The rise of the Ottoman Empire Mostafa Minawi

In the late 13th century, Osman I
established a small beylik,

or principality, in what is now Turkey.

In just a few generations, this beylik
outmaneuvered more powerful neighbors

to become the vast Ottoman empire.

What enabled its rapid rise?

In Osman’s time, the Anatolian peninsula
was a patchwork of Turkic principalities

sandwiched between a crumbling
Byzantine Empire

and weakened Sultanate
of the Seljuk of Rum.

Osman quickly expanded this territory

through a mixture of strategic
political alliances

and military conflicts
with these neighbors,

attracting mercenaries first
with the promise of booty,

then later through his reputation
for winning.

Osman was the first in a line
of Ottoman rulers distinguished

by their political shrewdness.

Often prioritizing political and military
utility over ethnic or religious affinity,

they expanded their influence by fighting
along certain sides when needed,

and fighting against them
when the time was right.

After Osman’s death his son Orhan

established a sophisticated military
organization and tax collection system

geared towards funding
quick territorial expansion.

The Ottomans’ first major expansion
was in the Balkans, in southeast Europe.

The military employed a mixture
of Turkic warriors and Byzantine

and other Balkan Christian converts.

They captured thousands
of young Christian boys

from villages from across the Balkans,

converted them to Islam, and trained
them to become the backbone

of a fierce military elite force
known as the Janissaries.

The captured enslaved boys could rise
to the high position of a vizier

in the Ottoman government.

Rulers of conquered areas were
also allowed, even encouraged,

to convert to Islam and take positions
in the Ottoman government.

Meanwhile, non-Muslims
who belonged to Abrahamic religions

were allowed religious freedom
in exchange for a tax known as Jizye,

among other strict conditions—

for example, they were not allowed
to join the army.

By the end of the 14th century,
the Ottomans had conquered or subordinated

most of the Anatolian beyliks
as well as the Balkans.

But in the first half of the 15th century,

as Sultan Beyazit I focused
on Western expansion,

the Central Asian ruler Timur attacked
from the east.

He captured Beyazit and carted
him off in an iron cage,

sparking a ten year struggle
for succession

that almost destroyed the Ottoman empire.

Sultan Murad II turned this trend around,

but fell short of one
of his loftiest goals:

capturing the Byzantine capital,
Constantinople.

His son, Sultan Mehmed II,
or Mehmed the Conqueror,

vowed to succeed where his father
had failed.

In preparation for the attack
on Constantinople,

he hired a Hungarian engineer
to forge the largest cannon in the world,

used Serbian miners to dig tunnels
under the walls of the city,

and ordered his fleet of ships
to be carried overland,

attacking the city
from an unexpected direction.

He laid siege to the city
and in the spring of 1453,

Constantinople fell to the Ottomans.

It would become the Ottoman capital,
known by its common Greek name, Istanbul,

meaning “to the city.”

By the time Mehmed II
conquered Constantinople,

the city was a shadow of its former glory.

Under Ottoman rule,
it flourished once again.

On an average day in Istanbul, you could
hear people speaking Greek, Turkish,

Armenian, Persian, Arabic, Bulgarian,
Albanian, and Serbian.

Architects like the famous Sinan
filled the city with splendid mosques

and other buildings commissioned
by the sultans.

Through Istanbul, the Otttomans brought
commodities like coffee to Europe.

They entered a golden age
of economic growth,

territorial acquisition,
art and architecture.

They brought together craftspeople
from across Europe, Africa,

the Middle East and Central Asia to create
a unique blend of cultural innovation.

Iznik ceramics, for example,

were made using techniques
from China’s Ming dynasty,

reimagined with Ottoman motifs.

The Ottomans would continue to expand,

cementing their political influence
and lucrative trade routes.

The empire lasted for more than 600 years
and, at its peak,

stretched from Hungary
to the Persian Gulf,

from the Horn of Africa
to the Crimean Peninsula.

13 世纪后期,奥斯曼一世在现在的土耳其
建立了一个小贝利克

或公国。

在短短几代人的时间里,这个贝利克就
战胜了更强大的邻国

,成为了庞大的奥斯曼帝国。

是什么促成了它的迅速崛起?

在奥斯曼的时代,安纳托利亚半岛
是突厥公国的拼凑,

夹在摇摇欲坠的
拜占庭帝国

和衰弱
的朗姆酒塞尔柱苏丹国之间。

奥斯曼

通过战略性
政治联盟


与这些邻国的军事冲突迅速扩大了这片领土,

首先
以战利品的承诺吸引了雇佣军,

然后以他
的胜利声誉吸引了雇佣军。

奥斯曼
是奥斯曼统治者中

以政治精明着称的第一位。

他们通常优先考虑政治和军事
效用,而不是种族或宗教亲和力,

他们通过
在需要时与某些方面

作战来扩大影响力,并
在适当的时候与他们作战。

奥斯曼死后,他的儿子奥尔汗

建立了一个复杂的军事
组织和税收征管系统,

旨在为
快速的领土扩张提供资金。

奥斯曼帝国的第一次大规模扩张
是在欧洲东南部的巴尔干半岛。

军队雇用
了突厥战士和拜占庭

和其他巴尔干基督教皈依者的混合物。

他们从巴尔干半岛的村庄抓获了数千
名年轻的基督徒男孩

将他们皈依伊斯兰教,并训练
他们成为

一支被称为禁卫军的凶猛军事精英部队的骨干

被俘虏的男孩可以

在奥斯曼政府中担任大臣。

被征服地区的统治者
也被允许,甚至被鼓励

皈依伊斯兰教并
在奥斯曼政府中任职。

与此同时
,属于亚伯拉罕宗教的非穆斯林

被允许宗教自由,
以换取被称为吉宰的税,

以及其他严格的条件——

例如,他们
不被允许参军。

到 14 世纪末
,奥斯曼人已经征服或从属于

安纳托利亚的大部分
地区以及巴尔干半岛。

但在 15 世纪上半叶,

随着苏丹贝亚齐特一世专注
于西部扩张

,中亚统治者帖木儿
从东方发起进攻。

他俘虏了贝亚齐特并将
他关在铁笼子里,

引发了长达十年
的继承权斗争

,几乎摧毁了奥斯曼帝国。

苏丹穆拉德二世扭转了这一趋势,

但未能
实现他最崇高的目标之一:

占领拜占庭首都
君士坦丁堡。

他的儿子苏丹穆罕默德二世
或征服者穆罕默德

发誓要在他父亲失败的地方取得成功

为了准备对君士坦丁堡的进攻

他聘请了一名匈牙利工程师
来制造世界上最大的大炮,

用塞尔维亚矿工
在城墙下挖掘隧道,

并命令他的
舰队从陆路运载,

从 一个意想不到的方向。

他围攻这座城市
,1453 年春天,

君士坦丁堡落入奥斯曼帝国之手。

它将成为奥斯曼帝国的首都,
以其共同的希腊名称伊斯坦布尔而闻名,

意思是“城市”。

到穆罕默德二世
征服君士坦丁堡时,

这座城市已是昔日辉煌的阴影。

在奥斯曼统治下,
它再次繁荣起来。

在伊斯坦布尔的平均一天,您可以
听到人们说希腊语、土耳其语、

亚美尼亚语、波斯语、阿拉伯语、保加利亚语、
阿尔巴尼亚语和塞尔维亚语。

像著名的思南这样的建筑师
让这座城市充满了辉煌的清真寺


苏丹委托的其他建筑。

通过伊斯坦布尔,奥斯曼帝国将
咖啡等商品带到了欧洲。

他们进入
了经济增长、

领土获取、
艺术和建筑的黄金时代。

他们汇集了
来自欧洲、非洲

、中东和中亚的工匠,创造
了独特的文化创新融合。

例如,伊兹尼克陶瓷

是使用
中国明朝的技术制成的,

并以奥斯曼帝国的图案重新构想。

奥斯曼帝国将继续扩张,

巩固他们的政治影响力
和利润丰厚的贸易路线。

帝国持续了600多年
,鼎盛时期

从匈牙利延伸
到波斯湾,

从非洲之角
延伸到克里米亚半岛。