| 1299 |
Establishment of the
Ottoman Principality by Osman Bey in Sogut and Domanic (east of Bursa) |
| 1326-1362 |
Orhan Bey period.
Accepted as the real founder of the Ottoman State by his military and
administrative organization and forming the divan. The first
ruler to use the title of sultan. |
| 1326 |
Ottomans under Sultan
Orhan take Bursa and establish their first capital there |
| 1364 |
Turks under Sultan Murat
I capture Adrianople (Edirne) and establish Ottoman capital there |
| 1389 |
Murat I wins the Kosova I
Battle; He establishes the Janissary Corps |
| 1396 |
Ottoman force led by
Bayezit I defeats Crusader army at Nicopolis (Nigbolu) |
| 1397 |
First Ottoman siege of
Constantinople |
| 1402 |
Tamerlane defeats
Ottomans under Bayezit I at Ankara; the Sultan is captured and
eventually commits suicide. Mongols overrun Anatolia, and Ottoman
power in the subcontinent is temporarily crushed |
| 1413-1421 |
Reign of Mehmet I;
revival of Ottoman power in Anatolia |
| 1421-1451 |
Reign of Murat II;
Ottoman armies sweep through the Balkans and also regain lost
territory in Anatolia |
| 1451-1481 |
Reign of Mehmet II, the
Conqueror |
| 1452 |
He builds the Rumeli
Fortress on the Bosphorus |
1453
(May 29) |
Turks under Mehmet II
conquer Constantinople, which becomes the fourth and last Ottoman
capital under the name of Istanbul; he is entitled as the conqueror |
| 1453-1579 |
Rise in the Ottoman
Empire |
| 1481-1512 |
Reign of Bayezit II |
| 1512-1520 |
Reign of Selim I; Battles
of Caldiran, Mercidabik, Ridaniye |
| 1517 |
Selim I captures Cairo
and adds the title of caliph to that of sultan |
| 1520-1566 |
Reign of Suleyman the
Magnificent (the longest in the Ottoman Empire; 46 years); zenith of
Ottoman power; because he organizes the state by making new laws, he
is called Kanuni meaning law-giver; the Mediterranean Sea
becomes a Turkish lake with many captures |
| 1526 |
Battle of Mohacs (Mohac)
and the conquest of Buda and Pest (Peste) |
| 1529 |
First and unsuccessful
Siege of Vienna |
| 1534-1535 |
Suleyman the
Magnificient's expedition into Iran and Iraq |
| 1538 |
Preveze naval battle,
Barbaros Hayrettin Pasa (Barbarossa) becomes Kaptan-i Derya
(Commander in chief of the fleet) |
| 1566-1574 |
Reign of Selim II |
| 1569 |
The great fire of
Istanbul |
| 1571 |
At Lepanto naval battle
allied fleet defeat the Ottomans except one squadron of Kilic Ali Pasa. |
| 1588 |
Death of Sinan |
| 1579-1699 |
The rule of women.
Ineffectual sultans give up control of Ottoman Empire to their women
and grand viziers; Reforms and Renaissance in Europe |
| 1607 |
Celali uprisings,
rebellions against the land tenure system of the provincial
fief-holding cavalry |
| 1638 |
Murat IV captures Baghdad |
| 1648 |
Great earthquake of
Istanbul |
| 1661 |
Another great fire in
Istanbul |
| 1666-1812 |
Period of intermittent
wars between Turks and European powers; Ottoman Empire loses much
power in southern Europe |
| 1683 |
Second and unsuccessful
Siege of Vienna by Grand Vizier Kara Mustafa Pasa of Merzifon |
| 1686 |
Ottomans are forced to
evacuate Hungary |
| 1699 |
Treaty of Karlowitz (Karlofca);
the first loss of territory by the Ottoman Empires |
| 1699-1792 |
Decline of the Ottoman
Empire |
| 1711 |
Grand Vizier Baltaci
Mehmet Pasa's battle of Pruth against Russians. According to a spicy
tradition, Pasa surrounded Peter the Great's army but then let him
avoid humiliation because he was persuaded by a secret nocturnal visit
to his tent by the czar's mistress (later empress) Catherine |
| 1718-1774 |
Treaties of Passarowitz (Pasarofca)
and Belgrade with Austrians, Kucuk Kaynarca with Russians |
| 1718-1730 |
Tulip period; Istanbul is
decorated with beautiful palaces and gardens; the first printing house
in Istanbul and the first paper factory in Yalova are set up |
| 1750 |
Another great fire in
Istanbul |
| 1754 |
Major earthquake in
Istanbul |
| 1782 |
Fire in Istanbul |
| 1789-1807 |
Recovery period; Selim
III; education becomes obligatory, reform in the army; Nizam-i
Cedit (organized army) |
| 1790 |
Ottoman-Prussian alliance
against Austria and Russia |
| 1808-1839 |
Mahmut II period |
| 1826 |
Mahmut II abolishes the
Janissary Corps; Medical and military schools are opened; General Post
Office is set up; Ministries are established instead of the Divan;
Government officers obliged to wear trousers |
| 1839-76 |
The Tanzimat Period;
Mahmut II puts the westernizing Imperial Reform Decree of the Tanzimat
into operation; Abdulmecit and Mustafa Resit Pasa prepare a new
program of reform: laws are made instead of sultan's orders; equal
rights for everybody; equal taxes according to incomes; no punishment
without trials |
| 1856 |
Paris Treaty: Ottoman
Empire to be accepted as a European state |
| 1876-1909 |
Reign of Abdulhamit II |
| 1876-1877 |
Short-lived first
Constitutional Regime |
| 1876 |
First Constitution is
prepared by Young Turks and the first Turkish Parliament is
established |
| 1877 |
Parliament is dissolved
by Abdulhamit II |
| 1877-1908 |
Autocracy of Abdulhamit
II |
| 1881 |
Birth of Mustafa Kemal in
Salonika |
| 1908 |
Constitutional Regime II |
| 1908 |
Abdulhamit is forced to
accept constitutional rule; parliament restored |
| 1909 |
Abdulhamit deposed; Young
Turks take power |
| 1912-13 |
Balkan Wars; Turks lose
Macedonia and part of Thrace |
| 1914 |
Ottoman Empire enters
World War I as an ally of Germany |
| 1915 |
Turks, led by Mustafa
Kemal, repel Allied landings on Gallipoli Peninsula |
| 1918 |
Turks surrender to
Allies; Istanbul occupied by Anglo-French Army |
| 1919-1922 |
War of Independence
|
| 1914 |
Ottoman Empire enters
World War I as an ally of Germany |
| 1915 |
Turks, led by Mustafa
Kemal, repel Allied landings on Gallipoli Peninsula |
| 1918 |
Turks surrender to
Allies; Istanbul occupied by Anglo-French Army |
| 1919-1922 |
War of Independence
|
| 1919 |
Sivas Congress; Ataturk
leads Turkish Nationalists to start the struggle for national
sovereignty; Greek army lands at Smyrna |
| 1920 |
Treaty of Sévres; Ottoman
Empire dissolved |
| 1920 |
Establishment of the
Grand National Assembly of Turkey with Ataturk as the president |
| 1922 |
Turks defeat Greeks and
drive them out of Asia Minor; sultanate abolished |
| 1923 |
Treaty of Lausanne
establishes sovereignty of modern Turkey, defines its frontiers and
arranges for exchange of minorities between Greece and Turkey; Turkish
Republic is proclaimed; Mustafa Kemal is elected president; Ankara
replaces Istanbul as the capital |
The Ottoman Empire was a Moslem Turkish state
that encompassed Anatolia, Southeastern Europe, the Arab Middle East and
North Africa from the 14C to the early 20C.
The Ottoman Empire succeeded both the
Byzantine Empire (1453) and the Arab Caliphate, the mantle of descent from
Mohammed after the conquest of Egypt (1517).
Expansion of the Ottoman Empire
The Ottoman Turks were descendants of
Turkoman nomads who entered Anatolia in the 11C as mercenary soldiers for
the Seljuks. At the end of the 13C, Osman I (from whom the name Ottoman is
derived) asserted the independence of his small principality in Sogut near
Bursa, which adjoined the decadent Byzantine Empire.
Gazis from all over Anatolia hitched
themselves to Osman's rising star, following the usual custom of adopting
the name of their leader and thus calling themselves Osmanli. Their
fight for their religion, holy war, was called gaza, and was intended
not to destroy but to subjugate the non-Moslem world.
Within a century the Osman Dynasty had
extended its domains into an Empire stretching from the Danube to the
Euphrates. In Bosnia, Bulgaria, Greece and Serbia the conquered Christian
princes were restored to their lands as vassals, while the subjects were
left free to follow their own religions in return for loyalty. The Ottomans
accepted submissive local nobility and military commanders into their
service, along with their troops, instead of killing them.
The empire was temporarily disrupted by the
invasion of the Tatar conqueror Timur, who defeated and captured the Ottoman
Sultan Bayezit I at the Battle of Ankara (1402). However, Mehmet I
(1389-1421), the Restorer, succeeded in reuniting much of the Empire and it
was reconstituted by Murat II and Mehmet II. In 1453, Mehmet II conquered
Constantinople, the last Byzantine stronghold.
During the reigns of Murat II and Mehmet II
the devsirme system of recruiting young Christians for conversion to
Islam and service in the Ottoman army and administration was developed. The
Christians in the army were organized into the elite infantry corps called
the Janissaries. Urban families, those with particular skills
vital to the local economy, or families with only one son were excluded in
this devsirme system. From the poor families' point of view, it was a great
chance for their sons to be offered a high level of education especially in
the palace which would provide good future prospects.
The empire reached its peak in the 16C.
Sultan Selim I (r. 1512-20) conquered Egypt and Syria, gained control of the
Arabian Peninsula and beat back the Safavid rulers of Iran at the Battle of
Caldiran (1514). He was succeeded by Suleyman I (the Magnificent, r.
1520-66), who took Iraq, Hungary and Albania and established Ottoman naval
supremacy in the Mediterranean. Suleyman codified and institutionalized the
classic structure of the Ottoman state and society, making his dominions
into one of the great powers of Europe.
Decline of the Ottoman Empire
The decline of the empire began late in the
16C. It was caused by a myriad of interdependent factors, among which the
most important were the flight of the Turco-Islamic aristocracy and
degeneration of the ability and honesty both of the sultans and of their
ruling class. The devsirme divided into many political parties and
fought for power, manipulated sultans and used the government for their own
benefit. Corruption, nepotism, inefficiency and misrule spread.
Reform Attempts
Sultan Selim III (r. 1789-1807) attempted to
reform the Ottoman system by destroying the Janissary corps and replacing it
with the Nizam-i Cedit (new order) army modeled after the new
military institutions being developed in the West. This attempt so angered
the Janissaries and others with a vested interest in the old ways that they
overthrew him and massacred most of the reform leaders. Defeats at the hands
of Russia and Austria, the success of national revolutions in Serbia and
Greece and the rise of the powerful independent Ottoman governor of Egypt,
Mohammed Ali, so discredited the Janissaries, however, that Sultan Mahmut II
was able to massacre and destroy them in 1826.
Mahmut then inaugurated a new series of
modern reforms, which involved the abolition of the traditional institutions
and their replacement with new ones imported from the West. This affected
every area of Ottoman life, not just the military. These reforms were
continued and brought to their culmination during the Tanzimat reform era
(1839-76) and the reign of Abdulhamit II (1876-1909). The scope of
government was extended and centralized as reforms were made in
administration, finance, education, justice, economy, communications and
army.
Financial mismanagement and incompetence,
along with national revolts in the Balkans and eastern Anatolia, the French
occupation of Algeria and Tunisia, the takeover by the British in Egypt and
the Italians in Libya, threatened to end the very existence of the Empire,
let alone its reforms. By this time the Ottoman Sultanate was known as the
"Sick Man of Europe," and European diplomacy focused on the so-called
Eastern Question how to dispose of the Sick Man's territories without
upsetting the European balance of power. Abdulhamit II, however, rescued the
empire, at least temporarily, by reforming the Ottoman financial system,
manipulating the rivalries of the European powers and developing the
pan-Islamic and pan-Turkic movements to undermine the empires of his
enemies. The sultan granted a constitution and parliament in 1876, but he
soon abandoned them and ruled autocratically so as to achieve his objectives
as rapidly and efficiently as possible. He became so despotic that liberal
opposition arose under the leadership especially in the palace which would
provide good future prospects.
The empire reached its peak in the 16C.
Sultan Selim I (r. 1512-20) conquered Egypt and Syria, gained control of the
Arabian Peninsula and beat back the Safavid rulers of Iran at the Battle of
Caldiran (1514). He was succeeded by Suleyman I (the Magnificent, r.
1520-66), who took Iraq, Hungary and Albania and established Ottoman naval
supremacy in the Mediterranean. Suleyman codified and institutionalized the
classic structure of the Ottoman state and society, making his dominions
into one of the great powers of Europe.
Decline of the Ottoman Empire
The decline of the empire began late in the
16C. It was caused by a myriad of interdependent factors, among which the
most important were the flight of the Turco-Islamic aristocracy and
degeneration of the ability and honesty both of the sultans and of their
ruling class. The devsirme divided into many political parties and
fought for power, manipulated sultans and used the government for their own
benefit. Corruption, nepotism, inefficiency and misrule spread.
Reform Attempts
Sultan Selim III (r. 1789-1807) attempted to
reform the Ottoman system by destroying the Janissary corps and replacing it
with the Nizam-i Cedit (new order) army modeled after the new
military institutions being developed in the West. This attempt so angered
the Janissaries and others with a vested interest in the old ways that they
overthrew him and massacred most of the reform leaders. Defeats at the hands
of Russia and Austria, the success of national revolutions in Serbia and
Greece and the rise of the powerful independent Ottoman governor of Egypt,
Mohammed Ali, so discredited the Janissaries, however, that Sultan Mahmut II
was able to massacre and destroy them in 1826.
Mahmut then inaugurated a new series of
modern reforms, which involved the abolition of the traditional institutions
and their replacement with new ones imported from the West. This affected
every area of Ottoman life, not just the military. These reforms were
continued and brought to their culmination during the Tanzimat reform era
(1839-76) and the reign of Abdulhamit II (1876-1909). The scope of
government was extended and centralized as reforms were made in
administration, finance, education, justice, economy, communications and
army.
Financial mismanagement and incompetence,
along with national revolts in the Balkans and eastern Anatolia, the French
occupation of Algeria and Tunisia, the takeover by the British in Egypt and
the Italians in Libya, threatened to end the very existence of the Empire,
let alone its reforms. By this time the Ottoman Sultanate was known as the
"Sick Man of Europe," and European diplomacy focused on the so-called
Eastern Question how to dispose of the Sick Man's territories without
upsetting the European balance of power. Abdulhamit II, however, rescued the
empire, at least temporarily, by reforming the Ottoman financial system,
manipulating the rivalries of the European powers and developing the
pan-Islamic and pan-Turkic movements to undermine the empires of his
enemies. The sultan granted a constitution and parliament in 1876, but he
soon abandoned them and ruled autocratically so as to achieve his objectives
as rapidly and efficiently as possible. He became so despotic that liberal
opposition arose under the leadership of the Young Turks, many of whom had
to leave the country from Abdulhamit's police.
Overthrow of the Ottoman Empire
In 1908 a revolution led by the Young Turks
forced Abdulhamit to restore the parliament and constitution. After a few
months of constitutional rule, however, a counterrevolutionary effort to
restore the sultan's autocracy led the Young Turks to dethrone Abdulhamit
completely in 1909. He was replaced by Mehmet (Resit) V (r. 1909-18), who
was only a puppet of those controlling the government.
Rapid modernization continued during the
Young Turk era (1908-18), with particular attention given to urbanization,
agriculture, industry, communications, secularization of the state and the
emancipation of women.
The empire was involved in World War I to
take sides with Germany and Austria-Hungary. The defeat of these Central
Powers led to the breakup and foreign occupation of the Ottoman Empire.
The Administration
The head of the empire was the sultan and the
sultanate passed from father to son. The orders of the sultan were accepted
as laws. His three major duties were commanding the army, appointing the
statesmen and supervising the Divan, today's Cabinet. Members of the
Divan were the chief vizier (prime minister), viziers (state
ministers), kazasker (minister responsible for the military), two
defterdars (finance ministers), nisanci (general secretary),
seyhulislam (authorized head of the religious matters) and kaptan-i
derya (Commander in chief of the fleet).
The functions of the ruling class were
limited to exploiting the resources of the empire, largely for their own
benefit; expanding and defending the state and maintaining order and
preserving the faith and practice of Islam as well as the religions of all
the subjects of the sultan.
The vast class of subjects were left to carry
out all other functions of the state through autonomous religious
communities, artisans' guilds, popular mystic orders and confederations,
which together formed a substratum of popular society.
The Use of Land
In the Ottoman Empire the lands belonged to
the state. The right to use the land was given to people and some revenue
from the income received was given to the state. However, when people failed
to use their land effectively for three consecutive years it had to be
returned.
The lands in general were divided into two
categories; Vakif and Dirlik. Vakif estates were spared for
charity institutions and public use like mosques, hospitals, caravansaries
and suchlike. Dirlik (fief) lands were given to statesmen according to their
incomes; each of these lands was classified as Has, Zeamet, or
Timar. Owners used some part of them for themselves and spared other
parts for the expenses of a certain number of soldiers. With this system,
the state had a powerful army without costs.
The Army
The Ottoman army was mainly divided into
three classes:
a) Kapikulu soldiers were
professionals who acted directly under the strict command of the sultan.
They were not even allowed to marry. They did not have any connection to the
land holding system as they worked for salaries. Ulufe was the name
given to their salaries which they received every 3 months. The majority of
these Kapikulu soldiers consisted of janissaries. There were both
foot-soldiers and cavalrymen.
b) Eyalet soldiers were Dirlik-holding
soldiers. The majority of the Ottoman army were Eyalet soldiers. They were
the front line soldiers and like Kapikulu soldiers they were divided into
both foot-soldiers and cavalrymen.
c) Reinforcements were soldiers who
came from annexed rulers.
Education
The two main arteries of education were
Enderun and Medrese.
Enderun was a royal school with a very high
level of education. The aim of this school was to educate statesmen.
Students were treated with considerable discipline and by the age of 30
approximately, they finished their schooling and attained their posts.
Although the medrese was originally a
theological school, in the Ottoman period, education in the medrese was
conducted in four faculties; 1-religion and law, 2-language
and literature, 3-philosophy, 4-basic sciences. The language
of education was Arabic. There was no set period, students had to finish
particular books rather than years. Students lived in cells, ate in
imarets (kitchens for the public, generally the poor) and received some
pocket money from the school Foundations.