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The Ottomans:
During the second
Mongol invasion, Tamerlane had met and very nearly annihilated
another rising power: the Ottomans. Under a minor chieftain named
Othman, groups of Turkish-speaking peoples in Anatolia were united
in the Ottoman confederation which, by the second half of the
fourteenth century, had conquered much of present-day Greece and
Turkey and was threatening Constantinople.
The Ottoman state
was born on the frontier between Islam and the Byzantine Empire.
Turkish tribes, driven from their homeland in the steppes of Central
Asia by the Mongols, had embraced Islam and settled in Anatolia on
the battle lines of the Islamic world, where they formed the Ottoman
confederation. They were called ghazis, warriors for the faith, and
their highest ambition was to die in battle for their adopted
religion.
In addition to their
military abilities the Turks seem to have been endowed with a
special talent for organization. Towards the end of the Ottoman
Empire, this talent fossilized into bureaucracy - and a moribund
bureaucracy at that. But at the beginning, when its institutions
were responsive to the needs of the people and the state, the
Ottoman Empire was a model of administrative efficiency. This,
together with a series of brilliant sultans - culminating in the
redoubtable Suleiman the Magnificent - established the foundations
of an empire that at its height was comparable to that of the
Romans.
The first important
step in the establishment of this empire was taken in 1326 when the
Ottoman leader Orhan captured the town of Bursa, south of the Sea of
Marmara, and made it his capital.
It was probably
during the reign of Orhan that the famous institution of the
Janissaries, a word derived from the Turkish yeni cheri ("new
troops"), was formed. An elite corps of slave soldiers conscripted
from the subject population of the empire, they were carefully
selected on the basis of physique and intelligence, educated,
trained, introduced to Islam, and formed into one of the most
formidable military corps ever known. At a later period the
Janissaries became so powerful that they made and unmade sultans at
their will, and membership in the corps was a sure road to
advancement.

The mosque at
Kyustendi in Bulgaria
was
founded during Ottoman rule.
Orhan's successor,
Murad I, who launched naval attacks upon the Aegean coasts of
Europe, established himself on the European shores of the Bosporus,
and crushed a Balkan coalition. The next Ottoman leader was Bayazid
I, who besieged Constantinople and routed the armies dispatched by
an alarmed Europe to raise the siege.
It was at this point
in history that Tamerlane and his Mongols advanced into Anatolia and
very nearly crushed the Ottomans forever. They recovered, however,
and later, under the leadership of a new sultan, Murad II, besieged
Constantinople for the second time. They were repulsed, but by 1444
they had advanced into Greece and Albania, leaving Constantinople
isolated though unconquered. Murad II was succeeded by Mehmed
(Muhammad) II, called "The Conqueror" because on May 29, 1453, after
his artillery finally breached Constantinople's massive walls, the
city fell.
After the fall of
Constantinople, and during the sixteenth century, the Ottoman system
evolved the centralized administrative framework by which the
sultans maintained effective control over the extraordinarily
diverse peoples in the vast empire.
An important part of
this framework was the millet system - essentially a division of the
empire into a communal system based upon religious affiliation. Each
millet was relatively autonomous, was ruled by its own religious
leader, and retained its own laws and customs. The religious leader,
in turn, was responsible to the sultan or his representatives for
such details as the payment of taxes. There were also, however,
organizations which united the diverse peoples. Particularly
important were the guilds of artisans which often cut across the
divisions of religion and location.
There was also a
territorial organization of the empire, at the upper levels of which
was a unit called the muqata'ah under the control of a noble or
administrator who could keep some portion of the state revenues
derived from it. The amount varied with the importance of the
individual noble or administrator, and he could use it as he saw
fit. Such rights were also given to some administrators or governors
in place of, or in addition to, salaries, thus insuring a regular
collection of revenues and reducing record keeping.
The Ottoman Empire
reached its peak in size and splendor under the sultan called
Suleiman the Magnificent, who ruled from 1520 to 1566 and was known
to the Turks as Suleiman the Law-Giver. But from the middle of the
sixteenth century on the empire began to decline. This process got
under way as the office of the Grand Vizier gradually assumed more
power and indifferent sultans began to neglect administration.
Another factor was that the Janissaries became too strong for the
sultans to control The sultans were further weakened when it became
customary to bring them up and educate them in isolation and without
the skills necessary to rule effectively.
Some sultans later
regained power through political maneuvering and by playing off
factions against one another, but as a result administration was
paralyzed. When Europe found a new route to India - thus eliminating
the traditional transshipment of goods through the Arab regions of
the empire, revenues began to fall, triggering inflation,
corruption, administrative inefficiency, and fragmentation of
authority.
Temporary reforms
under various sultans, and the still formidable, if weakened,
military prowess of the Ottomans helped maintain their empire. As
late as 1683, for example, they besieged Vienna. Nevertheless, the
decline continued. Because of the increasingly disruptive part
played by the Janissaries, the empire, in a series of
eighteenth-century wars, slowly lost territory. Because of
administrative paralysis, local governors became increasingly
independent and, eventually, revolts broke out. Even the various
reform movements were balked, and with the invasion of Egypt in 1798
by France it became obvious that the once powerful empire was
weakening.
In 1824 Mahmud II
finally broke the power of the Janissaries, brought in German
advisers to restructure the army, and launched a modernization
program. He also brought the semi-autonomous rulers in various
provinces under control, with the exception of the defiant and able
Muhammad 'Ali in Egypt. On the death of Mahmud, his sons continued
his efforts with a series of reforms called the tanzimat. Some of
these were no more than efforts to placate European powers - which
by then had great influence on the empire's policies - but others,
in education and law, were important. Again, however, the effects
were temporary and the empire continued to lose territory through
rebellion or foreign intervention.
By the early years
of the twentieth century the Ottoman Empire was clearly in decline
and was referred to as the "Sick Man of Europe." There were,
however, some positive accomplishments in this period, such as the
Hijaz Railway. Building the railway was undertaken in 1900 by Sultan
Abdul-Hamid, as a pan-Islamic project. Completed in 1908, it
permitted thousands of Muslims to make the pilgrimage in relative
comfort and safety. It also helped to give the Ottoman government
more effective control over its territories in western Arabia.
The Hijaz
Railway, completed by the Turks in 1908,
linked
Damascus with Medina,
eight hundred
miles to the south.
During the early
twentieth century too, a group called the Young Turks forced the
restoration of the constitution (which had been suspended by Abdul-Hamid),
eventually deposed the sultan, and again attempted to modernize the
Ottoman state. The Turkish defeat in the First World War (in which
the Ottoman Empire sided with Germany and the Central Powers)
finally discredited the Young Turks, however, and paved the way for
the success of a new nationalist movement under the leadership of an
army officer named Mustafa Kemal, later known as Ataturk or "Father
of the Turks." The nationalist government under Ataturk, dedicated
to leading Turkey in the direction of secularism and Westernization,
abolished the sultanate, declared a republic, and eventually (in
1924) abolished the caliphate as well.

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