4:33
Husein kapetan Gradaščević - zmaj od bosne
Husein-kapetan Gradaščević (31 August 1802 -- 31 August 1834) was a Bosnian Muslim general...
published: 18 Nov 2011
author: iambalkan
Husein kapetan Gradaščević - zmaj od bosne
Husein kapetan Gradaščević - zmaj od bosne
Husein-kapetan Gradaščević (31 August 1802 -- 31 August 1834) was a Bosnian Muslim general who fought for Bosnian autonomy in the Ottoman Empire. He is often...- published: 18 Nov 2011
- views: 5272
- author: iambalkan
17:36
Part 6 Serbia Novi Pazar
NOVI PAZAR Novi Pazar is a city located in southwest Serbia, in Sandžak and Raška District...
published: 17 Nov 2012
author: Nurettin Yilmaz
Part 6 Serbia Novi Pazar
Part 6 Serbia Novi Pazar
NOVI PAZAR Novi Pazar is a city located in southwest Serbia, in Sandžak and Raška District. According to the 2011 census, the population of the municipal are...- published: 17 Nov 2012
- views: 2982
- author: Nurettin Yilmaz
16:17
Part 7 Serbai Novi Pazar
NOVI PAZAR Novi Pazar is a city located in southwest Serbia, in Sandžak and Raška District...
published: 17 Nov 2012
author: Nurettin Yilmaz
Part 7 Serbai Novi Pazar
Part 7 Serbai Novi Pazar
NOVI PAZAR Novi Pazar is a city located in southwest Serbia, in Sandžak and Raška District. According to the 2011 census, the population of the municipal are...- published: 17 Nov 2012
- views: 2874
- author: Nurettin Yilmaz
14:49
Part 8 Serbia Novi Pazar
NOVI PAZAR Novi Pazar is a city located in southwest Serbia, in Sandžak and Raška District...
published: 17 Nov 2012
author: Nurettin Yilmaz
Part 8 Serbia Novi Pazar
Part 8 Serbia Novi Pazar
NOVI PAZAR Novi Pazar is a city located in southwest Serbia, in Sandžak and Raška District. According to the 2011 census, the population of the municipal are...- published: 17 Nov 2012
- views: 1901
- author: Nurettin Yilmaz
12:21
Mahmud II - The 30th Sultan Of The Ottoman Empire
Mahmud II (Ottoman Turkish: محمود ثانى Mahmud-ı sānī) (20 July 1789 -- 1 July 1839) was th...
published: 04 Jan 2014
Mahmud II - The 30th Sultan Of The Ottoman Empire
Mahmud II - The 30th Sultan Of The Ottoman Empire
Mahmud II (Ottoman Turkish: محمود ثانى Mahmud-ı sānī) (20 July 1789 -- 1 July 1839) was the 30th Sultan of the Ottoman Empire from 1808 until his death in 1839. He was born in the Topkapi Palace, Constantinople, the posthumous son of Sultan Abdulhamid I. His reign is notable mostly for the extensive administrative, military and fiscal reforms he instituted, which culminated into the Decree of Tanzimat (Reorganization) that was carried out by his sons Abdülmecid I and Abdülaziz I. His mother was Valide Sultan Naksh-i-Dil Haseki (who according to legend was a cousin of Joséphine de Beauharnais, wife of Napoleon Bonaparte). In 1808, Mahmud II's predecessor, and half-brother, Mustafa IV ordered his execution along with his cousin, the deposed Sultan Selim III, in order to defuse the rebellion. Selim III was killed, but Mahmud was safely kept hidden by his mother and was placed on the throne after the rebels deposed Mustafa IV. The leader of this rebellion, Alemdar Mustafa Pasha, later became Mahmud II's vizier. Western Historians give Mahmud a bad reputation for simply being the Sultan during a time of deterioration of the Ottoman Empire. There are many stories surrounding the circumstances of his attempted murder. A version by the 19th-century Ottoman historian Cevdet Pasha gives the following account: one of his slaves, a Georgian girl named Cevri, gathered ashes when she heard the commotion in the palace surrounding the murder of Selim III. When the assassins approached the Harem chambers where Mahmud was staying, she was able to keep them away for a while by throwing ashes into their faces, temporary blinding them. This allowed Mahmud to escape through a window and climb onto the roof of the Harem. He apparently ran to the roof of the Third Court where other pages saw him and helped him come down with pieces of clothes that were quickly tied together as a ladder. By this time one of the leaders of the rebellion, Alemdar Mustafa Pasha arrived with his armed men and upon seeing the dead body of Selim III proclaimed Mahmud as padishah. The slave girl Cevri Kalfa was awarded for her bravery and loyalty and appointed haznedar usta, the chief treasurer of the imperial Harem, which was the second most important position in the hierarchy. A plain stone staircase at the Altınyol (Golden Way) of the Harem is called Staircase of Cevri (Jevri) Kalfa, since the events apparently happened around there and are associated with her. The vizier took the initiative in resuming reforms that had been terminated by the conservative coup of 1807 that had brought Mustafa IV to power. However he was killed during a rebellion in 1808 and Mahmud II temporarily abandoned the reforms. Mahmud II's later reformation efforts were more successful. During the early years of Mahmud II's reign, his governor of Egypt Mehmet Ali Paşa successfully reconquered the holy cities of Medina (1812) and Mecca (1813) from the Nejdi rebels. His reign also marked the first breakaway from the Ottoman Empire, with Greece gaining its independence following a rebellion that started in 1821. In 1827 the combined British, French and Russian navies defeated the Ottoman Navy at the Battle of Navarino; in the aftermath, the Ottoman Empire was forced to recognize Greece with the Treaty of Constantinople in July 1832. This event, together with the occupation of the Ottoman province of Algeria by France in 1830, marked the beginning of the gradual break-up of the Ottoman Empire. Non-Turkish ethnic groups living in the empire's territories, especially in Europe, started their own independence movements. Among Mahmud II's most notable acts during his reign was the abolition of the Janissary corps in 1826, permitting the establishment of a European-style conscript army, recruited largely from Turkish speakers of Rumelia and Asia Minor. Mahmud was also responsible for the subjugation of the Iraqi Mamluks by Ali Ridha Pasha in 1831. He ordered the execution of the renowned Ali Pasha of Tepelena. He sent his Grand Vizier to execute the Bosniak hero Husein Gradaščević and dissolute the Bosnia Eyalet. He began preparations for the Tanzimat reforms in 1839. The Tanzimat marked the beginning of modernization in Turkey, and had immediate effects on social and legal aspects of life in the Empire, such as European style clothing, architecture, legislation, institutional organization and land reform. He was concerned also for aspects of tradition. He made great efforts to revive the sport of archery. He ordered archery master Mustafa Kani to write a book about the history, construction, and use of Turkish bows, from which comes most of what is now known of Turkish bowyery.[ Mahmud II died of tuberculosis - some say he was murdered - at the Esma Sultana Palace, Çamlıca, in 1839. His funeral was attended by crowds of people who came to bid the Sultan farewell. His son Abdülmecid succeeded him.- published: 04 Jan 2014
- views: 1
3:23
Ottoman Vassal And Tributary States Of The Ottoman Empire
Vassal States were a number of tributary or vassal states, usually on the periphery of the...
published: 08 Feb 2014
Ottoman Vassal And Tributary States Of The Ottoman Empire
Ottoman Vassal And Tributary States Of The Ottoman Empire
Vassal States were a number of tributary or vassal states, usually on the periphery of the Ottoman Empire under suzerainty of the Porte, over which direct control was not established, for various reasons. Some of these states served as buffer states between the Ottomans and Christianity in Europe or Shi'ism in Asia. Their number varied over time but notable were the Khanate of Crimea, Wallachia, Moldavia, Transylvania. Other states such as Bulgaria, the Eastern Hungarian Kingdom, the Serbian Despotate, and the Bosnia were vassals before being absorbed entirely or partially into the Empire. Still others had commercial value such as Imeretia, Mingrelia, Chios, the Duchy of Naxos, and the Republic of Ragusa (Dubrovnik). Areas such as holy cities and Venetian tributary areas of Cyprus and Zante were not fully incorporated either. Finally, some small areas such as Montenegro/Zeta and Mount Lebanon did not merit the effort of conquest and were not fully subordinated to the center. The Principality of Serbia again became a tributary in 1817, after being so in the 15th century prior to the fall of Smederevo and its annexation to the Ottoman Empire. Forms Some states within the eyalet system included sancakbeys who were local to their sanjak or who inherited their position (e.g., Samtskhe, some Kurdish sanjaks), areas that were permitted to elect their own leaders (e.g., areas of Albania, Epirus, and Morea (Mani Peninsula was nominally a part of Aegean Islands Province but Maniot beys were tributary vassals of the Porte.)), or de facto independent eyalets (e.g., the Barbaresque 'regencies' Algiers, Tunis, Tripolitania in the Maghreb, and later the Khedivate of Egypt). Outside the eyalet system were states such as Moldavia, Wallachia and Transylvania which paid tribute to the Ottomans and over which the Porte had the right to nominate or depose the ruler, garrison rights, and foreign policy control. They were considered by the Otomans as part of Dar al-'Ahd, thus they were allowed to preserve their self-rule, and were not under Islamic law, like the empire proper; Ottoman subjects, or Muslims for that matter, were not allowed to settle the land permanently or to build mosques. Some states such as Ragusa paid tribute for the entirety of their territory and recognized Ottoman suzerainty. Others such as the sharif of Mecca recognized Ottoman suzerainty but were subsidized by the Porte. There were also secondary vassals such as the Nogai Horde and the Circassians who were (at least nominally) vassals of the khans of Crimea, or some Berbers and Arabs who paid tribute to the North African beylerbeyis, who were in turn Ottoman vassals themselves. Other states paid tribute for possessions that were legally bound to the Ottoman Empire but not possessed by the Ottomans such as the Habsburgs for parts of Royal Hungary or Venice for Zante. Other tribute from foreign powers included a kind of "protection money" sometimes called a horde tax (similar to the Danegeld) paid by Russia or the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. It was usually paid to the Ottoman vassal khans of Crimea rather than to the Ottoman sultan directly.- published: 08 Feb 2014
- views: 0
3:30
Levice - Slovakia
Levice is a town in western Slovakia. The town lies on the left bank of the lower Hron riv...
published: 23 May 2012
author: viennaprofi1
Levice - Slovakia
Levice - Slovakia
Levice is a town in western Slovakia. The town lies on the left bank of the lower Hron river. Levice is first mentioned as Leua, one of the villages belongin...- published: 23 May 2012
- views: 560
- author: viennaprofi1
0:12
Novi Pazar - Partizan [Torcida Sandzak & Ekstremi] FENERBAHCE !!! [www.fknovipazar.net]
FK Novi Pazar at Novi Pazar-Partizan match... Navijaci Novog Pazara na utakmici FK Novi Pa...
published: 03 Mar 2012
author: fknovipazar1928
Novi Pazar - Partizan [Torcida Sandzak & Ekstremi] FENERBAHCE !!! [www.fknovipazar.net]
Novi Pazar - Partizan [Torcida Sandzak & Ekstremi] FENERBAHCE !!! [www.fknovipazar.net]
FK Novi Pazar at Novi Pazar-Partizan match... Navijaci Novog Pazara na utakmici FK Novi Pazar-FK Partizan... https://www.facebook.com/fknovipazar.- published: 03 Mar 2012
- views: 5193
- author: fknovipazar1928
1:12
Pocetak izgradnje sjeverne tribine - Reportaza [Gradski stadion Novi Pazar]
For more information, photos and videos visit us on: https://www.facebook.com/fknovipazar....
published: 06 Mar 2012
author: fknovipazar1928
Pocetak izgradnje sjeverne tribine - Reportaza [Gradski stadion Novi Pazar]
Pocetak izgradnje sjeverne tribine - Reportaza [Gradski stadion Novi Pazar]
For more information, photos and videos visit us on: https://www.facebook.com/fknovipazar.- published: 06 Mar 2012
- views: 1308
- author: fknovipazar1928