1. From the Black Death to Powered Flight
Six centuries – the lifetime of the Ottoman Empire – is a long time. The Ottoman dynasty had already established itself when the Black Death raged in the mid-fourteenth century, and it was still around as WWI raged in the twentieth century. During that span, Ottoman troops went from fighting against the Byzantine Empire with bows and arrows, to fighting against the British Empire with machine guns, modern artillery, and airplanes.
Defeat in WWI and its immediate aftermath finished off the Ottomans. After the war, the last sultan, Mehmet VI, signed a peace treaty that was seen as a humiliating betrayal by Turkish nationalists in Anatolia, the empire’s heartland. A nationalist opposition led by Mustafa Kemal (later surnamed “Ataturk”, or Father of the Turks) waged a successful Turkish War of Independence (1919-1923). By the time the dust had settled, Mehmet VI had been forced to abdicate, bringing to an end the Ottoman Empire, whose Turk heartland became The Republic of Turkey.
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Where Did We Find This Stuff? Some Sources and Further Reading
Daily Sabah, August 6th, 2015 – The History of Fratricide in the Ottoman Empire
Encyclopedia Britannica – Black Army
Encyclopedia Britannica – Siege of Vienna
Factinate – 42 Unhinged Facts About Ibrahim, the Mad Sultan of the Ottoman Empire
Freely, John – Istanbul: The Imperial City (1998)
Kinross, Lord – The Ottoman Centuries: The Rise and Fall of the Turkish Empire (1977)
Listverse – 10 Dark Secrets of the Ottoman Empire
Live Science – What Was the Most Pointless Battle in History?
Murphey, Rhoades – Ottoman Warfare, 1500-1700 (1999)
Ottoman History – Shehzade Mustafa
Turkey For You – History of Seljuk Turks
Warfare History Network – Clash of the Tyrants
War History Online – Once the Greatest Army in Europe: The Black Army of Hungary
War History Online – Punch Drunk at Karansebes: The Austrian Army That Fought Itself
Wheatcroft, Andrew – The Enemy at the Gate: Habsburgs, Ottomans, and the Battle For Europe (2009)
Wikipedia – Anarchy at Samarra