THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE
( A CHRONOLOGICAL OUTLINE )
The
Turks in the Islamic World
Before 1300
830-850, Turkish mercenaries from Central Asia found in service
of Abbasid caliphs
850-905,
Tulunids (Turkish generals) rule Egypt virtually independently
of the Abbasids
900,
Samanids rule in eastern Persia and borderlands of Turkistan;
Turks are exposed to Persianate Islamic culture; preparation
far incorporation of Turks into main body of Middle Eastern
Islamic civilization
10thc.
, term sultan (Arabic abstract noun meaning sovereign authority)
begins to be used to designate rulers
c.1000
, Ghaznavids establish rule in Afghanistan, break Samanid power,
and expand into Persia below Oxus River; champions of Sunni
Islam within a predominantly Persian cultural context
1040,
Seljuks take Khorasan from Ghaznavids; soon control most of
Persia with center at Isfahan; from there advance to defeat
Buwayhids (Shii Persians) who had dominated Abbasid caliphs
in Baghdad for a century
1055,
Seljuk sultans become de facto rulers in Abbasid Baghdad; two
centuries of turmoil is ended and unity restored in eastern
Islamic region; Persia and Mesopotamia are reunited and northern
Syria added to the Great Seljuk state
1071
, Battle of Manzikert ( Malazgirt ) a decisive victory for Seljuk
Sultan Alp Arslan over Byzantines; break Byzantine line of defense
in Eastern Anatolia; Turkish-speaking Muslims raid and settle
in area now known as Turkey; much of the Greek/ Christian
veneer of indigenous Anatolian population gradually replaced
by a Turkish/Muslim veneer
1092
, death of Seljuk Sultan Malik Shah and his great vizier, Nizam
al-Mulk; dynastic strife ensues
1118,
Seljuk Empire splits into principalities ruled by princes of
the family, often over- shadowed by their atabeys ( tutor
guardians )
12th
c. , Seljuks of Rum ( Konya, Anatolia ) rule centra1 Anatolian
plateau with center at Konya (Iconium) .
1204
, Byzantium fatally weakened by 4th. Crusade and
Latin occupation
c.1200
, high point of Seljuks of Rum; by absorption of smaller Turkish
principalities (beyliks), Seljuks extend their jurisdiction
to south coast of Anatolia; Turkish nomads (gazis) active
in western border/march region adjacent to Byzantium
1243,
Mongols under Hulagu Khan move west, defeat Selcuk Sultan Kaykhusrav
II, and establish overlordship in Seljuk Anatolia
1258,
Mongols conquer Baghdad and bring Abbasid Caliphate to an end
Later
13th c., Turkish Anatolia fragmented as Mongol control
weakens and is withdrawn; many small principalities ( beyliks
) emerge, one of them led by Osman (Turkish form of the Arabic/Muslim
name, Uthmm; European corruption of Osman is Ottoman) in northwest
Anatolia (around Iznik and Bursa) adjacent to Byzantine territories.
1071-1300,
Anatolia witnesses swift military penetration, ragged political
conquest, partial and superficial cultural/linguistic conquest
by Muslim Turks who, in their upper ranks were carriers of Persianate
Muslim culture. That group was small in number but powerful
. Below them, Turkish-speaking Muslims mix with indigenous population.
Folk culture and folk religion often at odds with high culture
and Islamic orthodoxy represented by the religious and political
elite in the society.
Assembled
by Richard L. Chambers,
The University of Chicago