Post on 30-Nov-2014
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Social Studies for 10th EGBTeacher: Mauricio Torres
DECLINE OF THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE
STRENGHTS OF THE EMPIRE• It rested on:
– Kapi Kullari system.– Centralized
absolutism of the Sultan.
– Tolerance– Islam
RELIGIOUS INTERFERENCE OF AFFAIRS• The Ulemas (religious
leaders) were grouped under the leadership of a religious head of state.
• These religious leaders now grew in power and had a voice in government affairs.
WEAKENING ECONOMY • During the 17th century, the Ottomans were no
longer advancing at great steps, but had finally settled down and set their borders.
• By now, they even began to lose the grip on the Eastern Mediterranean.– Portuguese sailors had navigated around Africa, reaching
India and China. This left Ottoman markets very weak.
• The state was now an oversized, clumsy and ineffective bureaucracy!– Their long ability to adapt was not there anymore, making
their old ways, obsolete.
OVERSIZED GOVERNMENT• The centralized government, which had been an
advantage, relied heavily on the ability and capabilities of their rulers.– They were now herded since an early age, into separate
and isolated facilities, full of luxury, but lacking education and even normal humane experiences. They were useless rulers.
• The Janissaries were also to blame:– They were overpaid. No longer slaves. Yet sultans relied
more and more on them, because the rest of their own armies grew obsolete.
– They later became “kingmakers”, looking out mostly for their own interests.
EXTERNAL ISSUES• With the Ottoman markets weaker, the
economy in general collapsed.– New and cheaper products came from America– Inflation rose.– New technologies were rejected by traditional
artisans.
• The lack of income, a primitive economy, added to the oversized and incompetent bureaucracy led to a long collapse.
SUBJECTIVE CAUSES• The Ottomans, due to their long years of
success, had an arrogant assumption of superiority.– In the beginning, the Turks had adapted and even
acquired techniques from their foes.– But later on, the rigid and orthodox Muslims came
to believe nothing worthy could be learned from “barbarous infidels”.
• Therefore, even inside the empire, non-Muslim subjects began to suffer from oppression. They had long been in charge of trade and finances.
PUSHING FOR REFORM• Even though at certain moments and times some
groups tried to push for reform and Westernization, only to find themselves blocked by conservatives.– Only when the incoming threat from Russia did they
actively seek to modernize the country.
• During the early 1800s, the Janissaries were massacred (1826), religious leaders changed their point of view towards reform. This period of reforms was known as the Tanzimat.
REFORM!• Finally, in the year 1876, Mihrdat Pasha
introduced a constitution and an assembly was also elected.– But, this new system of law, was still under the
jurisdiction of the Sharia.
• Western institutions were slowly adopted but could not be easily implemented. Minorities struggled to be accepted into mainstream society.– These ethnic minorities soon sought independence
thought the revival of nationalist ideas: Greeks, Bosniaks, Albanians, Egyptians and Arabs.
SICK MAN OF EUROPE• Faced with a collapse of institutions, the
economy, rising nationalism and a failed reform, the once mighty Ottoman Empire was now known as the Sick Man of Europe.
CAUSES FOR DECLINE
External
• Economy: alternate trade routes
• Development of European powers
• European expansion
Internal
• Obsolete army
• Traditionalist economy and law
• Inept leadership
• Persecution of minorities
• Arrogance
• Insufficient reform efforts