establish their influence in public affairs, but over time this struggle became so obvious that it served as the formation of opposing factions.

      As a result of this long struggle, Kosem Sultan was found strangled in her room, and her supporters were executed.

      Turhan Sultan (Hope)

      She was kidnapped in the steppes of Ukraine and donated to a harem. Soon she became the wife of Ibrahim, after whose death her young son Menmet 4 was placed on the throne. Although she became regent, her mother-in-law Kosem Sultan was not going to let go of the threads of government from her hands. But soon she was found strangled in her room, and her supporters were executed the next day. The regency of Turhan Sultan lasted 34 years and it was a record in the history of the Ottoman Empire.

        • Roksolana, with the help of her son-in-law, slandered him in front of his father, letters were drawn up, allegedly written by Mustafa to the Shah of Iran, where he asks the latter to help seize the throne. All this is happening against the backdrop of a sharp struggle between the Turks of Rumelia (Ottomans) and the Turks of Iran for the possession of the east. Anatolia, Iraq and Syria. Suleiman ordered Mustafa to be strangled.

          Could Mara have saved Krnstantinopol? The 15th century was marked by the relentless onslaught of the Ottomans on Byzantium. By this time, from Byzantium, in fact, only Constantinople remained. As Sultan Mehmet 2 once said, "Either I will take Constantinople, or he will take me."

The content of the article

OTTOMAN (OTTOMAN) EMPIRE. This empire was created by the Turkic tribes in Anatolia and existed since the decline of the Byzantine Empire in the 14th century. until the formation of the Turkish Republic in 1922. Its name comes from the name of Sultan Osman I, the founder of the Ottoman dynasty. The influence of the Ottoman Empire in the region began to gradually disappear from the 17th century, it finally collapsed after the defeat in the First World War.

Rise of the Ottomans.

The modern Republic of Turkey traces its origins to one of the Ghazi beyliks. The creator of the future mighty state, Osman (1259–1324/1326), inherited from his father Ertogrul a small border inheritance (uj) of the Seljuk state on the southeastern border of Byzantium, not far from Eskisehir. Osman became the founder of a new dynasty, and the state received his name and went down in history as the Ottoman Empire.

In the last years of Ottoman power, a legend appeared that Ertogrul and his tribe arrived from Central Asia just in time to save the Seljuks in their battle with the Mongols, and their western lands were rewarded. However, modern research does not confirm this legend. Ertogrul was given his inheritance by the Seljuks, to whom he swore allegiance and paid tribute, as well as to the Mongol khans. This continued under Osman and his son until 1335. It is likely that neither Osman nor his father were ghazis until Osman fell under the influence of one of the dervish orders. In the 1280s, Osman managed to capture Bilecik, İnönü and Eskisehir.

At the very beginning of the 14th century. Osman, together with his ghazis, annexed to his inheritance the lands that stretched up to the coasts of the Black and Marmara Seas, as well as most of the territory west of the Sakarya River, up to Kutahya in the south. After the death of Osman, his son Orkhan occupied the fortified Byzantine city of Brusa. Bursa, as the Ottomans called it, became the capital of the Ottoman state and remained so for more than 100 years until Constantinople was taken by them. In almost one decade, Byzantium lost almost all of Asia Minor, and such historical cities as Nicaea and Nicomedia were named Iznik and Izmit. The Ottomans subjugated the beylik of Karesi in Bergama (former Pergamum), and Gazi Orhan became the ruler of the entire northwestern part of Anatolia: from the Aegean Sea and the Dardanelles to the Black Sea and the Bosporus.

conquests in Europe.

The rise of the Ottoman Empire.

Between the capture of Bursa and the victory in Kosovo organizational structures and the management of the Ottoman Empire were quite effective, and already at that time many features of the future huge state loomed. Orhan and Murad were not interested in whether the new arrivals were Muslims, Christians or Jews, whether they were listed as Arabs, Greeks, Serbs, Albanians, Italians, Iranians or Tatars. State system board was based on a combination of Arab, Seljuk and Byzantine customs and traditions. In the occupied lands, the Ottomans tried to preserve, as far as possible, local customs, so as not to destroy the established social relations.

In all newly annexed areas, military leaders immediately allocated income from land allotments as a reward to valiant and worthy soldiers. The owners of these kind of fiefs, called timars, were obliged to manage their lands and from time to time participate in campaigns and raids on remote territories. From the feudal lords, called sipahs, who had timars, cavalry was formed. Like the ghazis, the sipahis acted as Ottoman pioneers in the newly conquered territories. Murad I distributed in Europe many such destinies to Turkic clans from Anatolia, who did not have property, resettling them in the Balkans and turning them into a feudal military aristocracy.

Another notable event of that time was the creation of a corps of Janissaries in the army, soldiers who were included in the military units close to the Sultan. These soldiers (Turkish yeniceri, lit. new army), called Janissaries by foreigners, later began to be recruited among captured boys from Christian families, in particular in the Balkans. This practice, known as the devshirme system, may have been introduced under Murad I, but did not fully take shape until the 15th century. under Murad II; it continued uninterrupted until the 16th century, with interruptions until the 17th century. Being slaves of the sultans in status, the Janissaries were a disciplined regular army, consisting of well-trained and armed foot soldiers, superior in combat capability to all similar troops in Europe until the advent of the French army of Louis XIV.

The conquests and fall of Bayezid I.

Mehmed II and the capture of Constantinople.

The young sultan received an excellent education at the palace school and as governor of Manisa under his father. He was undoubtedly more educated than all the other monarchs of the then Europe. After the murder of his minor brother, Mehmed II reorganized his court in preparation for the capture of Constantinople. Huge bronze cannons were cast and troops were gathered to storm the city. In 1452, the Ottomans built a huge fort with three majestic fortress castles in the narrow part of the Bosphorus about 10 km north of the Golden Horn harbor of Constantinople. Thus, the Sultan was able to control shipping from the Black Sea and cut off Constantinople from supplies from the Italian trading posts located to the north. This fort, called Rumeli Hisary, together with another Anadolu Hisary fortress built by the great-grandfather of Mehmed II, guaranteed reliable communication between Asia and Europe. The most spectacular move of the Sultan was the ingenious crossing of part of his fleet from the Bosphorus to the Golden Horn through the hills, bypassing the chain stretched at the entrance to the bay. Thus, the cannons from the ships of the Sultan could bombard the city from the inner harbor. On May 29, 1453, a breach was made in the wall, and the Ottoman soldiers broke into Constantinople. On the third day, Mehmed II was already praying in Ayasofya and decided to make Istanbul (as the Ottomans called Constantinople) the capital of the empire.

Owning such a well-located city, Mehmed II controlled the position in the empire. In 1456, his attempt to take Belgrade ended unsuccessfully. Nevertheless, Serbia and Bosnia soon became provinces of the empire, and before his death, the Sultan managed to annex Herzegovina and Albania to his state. Mehmed II captured all of Greece, including the Peloponnese, with the exception of a few Venetian ports, and the largest islands in the Aegean. In Asia Minor, he finally managed to overcome the resistance of the rulers of Karaman, seize Cilicia, annex Trebizond (Trabzon) on the Black Sea coast to the empire and establish suzerainty over the Crimea. The Sultan recognized the authority of the Greek Orthodox Church and worked closely with the newly elected patriarch. Previously, for two centuries, the population of Constantinople was constantly declining; Mehmed II moved many people from various parts of the country to the new capital and restored traditionally strong crafts and trade in it.

The heyday of the empire under Suleiman I.

The power of the Ottoman Empire reached its peak in the middle of the 16th century. The reign of Suleiman I the Magnificent (1520-1566) is considered the Golden Age of the Ottoman Empire. Suleiman I (previous Suleiman, son of Bayezid I, never ruled all of its territory) surrounded himself with many capable dignitaries. Most of them were recruited according to the devshirme system or captured during army campaigns and pirate raids, and by 1566, when Suleiman I died, these "new Turks", or "new Ottomans", already firmly held power over the entire empire in their hands. They formed the backbone of the administrative authorities, while the highest Muslim institutions were headed by the indigenous Turks. Theologians and jurists were recruited from among them, whose duties included interpreting laws and performing judicial functions.

Suleiman I, being the only son of a monarch, never faced any claims to the throne. He was an educated man who loved music, poetry, nature, and also philosophical discussions. And yet the military forced him to adhere to a militant policy. In 1521 the Ottoman army crossed the Danube and captured Belgrade. This victory, which Mehmed II could not achieve at one time, opened the way for the Ottomans to the plains of Hungary and to the basin of the upper Danube. In 1526 Suleiman took Budapest and occupied all of Hungary. In 1529, the sultan began the siege of Vienna, but was unable to capture the city before the onset of winter. Nevertheless, a vast territory from Istanbul to Vienna and from the Black Sea to the Adriatic Sea formed the European part of the Ottoman Empire, and Suleiman during his reign carried out seven military campaigns on the western borders of the state.

Suleiman led fighting and in the east. The borders of his empire with Persia were not defined, and the vassal rulers in the border regions changed their masters, depending on which side the power was on and with whom it was more profitable to conclude an alliance. In 1534, Suleiman took Tabriz, and then Baghdad, including Iraq in the Ottoman Empire; in 1548 he regained Tabriz. The Sultan spent the entire 1549 in pursuit of the Persian Shah Tahmasp I, trying to fight him. While Suleiman was in Europe in 1553, Persian troops invaded Asia Minor and captured Erzurum. Having expelled the Persians and devoted most of 1554 to the conquest of the lands east of the Euphrates, Suleiman, according to the official peace treaty concluded with the shah, received a port in the Persian Gulf at his disposal. The squadrons of the naval forces of the Ottoman Empire operated in the waters of the Arabian Peninsula, in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Suez.

From the very beginning of his reign, Suleiman paid great attention to strengthening the maritime power of the state in order to maintain the superiority of the Ottomans in the Mediterranean. In 1522 his second campaign was directed against Fr. Rhodes, lying 19 km from the southwestern coast of Asia Minor. After the capture of the island and the eviction of the Joannites who owned it to Malta, the Aegean Sea and the entire coast of Asia Minor became Ottoman possessions. Soon french king Francis I turned to the Sultan for military assistance in the Mediterranean and with a request to oppose Hungary in order to stop the advance of the troops of Emperor Charles V, advancing on Francis in Italy. The most famous of Suleiman's naval commanders, Khairaddin Barbarossa, supreme ruler of Algeria and North Africa, devastated the coasts of Spain and Italy. Nevertheless, Suleiman's admirals failed to capture Malta in 1565.

Suleiman died in 1566 in Szigetvar during a campaign in Hungary. The body of the last of the great Ottoman sultans was transferred to Istanbul and buried in a mausoleum in the courtyard of the mosque.

Suleiman had several sons, but his beloved son died at the age of 21, two others were executed on charges of conspiracy, and the only remaining son, Selim II, turned out to be a drunkard. The conspiracy that destroyed Suleiman's family can be partly attributed to the jealousy of his wife, Roxelana, a former slave girl of either Russian or Polish origin. Another mistake of Suleiman was the elevation in 1523 of his beloved slave Ibrahim, who was appointed chief minister (grand vizier), although there were many other competent courtiers among the applicants. And although Ibrahim was a capable minister, his appointment violated the long-established system of palace relations and aroused the envy of other dignitaries.

Mid 16th century was the heyday of literature and architecture. More than a dozen mosques were erected in Istanbul under the guidance and designs of the architect Sinan, the Selimiye Mosque in Edirne, dedicated to Selim II, became a masterpiece.

Under the new Sultan Selim II, the Ottomans began to lose their positions at sea. In 1571, the united Christian fleet met the Turkish in the battle of Lepanto and defeated it. During the winter of 1571-1572, the shipyards in Gelibolu and Istanbul worked tirelessly, and by the spring of 1572, thanks to the construction of new warships, the European naval victory was nullified. In 1573, the Venetians were defeated, and the island of Cyprus was annexed to the empire. Despite this, the defeat at Lepanto was an omen of the coming decline of Ottoman power in the Mediterranean.

Decline of the empire.

After Selim II, most of the Ottoman sultans were weak rulers. Murad III, Selim's son, reigned from 1574 to 1595. His tenure was accompanied by turmoil caused by palace slaves led by Grand Vizier Mehmed Sokolki and two harem factions: one led by the Sultan's mother Nur Banu, a Jewish convert to Islam, and the other by a beloved Safi's wife. The latter was the daughter of the Venetian governor of Corfu, who was captured by pirates and presented to Suleiman, who immediately gave her to his grandson Murad. However, the empire still had enough strength to move east to the Caspian Sea, as well as to maintain its position in the Caucasus and Europe.

After the death of Murad III, 20 of his sons remained. Of these, Mehmed III ascended the throne, strangling 19 of his brothers. His son Ahmed I, who succeeded him in 1603, tried to reform the system of government and get rid of corruption. He departed from the cruel tradition and did not kill his brother Mustafa. And although this, of course, was a manifestation of humanism, but since that time all the brothers of the sultans and their closest relatives from the Ottoman dynasty began to be imprisoned in a special part of the palace, where they spent their lives until the death of the ruling monarch. Then the eldest of them was proclaimed his successor. Thus, after Ahmed I, few of those who reigned in the 17th-18th centuries. Sultans had sufficient intellectual development or political experience to manage such a huge empire. As a result, the unity of the state and the central government itself began to weaken rapidly.

Mustafa I, brother of Ahmed I, was mentally ill and ruled for only one year. Osman II, the son of Ahmed I, was proclaimed the new sultan in 1618. Being an enlightened monarch, Osman II tried to transform state structures, but was killed by his opponents in 1622. For some time, the throne again went to Mustafa I, but already in 1623 Osman's brother Murad ascended the throne IV, who ruled the country until 1640. His reign was dynamic and reminiscent of the reign of Selim I. Having reached the age of majority in 1623, Murad spent the next eight years in relentless attempts to restore and reform the Ottoman Empire. In an effort to improve state structures, he executed 10,000 officials. Murad personally led his armies during the eastern campaigns, banned the consumption of coffee, tobacco and alcoholic beverages, but he himself showed a weakness for alcohol, which led the young ruler to death at the age of only 28 years.

Murad's successor, his mentally ill brother Ibrahim, managed to largely destroy the state he inherited before he was deposed in 1648. The conspirators put Ibrahim's six-year-old son Mehmed IV on the throne and actually led the country until 1656, when the Sultan's mother achieved the appointment of Grand Vizier with unlimited powers talented Mehmed Köprülü. He held this position until 1661, when his son Fazıl Ahmed Koprulu became vizier.

The Ottoman Empire nevertheless managed to overcome the period of chaos, extortion and crisis of state power. Europe was divided by religious wars and Thirty Years' War, while Poland and Russia experienced troubled period. This made it possible for both Köprül, after the purge of the administration, during which 30,000 officials were executed, to capture the island of Crete in 1669, and in 1676 Podolia and other regions of Ukraine. After the death of Ahmed Koprulu, his place was taken by a mediocre and corrupt palace favorite. In 1683, the Ottomans laid siege to Vienna, but were defeated by the Poles and their allies, led by Jan Sobieski.

Leaving the Balkans.

The defeat at Vienna was the beginning of the retreat of the Turks in the Balkans. First, Budapest fell, and after the loss of Mohacs, all of Hungary fell under the rule of Vienna. In 1688 the Ottomans had to leave Belgrade, in 1689 Vidin in Bulgaria and Nish in Serbia. Thereafter Suleiman II (r. 1687–1691) appointed Mustafa Köprülü, Ahmed's brother, as grand vizier. The Ottomans managed to retake Nis and Belgrade, but they were utterly defeated by Prince Eugene of Savoy in 1697 near Senta, in the far north of Serbia.

Mustafa II (r. 1695–1703) attempted to recapture lost ground by appointing Hussein Köprülä as grand vizier. In 1699, the Karlovitsky Peace Treaty was signed, according to which the Peloponnese and Dalmatia peninsulas retreated to Venice, Austria received Hungary and Transylvania, Poland - Podolia, and Russia retained Azov. The Treaty of Karlovtsy was the first in a series of concessions that the Ottomans were forced to make as they left Europe.

During the 18th century The Ottoman Empire lost most of its power in the Mediterranean. In the 17th century The main opponents of the Ottoman Empire were Austria and Venice, and in the 18th century. – Austria and Russia.

In 1718, Austria, according to the Pozharevatsky (Passarovitsky) treaty, received a number of territories. Nevertheless, the Ottoman Empire, despite the defeats in the wars that it waged in the 1730s, according to the treaty signed in 1739 in Belgrade, regained this city, mainly due to the weakness of the Habsburgs and the intrigues of French diplomats.

Surrenders.

As a result of behind-the-scenes maneuvers of French diplomacy in Belgrade, in 1740 an agreement was concluded between France and the Ottoman Empire. Called "Surrenders", this document was for a long time the basis for the special privileges received by all states in the territory of the empire. The formal beginning of the agreements was laid as early as 1251, when the Mamluk sultans in Cairo recognized Saint Louis IX, King of France. Mehmed II, Bayezid II and Selim I confirmed this agreement and used it as a model in relations with Venice and other Italian city-states, Hungary, Austria and most other European countries. One of the most important was the agreement of 1536 between Suleiman I and the French king Francis I. In accordance with the agreement of 1740, the French received the right to move freely and trade on the territory of the Ottoman Empire under the full protection of the Sultan, their goods were not taxed, with the exception of import and export duties, French envoys and consuls acquired judicial power over compatriots who could not be arrested in the absence of a representative of the consulate. The French were given the right to erect and freely use their churches; the same privileges were reserved within the Ottoman Empire and for other Catholics. In addition, the French could take under their protection the Portuguese, Sicilians and citizens of other states who did not have ambassadors at the Sultan's court.

Further decline and attempts at reform.

The end of the Seven Years' War in 1763 marked the beginning of new attacks against the Ottoman Empire. Despite the fact that the French king Louis XV sent Baron de Totta to Istanbul to modernize the Sultan's army, the Ottomans were defeated by Russia in the Danube provinces of Moldavia and Wallachia and were forced to sign the Kyuchuk-Kaynarji peace treaty in 1774. Crimea gained independence, and Azov went to Russia, which recognized the border with the Ottoman Empire along the Bug River. The Sultan promised to provide protection for the Christians living in his empire, and allowed the presence in the capital of the Russian ambassador, who received the right to represent the interests of his Christian subjects. Starting from 1774 and up to the First World War, the Russian tsars referred to the Kyuchuk-Kaynardzhi agreement, justifying their role in the affairs of the Ottoman Empire. In 1779, Russia received rights to the Crimea, and in 1792 the Russian border was moved to the Dniester in accordance with the Iasi peace treaty.

Time dictated change. Ahmed III (r. 1703–1730) brought in architects who built him palaces and mosques in the style of Versailles and opened a printing press in Istanbul. The closest relatives of the Sultan were no longer kept in strict imprisonment, some of them began to study the scientific and political heritage of Western Europe. However, Ahmed III was killed by the conservatives, and Mahmud I took his place, during which the Caucasus was lost, passed to Persia, and the retreat in the Balkans continued. One of the prominent sultans was Abdul-Hamid I. During his reign (1774-1789), reforms were made, French teachers and technical specialists. France hoped to save the Ottoman Empire and keep Russia out of the Black Sea straits and the Mediterranean.

Selim III

(reigned 1789–1807). Selim III, who became sultan in 1789, formed a 12-member cabinet of ministers in the style of European governments, replenished the treasury and created a new military corps. They created new educational establishments, designed to educate civil servants in the spirit of the ideas of the Enlightenment. Printed publications were again allowed, and the works of Western authors began to be translated into Turkish.

In the early years French Revolution The Ottoman Empire was left alone with its problems by the European powers. Napoleon considered Selim as an ally, believing that after the defeat of the Mamluks, the sultan would be able to strengthen his power in Egypt. Nevertheless, Selim III declared war on France and sent his fleet and army to defend the province. Saved the Turks from defeat only the British fleet, located off Alexandria and off the coast of the Levant. This step of the Ottoman Empire involved it in the military and diplomatic affairs of Europe.

Meanwhile, in Egypt, after the departure of the French, Muhammad Ali, a native of the Macedonian city of Kavala, who served in the Turkish army, came to power. In 1805 he became governor of the province, which opened a new chapter in the history of Egypt.

After the conclusion of the Treaty of Amiens in 1802, relations with France were restored, and Selim III managed to keep the peace until 1806, when Russia invaded its Danubian provinces. England helped her ally Russia by sending her fleet through the Dardanelles, but Selim managed to speed up the restoration of defensive structures, and the British were forced to sail into the Aegean Sea. The French victories in Central Europe strengthened the position of the Ottoman Empire, but a rebellion began in the capital against Selim III. In 1807, during the absence of Bayraktar, the commander-in-chief of the imperial army, the sultan was deposed, and his cousin Mustafa IV took the throne. After the return of Bayraktar in 1808, Mustafa IV was executed, but before that, the rebels strangled Selim III, who was imprisoned. Mahmud II remained the only male representative of the ruling dynasty.

Mahmoud II

(reigned 1808–1839). Under him, in 1809, the Ottoman Empire and Great Britain concluded the famous Dardanelles Peace, which opened the Turkish market for British goods on the condition that Great Britain recognized the closed status of the Black Sea straits for military ships in peacetime for the Turks. Earlier, the Ottoman Empire agreed to join the continental blockade created by Napoleon, so the agreement was perceived as a violation of previous obligations. Russia began hostilities on the Danube and captured a number of cities in Bulgaria and Wallachia. Under the Treaty of Bucharest in 1812, significant territories were ceded to Russia, and she refused to support the rebels in Serbia. At the Congress of Vienna in 1815, the Ottoman Empire was recognized as a European power.

National Revolutions in the Ottoman Empire.

During the French Revolution, the country faced two new problems. One of them has been ripening for a long time: as the center weakened, the separated provinces eluded the power of the sultans. In Epirus, Ali Pasha Yaninsky, who ruled the province as sovereign and maintained diplomatic relations with Napoleon and other European monarchs, revolted. Similar actions also took place in Vidin, Sidon (modern Saida, Lebanon), Baghdad and other provinces, which undermined the power of the Sultan and reduced tax revenues to the imperial treasury. The strongest of the local rulers (pashas) eventually became Muhammad Ali in Egypt.

Another intractable problem for the country was the growth of the national liberation movement, especially among the Christian population of the Balkans. At the height of the French Revolution, Selim III in 1804 faced an uprising raised by the Serbs, led by Karageorgiy (George Petrovich). The Congress of Vienna (1814–1815) recognized Serbia as a semi-autonomous province within the Ottoman Empire, led by Miloš Obrenović, a rival of Karađorđe.

Almost immediately after the defeat of the French Revolution and the fall of Napoleon, Mahmud II faced the Greek national liberation revolution. Mahmud II had a chance to win, especially after he managed to convince the nominal vassal in Egypt, Muhammad Ali, to send his army and navy to support Istanbul. However, the Pasha's armed forces were defeated after the intervention of Great Britain, France and Russia. As a result of the breakthrough of Russian troops in the Caucasus and their offensive against Istanbul, Mahmud II had to sign the Treaty of Adrianople in 1829, which recognized the independence of the Kingdom of Greece. A few years later, the army of Muhammad Ali, under the command of his son Ibrahim Pasha, captured Syria and found itself dangerously close to the Bosphorus in Asia Minor. Rescued Mahmud II only Russian amphibious assault who landed on the Asian shore of the Bosporus as a warning to Muhammad Ali. After that, Mahmud never managed to get rid of Russian influence until he signed the humiliating Unkiyar-Iskelesi Treaty in 1833, which gave the Russian Tsar the right to "protect" the Sultan, as well as to close and open at his own discretion Black Sea Straits for the passage of foreign warships.

Ottoman Empire after the Congress of Vienna.

Period after Congress of Vienna, probably proved to be the most destructive for the Ottoman Empire. Greece seceded; Egypt under Muhammad Ali, which, moreover, by capturing Syria and South Arabia, became virtually independent; Serbia, Wallachia and Moldavia became semi-autonomous territories. During the Napoleonic Wars, Europe significantly strengthened its military and industrial power. The weakening of the Ottoman state is attributed to a certain extent to the massacre of the Janissaries organized by Mahmud II in 1826.

By signing the Treaty of Unkiyar-Isklelesiy, Mahmud II hoped to buy time to transform the empire. His reforms were so tangible that travelers visiting Turkey in the late 1830s noted that more changes had taken place in the country in the last 20 years than in the previous two centuries. Instead of the Janissaries, Mahmud created a new army, trained and equipped according to the European model. Prussian officers were hired to train officers in the new military art. Fezzes and frock coats became the official attire of civil officials. Mahmoud tried to introduce into all areas of government latest methods developed in the young European states. It was possible to reorganize the financial system, streamline the activities of the judiciary, and improve the road network. Additional educational institutions were created, in particular, military and medical colleges. Newspapers began to be published in Istanbul and Izmir.

IN Last year life, Mahmud again entered the war with his Egyptian vassal. Mahmud's army was defeated in northern Syria, and his fleet in Alexandria went over to the side of Muhammad Ali.

Abdul Mejid

(reigned 1839–1861). The eldest son and successor of Mahmud II, Abdul-Majid, was only 16 years old. Without an army and navy, he was helpless in the face of the superior forces of Muhammad Ali. He was saved by the diplomatic and military assistance of Russia, Great Britain, Austria and Prussia. France initially supported Egypt, but the concerted action of the European powers made it possible to find a way out of the deadlock: the pasha received the hereditary right to rule Egypt under the nominal suzerainty of the Ottoman sultans. This provision was legalized by the London Treaty of 1840 and confirmed by Abdul-Mejid in 1841. In the same year, the London Convention of the European Powers was concluded, according to which military ships were not to pass through the Dardanelles and the Bosporus in peacetime for the Ottoman Empire, and the powers that signed it took to the obligation to assist the Sultan in maintaining sovereignty over the Black Sea straits.

Tanzimat.

During the struggle with his powerful vassal, Abdulmejid in 1839 promulgated the khatt-i sherif (“sacred decree”), announcing the beginning of reforms in the empire, with which the chief minister Reshid Pasha spoke to the highest state dignitaries and invited ambassadors. The document abolished the death penalty without trial, guaranteed justice for all citizens regardless of their racial or religious affiliation, established a judicial council to adopt a new penal code, abolished the farming system, changed the methods of recruiting the army and limited the length of military service.

It became apparent that the empire was no longer capable of defending itself in the event of a military attack by any of the great European powers. Reshid Pasha, who previously served as ambassador to Paris and London, understood that certain steps must be taken to show the European states that the Ottoman Empire was capable of self-reformation and manageable, i.e. deserves to be preserved independent state. Hatt-i sheriff seemed to be the answer to the doubts of the Europeans. However, in 1841 Reshid was removed from office. In the next few years, his reforms were suspended, and only after his return to power in 1845 did they begin to be put into practice again with the support of the British ambassador, Stratford Canning. This period in the history of the Ottoman Empire, known as the tanzimat ("ordering"), included the reorganization of the system of government and the transformation of society in accordance with the ancient Muslim and Ottoman principles of tolerance. At the same time, education developed, the network of schools expanded, sons from famous families began to study in Europe. Many Ottomans began to lead a Western way of life. The number of published newspapers, books and magazines increased, and the younger generation professed new European ideals.

At the same time, foreign trade grew rapidly, but the influx of European industrial products had a negative impact on the finances and economy of the Ottoman Empire. Imports of British factory-made textiles disrupted artisanal textile production and siphoned gold and silver out of the state. Another blow to the economy was the signing in 1838 of the Balto-Liman Trade Convention, according to which import duties on goods imported into the empire were frozen at the level of 5%. This meant that foreign merchants could operate in the empire on an equal footing with local merchants. As a result, most of the trade in the country was in the hands of foreigners, who, in accordance with the "Surrenders", were released from the control of officials.

Crimean War.

The London Convention of 1841 abolished the special privileges which Russian emperor Nicholas I received a secret annex to the Unkiyar-Iskelesi Treaty of 1833. Referring to the Kyuchuk-Kainarji Treaty of 1774, Nicholas I launched an offensive in the Balkans and demanded special status and rights for Russian monks in holy places in Jerusalem and Palestine. After the refusal of Sultan Abdulmejid to satisfy these demands, the Crimean War began. Great Britain, France and Sardinia came to the aid of the Ottoman Empire. Istanbul became a forward base for the preparation of hostilities in the Crimea, and the influx of European sailors, army officers and civil officials left an indelible mark on Ottoman society. The Paris Treaty of 1856, which ended this war, declared the Black Sea a neutral zone. The European powers again recognized Turkish sovereignty over the Black Sea Straits, and the Ottoman Empire was admitted to the "Union of European States". Romania gained independence.

Bankruptcy of the Ottoman Empire.

After Crimean War Sultans began to borrow money from Western bankers. Back in 1854, having practically no external debt, the Ottoman government very quickly became bankrupt, and already in 1875 Sultan Abdulaziz owed almost one billion dollars in foreign currency to European bondholders.

In 1875 the Grand Vizier declared that the country was no longer able to pay the interest on its debts. Noisy protests and pressure from the European powers forced the Ottoman authorities to raise taxes in the provinces. Unrest began in Bosnia, Herzegovina, Macedonia and Bulgaria. The government sent troops to "appease" the rebels, during which unprecedented cruelty was shown that amazed the Europeans. In response, Russia sent volunteers to help the Balkan Slavs. At this time, a secret revolutionary society of the "New Ottomans" appeared in the country, advocating constitutional reforms in their homeland.

In 1876, Abdul-Aziz, who succeeded his brother Abdul-Mejid in 1861, was deposed for incompetence by Midhat Pasha and Avni Pasha, leaders of the liberal organization of the constitutionalists. On the throne they put Murad V, the eldest son of Abdul-Mejid, who turned out to be mentally ill and was removed in just a few months, and Abdul-Hamid II, another son of Abdul-Mejid, was placed on the throne.

Abdul Hamid II

(reigned 1876–1909). Abdul-Hamid II visited Europe, and many pinned great hopes on him for a liberal constitutional regime. However, at the time of his accession to the throne, Turkish influence in the Balkans was in danger despite the fact that the Ottoman forces managed to defeat the Bosnian and Serbian rebels. This development of events forced Russia to come out with the threat of open intervention, which was sharply opposed by Austria-Hungary and Great Britain. In December 1876, a conference of ambassadors was convened in Istanbul, at which Abdul-Hamid II announced the introduction of the constitution of the Ottoman Empire, which provided for the creation of an elected parliament, a government responsible to it, and other attributes of European constitutional monarchies. However, the brutal suppression of the uprising in Bulgaria nevertheless led in 1877 to a war with Russia. In this regard, Abdul-Hamid II suspended the operation of the Constitution for the period of the war. This situation continued until the Young Turk Revolution of 1908.

Meanwhile, at the front, the military situation was developing in favor of Russia, whose troops were already encamped under the walls of Istanbul. Great Britain managed to prevent the capture of the city by sending a fleet to the Sea of ​​Marmara and presenting an ultimatum to St. Petersburg demanding to stop hostilities. Initially, Russia imposed on the sultan the extremely disadvantageous Treaty of San Stefano, according to which most of the European possessions of the Ottoman Empire became part of a new autonomous entity - Bulgaria. Austria-Hungary and Great Britain opposed the terms of the treaty. All this prompted the German Chancellor Bismarck to convene in 1878 Berlin Congress, on which the size of Bulgaria was reduced, but the complete independence of Serbia, Montenegro and Romania was recognized. Cyprus went to Great Britain, and Bosnia and Herzegovina to Austria-Hungary. Russia received the fortresses of Ardahan, Kars and Batum (Batumi) in the Caucasus; to regulate navigation on the Danube, a commission was created from representatives of the Danubian states, and the Black Sea and the Black Sea straits again received the status provided for by the Treaty of Paris of 1856. The Sultan promised to equally fairly govern all his subjects, and the European powers considered that the Berlin Congress had solved the difficult Eastern problem forever.

During the 32-year reign of Abdul-Hamid II, the Constitution actually did not come into effect. One of the most important unresolved issues was the bankruptcy of the state. In 1881, under foreign control, the Office of the Ottoman Public Debt was created, which was made responsible for the payments on European bonds. Within a few years, confidence in the financial stability of the Ottoman Empire was restored, which contributed to the participation of foreign capital in the construction of such large projects as the Anatolian Railway, which connected Istanbul with Baghdad.

Young Turk Revolution.

During these years, national uprisings took place in Crete and Macedonia. In Crete, bloody clashes took place in 1896 and 1897, which led to the empire's war with Greece in 1897. After 30 days of fighting, European powers intervened to save Athens from capture by the Ottoman army. Public opinion in Macedonia leaned towards either independence or union with Bulgaria.

It became obvious that the future of the state was connected with the Young Turks. The ideas of national upsurge were propagated by some journalists, the most talented of whom was Namik Kemal. Abdul-Hamid tried to suppress this movement with arrests, exiles and executions. At the same time, secret Turkish societies flourished in military headquarters around the country and in places as far away as Paris, Geneva, and Cairo. The most effective organization turned out to be the secret committee "Unity and Progress", which was created by the "Young Turks".

In 1908, the troops stationed in Macedonia rebelled and demanded the implementation of the Constitution of 1876. Abdul-Hamid was forced to agree to this, unable to use force. Elections to parliament followed, and the formation of a government of ministers responsible to that legislative body. In April 1909, a counter-revolutionary rebellion broke out in Istanbul, which, however, was quickly suppressed by armed units that arrived in time from Macedonia. Abdul-Hamid was deposed and sent into exile, where he died in 1918. His brother Mehmed V was proclaimed Sultan.

Balkan wars.

The Young Turk government soon faced internal strife and new territorial losses in Europe. In 1908, as a result of the revolution that took place in the Ottoman Empire, Bulgaria proclaimed its independence, and Austria-Hungary seized Bosnia and Herzegovina. The Young Turks were powerless to prevent these events, and in 1911 they found themselves embroiled in a conflict with Italy, which had invaded the territory of modern Libya. The war ended in 1912 when the provinces of Tripoli and Cyrenaica became an Italian colony. In early 1912, Crete allied itself with Greece, and later that year, Greece, Serbia, Montenegro, and Bulgaria launched the First Balkan War against the Ottoman Empire.

Within a few weeks, the Ottomans lost all their possessions in Europe, with the exception of Istanbul, Edirne and Ioannina in Greece and Scutari (modern Shkodra) in Albania. The great European powers, anxiously watching how the balance of power in the Balkans was being destroyed, demanded a cessation of hostilities and a conference. The Young Turks refused to surrender the cities, and in February 1913 the fighting resumed. In a few weeks, the Ottoman Empire completely lost its European possessions, with the exception of the Istanbul zone and the straits. The Young Turks were forced to agree to a truce and formally give up the already lost lands. However, the winners immediately began internecine war. The Ottomans entered into a clash with Bulgaria in order to return Edirne and the European regions adjacent to Istanbul. Second Balkan War ended in August 1913 with the signing Treaty of Bucharest, however, a year later, the First broke out World War.

World War I and the end of the Ottoman Empire.

Developments after 1908 weakened the Young Turk government and isolated it politically. It tried to correct this situation by offering alliances to the stronger European powers. On August 2, 1914, shortly after the start of the war in Europe, the Ottoman Empire entered into a secret alliance with Germany. On the Turkish side, the pro-German Enver Pasha, a leading member of the Young Turk triumvirate and Minister of War, participated in the negotiations. A few days later, two German cruisers "Goeben" and "Breslau" took refuge in the straits. The Ottoman Empire acquired these warships, sailed them into the Black Sea in October and fired at Russian ports, thus declaring war on the Entente.

In the winter of 1914–1915, the Ottoman army suffered huge losses when Russian troops entered Armenia. Fearing that local residents would come out on their side there, the government authorized the massacre of the Armenian population in eastern Anatolia, which many researchers later called the Armenian genocide. Thousands of Armenians were deported to Syria. In 1916, the Ottoman rule in Arabia came to an end: the uprising was raised by the sheriff of Mecca, Hussein ibn Ali, supported by the Entente. As a result of these events, the Ottoman government finally collapsed, although Turkish troops, with German support, achieved a number of important victories: in 1915 they managed to repel the Entente attack on the Dardanelles, and in 1916 they captured the British corps in Iraq and stopped the advance of the Russians in the east. During the war, the Capitulation regime was canceled and customs tariffs were raised to protect domestic trade. The Turks took over the business of the evicted national minorities, which helped create the nucleus of a new Turkish commercial and industrial class. In 1918, when the Germans were withdrawn to defend the Hindenburg Line, the Ottoman Empire began to suffer defeat. On October 30, 1918, Turkish and British representatives concluded a truce, according to which the Entente received the right to "occupy any strategic points" of the empire and control the Black Sea straits.

The collapse of the empire.

The fate of most of the provinces of the Ottoman state was determined in the secret treaties of the Entente during the war. The Sultanate agreed to the separation of regions with a predominantly non-Turkish population. Istanbul was occupied by forces that had their own areas of responsibility. Russia was promised the Black Sea straits, including Istanbul, but October Revolution led to the annulment of these agreements. In 1918, Mehmed V died, and his brother Mehmed VI took the throne, although he retained the government in Istanbul, he actually became dependent on the Allied occupying forces. Problems were growing in the interior of the country, far from the places of deployment of the Entente troops and government institutions subordinate to the Sultan. Detachments of the Ottoman army, wandering around the vast outskirts of the empire, refused to lay down their arms. British, French and Italian military contingents occupied various parts of Turkey. With the support of the Entente fleet in May 1919, Greek armed formations landed in Izmir and began to advance deep into Asia Minor in order to protect the Greeks in Western Anatolia. Finally, in August 1920, the Treaty of Sevres was signed. Not a single area of ​​the Ottoman Empire remained free from foreign supervision. An international commission was created to control the Black Sea Straits and Istanbul. After riots broke out in early 1920 as a result of the growth of national sentiment, British troops entered Istanbul.

Mustafa Kemal and the Lausanne Peace Treaty.

In the spring of 1920, Mustafa Kemal, the most successful Ottoman commander of the war period, convened a Grand National Assembly in Ankara. He arrived from Istanbul in Anatolia on May 19, 1919 (the date from which the Turkish national liberation struggle began), where he united patriotic forces around him, striving to preserve Turkish statehood and the independence of the Turkish nation. From 1920 to 1922 Kemal and his supporters defeated the enemy armies in the east, south and west and made peace with Russia, France and Italy. At the end of August 1922, the Greek army retreated in disorder to Izmir and the coastal regions. Then the detachments of Kemal went to the Black Sea Straits, where the British troops were located. After the British Parliament refused to support the proposal to start hostilities, British Prime Minister Lloyd George resigned, and the war was averted by the signing of a truce in the Turkish city of Mudanya. The British government invited the Sultan and Kemal to send their representatives to a peace conference, which opened in Lausanne (Switzerland) on November 21, 1922. However, the Grand National Assembly in Ankara abolished the Sultanate, and Mehmed VI, the last Ottoman monarch, left Istanbul on a British warship on November 17.

On July 24, 1923, the Treaty of Lausanne was signed, which recognized the complete independence of Turkey. The Office of the Ottoman Public Debt and Capitulations were abolished, and foreign control over the country was abolished. At the same time, Turkey agreed to demilitarize the Black Sea straits. The province of Mosul, with its oil fields, went to Iraq. It was planned to carry out an exchange of population with Greece, from which the Greeks living in Istanbul and the West Thracian Turks were excluded. On October 6, 1923, British troops left Istanbul, and on October 29, 1923, Turkey was proclaimed a republic, and Mustafa Kemal was elected its first president.


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