Ottoman Empire
The political and
geographical entity governed
by the Muslim Ottoman Turks.
Their empire was centered in
present-day Turkey,
and extended its influence
into southeastern Europe as
well as the Middle East.
Europe was only temporarily
able to resist their
advance: the turning point
came at the Battle of Varna
in 1444 when a European
coalition army failed to
stop the Turkish advance.
Only Constantinople (Istanbul)
remained in Byzantine hands and its
conquest in 1453 seemed
inevitable after Varna. The
Turks subsequently
established an empire in Anatolia and
southeastern Europe which
lasted until the early
twentieth century.
Although the Ottoman Empire
is not considered a European
kingdom per se, Ottoman
expansion had a profound
impact on a continent
already stunned by the
calamities of the fourteenth
and fifteenth centuries and
the Ottoman Turks must,
therefore, be considered in
any study of Europe in the
late Middle Ages. The ease
with which the Ottoman
Empire achieved military
victories led Western
Europeans to fear that
ongoing Ottoman success
would collapse the political
and social infrastructure of
the West and bring about the
downfall of Christendom.
Such a momentous threat
could not be ignored and the
Europeans mounted crusades
against the Ottomans in
1366, 1396, and 1444, but to
no avail. The Ottomans
continued to conquer new
territories.
One of a number of Turkish tribes that
migrated from the central
Asian steppe, the Ottomans
were initially a nomadic people who
followed a primitive
shamanistic religion.
Contact with various settled
peoples led to the
introduction of Islam and
under Islamic influence, the
Turks acquired their
greatest fighting tradition,
that of the gazi warrior.
Well trained and highly
skilled, gazi warriors
fought to conquer the
infidel, acquiring land and
riches in the process.
While the gazi warriors
fought for Islam, the
greatest military asset of
the Ottoman Empire was the
standing paid army of
Christian soldiers, the Janissaries. Originally
created in 1330 by Orhan,
the janissaries were
Christian captives from
conquered territories.
Educated in the Islamic
faith and trained as
soldiers, the janissaries were forced
to provide annual tribute in
the form of military
service. To counter the
challenges of the gazi
nobility, Murad I
(1319-1389) transformed the
new military force into the
elite personal army of the
Sultan. They were rewarded
for their loyalty with
grants of newly acquired
land and janissaries quickly rose
to fill the most important
administrative offices of
the Ottoman Empire.
During the early history of
the Ottoman Empire,
political factions within
Byzantium employed the
Ottoman Turks and the janissaries as
mercenaries in their own
struggles for imperial
supremacy. In the 1340's, a
usurper's request for Ottoman assistance in a
revolt against the emperor
provided the excuse for an
Ottoman invasion of Thrace on the northern frontier of
the Byzantine Empire. The
conquest of Thrace gave the Ottomans a foothold
in Europe from which future
campaigns into the Balkans
and Greece were launched and
Adrianople (Edirne)
became the Ottoman capital in 1366.
Over the next century, the
Ottomans developed an empire
that took in Anatolia and
increasingly larger sections
of Byzantine territories in
Eastern Europe and Asia
Minor.
Ottoman expansion into
Europe was well underway in
the late 14th century. Gallipoli was conquered
in 1354 and a vast crusading
army was crushed at the
Battle of Nicopolis in 1396.
The disaster was so great
that the knights of Western
Europe were discouraged of
launching a new expedition
against the Turks. The
appearance of the Tatars
under Tamerlane early in the
fifteenth century
temporarily delayed Turkish
advances but the Ottomans
soon resumed attacks on Byzantium and Eastern
Europe. A Hungarian - Polish
army was decimated at Varna
in 1444 by Murad II and
Ottoman conquests were
virtually unchecked during
the reign of his son, Mehmed
II the Conqueror
(1432-1481).
Constantinople itself was
captured in 1453, sending a
shock wave across Europe,
and its name was changed to Istanbul. With the fall
of Byzantium, a wave of Byzantine refugees fled
to the Latin West, carrying
with them the classical and
Hellenistic knowledge that
provided additional impetus
to the burgeoning humanism
of the Renaissance.
Athens fell in 1456 and
Belgrade narrowly escaped
capture when a peasant army
led by the Hungarian Janos
Hunyadi held off a siege in
the same year, nevertheless,
Serbia, Bosnia, Wallachia,
and the Khanate of Crimea
were all under Ottoman control by 1478.
The Turks commanded the
Black Sea and the northern
Aegean and many prime trade routes had been
closed to European shipping.
The Islamic threat loomed
even larger when an Ottoman beachhead was
established at Otranto in
Italy in 1480.
Although the Turkish
presence in Italy was
short-lived, it appeared as
if Rome itself must soon
fall into Islamic hands. In
1529, the Ottomans had moved
up the Danube and besieged
Vienna. The siege was
unsuccessful and the Turks
began to retreat. Although
the Ottomans continued to
instill fear well into the
16th century, internal
struggles began to
deteriorate the once
overwhelming military
supremacy of the Ottoman Empire. The
outcome of battles was no
longer a foregone conclusion
and Europeans began to score
victories against the Turks.
Despite military success of
their territorial expansion,
there remained problems of
organization and government within the Ottoman Empire. Murad II
attempted to limit the
influence of the nobility
and the gazi by elevating
faithful former slaves and janissaries to
administrative positions.
These administrators came to
provide an alternative voice
to that of the nobility and,
as a result, Murad II and
successive Sultans were able
to play one faction against
the other, a feature that
came to typify the Ottoman Empire. The
power of the janissaries often
overrode a weak sultan and
the elite military force
occasionally acted as
"king-makers".
Another weakness was that
primogeniture was not used
in Islam and the
transference of power from a
deceased sultan to his son
was frequently disputed. If
a sultan died without a male
heir or if he left several
sons, succession was
violently contested. In the
early period, to prevent
ongoing rivalries, all male
relatives of a newly crowned
sultan were put to death.
Later, however, the
potential rivals were merely
imprisoned for life. Some
historians consider that
this policy of imprisonment
contributed to the decline
of the Ottoman Empire as
mentally unstable and
politically inexperienced
sultans were rescued from
prison and placed upon the
throne. Nevertheless,
despite frequent disputes
over succession, the Ottoman Empire managed
to produce effective leaders
in the late Middle Ages and
a comprehensive government policy
developed.
Despite the difficulties of
succession and administrative control,
the Ottomans had a number of
advantages that contributed
to their success, the
enormous wealth of the
Empire being the most
significant asset. As the Ottoman Empire expanded,
it acquired control of the trade routes to the East
and many European powers,
such as Venice and Genoa,
paid great sums for the
privilege of access to these
routes.
Although the atrocities of
the "Infidel Turk" struck
fear into the hearts of all
Christians in the late
Middle Ages, in actuality,
the Ottomans generally
allowed religious groups to
continue to practice their
own faiths within the
conquered territories. They
also tended to preserve the
established feudal
institutions and, in many
cases, permitted the
co-existence of law codes to
regulate the different
ethnic and religious groups.
Their administrative and governmental systems were well developed and
highly effective and most
lands under Ottoman control were
well managed during this
time.