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The Ottoman Empire

The Ottoman Empire. From Islamic Empire to Western State. The Ottoman Empire. Posed the greatest threat to Western Europe The Ottomans were Turks, not Arabs. Brought from Central Asia to Anatolia (present-day Turkey) in 1200s. Gunpowder empire

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The Ottoman Empire

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  1. The Ottoman Empire From Islamic Empire to Western State

  2. The Ottoman Empire • Posed the greatest threat to Western Europe • The Ottomans were Turks, not Arabs. • Brought from Central Asia to Anatolia (present-day Turkey) in 1200s. • Gunpowder empire • In 1453, Ottomans led by Mehmed II captured the city of Constantinople from the Byzantine Empire, renaming it Istanbul. • From there marched on Eastern Europe, seizing Greece, Bulgaria, Romania, Transylvania, Moldavia, Walachia, Albania, and modern-day Yugoslavia.

  3. Ottoman Society • At the top of society, was the sultan, or pradishah. • Borrowed aspects of Byzantine and Persian empires: centralized bureaucracy, provinces governed by a bey (governor). • Sultan’s private domain known as the harem (also refers to his wives and concubines). • Bureaucrats and landed aristocracy of Ottomans • ‘Ulama, religious scholars • Fellahin (peasants) did not own land • Dhimmis (mostly Greeks, Jews, and Armenians) • “Circassian” slaves known as Circassians—people from Balkans and the Caucasus Mountain region. • Janissaries—elite military class (known as Mamluks under Ayyubid Empire).

  4. Modern Caucasus Mountains Janissaries

  5. Ottomans as Muslims • Ottomans were Sunni Muslims, sultan viewed as the caliph of Islam. • Qanun and Shari’a • Empire contained a minority of non-Muslims • Orthodox Christians of Greece and the Balkans, Armenian Christians, Coptic Christians in Egypt, and Jews throughout. • Usually not forced to convert to Islam.

  6. Ottoman Women • Women in a harem had more power than one imagines. • Many were Circassian slaves. • Often acted as diplomats. • Owned property. • Could chose their husbands and divorce fairly easy. • Many were educated.

  7. Life in the Harem? Of course not. This is the popular Western stereotype.

  8. This is the harem quarters of a sultan. What do you notice about the building?

  9. Beginning of Ottoman Decline • The Ottoman Empire began its decline in late 1500s with Selim II. • Territorial losses to Safavids and Hapsburgs • Muslims entered Janissary corps; corruption and uncontrollable military • Increased decentralization • Rising population and inflation • Agricultural economy; no exports • Adoption of Western practices

  10. Selim II

  11. Western Culture in Ottoman Empire • Upper class members wear European fashions, fill homes with European furniture and art, and drink coffee (Arab) and smoke tobacco. • Coffeehouses (cafés) appear across the empire—hotbeds of rebellion. • Shari’a ignored—drunkenness, adultery, etc. • Sultan and ‘ulama banned Western customs and products to no avail.

  12. Emulation of the West • Islamic response to foreign encroachment usually involved one of the following: • Emulation of Western ideas and institutions • Join Western ideas and Islamic institutions • Rejection of Western ideas and institutions • Best examples: • Egypt • Turkey

  13. Egypt • Egypt often called the “linchpin” of the empire. • Key to Ottoman dominance of the Middle East between 1500 and 1600. • Ottomans conquered Egypt in 1512, seizing it from the Mamluks (who conquered it from the Ayyubid Empire). • Major source of food and commodities.

  14. Modern Egypt Lower Egypt Upper Egypt Sudan (“Nubia”)

  15. Egyptian Population • Fellahin—Majority of population was native-born Egyptians, mostly descended from Arabs—rural and poor. • Mamluk ruling class—incorporated into Ottoman bureaucracy. • Ottoman military. • Ottomans and Mamluks constantly fighting. • Each emerged as dominant group at different times, never totally eliminating the other.

  16. French Occupation, 1798-1801 • Cycle was disrupted in July 1798 with the arrival of Napoleon (before he was emperor). • Battle of the Pyramids near Cairo. • Never totally defeated the Mamluks who had retreated into Upper Egypt and the Sudan.

  17. Napoleon “liberating” the Egyptians from Mamluk rule.

  18. Muhammad Ali • Combined Ottoman-British force expelled France from Egypt, Mamluks and Ottomans struggled for control, again. • In 1805, Ottoman of Albanian descent, Muhammad, or Mehmed Ali, came out on top. • Eventually recognized as the viceroy of Egypt. • Modernization movement

  19. Muhammad Ali’s Egypt • Often called pasha rather than bey, considered the “founder of modern Egypt.” • Ruled from 1805 to 1848 basically independent of the sultan. • Process of Westernization/modernization • His reign witnessed changes in Egypt’s politics, economics, and cultural orientation. • Creation of a modern Egyptian state

  20. Politics • Solidified his own power by crushing several resistance movements in Cairo. • 1809, removed the tax exempt status from religious organizations to curb power of the ‘ulama power—those that protested were exiled. • Wiped out remaining Mamluks in 1811 at a feast in Cairo.

  21. More on Politics • The core of his government was his family: sons, nephews, cousins. • Appointed foreign-born Egyptians to mid-level positions: Turks, Albanians, Greeks, and Circassians—came to be known as Turko-Circassians. • Employed Europeans as advisors. • Modernized the military.

  22. Muhammad Ali receiving Western envoys in Alexandria

  23. Economy • Nationalization of agriculture. • Fellahin forced to labor on government farms. • Canals and irrigation improved. • Farm land increased by 1/3 under Ali. • Promoted the growth of cotton, sugar, indigo, and rice as cash crops. • Funds used for public works such as roads and the military. • Attempted a massive industrialization project between 1810 and 1830—failure.

  24. Failure of Industrialization • High tariffs on Egyptian exports. • Inadequate power sources. • Factories relied on turbines driven by animals. • Industrial sabotage by workers forced to work in factories with little or no compensation.

  25. Culture • Egyptians were sent to study abroad in Europe. • Learned skills such as printing, shipbuilding, and modern military techniques. • Established a system of state-run military schools that also taught medicine and engineering. • Printing presses that printed Turkish and Arabic. • School of Languages, 1835, designed to teach Egyptians the languages of Europe. • Redesigned elite section of Cairo to resemble Paris.

  26. Muhammad Ali’s Successors • Muhammad Ali died in 1848, succeeded by son Ibrahim, then grandson Abbas (1848-1854), then another son, Muhammad Sa’id (1854-1863), finally grandson Isma’il (1863-1879). • Construction of the Suez Canal in 1869 • Financed by the British. • Bankrupt and indebted to Europe. • British use this as an excuse to interlope in Ottoman-Egyptian affairs.

  27. Egypt under the British (1882-1914) • Summer 1882, Great Britain dispatches naval and land forces to occupy Egypt. • “Protect” Suez Canal. • March on Cairo in September and Egyptians surrenders. • British ruled indirectly as a colonial power. • Egypt never officially became a colony • Remained Ottoman province until World War I.

  28. Suez Canal

  29. Suez Canal

  30. Creation of Turkey • Ottomans defeated by Russians in 1774; lose Crimea • Some Ottoman sultans emulated the West: • Selim III (r. 1762-1808) • European officers trained new army that replaced Janissaries • Mahmud II (r. 1808-1839) • Furthered Selim III’s reforms, modern centralized government • No Enlightenment ideals of equality or citizens’ rights • Tanzimat movement (1839-1876), “reordering” • Some Enlightenment ideas; anti-slavery movement • Ottomanism • Creation of a constitutional monarchy (1876) • Give Europeans few excuses to intervene in Ottoman affairs

  31. Mahmud II Selim III

  32. Young Turks • Tanzimat paved way for Young Turk Revolution of 1889-1908 • Turkish nationalism; opposition to Sultan Abdul Hamid II; pro-Western; secularists • Restoration of a Turkish Parliament • Suppression of nationalist movements in Empire (Greeks, Armenians, Assyrians, and Kurds) • Committee of Union and Progress (CUP) • World War I and the partition of the Ottoman Empire (1918-1922)

  33. Republic of Turkey • Turkey created in 1922 through leadership of Mustafa Kemal (Atatürk; 1881-1938) • First president, 1922-1938 • Kemalism; intensely pro-Western secular republicanism • European-style law code, abolition of Arabic script, adoption of Latin alphabet; abolition of the Arabic call to prayer • Continuation of Tanzimat and modernization • Continual movement toward democracy

  34. Atatürk giving instruction in the Latin alphabet in 1928.

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