Description: Please refer to the section BELOW (and NOT ABOVE) this line for the product details - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Title:The Ottoman Empire: The History And Legacy Of The Transcontinental Empire That Dominated Eastern Europe And The Middle East For Nearly 500ISBN13:9781987531299ISBN10:1987531299Author:Charles River Editors (Author)Description:(This is a RePrint) - *Includes Pictures *Includes Online Resources And A Bibliography For Further Reading In Terms Of Geopolitics, Perhaps The Most Seminal Event Of The Middle Ages Was The Successful Ottoman Siege Of Constantinople In 1453 The City Had Been An Imperial Capital As Far Back As The 4Th Century, When Constantine The Great Shifted The Power Center Of The Roman Empire There, Effectively Establishing Two Almost Equally Powerful Halves Of Antiquity's Greatest Empire Constantinople Would Continue To Serve As The Capital Of The Byzantine Empire Even After The Western Half Of The Roman Empire Collapsed In The Late 5Th Century Naturally, The Ottoman Empire Would Also Use Constantinople As The Capital Of Its Empire After Their Conquest Effectively Ended The Byzantine Empire, And Thanks To Its Strategic Location, It Has Been A Trading Center For Years And Remains One Today Under The Turkish Name Of Istanbul The End Of The Byzantine Empire Had A Profound Effect Not Only On The Middle East But Europe As Well Constantinople Had Played A Crucial Part In The Crusades, And The Fall Of The Byzantines Meant That The Ottomans Now Shared A Border With Europe The Islamic Empire Was Viewed As A Threat By The Predominantly Christian Continent To Their West, And It Took Little Time For Different European Nations To Start Clashing With The Powerful Turks In Fact, The Ottomans Would Clash With Russians, Austrians, Venetians, Polish, And More Before Collapsing As A Result Of World War I, When They Were Part Of The Central Powers When Studying The Fall Of The Ottoman Empire, Historians Have Argued Over The Breaking Point That Saw A Leading Global Power Slowly Become A Decadent Empire The Failed Battle Of Vienna In 1683 Is Certainly An Important Turning Point For The Expanding Empire, As The Defeat Of Grand Vizier Kara Mustafa Pasha At The Hands Of A Coalition Led By The Austrian Habsburg Dynasty, Holy Roman Empire And Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth Marked The End Of Ottoman Expansionism It Was Also The Beginning Of A Slow Decline During Which The Ottoman Empire Suffered Multiple Military Defeats, Found Itself Mired By Corruption, And Had To Deal With The Increasingly Mutinous Janissaries (The Empire's Initial Foot Soldiers) Despite It All, In The Last Century Of Its Life It Strove To Reform Its Military, Administration And Economy Until It Was Finally Dissolved Years Before The Final Collapse Of The Empire, The Tanzimat (Reorganization), A Period Of Swiping Reforms, Led To Significant Changes In The Country's Military Apparatus, Among Others, Which Certainly Explains The Initial Success The Ottoman Empire Was Able To Achieve Against Its Rivals Similarly, The Drafting Of A New Constitution (Kan N-U Es S , Basic Law) In 1876, Despite It Being Shot Down By Sultan Abdul Hamid Ii Just Two Years Later, As Well As Its Revival By The Young Turks Movement In 1908, Highlights The Understanding Among Ottoman Elites That Change Was Needed, And Their Belief That Such Change Was Possible Overall, The History Of The Dissolution Can Be Defined As A Race Between The Empire's Growing Illness On One Side (The Ottoman's Inability To Appease And Federate The Various People Within Its Territory), And Constant Attempts To Find A Cure In The Form Of Broad Reforms These Questions Are Often Presented Together, But That Tends To Shift The Focus Outward, Onto The Various Peoples And Their Aspirations, Along With Europe's Growing Influence Over The Fate Of The Ottoman Empire To Consider Both The Illness And The Cure, It's Necessary To Separate Them, Before Moving On To The Direct Cause Of The Empire's Dissolution (World War I) And Its Heritage The Ottoman Empire: The History And Legacy Of The Transcontinental Empire That Dominated Eastern Europe And The Middle East For Nearly 500 Years Chronicles The Culture, Battles, And Events That Took Place Across The Vast Turkish Empire From The Middle Ages To The End Of World W Binding:Paperback, PaperbackPublisher:Createspace Independent Publishing PlatformPublication Date:2018-04-04Weight:0.51 lbsDimensions:0.36'' H x 9.02'' L x 5.98'' WNumber of Pages:168Language:English
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Book Title: Ottoman Empire: the History and Legacy of the Transcontinental Empire That Dominated Eastern Europe and the Middle East for Nearly 500 Years
Number of Pages: 168 Pages
Language: English
Publisher: CreateSpace
Topic: Middle East / Turkey & Ottoman Empire
Publication Year: 2018
Item Height: 0.4 in
Genre: History
Item Weight: 11.1 Oz
Author: Charles River Charles River Editors
Item Length: 9 in
Item Width: 6 in
Format: Trade Paperback