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ISLAMIC GUNPOWDER EMPIRES

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Presentation on theme: "ISLAMIC GUNPOWDER EMPIRES"— Presentation transcript:

1 ISLAMIC GUNPOWDER EMPIRES
EARLY MODERN ISLAM 1450 TO 1750

2 DYNASTIC STATE The Ottoman, Safavid, Mughal rulers and Islam
All three Islamic empires were military creations Gunpowder empires as guns were critical to rise of empire Military prowess of rulers, elite units critical Devotion to Islam led rulers to extend faith to new lands Steppe traditions Turkish in origin; two were Shia Autocratic: leaders imposed their will and had absolute control Ongoing problems with royal succession Ottoman rulers legally killed brothers after taking throne Royal women often had great influence on politics Wives, sisters, daughters, aunts, mother of sultan lived in harem Eunuchs protected women; both eunuchs, women had influence Children raised in harem; often not allowed out until teenager Harem politics: women often influenced policies, selections

3 RISE OF OTTOMAN EMPIRE Anatolian clan of the Seljuk Turks
Ottoman expansion into Byzantine Empire Seized city of Bursa, then into the Balkans Central role of the Janissaries (slave troops) Effective use of gunpowder in battles and sieges Mehmed the Conqueror (reigned ) Captured Constantinople in 1453 Renamed city Istanbul, the Ottoman capital Expanded to Serbia, Greece, Albania Attacked Italy

4 TURKISH SOCIAL STRUCTURE
Four social groupings in settled, urban environment The men of the pen: intellectuals (bureaucrats) Men of the sword: military Men of negotiations: merchants, etc. Men of husbandry: farmers, livestock raisers Life on frontier was far less structured Divided into two groups Askeri (the military) Raya (the subjects) Over time Separation between askeri and raya became more rigid Military became almost hereditary Women had no rights aside from tradition, class, and husbands’ wishes

5 TIMAR AND LAND CONTROL Timar system
Askeri given share of agricultural taxes from villages In return for military service as cavalryman, assisted in provincial government Exempt from taxation At height Ottomans had more than 100,000 cavalrymen Gradually became hereditary Timar was like feudalism but not identical Timar-holder did not dispense justice Justice was sultan’s prerogative In Ottoman Empire Central government was active and crucial Timar more like Japanese shogun fief system (discuss later)

6 Devshirme Ghulam was a non-Muslim slave
Educated and trained for state service Ottomans modified ghulam system by devshirme Young 8-15 year-old Christian males Taken from Balkan villages and brought before sultan Chose best physique, intelligence, other qualities Converted to Islam Received education in palace school Islam and its culture Turkish, Persian, and Arabic Military and social arts Those not selected Converted to Islam, worked for rural Turkish farmers Learned vernacular Turkish, folk Islamic culture Became sultan’s elite infantry: Janissaries

7 TURKISH MILLET Communities ruled themselves based on their religion
Was headed by its own religious leader Heads of millet responsible to Turkish sultan Advised sultan on affairs in the community Was punished by sultan for problems of community Each community was responsible for Collection of its taxes Educational arrangements Internal legal matters re: marriage, divorce, inheritance In the pre-modern Middle East Identity was largely based on religion System functioned well until rise of European nationalism

8 SULEYMAN THE MAGNIFICENT
Empire at its height Reigned Son of Sultan Selim the Grim Mother was Christian Came to power through murder of brothers Conquered lands in Europe, Asia, Africa Siege of Vienna in 1529 failed Built powerful navy to rule Mediterranean Encouraged development of arts Beautified Constantinople with mosques Empire began slow decline after Suleyman

9 SAFAVID PERSIA Founder Shah Ismail (reigned 1501-1524)
Claimed ancient Persian title of shah. Proclaimed Shiaism official religion, imposing it on Sunnis Traced origins to 12 ancient Shiite imams Ismail believed to be twelfth, or "hidden," imam Shah Abbas the Great (reigned ) Revitalized Safavid empire Modernized military Sought European alliances Permitted European merchants, missionaries

10 MUGHAL (“Mongol”) EMPIRE
Tamerlame was direct predecessor Founder is Babur (reigned ) Central Asian Turk invaded India in 1523 Akbar (reigned ) Created centralized, absolutist government Expanded to Gujurat, Bengal, S. India Encouraged religious tolerance Stopped tax on Hindus, banned sati Aurangzeb (reigned ) Expanded empire to almost entire Indian subcontinent, empire is largest under his rule Revoked policies of toleration and implemented Sharia His rule troubled by religious tensions and hostility Arrival of Europeans: permitted them to trade, establish bases

11 DEMOGRAPHY & COMMERCE Demographics Food crops Commerce
Population growth less dramatic than in China, Europe India: significant growth due to intense agriculture All empires were multi-national, some multi-religious Food crops Agriculture: the basis of all three empires Major crops: wheat, rice Imports of coffee, tobacco very popular Peasants tended to be overtaxed, overworked by nobles Commerce Long-distance trade important to all three empires Minorities controlled trade in all three states Trade goods = traditional crafts; little manufacturing Ottomans, Safavids shared parts of east-west trade Mughals less attentive to foreign or maritime trading

12 RELIGIOUS AFFAIRS Religious diversity created challenges to rule of empires Religious minorities Generally tolerated in Islamic states In Ottoman Empire millets allowed religious/civil autonomy Much of population was Christian, Jewish In Persia Shia were fanatical In India majority of population was Hindu Early Muslim rulers worked with Hindus Religious diversity in India under the rule of Akbar Catholic missionaries welcomed at his court Tolerated Sikhism new faith with elements of Islam and Hinduism Under Aurangzeb: Islam made state religion

13 CULTURAL PATRONAGE Sponsored arts and public works
Golden Age of Islamic art, architecture Mosques, palaces, schools, hospitals, caravanserais Istanbul, Ottoman capital Cosmopolitan city of million people Blended Islamic, Byzantine architecture Isfahan, Safavid capital The "queen of Persian cities“ Fatehpur Sikri, Mughal capital, created by Akbar Combined Islamic style with Indian elements Site abandoned because of bad water supply Taj Mahal, exquisite example of Mughal architecture

14 DETERIORATION Dynastic decline
Caused by negligent rulers, factions Government corruption Harem politics Rulers’ mothers, wives jockeyed for position, sons Progress ceased and conservatism emerged Ottoman conservatives Resisted innovations like telescope, printing press Resisted industrialization and western military innovations Safavid Empire Shiite leaders urged shahs to persecute Sunnis, Sufis Non-Muslims lost many protections Mughal India Deep animosity of Hindus Rise of Sikhs and Christians

15 REASONS FOR DECLINE Economy and Military Expansion
Each conquest had provided bounty to grow the state End of territorial expansion meant no bounty Difficult to support armies and bureaucrats Series of long and costly wars with no financial support Economy stagnated by 18th century Officials had to raise taxes to deal with financial problems Corruption lost millions in revenue to state

16 REASONS FOR DECLINE Military decline Rise of banditry, piracy
Imported European weapons but never made their own Arsenals outdated; tactics outdated; systems outdated Ottoman Empire Even purchased military vessels from abroad Europeans developed extremely modern militaries India Mughals refused to build navy, let Europeans rule seas Local princes, rulers assumed control, defied Mughals Rise of banditry, piracy In countryside, many poor peasants took to banditry On seas, many ports and merchants took to piracy Trade disrupted, made Europeans mad, often retaliated

17 CULTURAL INSULARITY Cultural conservatism Social conservatism
Muslims seldom traveled to West, confident of their superiority Science, technology ignored as it was western threat Ignorant of European technological developments Hostile to European, Christian inventions/institutions Social conservatism Middle classes failed to develop in Muslim states Growing gap between ruling elite, peasants/slaves Growing antagonism between religious elites, ruling elites

18 CULTURAL INSULARITY Resistance to printing press
At first, Ottomans banned printing in Turkish, Arabic Ban lifted in 1729; conservatives closed Turkish press in 1742 In India, Mughals showed little interest in printing technology


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