- published: 08 Oct 2014
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The Karamanids or Karamanid dynasty (Modern Turkish: Karamanoğulları, Karamanoğulları Beyliği), also known as the Principality of Karaman and Beylik of Karaman (Karaman Beyliği ), was one of the Anatolian beyliks, centered in south-central Anatolia around the present-day Karaman Province. From the 13th century until its fall in 1487, the Karamanid dynasty was one of the most powerful Turkish beyliks in Anatolia.
The Karamanids traced their ancestry from Hodja Sad al-Din and his son Nure Sufi Bey, who emigrated from Arran (roughly encompassing modern-day Azerbaijan) to Sivas because of the Mongol invasion in 1230.
The Karamanids were members of the Salur tribe of Oghuz Turks. According to Muhsin Yazicioglu and others, they were members of the Afshar tribe, which participated in the revolt led by Baba Ishak and afterwards moved to the western Taurus Mountains, near the town of Larende, where they came to serve the Seljuks. Nûre Sûfi worked there as a woodcutter. His son, Kerîmeddin Karaman Bey, gained a tenuous control over the mountainous parts of Cilicia in the middle of the 13th century. A persistent but spurious legend, however, claims that the Seljuq Sultan of Rum, Kayqubad I, instead established a Karamanid dynasty in these lands.
Mehmet I of Karaman (Turkish: Karamanoğlu Mehmet Bey), also known as Şemseddin Mehmet, was the second bey of Karaman Beylik, a Turkish principality in Anatolia in the 13th century. His father was Karaman Bey.
After the death of his father around 1261, Mehmet collaborated with the governor of Niğde to start a rebellion against the Mongols who were the suzerain of Seljuk lands. However after the governor of Niğde was killed by the Mongols, Mehmet lost his capital Ermenek. Nevertheless Mehmet continued fighting and in 1276 he defeated the combined forces of Mongols and Seljuks in a surprise attack in Göksu River valley.
Next year he allied himself with Baybars of Mamluks. In May he captured Konya the Seljuk capital. But instead of declaring himself as the sultan he supported Jimri, his puppet, as the sultan and in turn Jimri appointed him as the vizier of the Seljuks on 12 May 1277. As a vizier Mehmet issued his famous firman which states that Turkish language replaced Persian language in government offices. But his service term in Konya was only about a month. Upon the news of approaching Mongol army, both Mehmet and Jimri fled from Konya. But Mongols chased him and during a clash in Mut Mehmet as well as his two sons were killed in August 1277. He was succeeded by his brother Güneri.
The Old Anatolian Turkish (Modern Turkish: Eski Anadolu Türkçesi) is the stage in the history of the Turkish language spoken in Anatolia from the 11th to 15th centuries. It developed into Early Ottoman Turkish. It was written in the Arabic script. Unlike in later Ottoman Turkish, short-vowel diacritics were used.
Old Anatolian Turkish was widely spoken in the entire area of Anatolia. Despite this, it had no official status until in 1277, Mehmet I of Karaman declared, "Starting today, in dervish convents, in council, in the palace, in Majlis and in squares, no language other than Turkish is allowed."
The Ottoman Empire (/ˈɒtəmən/; Ottoman Turkish: دَوْلَتِ عَلِيّهٔ عُثمَانِیّه Devlet-i Aliyye-i Osmâniyye, Modern Turkish: Osmanlı İmparatorluğu or Osmanlı Devleti), also known as the Turkish Empire, Ottoman Turkey or Turkey, was an empire founded in 1299 by Oghuz Turks under Osman I in northwestern Anatolia. After conquests in the Balkans by Murad I between 1362 and 1389, the Ottoman sultanate was transformed into a transcontinental empire and claimant to the caliphate. The Ottomans ended the Byzantine Empire with the 1453 conquest of Constantinople by Mehmed the Conqueror.
During the 16th and 17th centuries, in particular at the height of its power under the reign of Suleiman the Magnificent, the Ottoman Empire was a multinational, multilingual empire controlling much of Southeast Europe, Western Asia, the Caucasus, North Africa, and the Horn of Africa. At the beginning of the 17th century the empire contained 32 provinces and numerous vassal states. Some of these were later absorbed into the Ottoman Empire, while others were granted various types of autonomy during the course of centuries.
Turkish usually refers to something related to Turkey, a country in Eurasia.
It may refer specifically to:
This video is about history of the Karamanids Empire , the historical turkic empire of how it developed and grew in an very powerful turkish prince in turkey general perhaps subscribe to my channel i hope you all have enjoyed stay groovy. my channel : https://www.youtube.com/user/SuperTarihci/videos follow me : https://twitter.com/GroovyHistorian check out my groovy historical blog : http://officalgroovyhistorian.com/
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Karamanids =======Image-Copyright-Info======= Image is in public domain Author-Info: Jecowa Image Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Karamanid_Dynasty_flag.svg =======Image-Copyright-Info======== ☆Video is targeted to blind users Attribution: Article text available under CC-BY-SA image source in video
Karamanoğlu Mehmet Bey'in Türkçü olduğundan türkçeyi her yerde kullanmayı zorunlu kıldığını biliyorduk meğer niyet tamamen farklıymış. Meğer Karamanlılar farsçayı kullanıyorlarmış.
Altaic/Turkic/Common Turkic/Old Anatolian Turkish/Ottoman-Azerbaijani Turkish/Turkish-Azerbaijani 11th-15th century Seljuk Empire Sultanate of Rûm Anatolian Beyliks Pre-Ottoman and Ottoman Period Karamanids
Osman 1 or Othman 1 or Osman Gazi (1258 -- 1326) Ottoman Turkish: Sultan Osman Ghazi, Turkish: Osman Gazi or Osman Bey or I. Osman, Osman Gazi Han), nicknamed "Kara" (black in Turkish-for his bravery), was the leader of the Ottoman Turks, and the founder of the dynasty that established and ruled the Ottoman State. The State, named after him, would prevail as a world empire for almost six centuries. It existed until 1 November 1922, after being in serious decline since the early 18th century. Osman announced the independence of his own small kingdom from the Seljuk Turks in 1299, and was acclaimed the Khan of the Kayihan tribe. The westward drive of the Mongol invasions had pushed scores of Muslims toward Osman's Anatolian principality, a power base that Osman was quick to consolidate. A...
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Nefise Hatun, Nefise Sultan, Nefise Melek Hatun, or Nefise Melek Sultan Hatun (c. 1363 - c. 1400) was an Ottoman princess, the daughter of Sultan Murad I of the Ottoman Empire. She was married to Prince Alaeddin Ali of Karaman, who was a rival of the rising Ottoman Empire and became the mother of the next Karamanid ruler, Mehmed II of Karaman, who was married to Princess Incu Hatun, the daughter of Ottoman Sultan Mehmed I. Her marriage served an alliance between the Ottomans and the Karamanids. Biography Her father served her to try to calm Alaeddin Bey, the son and successor of Halil Bey, ruler of Karamanids. He therefore married her to him in 1378. In the early days of the reign of Murad, Alaeddin, tried to increase the embarrassment that the revolt of the landowners of Galatia had raise...
Afşar Boyu © Infinitectual Afsar Foundation Afşar boyu, Oğuz Kağan Destanı'na göre Oğuzların 24 boyundan biri ve Kaşgarlı Mahmud'a göre Divân-ı Lügati't-Türk'deki yirmi iki Oğuz bölüğünden Altıncısı; "Afşar"lardır. Belgeleri şudur : Avsar.jpg[1] diye tanımladığı bir Oğuz boyudur. Bu boyların Bozoklar kolundan (sağ kolundan) Oğuz Kağan'ın oğlu Yıldız Han'ın dört oğlundan en büyüğü olan Afşar'ın soyundan gelir. Afshars, also called Avshar are a branch of the Turkic Oghuz groups.[1] These originally nomadic Oghuz tribes moved from Central Asia and finally most of them settled in Azerbaijan. They are considered as a branch of the Turkmens[2] or Azerbaijanis.[3] The Afshar tribes are the founders of the Afsharid dynasty and the Karamanid dynasty.[4] The Afshar tribes of Iran are two distinct ...
Bir milleti tarih sahnesinden indirmek isteyen güçler, ilk önce o milletin dilini hedef alır. İhanete uğrayan milletler ilk önce dilini, kimliğini, sonra da bütünlüğünü kaybeder. Karamanoğlulları, Oğuz Türklerinin Salur boyuna mensup bir Türk kabilesidir. Moğolların Asya'da Oğuz ülkelerine akınları ve baskıları, Müslüman Oğuzların batıya göç etmesini başlatmış oldu. Büyük Selçuklu İmparatorluğunun yıkılmasıyla da, burada yaşayan Oğuzlar, daha batıya, Anadolu'ya ve Mezopotamya'ya doğru göç etmeye başlamışlardı. Malazgirt zaferiyle de Anadolu'yu ve Mezopotamya'yı ebedi yurt edindiler. Yahya Kemal, '' Türkçe'nin çekilmediği yerler vatandır. Ancak çekildiği yerler, vatanlıktan çıkar. Vatanının kendi gövde ve ruhu Türkçedir. Bu bağ uzak coğrafyalardaki milyonlarca Türk'ü birbirine bağlar" diye ...
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Deliorman (Bulgarca: Лудогорие Ludogorie) Aşağı Tuna Ovası'nda yer alan; Rusçuk, Razgrad, Silistre, Şumnu ve Dobriç şehirlerini de kapsayan geniş bir bölgedir. Bu bölge hala Türklerin yoğun olarak oturdukları yerlerden biridir. Yerli halk tarafından böyle adlandırılmasının sebebi ağırlıklı olarak Meşe, Gürgen ve Kızılcık ağaçlarından oluşan çok sık ve geçit vermez ormanlarla örtülü olmasından ileri gelmektedir. Osmanlı arşivlerinde ise ismi "Deli orman" olarak geçmektedir. 1942'de Bulgaristan hükümeti Slav kökenli olan "Polesie" (orman tarafındaki yer) ismini koyduysa da bu isim asla yaygın kullanıma geçmedi ve 1952'de şu anki adına çevirildi. Bulgarca isim, Türkçeden mot-a-mot (kelimesi kelimesine) çeviri ile "Deli" (Луд), "Orman" (гора) oluşturulmuştur. Bölge tarihte pehlivanları ile ü...
The name Karamanlis (Greek: Καραμανλής) (also spelled Caramanlis) can refer to: A resident of Karamania, a region of Asia Minor in Turkey (Karamanlides). This is the original meaning. A Orthodox Christian who speaks Turkish. This is the most common use. Karamanli can also refer to the Karamanli dynasty of Tripoli,. • Constantine Karamanlis, former President and Prime Minister of Greece. Beylik of Karaman or of Karamanoğlu (Karamanoğulları in Turkish plural), also called the Karamanid Dynasty or the Karamanids. The Karamanids traced their ancestry back to Hoca Sadeddin and his son Nure Sufi, who emmigrated from Azerbaijan to Sivas.. In ancient times Karaman was known as Laranda the town was taken by the Turkish warlord Karamanoğlu Mehmet Bey and was renamed Karaman in his honor. Georgios ...
Ali of Karaman was the ruler of Karamanids in what is now modern Turkey in the 15th century . This channel is dedicated to make Wikipedia, one of the biggest knowledge databases in the world available to people with limited vision. Article available under a Creative Commons license Image source in video
February 27, 2016 | Turkish American Day ATAA 36th Annual Turkish American Conference February 25-27, 2016 Washington, DC
Karamanids =======Image-Copyright-Info======= Image is in public domain Author-Info: Jecowa Image Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Karamanid_Dynasty_flag.svg =======Image-Copyright-Info======== ☆Video is targeted to blind users Attribution: Article text available under CC-BY-SA image source in video
Altaic/Turkic/Common Turkic/Old Anatolian Turkish/Ottoman-Azerbaijani Turkish/Turkish-Azerbaijani 11th-15th century Seljuk Empire Sultanate of Rûm Anatolian Beyliks Pre-Ottoman and Ottoman Period Karamanids