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Suleyman the Lawgiver.
The Muslim World Expands,1300–1700
Three great Muslim powers—the Ottoman, Safavid, and Mughal empires—emerge between 1300 and 1600. By 1700 all three were in decline.
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Section 1
The Ottomans Build aVast Empire The Ottomans establish a Muslim empirethat combine many cultures and lasted formore than 600 years.
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Turks Move into Byzantium
The Ottomans Build a Vast Empire
Turkish Warriors• Many Turks live in Anatolia, on edge of Byzantine
Empire• Many see themselves as ghazis—warriors who
fight for Islam
Osman Establishes a State• From 1300 to 1326, Osman, successful ghazi, builds
state in Anatolia• Europeans call him Othman and followers Ottomans• Ottomans win battles because they use muskets and
cannons• Successors expand state through alliances and land
buying
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Continued . . .
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Osman Establishes a State• Orkhan, Osman’s son, declares himself sultan—
overlord• In 1361, Turks conquer Adrianople• Ottomans rule fairly over conquered peoples
continued Turks Move into Byzantium
Timur the Lame Halts Expansion• Timur the Lame—Tamerlane—rises to power in
Central Asia• Timur defeats Ottomans in 1402, burning Baghdad
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Powerful Sultans Spur Dramatic Expansion
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Murad II• Murad II begins expansion
Mehmed II Conquers Constantinople• Murad’s son, Mehmed II, conquers
Constantinople in 1453• Opens city to Jews, Christians, and Muslims and
rebuilds
Ottomans Take Islam’s Holy Cities• In 1512, Selim the Grim, Mehmed’s grandson,
comes to power• He defeats Persian Safavids and pushes into
North Africa• Conquers Mecca, Medina, and Cairo: important
Muslim cities
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Suleyman the Lawgiver
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A Great Ruler• Suleyman the Lawgiver, Selim’s son, rules from
1520 to 1566
The Empire Reaches Its Limits• Suleyman conquers Belgrade (1521) and
Rhodes (1522)• Ottomans control eastern Mediterranean• Turks take North African coastline, control inland
trade routes • Suleyman’s forces advance to Vienna• By 1526, Ottoman Empire is the largest in the
world
Continued . . .
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Highly Structured Social Organization• Suleyman creates law code, reduces
bureaucracy, simplifies taxation• Army uses devshirme—drafts boys from
conquered lands• Trains 30,000 elite soldiers—janissaries—loyal
only to the sultan• Jews and Christians allowed to practice own
religion
continued Suleyman the Lawgiver
Cultural Flowering• Suleyman’s broad interests lead to flourishing of
arts, learning• Sinan, brilliant architect, designs magnificent
Mosque of Suleyman
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The Empire Declines Slowly
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Gradual Fall• Suleyman kills one son and exiles another• Third son inherits throne but rules weakly• Later sultans kill their brothers and leave their
sons uneducated• Long line of weak sultans leads to empire’s
eventual fall
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The Safavid Empire produce a rich and complex blended culture in Persia.
Section 2
Cultural Blending CASE STUDY: The Safavid Empire
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Patterns of Cultural Blending
Cultural Blending
Cultural Blending in Persia• Between16th and 18th centuries a Shi’ite Muslim
dynasty ruled Persia• Safavid Empire—Shi’ite Muslim dynasty from 16th to
18th centuries
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Causes of Cultural Blending• Changes occur through migration, conquest, trade,
or religion
Results of Cultural Blending• Changes in language, religion, government, use of
technology• Racial and ethnic blending, intermarriage• Cultural styles adapted into arts and architecture
CASE STUDY:The Safavid Empire
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The Safavids Build an Empire
Safavid Origins• Begins as religious order named for founder• Safavids concentrate on building powerful military
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Isma’il Conquers Persia• Fourteen-year-old Isma’il conquers Iran by 1451• Takes title of shah—king• Makes Shi’a Islam official religion; kills Sunnis• Son, Tahmasp, greatly expands empire
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A Safavid Golden Age
Abbas the Great• Shah Abbas—Abbas the Great—takes throne in
1587
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Reforms• Helps create a thriving Safavid culture• Reforms military and government; brings in Christian
trade
A New Capital• Esfahan—new capital—is one of world’s most
beautiful cities
Art Works• Chinese artisans blend Chinese and Persian styles
Carpets• Carpet weaving becomes national industry
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The Dynasty Declines Quickly
The Safavid Empire Weakens• Abbas kills and blinds his ablest sons• Safi, Abbas’s incompetent grandson, leads to
empire’s decline• By 1722, the empire is losing land to the
Ottomans and Afghans • Nadir Shah Afshar expands the empire, but it falls
apart in 1747
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Section 3
The Mughal Empirein IndiaThe Mughal Empire brings Turks, Persians, and Indians together in a vast empire.
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Early History of the Mughals
The Mughal Empire in India
Mongol Invaders• Mughals, or Mongols, invade northwestern India
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Conflict• Muslims and Hindus fight for almost 300 years• In 1000, loose empire of Turkish warlords—Delhi
Sultanate—forms
Delhi Sultanate• Sultans rule from Delhi between 13th and 16th
centuries• Timur the Lame destroys Delhi in 1398
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Early History of the Mughals
Babur Founds an Empire• Babur becomes king of small land in Central Asia at
age 11• Is dethroned and driven south into India• Army conquers much of northern India, forming
Mughal Empire• Son Humayun loses most of the territory Babur
conquered• Babur’s grandson succeeds Humayan
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Akbar’s Golden Age
Babur’s Grandson• Akbar—“Greatest One”— rules India from 1556
to 1605
A Military Conqueror• Akbar uses cannons; names native Indians as
officers
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Continued . . .
A Liberal Ruler• Akbar allows religious freedom and abolishes tax on
non-Muslims • Akbar allows all people a chance to serve in high
government office• Hindu finance minister develops better tax plan;
income grows• Akbar gives land to his officials, then reclaims
it when they die
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A Flowering of Culture• Many cultures blend, mixing art, education,
politics, and language• New languages like Hindi and Urdu emerge
continued Akbar’s Golden Age
The Arts and Literature• Book illustrations, called miniatures, flourish• Hindu literature reemerges during Akbar’s rule
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Architecture• New architectural style named for Akbar develops
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Akbar’s Successors
Jahangir and Nur Jahan• Akbar’s son, Jahangir, allows wife Nur Jahan to
control government• Nur Jahan appoints her father prime minister • Nur Jahan favors son Khusrau over other sons• Khusrau rebels, supported by Sikhs, nonviolent
religious group• Sikhs become targets of Mughal hatred
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Continued . . .
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Shah Jahan• Shah Jahan—Jahangir’s son and successor,
marries Persian princess• Assassinates all competitors for throne• His wife dies while giving birth to her 14th child in
1631• Taj Mahal—huge marble tomb Shah Jahan
builds for his wife• Taj Mahal is one of the most beautiful buildings
in the world
continued Akbar’s Successors
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Continued . . .
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The People Suffer• People suffer paying for wars and monuments• Shah Jahan’s third son—Aurangzeb—imprisons
father and takes over
continued Akbar’s Successors
Aurangzeb’s Reign• Rules between 1658 and 1707; expands empire to
its largest• Strictly enforces Islamic law and attempts to get rid
of Hindus• Hindus rebel and Sikhs become militant• Levies oppressive taxes on Hindus, causing more
rebellion
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The Empire’s Decline and Decay
The Mughal Empire Crumbles• Over 2 million people die of famine while Aurangzeb
wages war• Emperor becomes a figurehead; empire breaks into
separate states• Meanwhile, traders arrive from England, Holland,
France, Portugal• European traders gain key ports
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