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Flashcards covering key vocabulary, people, terms, and events from Chapters 1 through 6 of A Short History of the Ottoman Empire by Renée Worringer, focusing on Ottoman historiography, early foundations, consolidation of power, and imperial heights in the 16th century.
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Ottoman Historiography
Early Western scholarship often relied only upon European sources, leading to a biased view, which the author argues should include pre-Ottoman and Islamic history.
Ottoman Periodization
Revised scholarship views the post-16th century as a period of continuous transformation and adaptation rather than a simple decline, moving from principality to an institutionalized empire between the late 13th/early 14th to late 16th centuries.
Ottoman Turkish
A dead vernacular synthesized from Turkish, Persian, and Arabic, required for studying primary source documents.
Ottoman Flexibility
Attributed as a key reason for the empire's longevity and success in governing vast territories and diverse peoples.
Turkic Origins
Turkic tribal confederations (Tu-chiieh) originating in Central Asia, with migrations leading them westward.
Abbasid Dynasty
A Sunni Islamic dynasty (r. 750–1258) ruling from Baghdad, which inherited Persian cultural influence and valued knowledge and commerce.
Seljuk Turks
Having converted to Sunni Islam, they established a vast empire, influenced later Ottomans with their state organization, bureaucracy, legal models (iqta), and religious institutions (madrasas).
Osman's Emirate (Beylik)
The Ottoman principality founded by Osman at the turn of the 14th century, a small principality on the Byzantine/Seljuk frontier in Anatolia.
Gazi Thesis
A debated motivation for early Ottoman expansion, suggesting holy war, though early conquests also involved shifting, cross-religious alliances for plunder and booty.
Osman's Dream
A semi-mythical narrative used to legitimate early Ottoman rule, symbolizing the grant of imperial office.
Murad I (r. 1362–89)
An early Ottoman ruler under whom the Ottomans rapidly expanded into Anatolia and the Balkans, making Edirne a second capital.
Bayezid I (r. 1389–1402)
An Ottoman ruler who oversaw rapid expansion but was eventually defeated and captured by Timur at the Battle of Ankara.
Tug
Turkic symbols of sovereignty, like horsetail standards, used by Ottomans to assert their right to rule.
Open Succession
Based on Turco-Mongol custom, where all sons in the dynastic patriarchal line were eligible to rule, often leading to fratricidal conflict for the throne.
Vilayets/Beylerbeyliks
Provinces into which the Ottoman Empire was divided, such as Rumelia and Anatolia, overseen by an administrative hierarchy.
Sipahis
The core Ottoman mounted cavalry, supported by timars in exchange for military service.
Timar
A land grant that provided revenue based on cadastral surveys to sipahi cavalrymen in exchange for military service, adapted from earlier Seljuk iqta practices.
Kapikulu
"Slaves of the Porte"; a state system that drew military and administrative forces from non-tribal sources loyal solely to the Sultan.
Devsirme System
A formalized method, evolving from the pencik levy, involving a regular draft of young Christian boys, often from the Balkans, who were converted to Islam and rigorously educated for administrative or military positions.
Janissaries
The elite imperial infantry and guard corps, originally recruited through the devsirme system, known for fierce discipline.
Ottoman Interregnum (1402-1413)
A critical crisis triggered by the defeat and capture of Sultan Bayezid I by Timur, leading to a civil war among Bayezid's sons until Mehmed I emerged victorious.
Mehmed II (The Conqueror)
Ascended the throne (r. 1444-46, 1451-81) with an ambitious imperial vision, conquered Constantinople in 1453, and centralized the empire.
Conquest of Constantinople (1453)
Achieved by Mehmed II using massive cannons, the city was renamed Kostantiniyye (later Istanbul) and rebuilt as the Ottoman capital, symbolizing the shift to a Muslim world empire.
Kuls
Slave servants formalized by Mehmed II for high government positions, creating a polyglot ruling elite no longer dominated by entrenched Muslim-born families.
Kanunname of Mehmed II
A legal code that officially enshrined fratricide as dynastic law and formalized court protocol, such as the Sultan no longer dining with his ministers.
Topkapı Palace
Construction began around 1458/9, its layout mirrored the major reorganization toward a centralized, bureaucratic state under Mehmed II.
Siirgiin
Forced resettlement of populations, used by Mehmed II to repopulate Istanbul and ensure economic growth and stability, creating a multiethnic, multiconfessional community.
Capitulations (İmtiyazat)
Commercial privileges granted by the sultan to foreign traders, initially from a position of strength, but later becoming an economic liability.
Voivodes
Local Christian leaders used as vassals by the Ottomans in contested border areas like Wallachia for pragmatic territorial management.
Wagenburg Tactic
A wagon defense circle (tabur) effectively employed by the Ottoman military in field artillery battles after adopting gunpowder technology.
Ottoman Naval Development
The state evolved into an amphibious power, recognizing the need for sea power to control straits and trade routes, stationing forces at key points like Gallipoli, Alexandria, and Suez.
Safavid Dynasty
A Shi'ite dynasty in Persia (founded c. 1500) that posed a major ideological and territorial challenge to the Ottomans.
Kızılbaş
"Redheads"; Turkic tribesmen in eastern Anatolia adhering to esoteric Shi’ite Islam, loyal to the Safavids.
Battle of Çaldıran (1514)
A decisive victory where Sultan Selim I defeated the Safavids, led by Shah Ismail.
Conquest of the Mamluks (1517)
Selim I's army defeated the Mamluks, conquering Cairo and extending the empire into the Arab lands, securing control of Red Sea trade and holy cities.
Bayezid II (r. 1481–1512)
His reign was plagued by a succession struggle with his brother Cem and used diplomacy to exploit rivalries among Christian states.
Süleyman I (The Magnificent/Kanuni)
Reigned for 46 years (r. 1520–66) during a period of imperial consolidation and expansion, known in the West as "the Magnificent" and in the Muslim world as "the Lawgiver."
Battle of Mohacs (1526)
A key campaign under Süleyman I, resulting in a decisive victory over the Hungarian nobility, leading to Hungary's incorporation into the empire in 1541.
Shaykhulislam Ebussuud Efendi
Chief jurisprudent under Süleyman I who orchestrated major legal reforms to reconcile secular dynastic laws (kanuns) with Islamic law (seriat).
Kanun
Secular dynastic laws that were codified and reconciled with Islamic law (seriat) under Süleyman I.
Ottoman "Provisioning Organism"
A concept defining the empire's imperial image due to its adaptive ability to mobilize resources across its vast territory, projected by Süleyman I.
Roxelana (Hürrem Sultan)
Broke with succession tradition by marrying Süleyman and remaining in the capital, influencing the later shift away from provincial postings for princes.
Mimar Koca Sinan
The master architect of the Ottoman Empire, a prominent elite who was a product of the devsirme system.
Mukataa
A form of tax farming representing revenue from commodities.
Iltizam
A system for the collection of tax revenues, expanded during the centralization of the 16th century.
Osman Gazi
Eponymous founder of the Ottoman principality (beylik), whose approximate rise was around 1300 CE.
Mehmed I (r. 1413–21)
The ruler who emerged victorious from the Interregnum civil war, consolidating power after Bayezid I's defeat.
Selim I (The Grim)
Ottoman Sultan (r. 1512–20) who defeated the Safavids at Çaldıran (1514) and conquered the Mamluks/Egypt (1517).
askeri
The imperial ruling class, usually military or administrative elites who were exempt from taxes.
re’aya
All tax-paying subjects of the empire, the 'flock' guided by the ruler.
kanunname
Ottoman (Persian) legal code or lawbook defining governance and customs, supplementing Islamic seriat law.
Battle of Manzikert (1071 CE)
An important historical event prior to the Ottoman rise.
First Siege of Vienna (1529)
An initial but unsuccessful siege by Süleyman I during his reign of imperial expansion.
Incorporation of Hungary (1541)
The official integration of Hungary into the Ottoman Empire following the victory at the Battle of Mohacs.