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Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires
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Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

Mar 27, 2015

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Page 1: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

Muslim Empires

The Gunpowder

Empires1450-1750

Page 2: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.
Page 3: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

Three DynastiesThree Dynasties• Why had Muslim unity dissolved?

–Mongol invasion of the 13th and 14th century

• New dynastic empires:• Ottomans – peaked in the 17th

century’

• Safavids – Persia and Afghanistan

• Mughals (Mogul) - India

Page 4: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

The Ottoman Empire

Page 5: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

The Fall of Constantinople, 1453

Page 6: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

Mehmed II’s Topkapi Palace, Istanbul

Page 7: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

Ottoman Dominance• Turkic people who took over after the

Mongols defeated the Seljuks• 1453 captured Constantinople – Sultan

Mehmed II• Extended to include Middle East (Selim I)• North Africa, southeastern Europe

(Suleiman)• Invaded Vienna in the 16th and 17th

century / also conflicts with Venice• Vast navy superiority in Mediterranean

Page 8: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

Ottomans: military• Early warrior aristocracy = Turkic

Horseman (eg: feudal nobility/askeri)

• Warrior class built up power by seizing land

• conscripted youth from conquered lands - janissaries

• janissaries expanded under Sultan Selim I

• Greatest expansion/height under Sultan Suleiman “the Lawmaker”

Page 9: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

Devshirme -Recruitment of the Children

Page 10: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

Sultans and Court

• Absolute Monarchs who focused on maintaining justice (adala)

• Large bureaucracies were formed that involved every ruler and son

• There were vague principles of imperial succession which led to strife

• new sultan would often execute brothers – later imprisonment

Page 11: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

Ottoman GovernmentOttoman Government

• Sultan – Absolute Power – Caliph – Islamic Orthodoxy

• ’adala - justice

• Kanuna – body of law; Shari’a +

• Diwan – “couch”; Close advisory council to Sultan; vizier- chief minister

• Ulama Courts – Religious Courts

• Firman: Public declarations of laws and taxes

Page 12: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

Important Sultans

• Mehmed II – conq. Constantinople

• Selim I – conq. Syria & Egypt

• Suleiman Kanuni/ the Magnificient – huge gain in Europe

• <Selim II / the drunkard>

• Kara Mustafa – attempted conquest of Austria again ---lost

Page 13: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

Flowering Culture• Constantinople became the capital of

empire as Istanbul

• Hagia Sophia turned into a mosque – model for other Turkish mosques

• Artisan classes were very important

• Turkish language legacy by the late 17th century

• Artistic legacy in poetry, ceramics, carpet, and architecture

Page 14: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

Ottoman Weaknesses• Too extensive; but slow…..decline• New territory became less available which

slowed growth• Corrupt bureaucracy and regional officials

used money for personal gain• Oppressed peasants led revolts and/or left

land• Civil strife increased and military efficiency

deteriorated• Conflicts with Venice/ Portuguese/Spain

Page 15: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

Ottoman Decline• Spanish-Venetian naval victory in 1571

• Muslims lost control of eastern Africa to Portuguese

• Commercial decline was aggravated by inflation caused by New World bullion led to commercial decline

• Religious leaders blocked western inspired innovation

• Weaker, lazier less attentive Sultans

Page 16: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

• 1663 – invasion of Vienna – eventually thwarted

• --Parthenon blown up by the Venetians

• 1699 – Peace of Karlowitz – Austria took Hungary & Transylvania

• Wars with Russia continual

Page 17: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

Ottoman & Safavid Empires, c. 1683

Page 18: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.
Page 19: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

Safavids

• Muslims in Azerbaijan region (probably Azeri) fought to purify and spread Islam to Turkic peoples – started out as a religious order

• Warrior groups called: quizilbash

Page 20: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

• 1501 – Ismail seized Tabriz and was proclaimed Shah

• Was defeated at Chaldiran in 1514 by the Ottomans –

THE GUNPOWDER AGE

Safavid dynasty

Page 21: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

State and Religion

• Shah Ismail – instituted forced conversion to Shi’ite Islam

• Shi’ite religious establishment in each city

• Actively anti-Sunni

• Shahs descent from imams

• Tension between Shi’a ulama (esp. ayatollahs) and govt

Page 22: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

Safavid Shah

• Shah Abbas IShah Abbas I بزرگ عباس (1629-1587 )شاه –

• Empire reached its zenith• Persians counterbalanced the role of

the Turkic warriors• Used capture youth to fill military and

bureaucratic positions• Incorporated Persian court etiquette• Created infrastructure for trade and

Islamic culture

Page 23: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

Society and Gender in Ottoman and Safavid

• Dominated by Warrior class/nobility (askeri / quizilbash)

• Nobility controlled the peasantry

• “slave” infantry & bureaucracy

• Artisans worked in Imperial workshops

• Safavid less market-oriented than Ottoman

• Women did not enjoy many outlets especially among the elite

Page 24: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

The Royal Academy of Isfahan

Page 25: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.
Page 26: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

Decline of the Safavid

• Weak succession after Abbas

• Internal strife between Turkic and Persian ethnic groups

• Foreign invasion from Afghani invaders

Page 27: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

The Mughal Empire

Page 28: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

Mughals

• Turkic invaders led by Babur invaded India in 1526 – sought plunder not conquest

• Stayed when prevented from going north

• Babur’s forces defeated Hindu confederation in 1527 – He then ruled the Indus and Ganges plains

Page 30: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

Mughal weakness

• After Babur died in 1530 he left no central political infrastructure

• Feudal structure

• He also left no competent heir

• Humayn fled to Persia – from Persia launched attacks into India

• Humayn restored control of the North by 1556

Page 31: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

Mughal’s Lasting Empire• Humayn’s son Akbar succeeded to the

throne

• Akbar was an outstanding military and administrative talent

• Policy of reconciliation with Hindu subjects

• Abolished head taxes

• Respected Hindus and allowed them in the administration

• Hindu Nobility stayed if taxes were collected and paid

Page 32: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

Akbar’s Social Agenda• Encouraged

intermarriage and Widow remarriage

• Discouraged child marriage

• Prohibited sati

• Discouraged consumption of alcohol

• Created special market days for women only

Page 33: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

Akbar’s Legacy & European Contact

• Social reforms failed in the immediate future (including child marriage and sati)

• After his death no new territory was added

• Most of the population lived in poverty

• Developed major commercial and manufacturing Empire in Indian cotton textiles

Page 34: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

Court Politics & Women

• Nur Jahan – wife of Jahangir

–“The Twentieth Wife”

• Mumtaz Mahal – wife of Shah Jahan I

• Ordinary women’s rights decline under Jahangir and Shah Jahan

Page 35: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

Nur Jahan Mumtaz Mahal

Page 36: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

Mughal Era Achievements

• Taj Mahal – Shah Jahan

• blends Persian and Hindu traditions

Page 37: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.

Mughal Decline

• Aurangzeb fought many wars in India to reclaim much of the land that had been lost – depleted the treasury

• created resentment by beginning religious reform to rid Islam of Hindu influences – created internal weakness

• By early in the 18th century power passed to regional lords away from imperial control – allows for European inroads…

Page 38: Muslim Empires The Gunpowder Empires 1450-1750.