The
Ottoman Interregnum (also known as the
Ottoman Triumvirate;
Fetret Devri in
Turkish) was a period in the beginning of the
15th century when chaos reigned in the
Ottoman Empire following the defeat of
Sultan Bayezid I in
1402 by the
Turco-Mongol warlord
Tamerlane (Timur the Lame).
Summary
Suleyman Çelebi, ruled northern
Greece,
Bulgaria and
Thrace. His brother, İsa Çelebi ruled
Greece and the westernmost of
Anatolia, however he was overthrown by the younger half-brother
Mehmed Çelebi from his
capital in
Bursa in
1404. Suleyman then acquired southern
Greece as well and Mehmet ruled over Anatolia. Mehmet sent his younger brother Mûsa across the
Black Sea with a large army to conquer Suleyman. Mûsa won in
Bulgaria in
1410 and Suleyman was forced to retreat south to Greece.
Mûsa then proclaimed himself as sultan of the Ottoman Empire. Mehmed became furious and sent a small army over to
Gallipoli where it was defeated. Mehmed later came to his senses and forced an alliance with the
Byzantine Empire. Three years later Mehmed sent over a new army that defeated Mûsa in Kamerlu,
Serbia. It was then easy for
Mehmed I to overthrow his last brother in Greece and become the Ottoman sultan.
Developments
The Ottoman Empire (Ottoman
Sultanate), which during the fourteenth century had acquired such dimensions and vigor, lay at the beginning of the fifteenth century in apparently irretrievable ruin. Besides the fatal day at Ankara, when its veteran army was destroyed, and it long-victorious sovereign taken captive, calamity after calamity bad poured fast upon the house of Osman. Their ancient rivals in Anatolia, the Seljuk princes of Karamanoğulları, Aydınoğulları (Aidian), Germiyanoğulları (Kermian), and other territories which the three first Ottoman rulers had conquered, were reinstated by Timur in their dominions. In Europe the Byzantine Empire gained, if nothing else, a reprieve from Bayezid's siege of Constantinople. But the heaviest and seemingly the most fatal of afflictions was the civil war which broke out among the sons of Beyazit, and which threaten the utter disintegration and destruction of the relics of the ancestral dominions. At the time of Bayezid’s death, his oldest son, Suleyman, ruled at Adrianople. The second son, İsa, established himself as an independent ruler at Brusa after the Mongols retired from Asia Minor. Mehmet, the youngest and the ablest of the brothers, formed a little kingdom at Amasya. War soon broke out between Mehmet and İsa. In which Mehmet was completely successful. İsa fled to Europe where he sought protection and aid from Suleyman, who forthwith attacked Mehmet, so that Thrace and Anatolian sides were now arrayed against each other.
At first Suleyman was successful. He invaded Anatolia, and captured Bursa and Ankara. Meanwhile while the other surviving son of Bayezid, Prince Musa, had, after his liberation by Timur, been detained in custody by the Seljuk Prince of Kermian, through whose territories he was passing with the remains of Bayezid, which he was to bury at Bursa. The interposition of Mehmet had put an end to this detention, and Prince Musa fought on Mehmets’s side against Suleyman in Anatolia. After some reverses which they sustained from Suleyman in the first campaign, Musa persuaded Mehmet to let him cross over to Thrace with a small force, and effect a diversion in Mehmet's favour by attacking the enemy in his own territories. This maneuver soon recalled Suleyman to Thrace, where a short but sanguinary contest between him and Musa ensued. At first Suleyman had the advantage; but the better qualities of this prince were now obscured by the debasing effects of habits of debauchery. He treated his troops with savage cruelty, and heaped the grossest insults on his best generals. The result was that his army passed over to the side of Musa, and Suleyman was killed while endeavoring to escape to Constantinople (1410).
Musa was now master of the Ottoman dominions in Thrace, and speedily showed that he inherited a full proportion both of the energy and of the strength of his father Bayezid. In an expedition which he undertook against the Serbian Prince, whom he accused of having treacherously aided Suleyman in the civil war, he is said to have not only pursue the male youth for the janissaries, he also developed his army according to fighting three Serbian units and order them to destroy not the armies but also their generals. Byzantine writer Ducas using his creative writing wrote; “Musa caused the carcasses of three Serbian garrisons to be arranged as tables, and a feast to be spread on them, at which he entertained the generals and chief captains of the Ottoman army”.
The Byzantine Emperor,
Manuel II Palaiologos, had been the ally of Suleyman; Musa therefore attacked him, and besieged his capital. Manuel called over Mehmet to protect him, and the Anatolian Ottomans now garrisoned Constantinople against the Ottomans of Thrace. Mehmet made several gallant but unsuccessful sallies against his brother’s troops, and was obliged to re-cross the Bosporus to quell a revolt that had broken out in his own territories. Musa now pressed the siege of the Greek capital; but Mehmet speedily returned to Thrace, and obtained the assistance of Stephan, the Serbian King. The armies of the rival Ottoman bother were at last arrayed for a decisive conflict on the plain of Chamurli, near the southern Serbian frontier. But Musa had alienated the loyalty of his soldiers by conduct similar to that by which Suleyman’s desertion and destruction had been caused, while Mehmet was as eminent for justice and kindness towards those who obeyed him, as for valor and skill against those who were his opponent’s. When the two armies were about to close in battle, Hassan, the Aga of the Janissaries on the side of Mehmet, stepped out before the ranks, and exhorted his old comrades, who were the pert of Musa, to leave the cause of a madman from whom they met with constant outrage and humiliation, and to range then selves among the followers of the most just and virtuous of the princes of the house of Osman. Enraged at hearing his troops thus addressed, Musa rushed against Hassan, and kill him, but was himself wounded by an officer who had accompanied Hassan. Musa reeled back bleeding towards his own soldiers, who were seized with a panic, and broke their ranks, and fled in all directions. Musa endeavored to escape, but was found by the pursuers lying dead in a marsh near the field where the armies had met. His death ended the war of succession in the Ottoman Empire, for Prince Isa had disappeared some years before, during the hostilities between Suleyman and Mehmet in Anatolia; and Mehmet was now, after Musa’s death, the sole known surviving son of Bayezid.
See also
References
- Incorporates text from “History of Ottoman Turks” (1878)
Ottoman Empire or Ottoman Caliphate (1299 to 1922) (Old Ottoman Turkish: دولت عالیه عثمانیه Devlet-i Âliye-yi Osmâniyye, Late Ottoman and Modern Turkish:
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The rise of the Ottoman Empire is the period from the late thirteenth century to 1453. In late 13th century, the Seljuq empire had collapsed and Anatolia was divided into many small states. One of these states was Söğüt, a small tribe settled in river valley of Sakarya.
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During the growth period, also "Pax Ottomana", empire grow in size and extent, expanding into North Africa in the southwest, and battling with the Shi'ia Islamic Safavid Empire of re-emergent Persia, to the east.
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Stagnation of the Ottoman Empire (1683-1827) was a period after the growth (extend of lands) of the Empire reached its maximum. During stagnation the empire continued to be militarily strong.
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The Sultanate of Women (Turkish: Kadınlar Saltanatı) is the nearly 130-year period, in the 16th and 17th centuries, during which the women of the Harem of the Ottoman Empire exerted extraordinary political influence.
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Tulip Era (Ottoman Turkish: لاله دورى, Turkish Lâle Devri) has been the traditional name for a period in Ottoman history lasting from 1718 to 1730, a relatively peaceful period in which the Ottoman Empire has
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The Decline of the Ottoman Empire covers the military and political events between 1828 to 1908. The name of the period is based on loss/gain comparison. The empire was directly affected by Russian expansion during this time.
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The Tanzimat (Ottoman Turkish: تنظيمات), meaning reorganization of the Ottoman Empire, was a period of reformation that began in 1839 and ended with the First Constitutional Era in 1876.
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The First Constitutional Era of the Ottoman Empire was the period of constitutional monarchy from the promulgation of the Kanûn-ı Esâsî (meaning "Basic Law" in Ottoman Turkish), written by members of the Young Ottomans, on 23 November 1876 until 13 February
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This article describes the process of
dissolution of the Ottoman Empire, in particular its final years in the early part of the 20th century.
Balkan Wars
For more details on this topic, see First Balkan War.
..... Click the link for more information. The period of the Ottoman Empire's final dissolution, the Second Constitutional Era (ايکنجى مشروطيت دورى İkinci Meşrûtiyyet Devri
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The term triumvirate (a law)(from Latin, "of three men") is commonly used to describe a political regime dominated by three powerful individuals. The arrangement can be formal or informal, and though the three are usually equal on paper, in reality this is rarely the case.
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Turkish (Türkçe, ] (help info )
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15th century was that century which lasted from 1401 to 1500.
Events
- 1402: Ottoman and Timurid Empires fight at the Battle of Ankara resulting in Timur's capture of Bayezid I.
- 1402: The conquest of the Canary Islands signals the beginning of the Spanish Empire.
..... Click the link for more information. Ottoman Empire or Ottoman Caliphate (1299 to 1922) (Old Ottoman Turkish: دولت عالیه عثمانیه Devlet-i Âliye-yi Osmâniyye, Late Ottoman and Modern Turkish:
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Sultan (Arabic: سلطان) is an Islamic title, with several historical meanings. Originally it was an Arabic language abstract noun meaning "strength", "authority", or "rulership", derived from the Arabic
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Bayezid I (Ottoman: بايزيد الأول, Turkish: Beyazıt, nicknamed Yıldırım
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14th century - 15th century - 16th century
1370s 1380s 1390s - 1400s - 1410s 1420s 1430s
1399 1400 1401 - 1402 - 1403 1404 1405
:
Subjects: Archaeology - Architecture -
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The Turco-Mongols were the aristocratic, nomadic, mostly Turkic-speaking horsemen of East and Central Asian Turkic and Mongolian descent who served as rulers and conquerors in Central and Western Asian societies during the Middle Ages.
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Tīmūr bin Taraghay Barlas (Chagatai Turkic: تیمور - Tēmōr, "iron") (1336 – February 1405), known in the West as Tamerlane, was a 14th century warlord of Turco-Mongol descent,[1]
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Motto
Ελευθερία ή θάνατος
Eleftheria i thanatos
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Motto
Съединението прави силата (Bulgarian)
"Suedinenieto pravi silata"
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Thrace, (Turkish: Trakya, Romanian: Tracia, Bulgarian: Тракия or Trakiya, Greek:
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Motto
Ελευθερία ή θάνατος
Eleftheria i thanatos
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Mehmed I Çelebi (Ottoman: چلبی محمد, I.Mehmet or Çelebi Mehmet) (1389 – May 26, 1421) was a sultan of the Ottoman Empire.
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capital (also called capital city or political capital — although the latter phrase has a second meaning based on an alternative sense of "capital") is the center of government.
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Bursa (historically also known as Brusa, Greek: Προύσσα, Prusa) is a city in northwestern Turkey and the seat of Bursa Province.
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14th century - 15th century - 16th century
1370s 1380s 1390s - 1400s - 1410s 1420s 1430s
1401 1402 1403 - 1404 - 1405 1406 1407
:
Subjects: Archaeology - Architecture -
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Motto
Ελευθερία ή θάνατος
Eleftheria i thanatos
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