“gunpowder” empires

30
“Gunpowder” Empires

Upload: dore

Post on 09-Feb-2016

47 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

“Gunpowder” Empires. Why was the West Advancing?. How did the Renaissance contribute? How did the Reformation contribute? How did Exploration & Absolutism contribute?. Why did China fall behind?. What factors led to China not dominating the West?. Why The West Was Advancing. Renaissance - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 2: “Gunpowder” Empires

Why was the West Advancing?• How did the Renaissance contribute?

• How did the Reformation contribute?• How did Exploration & Absolutism

contribute?Why did China fall behind?

• What factors led to China not dominating the West?

Page 3: “Gunpowder” Empires

Why The West Was Advancing

• Renaissance– Humanism & the individual, classicism, secularism

• Reformation– Questioning (due to Middle Ages)– Competition for followers, missionary work

• Exploration & Absolutism– Spread of influence– Wealth from empire– Expansion of navy & army– Individual competition, national competition– Gain of knowledge (technology, science, medicine)

Page 4: “Gunpowder” Empires

Why China Fell Behind• No exploration, expansion of influence• No competition for wealth, power (no

need to enhance military, navy)• No foreign influence (new tech.,

knowledge)

Page 5: “Gunpowder” Empires

The Anatolian Turks• No central power• “ghazis” or warriors for Islam• Military societies led by emir, or

chief commander• Strict Islamic code of

conduct• Raided territories of

“infidels”

Page 6: “Gunpowder” Empires

Osman’s State• a.k.a. Othman – most successful

ghazi– Followers known as Ottomans

• Military use of gunpowder– Replaced archers on horseback

w/musket-carrying foot-soldiers– Among the 1st to use cannons as

weapons of attack

Page 7: “Gunpowder” Empires

Ottoman Conquest• Osman’s son Orkhan I

declared himself sultan (“overlord”, “one with power”)

• Ottomans acted kindly towards conquered people– Local officials appointed by

sultan– Improved the lives of

peasants

Page 8: “Gunpowder” Empires

Tamerlane• Timur the Lame =

rebellious warrior from Samarkand in C. Asia– Europeans called him

Tamerlane• Burned Baghdad & crushed

Ottoman forces at Battle of Ankara (1402)

• This defeat halted Ottoman expansion

Page 9: “Gunpowder” Empires

Summary Questions• How was the Anatolian Turk

society organized?• Why was Osman’s military

successful?• How did the Ottomans treat the

people they conquered?• What was the significance of

Tamerlane?

Page 10: “Gunpowder” Empires

Siege of Constantinople• Mehmed II (“the

Conqueror”) “Give me Constantinople!”

• Constantinople dominated Bosporous Strait– Having control of this

waterway meant controlling trade & transportation between Ottoman territories

Page 11: “Gunpowder” Empires

The End of the Byzantine Empire

Page 12: “Gunpowder” Empires

“Golden Horn”

Page 13: “Gunpowder” Empires

Siege of Constantinople• 1453 – began firing cannons on city walls• Turkish fleet dragged 70 ships over hill on

greased runners• Attacked Constantinople from two sides• After 7 weeks, Turks found break in wall

& entered city• Mehmed II opened Constantinople to new

citizens of many religions & backgrounds– Jews, Christians, Muslims, Turks, non-Turks

helped rebuild city, now known as Istanbul

Page 14: “Gunpowder” Empires

Hagia Sophia

Page 15: “Gunpowder” Empires

Hagia Sophia - interior

Page 16: “Gunpowder” Empires

Ottomans & Islam• Selim the Grim defeated Safavids of

Persia• Conquered holiest cities of Islam

Mecca & Medina• Captured Cairo, the intellectual

center of Muslim world

Page 17: “Gunpowder” Empires

Suleyman• Suleyman “the

Magnificent” • Great military leader

– Dominated Mediterranean– Controlled trade routes

• Moved northward into Hungary & Austria– Threatened central Europe

• Most powerful monarch of the time

Page 18: “Gunpowder” Empires

Suleyman the Lawgiver• Created law code to handle

both criminal and civil actions– Simplified system of taxation – Reduced gov’t bureaucracy

• Bettered the daily life of almost every citizen

Page 19: “Gunpowder” Empires

Summary Questions• What was the advantage to taking

Constantinople?• How was Mehmed II able to conquer

Constantinople?• What was the significance of

Mehmed’s military conquests?• Why was Suleyman given the name

“lawgiver”? Specific reasons

Page 20: “Gunpowder” Empires

Structured Social Organization• Palace bureaucracy staffed by

20,000 personal slaves• Policy of devshirme army

drafted boys from conquered Christian territories– Educated, converted to Islam,

trained as soldiers• Elite force of 30,000 soldiers

known as janissaries were trained to be loyal to sultan only

• Christian families sometimes bribed officials to take their children

Page 21: “Gunpowder” Empires

Structured Social Organization

• Suleyman required to follow Islamic law– Granted freedom of worship to other religious

communities• Treated communities as millets or nations

– The heads of the millets reported back to sultan– Minimized conflict between various religions

Page 22: “Gunpowder” Empires

Cultural Flowering• Suleyman studied poetry,

history, geography, astronomy, mathematics, architecture

• Employed Sinan, one of world’s finest architects, to build Mosque of Suleyman– Complex w/domes, includes

four schools, library, bath, hospital

• Art & literature flourished• Painters & poets used

foreign influences to express Ottoman ideas

Page 23: “Gunpowder” Empires

Why Didn’t Ottomans Dominate the West?• Military weakness

– Europeans were surpassing Muslim technologies (navy)

– Collapse of janissary system – too involved in politics

– Tamerlane halts expansion– Failure at Vienna

• Political weakness– Series of ineffective rulers– No expansion of influence, exploration

• Economic weakness– No dominance on trade

• Other weaknesses = no new technology/medicine

Page 24: “Gunpowder” Empires

Ottomans exist until WWI

Page 25: “Gunpowder” Empires

Summary Questions• What were the advantages of the devshirme system for the sultan?

• What was the importance of Suleyman’s religious tolerance?

• Which cultural achievements of Suleyman’s reign were similar to the European Renaissance?

• What factors led to the decline of the Ottoman Empire?

Page 26: “Gunpowder” Empires

Safavid Empire

Page 27: “Gunpowder” Empires

Isma’il & Islam• Forced conversion (to

Shi’ite sect), attacked Sunni• Defeated by Ottomans

Page 28: “Gunpowder” Empires

Safavid Golden Age• Shah Abbas• Reformed military• New capital Esfahan• Reformed gov’t

– Punished corruption• Religious toleration

– Welcomed Christian religious leaders

• Cultural blending– Chinese potters, Armenian

woven carpets

Page 29: “Gunpowder” Empires

Decline of Safavids• Weak or ineffective, corrupt, cruel

leaders– Assassinations

• Attacks from Ottomans, Afghans

Page 30: “Gunpowder” Empires

Main Points• What similarities do you see

between the “Golden Ages” of both the Ottomans & Safavids? What brings an empire to its height?

• What factors led to the decline of these empires? Why didn’t they dominate the West?