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Anatolian beyliks (Turkish: Anadolu beylikleri, Ottoman Turkish: Tavâif-i mülûk, Beylik; Turkish pronunciation: [bejlic]) were Turkish[1] principalities (or petty kingdoms) in Anatolia governed by beys, the first of which were founded at the end of the 11th century. A second and more extensive period of establishment took place as a result of the decline of the Seljuq Sultanate of Rûm in the latter half of the 13th century.
One of the beyliks, that of the Osmanoğlu of the Kayı branch of Oghuz Turks, from its capital in Bursa completed its incorporation of the other beyliks to form the Ottoman Empire by the late 15th century.
The word beylik denotes a territory under the jurisdiction of a bey, equivalent to a duchy or principality in other parts of Europe.[2]
History
editFollowing the 1071 Seljuk victory over the Byzantine Empire at the Battle of Manzikert and the subsequent conquest of Anatolia, Oghuz Turkic clans began settling in present-day Turkey. The Seljuk Sultanate of Rum's central power established in Konya was largely as a result of using these clans under appointed beys called uç bey or uj begi (especially in border areas to ensure safety against the Byzantines); uç is a Turkish term that denotes a border or frontier territory equivalent to marches, with the similar term margrave used in other parts of Europe. These clans, led by beys, would receive military and financial support from the Seljuks in return for their fealty.
However, Mongol invasions from the East saw a decline in Seljuk power which gradually deteriorated. The Ilkhanate commanders in Anatolia then gained strength and authority which encouraged the beys, who had until then been vassals to the Sultanate of Rum, to declare sovereignty over their dominions. With the fall of Seljuk centralized power in Konya, many beys joined forces with the atabegs (former Seljuk leaders), and other religious Muslim leaders, in addition to employing Ghazi warriors from Persia and Turkestan, who also fled the Mongols. The ghazis fought under the inspiration of either a mullah[citation needed] or a general, trying to assert Islamic power, with the attacks on Byzantine territory further expanding the power sphere of the beyliks.[citation needed]
As the Byzantine Empire weakened, their cities in Asia Minor became gradually less and less able to resist these attacks, and many Turks began to settle in western parts of Anatolia.[5] As a result, many more beyliks were founded in these newly conquered realms, who engaged in power struggles with the Byzantines, the Genoese, the Knights Templar, as well as between each other.
By 1300, the Turks had reached the Aegean coastline, held momentarily two centuries before. In the beginning, the most powerful states were the Karamanids and the Germiyanids in the central area. The Beylik of Osmanoğlu, who would later go on to become the Ottoman Empire, was situated in the northwest, around Söğüt, and was at that stage relatively small and possessed modest military power. Along the Aegean coast, from North to South, were the principalities of Karasi, Saruhan, Aydin, Menteşe, and Teke. The Candar dynasty (later also known as Isfendiyar) reigned in the Black Sea region around the provinces of Kastamonu and Sinop in what was the Beylik of Candar.[6]
Under its eponymous founder, Osman I, the Beylik of Osman expanded at Byzantine expense westwards and southwards of the Sea of Marmara in the first decades of the 14th century. With their annexation of the neighboring Beylik of Karasi and their advance into Rumelia starting in 1354, they soon gained strength to emerge as the principal rivals of the Beylik of Karaman, who at the time were thought to be the strongest. Towards the end of the 14th century, the Ottomans advanced further into Anatolia either through the acquisition of towns or by cementing marriage alliances. Meanwhile, wary of an increase in Ottoman regional power, the Karamanids repeatedly engaged in conflict with the Ottomans with the help of other beyliks, Mamluks, Aq Qoyunlu ("White Sheep Turkomans"), Byzantines, Pontics and Hungarians, failing and losing power every time. By the close of the century, the early Ottoman leaders had conquered large parts of land from Karamanids and other less prominent beyliks. These had a short respite when their territories were restored to them after the Ottoman defeat suffered against Tamerlane in 1402 in the Battle of Ankara.
But the Ottoman state quickly collected itself under Mehmed I and his son Murad II, who reincorporated most of these beyliks into Ottoman territory in a period of about 25 years. The final blow to the Beylik of Karaman was struck by Mehmed II, who conquered their lands and re-assured a homogeneous rule in Anatolia. The further steps towards a single rule by the Ottomans were taken by Selim I who conquered territories of the Beylik of Ramadan and the Beylik of Dulkadir in 1515 during his campaign against the Mamluk Sultanate, and his son Süleyman the Magnificent who more or less completely united the present territories of Turkey (and much more) in his 1534 campaign. Many of the former Anatolian beyliks subsequently became the basis for the administrative subdivisions in the Ottoman Empire.
List of beyliks
editBeyliks founded after Manzikert (1071)
editIn the list below, only the beyliks that were founded immediately after the Battle of Manzikert in 1071, mostly situated towards eastern Anatolia, and who were vassals (or sometimes at war) of the centralized power of the Seljuk Sultanate of Rum based in Konya are listed.
Beylik's name | Capital city | Duration of rule |
---|---|---|
Beylik of Smyrna | İzmir | 1081–1098 |
Shah-Armens (also called Ahlatshahs) | Ahlat | 1110–1207 |
Artuqids (three branches) | Hasankeyf, Mardin, Harput | 1102–1409 |
Danishmend | Sivas | 1071–1178 |
Dilmaçoğlu | Bitlis | 1085–1398 |
İnaloğlu | Diyarbekir | 1095–1183 |
Mengujekids | Erzincan, later Divriği | 1072–1277 |
Saltukids | Erzurum | 1072–1202 |
Çubukoğulları | Harput | 1085–1112 |
Beylik of Tanrıbermiş | Alaşehir | 1071–1098 |
Beyliks founded after Köse Dağ (1243)
editA second group beyliks emerged as a result of the weakening of this central state under the Mongol blow with the Battle of Köse Dağ in 1243, which had the indirect consequence of extending Turkic territory in Western Anatolia toward the end of the 13th century.
Beylik's name | Capital city | Duration of rule |
---|---|---|
Ahiler[7] | Ankara | c. 1290–1362 |
Alaiye | Alanya | 1293–1471 as vassals to Karamanids |
Aydinids | Birgi, later Ayasluğ (Selçuk) | 1300–1425 |
Canik | Samsun, Amasya and the vicinity | ?–1460 |
Candar (later also known as Beylik of Isfendiyar) | Eflani, later Kastamonu, last Sinop | 1291–1461 |
Chobanids | Kastamonu (preceding the Candars) | 1211–1309 |
Dulkadirids | Elbistan, later Maraş | 1348–1522 |
Eretnids | Sivas, later Kayseri | 1335–1390 |
Erzincan | Erzincan | 1379–1410 |
Eshrefids | Beyşehir | 1285–1326 |
Germiyanids | Kütahya | 1300–1429 |
Hamidids | Eğirdir | 1300–1391 |
Kadi Burhan al-Din | Sivas (replacing the Eretnids) | 1381–1398 |
Karamanids | Larende (Karaman) | 1250–1487 |
Karasids/Karası | Balıkesir, later Bergama and Çanakkale | 1296–1357 |
Ladik (also called Inanjids, subordinate to Sahib Ataids and Germiyanids) | Denizli | 1262–1391 |
Menteşe | Milas | 1261–1424 |
Ottomanids (later the Ottoman Empire) | Söğüt, later Bursa, Dimetoka, Edirne and Istanbul | 1299–1922 |
Pervâneid | Sinop | 1277–1322 |
Ramadanids | Adana | 1352–1608 |
Sahib Ataids | Afyonkarahisar | 1275–1341 |
Sarukhanids | Manisa | 1300–1410 |
Teke (issued from the Hamidids) | Antalya, later Korkuteli | 1321–1423 |
Society
editLanguage
editCombined with the Seljuks and the migration of Turkic tribes into the Anatolian mainland, the Anatolian beyliks spread the Turkic language and Islamic culture in Anatolia.[8] Unlike the Seljuks, whose administrative language was Persian, the Anatolian beyliks adopted spoken Turkic as their formal literary language.[8] The Turkish language thus achieved widespread use in these principalities and reached its highest sophistication during the Ottoman era.[8]
Art
editIn spite of their limited sources and the political climate of their era, art during the Anatolian beyliks flourished, probably forming the basis for Ottoman art. Although the artistic style of the Anatolian beyliks can be considered as representatives of a transition period between Seljuks and Ottomans, new trends were also acquired. Especially wandering traditional crafts artists and architects helped spread these new trends and localized styles to several beyliks across Anatolia, which resulted in innovative and original works particularly in architecture. Wood and stone carving, clay tiles and other similar decorative arts of the Seljuks were still used, however with the influence of the pursuit for new spaces and its reflections in other arts as well.
Architecture
editSome representative examples of the Anatolian beyliks' architecture are İlyas Bey Mosque at Balat (Milet) (1404), İsabey Mosque at Selçuk (1375), Ulucami Mosque at Birgi (1312) built by the Aydın beylik. The above mosques, although being successors of Seljuq architecture, differ greatly in the increase of decorations in the interior and exterior spaces and the different placement of the courtyards and minarets. Karaman beylik also left noteworthy architectural works, such as Ulucami Mosque in Ermenek (1302), Hatuniye Madrassa in Karaman (1382), Akmedrese Madrassa in Niğde (1409), all of which respect a new style that considers and incorporates the exterior surroundings also. One of the first examples of the Anatolian beylik architecture hinting at the forming of the Ottoman architecture that aims at uniting the interior space beneath one big dome and forming a monumental architectural structure is Ulucami Mosque in Manisa (1374) built by the Saruhan beylik. Also worth noting is the increase in constructions of madrassas that points at the beyliks' attaching greater importance to sciences.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Howard 2016, p. 38
- ^ (limited preview) Mohamed Hedi Cherif - Daniel Panzac (1995). Histoire économique et sociale de l'Empire ottoman et de la Turquie (1326-1960) (in French). Peeters Publishers. ISBN 90-6831-799-7.
- ^ "The Cresques Project - Panel IV". www.cresquesproject.net.
- ^ Forêt, Philippe; Kaplony, Andreas (30 November 2008). The Journey of Maps and Images on the Silk Road. BRILL. p. 194. ISBN 978-90-474-2497-0.
- ^ This process is described in the pioneering work, Speros Vryonis, The decline of medieval Hellenism in Asia Minor: and the process of Islamization from the eleventh through the fifteenth century (Berkeley: University of California, 1971), ISBN 978-1597404761
- ^ Kate Fleet (1999). European and Islamic Trade in the Early Ottoman State: The Merchants of Genoa and Turkey. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-64221-3.
- ^ The Ahiler Beylik is sometimes considered one of the Anatolian beyliks but was a mercantile republic rather than a monarchical dynasty. See Ahiler for more information.
- ^ a b c Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire, Gábor Ágoston, Bruce Alan Masters, page 40
Sources
edit- Howard, Douglas A. (2016). The History of Turkey (2nd ed.). Santa Barbara, California: Greenwood. ISBN 978-1-4408-3466-0.
- Mehmet Fuat Köprülü (translated by Gary Leiser) (1992). The Origins of the Ottoman Empire. State University of New York Press. ISBN 0-7914-0819-1. (limited preview)
- Westermann Großer Atlas zur Weltgeschichte (in German)
External links
edit- "Osmanlı Medeniyeti (Ottoman Civilization)" (in Turkish). Archived from the original on 2005-08-01. Retrieved 2005-07-18.