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The Muslim Empires

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Byzantine Empire weakened by the sack of Constantinople in the Fourth Crusade, 1204 ... What role did women play in each of the Muslim empires? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Muslim Empires


1
The Muslim Empires
15
2
The Ottoman Empire
  • Rise of the Ottoman Turks
  • Osman (1280-1326) leader of Osman Turks
  • At first peaceful, pastoral people
  • Osmanli (Ottoman) dynasty
  • Byzantine Empire weakened by the sack of
    Constantinople in the Fourth Crusade, 1204
  • Orkhan I (1326-1360) attacked across the Bosporus
    into the Balkans
  • Murad I (1360-1389)
  • Reduces the Byzantine emperor to a vassal
  • Janissaries
  • Battle of Kosovo, 1389

3
Expansion of the Empire
  • Bayazid I(1389-1402)
  • Mehmet II (1451-1481)
  • The Fall of Constantinople, 1453
  • The Advance into Western Asia and Africa
  • Selim I (1512-1520)
  • Consolidate control over Mesopotamia and Northern
    Africa
  • Pashas

4
Turkish Expansion in Europe
  • Suleyman I the Magnificent (1520-1566)
  • Belgrade, 1521
  • Battle of Mohács, 1526
  • Vienna, 1529
  • Turkish defeated by the Spanish at Lepanto, 1571
  • Vienna, 1683

5
Nature of Turkish Rule
  • Sultan
  • Evolution from bey to sultan
  • Topkapi Palace
  • Harem (Private domain of the sultan)
  • Place of women in the harem depends on giving
    birth to sons
  • Women of the harem often exercised influence
  • Members of the harems were often slaves
  • Educated and trained like Janissaries in the
    Devshirme
  • Harem made up of extended family few used for
    sex
  • Administration of the Government
  • Grand Vezir, the chief minister
  • Provinces and districts governed by officials who
    combined civil and military functions
  • Senior officials assigned land by the sultan

6
The Ottoman Empire
7
Religion and Society in the Ottoman World
  • The Ottoman ruling elites were Sunni Muslims
  • Claimed the title of caliph
  • Had to uphold the Sharia, Islamic Law
  • Sufism
  • The Treatment of Minorities
  • Non-Muslims- Orthodox Christians (Greeks and
    Slavs, Jews, Armenian Christians
  • Position of women

8
Ottomans in Decline
  • Battle of Carlowitz, 1699
  • Reasons for decline
  • Administrative system began to break down
  • Changes in the devshirme system
  • Corruption
  • Material affluence and impact of western ideas
    and customs
  • Weak rulers

9
Ottoman Art
  • Pottery, rugs, textiles, jewelry, arms, armor,
    and calligraphy
  • Architecture
  • Santa Sophia and Blue Mosque in Istanbul
  • Tiles and mosaics new glazed tile
  • Silk industry rugs

10
The Safavid
  • Shah Ismail (1487-1524)
  • Was Sufi
  • Seized much of Iran and Iraq, 1501
  • Sent Shiite preachers into Anatolia
  • Ottomans attack Shah Abbas I, the Great, 1850s
  • Safavid forced to move capital
  • Safavid reach the zenith of their glory
  • Problems following Abbas, the Great

11
The Ottoman and Safavid Empires, c. 1683
12
Safavid, contd
  • Safavid Politics and Society
  • Used Shiism as a unifying force
  • Pyramidal political system, shah at the top
  • Economy of commerce and manufacturing
  • Safavid Art and Literature
  • Isfahan
  • Textiles
  • Silk weaving
  • Painting

13
The Grandeur of the Mughals
  • The Founding of the Empire
  • Mughal Dynasty A Gunpowder Empire?
  • Babur (1483-1530)
  • Captures Delhi in 1526 and thus control of the
    northern plains
  • Humayun (1530-1556)
  • Was forced to flee in 1540
  • Recaptures Delhi in 1555
  • Akbar (1556-1605)
  • Expansion under Akbar

14
The Mughal Empire
15
The Mughals, contd
  • Akbar and Indo-Muslim Civilization
  • Religion
  • Religious tolerance
  • Din-I-ilahi (Divine Faith)
  • Society and the Economy
  • Upper ranks nonnative Muslims
  • Lower ranks Hindus
  • Paid salaries but later assigned agricultural
    land and can collect taxes in lieu of salary
  • Zamindars, officials paid rest of taxes to
    government
  • Mughal legal system
  • Hindu laws applied to areas settled by Hindus
  • Hindus no longer paid jizya, poll tax on
    non-Muslims

16
Twilight of the Mughals
  • Jahangir (1605-1628)
  • In early years strengthened central control
  • Court falls under influence of one of his wives
  • The Reign of Shah Jahan (1628-1657)
  • Killed all his rivals when he came to the throne
  • Expanded the boundaries
  • Growing domestic problems
  • Taj Mahal
  • Rule of Augangzeb (1658-1707)
  • Reforms and religious intolerance
  • Rebellions

17
Decline of the Mughals
  • Draining of the imperial treasury
  • Decline in the competence of Mughal rulers
  • Loosely knit principalities
  • Unwillingness of the wealthy to accept authority

18
Akbars Reign
  • Long period of peace and political stability
  • Commerce and manufacturing flourished
  • Foreign trade thrived
  • Tariffs on imports low
  • Foreign commerce handled by Arab traders because
    Indians did not care for travel by sea
  • Internal trade dominated by merchant castes

19
Impact of Western Power in India
  • The Portuguese arrived first
  • The English arrive at Surat in 1608
  • Send an ambassador in 1616
  • Fort William (Calcutta)
  • Dutch and French
  • Joseph François Dupleix
  • Pondicherry
  • Continued English activities
  • Sir Robert Clive
  • British East India Company
  • Battle of Plassey, 1757
  • British began to consolidate control

20
Economic Difficulties
  • East India Companys takeover of vast
    landholdings a disaster for Indian economy
  • Transfer of capital from local Indian aristocracy
    to company officials, who sent profits back to
    England
  • Destruction of local industries because British
    goods imported duty-free
  • British expansion hurt peasants
  • British law meant people who couldnt pay tax
    lost their land
  • Series of massive famines led to death of 1/3
    population

21
India in 1805
22
Resistance to the British
  • Indian commanders harassed and ambushed British
    (guerrilla warfare)
  • Haidar Ali
  • 18th C final consolidation of British rule over
    subcontinent

23
Society and Economy under the Mughals
  • Position of women
  • Mix of Hindu, Muslim, and tribal practices
  • purdah
  • Women in commerce
  • Hindus efforts to defend themselves
  • Commercialization of India
  • The Economy
  • Long-term stability led to increasing
    commercialization and spread of wealth
  • Mughal era affluent landed gentry and
    prosperous merchant class
  • British rule prominent Indians established
    commercial relationships with foreigners

24
Mughal Culture
  • Islamic combined with Persian and indigenous
    influences
  • Architecture
  • The most visible achievement
  • The Taj Mahal Humayuns mausoleum

25
Discussion Questions
  • What was the ethnic composition of the Ottoman
    Empire, and how did the government of the sultan
    administer such a diverse population?
  • What role did women play in each of the Muslim
    empires?
  • What were the main characteristics of each of the
    Muslim empires, and in what ways did they
    resemble each other. How were they distinct from
    their European counterparts?
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