Transcript Slide 1

The Islamic World in the Early Modern Period:
The Three Gunpowder Empires
Ottomans
Safavids
Mughals
• The Mongol invasions of
the 13th and 14th centuries
destroyed Muslim unity as
the Abbasids and other
regional dynasties were
overthrown.
• After the Mongol period,
three empires rose and
expanded throughout
much of the Islamic world.
• The Ottomans were the
most expansive and
powerful of the three.
Mongol siege of Baghdad
The Ottoman Empire
• The Ottoman dynasty was founded by Turkic people who
migrated into Anatolia in the mid 13th century.
• After securing dominance, the Ottomans began to expand in
the 14th, 15th and 16th centuries.
• After defeating the Byzantines in 1453, Istanbul became the
capital.
• The Ottomans continued to expand into the Balkan peninsula,
as far north as Hungary.
• Many diverse ethnic and religious groups lived within the
Ottoman Empire.
• Millets were communities of non-Muslims who had some
degree of autonomy in the empire.
The Ottoman Janissaries
• The janissaries were another
important and powerful force in the
Ottoman system.
• Elite infantry divisions of the
imperial army.
• Most janissaries were conscripted
from the Christian Balkans.
The Ottoman Janissaries
•Young boys were recruited,
educated, and converted to Islam.
•Over time, the janissaries became a
powerful, conservative political force.
•Resistance to modernization within
the army was one of the signs of
decline in the Ottoman empire.
• Suleiman the Magnificent (r. 1520-1566) was sultan
at the height of the Ottoman Empire in the 16th cen.
1. modernized the army
2. conquered territory in Mesopotamia, North Africa,
and Eastern Europe
3. Improved justice system (known as “the lawgiver.”)
4. self-proclaimed “protector of the sacred places”
(meaning Mecca and Medina)
5. art and literature flourished under Suleiman
• Eventually, the following led to
Ottoman decline:
• lagging industry
• reliance on agriculture
• over-taxing the peasants
• Revolts
• disputes with neighboring
kingdoms and states Plus, new
challenges (especially economic)
resulting from the rise of the
West weakened the empire.
• Signs of decline began in late 17th
century, though the empire lasted all
the way up to WWI.
Safavid
Persia
•The Safavid dynasty
was founded after the
fall of the Mongols and
Timurids in the 14th
century.
•The Safavids were
Shia, and spread Shia
beliefs and traditions
among Turkic and
Persian peoples.
• Modern Iran, which was the
heart of the Safavid empire,
is overwhelmingly Shia to
this day.
•Territorial and religious
disputes often broke out
between the Sunni Ottomans
and Shia Safavids.
• In 1501, the Safavid king
Ismail was proclaimed
shah after a series of
struggles with rival groups.
Tabriz became the capital,
though later it would be
moved to Isfahan.
The greatest Safavid ruler was
Shah Abbas the Great (r. 1588-1629)
- centralized the
government
- improved and organized
the military
- allied with European
states against the
Ottomans
- tolerant policies toward
non-Muslims
- built a capital at Isfahan
The greatest Safavid ruler was
Shah Abbas the Great (r. 1588-1629)
• The Safavid Empire
declined after the death of
Shah Abbas.
• Eventually, religious
disputes and rebellions
(such as that of the Sunni
Afghans) caused the empire
to weaken.
• Like the Ottomans, an
inability to compete with the
West also caused problems.
The Mughal Empire
1.The Mughal Empire ruled most of India
and Pakistan in the 16th and 17th
centuries.
2.It consolidated Islam in South Asia, and
spread Muslim (and particularly Persian)
arts and culture.
3.Mughals - Muslims who ruled a country
with a large Hindu majority. However for
much of their empire they allowed Hindus
to reach senior government or military
positions.
The Mughal Empire
1.The Mughals brought several changes to
India:
•Centralized government which brought
together many smaller kingdoms
•Delegated government with respect for
human rights
•Persian art and culture
•Persian language mixed with Arabic &
Hindi to create Urdu
•Periods of great religious tolerance
•A style of architecture (the Taj Mahal)
•Akbar (grandson of Babur, founder of
the Mughal dynasty) became ruler of the
empire in 1556 at the age of 13.
(Elizabeth I, Phillip II, and Shah Abbas I
ruled in the same time frame.)
•He expanded the empire throughout
much of northern India.
•Centralized and reformed the
government by appointing military
governors in charge of different regions.
•Began taxing the nobility as well as
lower classes.
•To win over Hindus, Akbar eliminated
the jizya and pilgrimage taxes levied by
previous Muslim rulers in India.
• Akbar
married 5000 wives for
political reasons – mainly to
cement relations with regional
kingdoms.
• His
favorite wife was a Hindu
princess – their son Jahangir
became the next Mughal
emperor.
• Akbar
allowed for a great
degree of regional autonomy
within the empire.
• Hindus
were allowed to retain
their own laws and courts
• This loose style of
government became the
model also used by the
British when they began
building their colonial
government in the 18th and
19th centuries.
• Discontent among Hindus,
unrest, and the weakening of
the Mughal empire marked
the harsh reign of Aurangzeb,
the great-grandson of Akbar.
• The British would eventually
capitalize on these
weaknesses.