|
|
The
Ottomans:
A Turkish dynasty
named after its founder Osman, who ruled a small principality in the
northwestern corner of Anatolia after the Mongol invasion of the thirteenth
century. The Ottomans fulfilled an Islamic dream of eight centuries
in conquering Constantinople (renaming it Istanbul) and formed the
largest Islamic empire of its time which comprised the Balkans, Greece,
Anatolia, Syria, Iraq, Egypt, the Holy Cities of Arabia, Algeria and
Tunisia. The Ottomans acquired the title sultan in 1394, and the ultimate
title caliph after the conquest of Egypt in 1517. The empire was dissolved
after the First World War. |
|
The
Janissary Corps:
A distortion of the
Turkish Yeniceri (the New Army), the most privileged corps of the
Ottoman army established in the 14th century and staffed from the
recruits levied as boys from the non- Islamic provinces of the Ottoman
empire (the Devshirme system). High administrators were usually drawn
from its ranks. The Janissary Corps of the province of Egypt was stationed
at the Citadel of Cairo. |
|
The
Church of Hagia Sofia (Ayasofia) (532-37):
The building that most affected the Ottoman architects and patrons
as an object of admiration and imitation. Its huge central dome on
four elephant piers was a masterpiece of engineering that many Ottoman
architects and patrons felt the need to surpass. The most famous Ottoman
architect, Sinan, is reported to have felt relieved only when he completed
his dome of the Selimiye Mosque at Edirne which equaled the width
of Ayasofia's dome. |
|
|
|
|
|
|