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Southwest Asia and the Indian Ocean 1500-1750

Southwest Asia and the Indian Ocean 1500-1750. CHAPTER 19 AP WORLD HISTORY. I. The Ottoman Empire, to 1750. A. Expansion and Frontiers

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Southwest Asia and the Indian Ocean 1500-1750

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  1. Southwest Asia and the Indian Ocean 1500-1750 CHAPTER 19 AP WORLD HISTORY

  2. I. The Ottoman Empire, to 1750 • A. Expansion and Frontiers • 1. Osman established the Ottoman Empire in northwestern Anatolia in 1300. He and his successors consolidated control over Anatolia, fought Christian enemies in Greece and in the Balkans, captured Serbia and the Byzantine capital of Constantinople. • 2.. Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent (r. 1520–1566) conquered Belgrade (1521) and Rhodes (1522) and laid siege to Vienna (1529), but withdrew with the onset of winter. • 3. The Ottoman Empire fought with Venice for two centuries as it attempted to exert its control over the Mediterranean. The Ottomans forced the Venetians to pay tribute but continued to allow them to trade.

  3. Osman I was the Founder of the Ottoman Empire.

  4. Mehmed II

  5. Last moments of Constantine XI

  6. Constantine XI

  7. The size and territories of the Ottoman Empire. It stretched from the Persian Gulf into Central Europe.

  8. Suleiman the Magnificent led the Ottoman Empire to its greatest military achievements when he led his army to the outskirts of Vienna.

  9. B. Central Institutions • 1. The original Ottoman military forces of mounted warriors armed with bows were supplemented in the late fourteenth century when the Ottomans formed captured Balkan Christian men into a force called the “new troops” (Janissaries), who fought on foot and were armed with guns. In the early fifteenth century the Ottomans began to recruit men for the Janissaries and for positions in the bureaucracy through the system called devshirme—a levy on male Christian children. • 2. The Ottoman Empire was a cosmopolitan society in which the Osmanli-speaking, tax-exempt military class (askeri) served the sultan as soldiers and bureaucrats. The common people—Christians, Jews, and Muslims—were referred to as the raya (flock of sheep). • 3. During the reign of Suleiman the Magnificent, Ottoman land forces were powerful enough to defeat the Safavids, but the Ottomans were defeated at sea by combined Christian forces at the Battle of Lepanto in 1571. • 4. In the view of the Ottomans, the sultan supplied justice and defense for the common people (the raya), while the raya supported the sultan and his military through their taxes.

  10. The Janissaries were Balkan Christian men that the Ottomans formed into elite infantry who were proficient in the use of firearms. These are Janissaries who were present at the Battle of Vienna.

  11. Devshirme was the practice by which the Ottoman Empire conscripted boys from Christian families, who were taken from their families and by force converted to Islam trained and enrolled in one of the four imperial institutions: the Palace, the Scribes, the Religious and the Military.

  12. Various Ottoman Empire Sultans from Osman I to Mehmed V.

  13. On Oct. 7, 1571 outnumbered Christian naval forces of the Holy League, including Spain, Venice, Genoa, Savoy, the Papal States and the Knights of Malta, defeated a Muslim war fleet threatening Italy and seeking to expand Turkish power into the western Mediterranean.

  14. C. Crisis of the Military State, 1585-1650 • 1. The increasing importance and expense of firearms meant that the size and cost of the Janissaries increased over time while the importance of the landholding Turkish cavalry (who disdained firearms) decreased. • 2. Financial deterioration and the use of short-term mercenary soldiers brought a wave of rebellions and banditry to Anatolia. The Janissaries began to marry, went into business, and enrolled their sons in the Janissary corps, which grew in number but declined in military readiness.

  15. During the crisis of the Military State from 1585-1650 the Janissaries were able to use their considerable influence to gain relief from prohibitions on marrying and began to engage in business.

  16. Banquet (Safranpilav) for the Janissaries , given by the Sultan. If they refused the meal, they signaled their disapproval of the Sultan. In this case they accept the meal. Ottoman miniature painting.

  17. D. Economic Change and Growing Weakness, 1650-1750 • 1. The period of crisis led to significant changes in Ottoman institutions. The sultan now lived a secluded life in his palace, the affairs of government were in the hands of chief administrators, the devshirme had been discontinued, and the Janissaries had become a politically powerful hereditary elite who spent more time on crafts and trade than on military training. • 2. Rural administration came to depend on powerful provincial governors and wealthy tax farmers. • 3. Europeans dominated Ottoman import and export trade by sea, but they did not control strategic ports or establish colonial settlements on Ottoman territory. • 4. In 1730, the Patrona Halil rebellion indicated the weakness of the central state; provincial elites took advantage of this weakness to increase their power and their wealth.

  18. Janissaries gradually took more and more power from the Sultan and gradually formed into the powerful hereditary elite who spend more time on arts and crafts than military endeavors.

  19. Portrait of Patrona Khalil, a former marine who instigated a mob uprising that replaced Sultan Ahmed III with Mahmud I, on February 28, 1730. Standing, full-length, with a sword in his right hand lifted, with some of his followers on the right. In the background a view of the courtyard of the Serail, with the bodies of people killed in the coup to be carried away.

  20. II. The Safavid Empire, 1502-1772 • A. The Rise of the Safavids • 1. Ismail declared himself shah of Iran in 1502 and ordered that his followers and subjects all adopt Shi’ite Islam. • 2. It took a century of brutal force and instruction by Shi’ite scholars from Lebanon and Bahrain to make Iran a Shi’ite land.

  21. A map depicting the extent of the Safavid Empire in approximately 1510.

  22. Flag and coat of arms of the Safavid Empire.

  23. B. Society and Religion • 1. From the tenth century onward, Persian literature and Persian decorative styles had been diverging from Arabic culture—a process that had intensified when the Mongols destroyed Baghdad and thus put an end to that city’s role as an influential center of Islamic culture. • 2. Under the Safavids, Iranian culture was further distinguished by the strength of Shi’ite beliefs including the concept of the Hidden Imam and the deeply emotional annual commemoration of the martyrdom of Imam Husayn.

  24. Safavid art had a very Persian and Asian culture that Was very different from Arabic Culture.

  25. Depiction of Imam Husayn the founder of Shi’ite Islam and his shrine in Karbala Iraq.

  26. C. A Tale of Two Cities: Isfahan and Istanbul • 1. Isfahan and Istanbul were very different in their outward appearance. Istanbul was a busy port city with a colony of European merchants, a walled palace and a skyline punctuated by gray domes and soaring minarets. Isfahan was an inland city with few Europeans, brightly tiled domes, and an open palace with a huge plaza for polo games. • 2. Both cities were built for walking (not for wheeled vehicles), had few open spaces, narrow and irregular streets, and artisan and merchant guilds. • 3. Women were seldom seen in public in Istanbul or in Isfahan, being confined in women’s quarters in their homes; however, records indicate that Ottoman women were active in the real estate market and appeared in court cases. Public life was almost entirely the domain of men.

  27. Isfahan's numerous cultural treasures and historical splendors comprising of palaces, mosques, churches, bazaars and beautiful bridges, make it one of the most beautiful cities in Asia Minor. (Current population: 1,300,000)

  28. Süleymaniye - mosque completed in 1557 by order of Sultan Süleyman I., based on plans by master builder Sinan. • In the foreground at left is the Rüstem Pasa Mosque, built in 1561 and known for the splendid tiles which adorn it inside and out.

  29. D. Economic Crisis and Political Collapse • 1. Iran’s manufactures included silk and its famous carpets, but overall, the manufacturing sector was small and not very productive. • 2. Like the Ottomans, the Safavids were plagued by the expense of firearms and by the reluctance of nomad warriors to use firearms. Shah Abbas responded by establishing a slave corps of year-round professional soldiers armed with guns. • 3. In the late sixteenth century inflation caused by cheap silver and a decline in the overland trade made it difficult for the Safavid State to pay its army and bureaucracy. • 4. The Safavids never had a navy; when they needed naval support, they relied on the English and the Dutch. Nadir Shah, who briefly reunified Iran between 1736 and 1747, built a navy of ships purchased from the British, but it was not maintained after his death.

  30. Shah Abbas was the greatest Safavid ruler who reformed the army, enabling him to fight the Ottomans and Uzbeks and reconquer Iran's lost provinces. He also took back land from the Portuguese and the Mughals. Abbas was a great builder and moved his kingdom's capital from Qazvin to Isfahan. In his later years, the shah became suspicious of his own sons and had them killed or blinded.

  31. Nadir Shah briefly reunited Iran and attempted to rid Iran of European influence and even created his own navy. The picture on the right is his tomb which is a major tourist attraction.

  32. A remarkable discovery, featured as lot 301 in the sale, is a 17th-century silk velvet figural panel from Safavid Iran which is exhibited in public for the first time having recently resurfaced in a European private collection where it had been since the early 20th century. The outstandingly high quality of craftsmanship, combined with the rarity and beauty, as well as the miraculous state of preservation, make this textile one of the most sophisticated weavings ever produced by the workshops of the Safavid court.

  33. III. The Mughal Empire, 1526-1761 • A. Political Foundations • 1. The Mughal Empire was established and consolidated by the Turkic warrior Babur (1483–1530) and his grandson Akbar (r. 1556–1605). • 2. Akbar and his successors gave efficient administration and peace to their prosperous northern heartland while expending enormous amounts of blood and treasure on wars with Hindu rulers and rebels to the south and Afghans to the west. • 3. Foreign trade boomed, but the Mughals, like the Safavids, did not maintain a navy or merchant marine, preferring to allow Europeans to serve as carriers.

  34. The Mughal Empire stretched from southern India to the borders of the Safavid Empire and lasted from 1526-1858.

  35. Babur was the founder of the Mughal Empire and who was the descendant of both Timur through his father and Genghis Khan from his mother and brought Persian culture to India.

  36. Akbar's reign significantly influenced art and culture in the country. He took a great interest in painting, and had the walls of his palaces adorned with murals. Besides encouraging the development of the Mughal school, he also patronized the European style of painting. He was fond of literature, and had several Sanskrit works translated into Persian and Persian scriptures translated in Sanskrit apart from getting many Persian works illustrated by painters from his court. During the early years of his reign, he had an intolerant attitude towards Hindus and the other religions, but he exercised great tolerance after he began marriage alliances with Rajput princesses.

  37. B. Hindus and Muslims • 1. The violence and destruction of the Mughal conquest of India horrified Hindus, but they offered no concerted resistance. • 2. Akbar was the most illustrious of the Mughal rulers: he took the throne at thirteen and commanded the government on his own at twenty. Akbar worked for reconciliation between Hindus and Muslims by marrying a Hindu Rajput princess and by introducing reforms that reduced taxation and legal discrimination against Hindus. • 3. Akbar made himself the center of a short-lived eclectic new religion (“Divine Faith”) and sponsored a court culture in which Hindu and Muslim elements were mixed. • 4. In the Punjab (northwest India), Nanak (1469–1539) developed the Sikh religion by combining elements from Islam and Hinduism.

  38. This map shows the areas of Muslim majority in India and the areas of Hindu majority. Akbar was able to unite most of India because he married a Hindu princess.

  39. Indian movie called “Jodhaa Akbar” tells the love story of the Mughal Muslim Emperor and the Rajput Hindu Princess.

  40. The Golden Temple (Harmandir Sahib) is the Sikh’s holiest site. It is located in Amritsar India

  41. Here is a Sikh man who has a made a pilgrimage to the Golden Temple.

  42. C. Central Decay and Regional Challenges, 1707-1761 • 1. The Mughal Empire declined after the death of Aurangzeb in 1707. Factors contributing to the Mughal decline include the land grant system, the failure to completely integrate Aurangzeb’s newly conquered territory into the imperial administration, and the rise of regional powers. • 2. As the Mughal government lost power, Mughal regional officials bearing the title of nawab established their own more or less independent states. These regional states were prosperous, but they could not effectively prevent the intrusion of Europeans.

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