Hist1: The fall of the last of the great Islamic empire (Ottoman) and the origin of Turkey (v1.0)
This is a completely factual essay. This essay was created from multiple public sources on the
web. You have to be familiar with geography to understand the full context.
1. The long arc of Islamic empires
After the Prophet Muhammad died in 632 CE, the early caliphates
expanded rapidly under the Rashidun (632–661 CE). Over the next 1,200 years, numerous Islamic
empires rose and fell across:
- North
Africa
- The
Middle East
- West
and Central Asia
- India
- Parts
of Eastern Europe
- Southeast
Asia (including Indonesia)
This period included the Islamic Golden Age, marked
by major advances in science, mathematics, medicine, philosophy, and trade.
The last of these great Islamic empires to fall was the Ottoman
Empire, which collapsed in 1922.
2. Origins and rise of the Ottoman Empire
The Ottomans began as Turkish tribes in Anatolia
(Asia Minor) in the 13th century. They expanded by:
- absorbing
the declining Byzantine Empire
- taking
advantage of the regional vacuum created by the Mongol invasions
- building
a powerful military and administrative system
At its height, the empire stretched across:
- Southeastern
Europe (to the gates of Vienna)
- Hungary,
the Balkans, Greece, parts of Ukraine
- North
Africa (as far west as Algeria)
- The
Middle East
- Anatolia
(modern Turkey)
It lasted over 600 years, leaving deep cultural,
linguistic, and religious footprints across this vast region.
3. The long decline (1566–1807)
After its peak, the empire entered a slow decline. By the
late 18th century, Sultan Mahmud II initiated internal reforms, which
his sons continued. The Tanzimat reforms (1839–1876) modernized
administration, law, and the military and were largely successful.
But structural weaknesses remained.
4. The crisis of 1875–1878
A combination of drought (1873), floods (1874), heavy
taxation, and crushing debt triggered uprisings. Ottoman attempts to suppress
them led to:
- war
with Serbia and Montenegro
- intervention
by European powers
- Russian
declaration of war (1877)
The Ottomans were defeated. The Treaty of San Stefano
(1878) forced them to:
- recognize
the independence of Romania, Serbia, and Montenegro
- concede
autonomy to Bulgaria
- cede
territory to Russia
- pay
indemnities
- implement
reforms
A later revision gave:
- Bosnia
and Herzegovina to Austria‑Hungary
- Cyprus
to Britain
By 1914, the Ottomans had lost nearly all of Europe and
North Africa.
5. The empire on the eve of World War I
Despite losses, the empire still ruled about 28 million
people, including:
- 17
million in modern Turkey
- 3
million in Syria, Lebanon, and Palestine
- 2.5
million in Iraq
- 5.5
million under nominal rule in the Arabian Peninsula
In 1914, the Ottoman government signed a secret treaty with Germany,
forming the Ottoman‑German Alliance.
6. World War I and the Armenian tragedy
In 1915, as Russian forces advanced in eastern Anatolia with
help from Armenian volunteers, the Ottoman government issued the Tehcir Law,
ordering the deportation of Armenians from eastern provinces.
This resulted in what is widely recognized as the Armenian
genocide.
Estimates of deaths vary:
- 300,000
(modern Turkish state)
- 600,000
(early Western estimates)
- up to
1.5 million (modern Western and Armenian scholars)
The Arab Revolt (1916) further weakened the empire.
By the Armistice of Mudros (1918), the Ottomans had
lost nearly all remaining territories outside Anatolia.
7. Partition and the end of the empire
The Treaty of Sèvres (1920) formalized the partition
of Ottoman lands. From its former territories, 39 modern countries
eventually emerged.
A Turkish national movement, led by Mustafa Kemal Pasha
(Atatürk), fought the Turkish War of Independence (1919–1923). They
succeeded.
- The Sultanate
was abolished on 1 November 1922.
- The Republic
of Turkey was proclaimed in 1923.
Modern Turkey was born from the remnants of the empire.
8. Why the Ottoman story matters
The Ottoman Empire sits at the crossroads of:
- Europe
- Africa
- The
Middle East
- Russia
- Central
Asia
- The
Islamic world
- The
legacy of the Roman Empire
- World
War I
Its fall reshaped borders, identities, religions, and
geopolitics across a vast region. Understanding its rise and collapse helps
explain much of the modern world.
Want to Read on?
NEXT: Where did Asian Indians come from?
Comments
https://jaykasi.blogspot.com/2023/09/why-i-write-essays.html
https://jaykasi.blogspot.com/2023/06/a-window-into-some-troublesome-parts-of.html
I have written essays on judaism, christianity, islam, buddhism and hinduism. If curious look them up.
https://jaykasi.blogspot.com/2022/03/the-goals-of-my-science-essays-earlier.html
This last para in my foreign policy essay pretty much sums up where I come from.
I look at foreign policy from the self-interest lens of the US and India, both of which I have strong connections to. I am interested in my heritage through birth to India, and I have good memories of my early life in India and have great Indian origin friends, but today I am very much an American. I wish India all the best and all success.