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XIV International Economic History Congress, Helsinki 2006Session 106: State and Finance in the Early Modern Times in the Eurasian Continuum
Kayhan ORBAY University of Vienna
Ottoman Central Administration and War Finance, Late Seventeenth Century
The course of the 16th and 17th centuries, which is recently called the “transformation
period” in the Ottoman historiography, was a crucial period of changes, economic crises and
social turmoil.1 The Ottoman fiscal system witnessed significant changes in the same period.
The Ottoman finance department experienced structural reorganization, fiscal practices and
the taxation system underwent several changes.2 Some changes in the fiscal sphere were
fundamental and long lasting whereas some financial measures were rather temporary and
developed as relatively prompt respond to meet urgent fiscal needs. To mention a few of these
changes during the 17th century, the taxation burden laid on large masses of the population
increased as some customary and extraordinary taxes were combined and regularly levied, as
well as new taxes were assessed. Some methods supplying cash to the treasury for its
immediate needs were applied more largely in tax collection. These changes and several other
fiscal arrangements of the 17th century such as debasements and tax reforms were mainly
connected with the crucial matter of war finance. However, the central administration was in
1 It has been a commonly held argument in the contemporary historiography that the Ottoman Empire passedthrough a period of transformation, and experienced an economic and fiscal crisis, as well as social disturbancesin the late sixteenth century and in the seventeenth century. For the general account of and major developmentsin this period see Halil nalc k, “The Ottoman Decline and Its Effects Upon the Reaya”, in The Ottoman Empire:Conquest, Organization, and Economy, London, Variorum Reprints, 1978, XIII, 338-354; Idem, “Military andFiscal Transformation in the Ottoman Empire, 1600-1700”, in Studies in Ottoman Social and Economic History,London, Variorum Reprints, 1985; Mustafa Akda , Türkiyenin ktisadi ve çtimai Tarihi 2 (1453-1559),stanbul, Cem Yay nevi, 1995.
2 nalc k, “Military and Fiscal Transformation”; Ahmet Tabako lu, Gerileme Dönemine Girerken OsmanlMaliyesi, stanbul, Dergah Yay nlar , 1985; Linda Darling, Revenue-Raising and Legitimacy; Tax Collection andFinance Administration in the Otoman Empire 1560-1660, Leiden, E.J. Brill, 1996; Idem, “Ottoman FiscalAdministration: Decline or Adaptation?”, The Journal of European Economic History, 26/1, Spring, 1997.
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desperate need of money under the pressure of growing military expenditures and compelled
to resort to some other tools for financing warfare as well.
The fiscal needs of the Empire and the following fiscal transformations were closely
related to the developments in the military field in the 16th and 17th centuries. Growing size of
the standing army in these centuries expanded the salary payments, and together with the long
wars on several fronts put an increasing pressure on the treasury. Increasing military
expenditures eventually led to large budget deficits thus asked for additional financial
measures. It is striking that beside the well-known and most-resorted measures to increase
revenues such as extra taxation and borrowing, the fisc looked at the resources held by the
charitable foundations (waqfs) for its finance, more precisely for war finance. Although many
waqfs were regularly supporting the central treasuries through transfers from their budget
surpluses, drawing large sums directly from the waqf revenues was a completely new option
for state finance which was indeed applied once or perhaps twice in the 17th century. This
particular case, which depicts the state treasury in desperate need for war finance and
supposes further implications for the waqf system is given a particular emphasis in the present
study.
Waqf Funds for the Financing of Wars after the Vienna Defeat
When the Ottoman central administration attempted to draw financial resources for its
warfare from the waqfs at the end of the 17th century, the glorious victories of the Empire had
already belonged to past days. For more than a century, the Empire had waged long and
exhaustive wars on several fronts against strong armies of Iran, Venice, the Habsburgs and
Poland. The military campaigns in the 17th century were not bringing large profits through
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territorial expansion as before, on the contrary they resulted in large budget deficits, and with
territorial losses at the end of the century, the central treasury lost revenue sources as well.
The waqfs, in particular the imperial waqfs the largest economic and social institutions
in the Ottoman Empire, were already contributing to the central treasury and hence to the
campaign budgets through regular deliveries from their budget surpluses. However, after the
Ottoman defeat at Vienna in 1683, the Ottoman Empire had to fight against the armies of the
Sacred Alliance of the Habsburgs, Venice and Poland in the following years. As the central
budget went into fiscal straits due to this costly warfare, it sought for more funding from the
foundations. In 1688, the Ottomans lost Belgrade, a large town in a highly strategic location
for maintaining sovereignty over the Balkans. The army was being prepared for the recovery
of Belgrade in spite of the drained treasury. In the year 1689, and then probably again in
1693-94, the central administration required the delivery of payments for six months’ salary
of the waqfs’ employees. The reason for this was that the treasury fell into difficulty due to
the military campaign.
“Military Revolution” in and against the Ottoman Army
The changes taking place in the Ottoman Empire’s fiscal administration and practices
during the 16th and 17th centuries were associated with the changes and needs in the military
sphere and all these changes were usually defined as “military and fiscal transformation” in
Ottoman historiography.3 The military transformation in the Ottoman Empire was stimulated
and forced by the contemporary military developments in the West. It has been widely
recognized in historiography that the European warfare experienced a “military revolution” in
3 nalc k, “Military and Fiscal Transformation”.
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the 16th and 17th centuries.4 The “military revolution” is defined –among others- with
reference to the increasing military effectiveness of the firearms and consequent changes in
army composition and in battle tactics accompanied by the spreading use of handguns and
field artillery. Engineering in new fortification designs called “trace italienne” was developed
against new threats of the battlefield with siege cannons. The growing size of the standing
armies is also argued as one of the fundamental developments in the “military revolution”
conception.
With regard to the military field, the “military revolution” is supposed to result in
Western military superiority over the Ottomans first halting their advance in Europe and then
overcoming them. In the fiscal sphere, the “military revolution” brought about the overall
increase in warfare budgets with the bigger standing armies demanding larger salary
payments, costly fortifications to build, and the increasing costs of logistics coming with the
procurement, maintenance and deployment of diversified ordnance, as well as with the
reforms in administrative apparatus to support the new warfare.
Mentioning briefly the military developments in the Ottoman Empire and its reaction to
the European “military revolution”, it seems that the number of soldiers in the central
Ottoman army had already begun to increase towards the end of the 16th century.5 In addition,
4 For the “military revolution” discussion in historiography see Clifford J. Rogers, “The Military Revolution inHistory and Historiography”, in The Military Revolution Debate, ed. Clifford J. Rogers, Westview Press, 1995,1-10. Also see Michael Roberts, “The Military Revolution, 1560-1660, in The Military Revolution Debate, ed.Clifford J. Rogers, Westview Press, 1995, 13-35; Geoffey Parker, The Military Revolution, Military Innovationand the Rise of the West, 1500-1800, Cambridge University Press, 1988; The term ‘revolution’ itself isdisputable as a term accurately defining the developments against the fact that changes and innovations givingway to military transformation and a new warfare took place in a process. The period which the “militaryrevolution” is ascribed to is also controversial, see Geoffrey Parker, “The ‘Military Revolution, 1560-1660’ – AMyth?”, in The Military Revolution Debate, ed. Clifford J. Rogers, Westview Press, 1995, 37-54; Jeremy Black,“A Military Revolution? A 1660-1792 Perspective”, in The Military Revolution Debate, ed. Clifford J. Rogers,Westview Press, 1995, 95-114.5 For the “military revolution” discussion in the context of Ottoman history, as well as for its military and fiscalconsequences see John F. Guilmartin, “The Military Revolution: Origins and First Tests Abroad, in The MilitaryRevolution Debate, ed. Clifford J. Rogers, Westview Press, 1995, 299-333; Rhoads Murphy, Ottoman Warfare,1500-1700, London, UCL Press, 1999; Jonathan Grant, “Rethinking the Ottoman ‘Decline’: MilitaryTechnology Diffusion in the Ottoman Empire, Fifteenth to Eighteenth Centuries”, Journal of World History,Vol. 10, No. 1, 1999; Colin Imber, The Ottoman Empire, Palgrave MacMillan, 2002; Gabor Agoston, Guns for
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the Ottoman army recruited mercenary troops equipped with firearms in the 17th century. In a
similar way to the developments in the Western armies, handguns diffused and field artillery
deployed on a large extent.6 Recent research reveals that the Ottoman army was not inferior to
its counterparts and even superior in some aspects. But it was the changing international
politics and balance of power that forced the Ottomans to engage long and multi-front wars.7
At the same time, the Ottoman Empire had to cope with the financial pressure of the increased
costs of new warfare. As the cost of warfare went up due both to the larger standing army and
the increasing ordnance and provisioning costs, and as the Empire engaged in long wars
fought on two fronts against Iran and the Habsburgs in the late 16th century, the central
treasury’s need for ready cash had increased.8
Fiscal Deterioration in the 17th Century
In addition to the rising military expenditures due to the frequent military campaigns
and long wars, during the 17th century, the size of the waged army further grew, almost
doubling the wage payments between the mid-16th and mid-17th centuries, and making the
salary payments for military personnel a considerable part of the central budget. This put an
the Sultan; Military Power and the Weapons Industry in the Ottoman Empire, Cambridge University Press,2005.6 Murphy, Ottoman Warfare; Virginia Aksan, “Ottoman War and Warfare 1453-1812”, in War in the EarlyModern World, ed. Jeremy Black, UCL Press, 1999, 147-175; Agoston, Guns for the Sultan. Also see HalilInalc k, “The Socio-Political Effects of the Diffusion of Fire-Arms in the Middle East”, in The Ottoman Empire:Conquest, Organization, and Economy, London, Variorum Reprints, 1978, XIV, 196-201; R. C. Jennings,“Firearms, Bandits, and Gun-Control: some evidence on Ottoman policy towards firearms in the possession ofreaya, from judicial records of Kayseri, 1600-1627”, Archivum Ottomanicum, VI, 1980, 339-358.7 Murphy, Ottoman Warfare; Agoston, Guns for the Sultan.8 Caroline Finkel, The Administration of Warfare: The Ottoman Military Campaigns in Hungary, 1593-1606,Wien, VWGÖ, 1988, Beihefte zur Wiener Zeitschrift für die Kunde des Morgenlandes; Caroline Finkel, “TheCost of Ottoman Warfare and Defence”, Byzantinische Forschungen, XVI, 1991, 91-103; Darling, Revenue-Raising and Legitimacy; Murphy, Ottoman Warfare; Agoston, Guns for the Sultan. In the same period, theOttoman naval fleet experienced an expansion. Logistics required large investment into production facilities,transportation means, organizational structure, storing etc. however, some researchers argue that firearmtechnology contributed marginally to the total cost of warfare. Instead, the size of the waged-army was the majordeterminant of the costs, I. A. A. Thompson, “Money, Money, and Yet More Money!” Finance, Fiscal-State, andthe Military Revolution: Spain 1500-1650”, in The Military Revolution Debate, ed. Clifford J. Rogers, WestviewPress, 1995, 273-298.
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additional pressure on the state budget. The army experienced another expansion between
1683 and 1699 increasing the salary payments further.9 In this period, the salary payments for
the military amounted to 50-60% of the central budget and even to 80% in the campaign
years.10
In the 1690s, together with warfare against the Sacred Alliance, the central treasury
experienced a series of severe budget deficits in the campaign years.11 The Outer Treasury
drew large sums frequently from the Inner Treasury, the private treasury of the Sultan himself
in these years.12 The budget deficit of the years 1687-88 and 1690-91 were particularly large
and many extraordinary financial arrangements coincided with the financial troubles of these
years. 13
As the Ottoman Empire experienced an inflationary period parallel to the European
“price revolution of the 16th century”, but especially following the debasement of 1585, the
prices, pushing up the costs of employing, equipping and provisioning an army had steeply
risen at the end of the 16th century.14 Although prices fluctuated up and down throughout most
of the 17th century, they were more than twice as high as before and tending to increase in the
last three decades of the century.15 The price risings of the late 16th century worsened the
budget balance as the inflation increased the expenditures while the revenues from taxation
were relatively rigid to keep pace with the price rises.
9 Tabako lu, Gerileme Dönemine Girerken Osmanl Maliyesi, p. 189.10 Tabako lu, Gerileme Dönemine Girerken Osmanl Maliyesi, p. 183-193, 209f.11 Tabako lu, Gerileme Dönemine Girerken Osmanl Maliyesi; Murphy, Ottoman Warfare.12 Tabako lu, Gerileme Dönemine Girerken Osmanl Maliyesi, p. 37.13 Tabako lu, Gerileme Dönemine Girerken Osmanl Maliyesi, p. 15f, 74-80.14 Ömer Lütfi Barkan, “The Price Revolution of the Sixteenth Century: A Turning Point in the Economic Historyof the Near East”, International Journal of Middle East Studies, 1975, 6, 3-28; Cf. Haim Gerber, “The MonetarySystem of the Ottoman Empire”, Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient, vol. XXV, Part III,1982, 308-324, and Holm Sundhaussen, “Die Preisrevolution im Osmanischen Reich wahrend der zweitenHalfte des 16. Jahrhunderts”, Südost-Forschungen, 1983, 42, 169-181; evket Pamuk, “The Price Revolution inthe Ottoman Empire Reconsidered”, International Journal of Middle East Studies, 33, 2001, 69-89; Idem,“Prices in the Ottoman Empire, 1469-1914”, International Journal of Middle East Studies, 36, 2004, 451-68.15 evket Pamuk, A Monetary History of the Ottoman Empire, New York, Cambridge University Press, 2000;Idem, Istanbul ve Di er Kentlerde 500 Y ll k Fiyatlar ve Ücretler, 1469-1998, Ankara, Devlet IstatistikEnstitüsü, 2000.
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Besides, large rebel armies were roaming through Anatolia plundering the villages and
even attacking towns in the late 16th and in the first half of the 17th century. The widespread
and large-scale revolts disrupted the revenue collection and despoiled the tax base, thus they
further exacerbated the fiscal balance.16 The uprisings were followed by depopulation and
then a population decline which is defined to the extent of “demographic catastrophe” by
some historians.17 The demographic decline accompanied by the stagnating rural and town
economy and by the commercial losses due to the changing international trade routes further
reduced the revenue sources of the central treasury.
In the military sphere, as a result of the aforementioned developments in military
technology, the timariots, namely the provincial cavalry troops using traditional arms
gradually lost their previous importance against the new military troops equipped with
firearms. The timar system was a prebendal system in which the timariots were awarded
certain tax revenues in return for military service. Therefore its gradual disappearance brought
about a change in revenue collection. The revenue sources in the timar system were allocated
according to the land surveying system (tahrîr). Even long before the timar system
disappeared, the land surveying ceased to be performed and was replaced by the “avâr z”
surveys in the late 16th century. The tax farming system (iltizâm) was applied extensively in
16 Darling, Revenue-Raising and Legitimacy. For the rebel movements and their effects on economy and societysee Ça atay Uluçay M., XVII. As rda Saruhan’da E kiyal k ve Halk Hareketleri, stanbul, Manisa HalkeviYay nlar ndan Say : XI, 1944; nalc k, “Military and Fiscal Transformation”; William J. Griswold, The GreatAnatolian Rebellion 1000-1020 / 1591-1611, Berlin, Klaus Schwarz, 1983; Karen Barkey, Bandits andBureaucrats, New York, Cornell University Press, 1994; Mustafa Akda , Türk Halk n Dirlik ve DüzenlikKavgas , Celali syanlar , stanbul, Cem Yay nevi, 1995.17 For the depopulation and population decline in Anatolia in the 17th century see Ronald C. Jennings, “UrbanPopulation in Anatolia in the Sixteenth Century: A Study of Kayseri, Karaman, Amasya, Trabzon, andErzurum”, International Journal of Middle East Studies, VII, 1976, 21-57; Bruce McGowan, Economic Life inthe Ottoman Europe; Taxation, Trade and the Struggle for Land, 1600-1800, Cambridge, Cambridge UniversityPress, 1981; Mehmet Öz, XV.-XVI. Yüzy llarda Canik Sanca , Ankara, Turk Tarih Kurumu, 1999; Oktay Özel,“Population Changes in Ottoman Anatolia During the 16th and 17th Centuries: The “Demographic Crisis”Reconsidered”, International Journal of Middle East Studies, 36, 2004, 181-205; Idem, “State, Banditry andEconomy: On the Financial Impact of the Celali Movement in Ottoman Anatolia”, in The Proceedings of theIXth Congress of Economic and Social History of Turkey, Dubrovnik 20-23 August 2001, Ankara, Türk TarihKurumu, forthcoming.
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tax collection to meet the state’s demand for ready cash in the 17th century.18 In this system,
the collection of state revenues was farmed out under a contract for a cash-sum. The life-time
renting system (mâlikâne), which supplied cash revenue to the state, was also applied first
from the last years of the 17th century onwards.19 With the introduction of new methods of tax
assessment and collection, and as will be seen later, along with the new impositions and
changing weights of various taxes in the central budget, the fiscal administration experienced
a reorganization. The finance department grew and some bureaus underwent an expansion and
diversification as well.20
Fiscal Measures to Increase Revenues
To review briefly, long and costly wars on several theaters in the late 16th and 17th
centuries and the rising military expenses to maintain a larger standing army brought about
fiscal difficulties which were exacerbated as the budget imbalance grew with the increasing
expenditures in the overall budget due to the inflationary period of the late 16th and late 17th
centuries. As the treasury began to experience constant fiscal straits and faced budget deficits,
the government was compelled to re-organize its financial system to find additional
revenues.21
In search for additional cash resources for the treasury, the Ottoman central
administration resorted to a variety of means ranging from coining copper money to the new
18 Tabako lu, Gerileme Dönemine Girerken Osmanl Maliyesi; Darling, Revenue-Raising and Legitimacy;nalc k, “Military and Fiscal Transformation”, pp. 322-327, 333f.
19 Tabako lu, Gerileme Dönemine Girerken Osmanl Maliyesi; nalc k, “The Ottoman Decline and Its Effects”,pp. 341, 349; idem, “Çiftliklerin Do u: Devlet, Toprak Sahipleri ve Kirac lar”, in Osmanl Toprak Mülkiyetive Ticari Tar m, eds. Ç. Keyder, F. Tabak, stanbul, Tarih Yurt Vakf , 1998, pp. 22-24; Akda , Türkiyeninktisadi ve çtimai Tarihi, pp. 294, 317; Bruce McGowan, “The Study of Land and Agriculture in the Ottoman
Provinces within the Context of an Expanding World Economy in the 17th and 18th Centuries”, InternationalJournal of Turkish Studies, 1981, vol. 2, no. 1, 57-63.20 Darling, Revenue-Raising and Legitimacy.21 Akda , Türkiyenin ktisadi ve çtimai Tarihi, pp. 281, 287; Halil nalc k, “The Ottoman State: Economy andSociety, 1300-1600”, in An Economic and Social History of the Ottoman Empire, 1300-1914, eds. Halil nalc kwith Donald Quataert, New York, Cambridge University Press, 1994, 11-409, p. 24.
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methods in tax collection that were mentioned above.22 The Ottoman Empire applied an
expansive monetary policy through debasements and coinage in the years of fiscal difficulty.
After a long period of monetary stability, the central government debased the akça (silver
coin) in the late 16th century in order to create additional income for the treasury.23 The
decades following this debasement are known as the period of fiscal and monetary instability
in Ottoman history.24 Although the debasements brought a relief to the treasury, their adverse
effects coming with the debasement-pushed inflation were not late to show up in the central
budget.
The large group of irregular taxes known as “avâr z” taxes paid in time of war was one
of the most important revenue sources of the central treasury. In the early 17th century, these
extraordinary impositions (avâr z-i dîvâniyye) and customary levies (tekâlîf-i ‘örfiyye) were
combined and they became an annual and a regular revenue item in the central budget.25 At
the same time, some extraordinary obligations that were traditionally being paid in kind were
now collected cash. In the late 17th century, the revenues coming from these taxes constituted
about 20% of the central budget.26
Beside the increasing taxation, the central administration sought for the widening of the
tax base to increase revenues.27 As mentioned before, the large-scale rebel movements and
22 Tabako lu, Gerileme Dönemine Girerken Osmanl Maliyesi, pp. 279-82; Yavuz Cezar, Osmanl MaliyesindeBunal m ve De im Dönemi, Alan Yay nc k, 1986.23 Pamuk, A Monetary History of the Ottoman Empire.24 evket Pamuk, “The Monetary Crisis of the 17th Century”, in Histoire Economique et Sociale de L’EmpireOttoman et de la Turquie (1326-1960), Actes du sixieme congres international tenu a Aix-en-Provence, ed.Daniel Panzac, Paris, Peeters, 1995, 243-250; Idem, “In the Absence of Domestic Currency: Debased EuropeanCoinage in the Seventeenth-Century Ottoman Empire”, Journal of Economic History, vol. 57, 2, June 1997, 345-366; Idem, A Monetary History of the Ottoman Empire.25 Halil nalc k, “The Heyday and Decline of the Ottoman Empire”, in The Cambridge History of Islam, vol. 1,The Central Islamic Lands, eds. P. M. Holt et al., London, Cambridge University Press, 1970, p. 345; Akda ,Türkiyenin ktisadi ve çtimai Tarihi, p. 295; Idem, Celali syanlar , pp. 54-58, 79-80; Darling, Revenue-Raisingand Legitimacy; Idem, “Ottoman Fiscal Administration”, pp. 164, 168-172.26 Tabako lu, Gerileme Dönemine Girerken Osmanl Maliyesi, pp. 156-164.27 Tabako lu, Gerileme Dönemine Girerken Osmanl Maliyesi; Cezar, Osmanl Maliyesinde Bunal m; Darling,Revenue-Raising and Legitimacy.
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ensuing social turmoil in Anatolia caused mass peasant flights and renomadization.28 Peasants
migrating to the towns and other villages or turning to the nomadic life meant the loss of
taxable sources because the lands remained uncultivated and immigrants were not registered
for taxation. Therefore, after long and fierce struggles to oppress rebellions, the central
administration encouraged the peasant masses to return to their homes through granting tax
exemptions, and applied a policy of sedentarization of nomads.
The Late Seventeenth Century
The years following the Ottoman defeat in Vienna and offensive movements of the
Sacred Alliance in the late 17th century, provides us with some quite good examples for the
relationship between the military needs and fiscal policies. In this period, the central
administration carried out some substantial reforms in the taxation system but it also resorted
to some ad hoc measures.
During the financially hardest years of the central treasury in the last two decades of the
17th century, new silver mines were opened as well as some mines and mints that had been
closed for a long time due mainly to the influx of American silver were operated again.29
Moreover, precious objects were taken out from the Inner Treasury to be minted. The most
striking monetary policy of the treasury to meet its need for ready cash was the excessive
coinage of copper money which was also overvalued against the akça between 1688-91.30
28 Suraiya Faroqhi, “Rural Society in Anatolia and the Balkans during the Sixteenth Century, II”, Turcica, RevueD’Etudes Turques, tome XI, 1979, 103-153.29 For the closing down of the mints see Halil Sahillio lu, “The Role of International Monetary and MetalMovements in Ottoman Monetary History 1300-1750”, in Precious Metals in the Later Medieval and EarlyModern Worlds, ed. J. F. Richards, Durham, Carolina Academic Press, 1983, 269-304.30 Sahillio lu, “Ottoman Monetary History 1300-1750”; Tabako lu, Gerileme Dönemine Girerken OsmanlMaliyesi, pp. 276-282.
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Following this inflationist policy, the central administration tried to establish a new monetary
system based on the Ottoman “guru ”, a silver coin larger than the existing “akça”.31
The poll tax on non-Muslims (cizye) was another important source of income. The
method of assessment of this tax was reformed in 1690. It was diversified in three categories
in accordance with the taxpayers’ capacity which resulted in an enormous revenue increase,
about 240 million akça, for the treasury.32
In addition to the arrangements in already existing taxes and regularization of some
taxes, new ones called the “imdâd- seferiyye” and the “imdâd- hadariyye” were levied in
order to finance military expenses.33 The “imdâd-i seferiyye” was a wartime levy first
assessed in 1688 but regularized in the next century, and the “hadariyye” was basically the
same tax for peacetime that was levied in the first quarter of the 18th century.
The Ottoman central administration even demanded “cash substitute” called “bedel-i
timar” from the timariots who were originally from among the tax-exempt military class. It
was a tax on timar holders who did not go on campaign.34 Several other taxes associated with
military expenses were levied such as “kassabiye” which was a levy on the wealthy to
subsidize meat sales to Janissaries.
The central administration did not borrow from international banking or moneylenders,
however, central treasury drew funds through forced loans from state officials and the
wealthy.35 In addition, high-officials were requested to provide fully equipped troops in the
31 Pamuk, “The Monetary Crisis of the 17th Century”; Idem, A Monetary History of the Ottoman Empire.32 Tabako lu, Gerileme Dönemine Girerken Osmanl Maliyesi, pp. 136-149, 276.33 Tabako lu, Gerileme Dönemine Girerken Osmanl Maliyesi, pp. 266-69; Cezar, Osmanl MaliyesindeBunal m, pp. 54-64.34 Tabako lu, Gerileme Dönemine Girerken Osmanl Maliyesi, pp. 272f; Finkel, The Administration of Warfare,p.255-5935 Finkel, The Administration of Warfare, p. 261f.
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1690s.36 In this period, confiscations increased in frequency and property of high-ranking
state officials was forfeit on their death.37
The central administration tried also to cut budget expenditures. In the 1690s, the central
administration performed a survey for the employees in state offices and achieved a
significant reduction in salary payments.38 As mentioned before, the years immediately
preceding the 1690s and the 90s as well were the financially worst war years. The central
treasury postponed the debt repayments and late salary payments till the end of military
campaigns in 1689-90.39 In 1686 and then in 1688, six month salaries of the class of
mütekâ‘ids the retired pensioners and of the du’âgûyân the prayers, who were being paid their
salaries from the customs revenues of Istanbul and its surroundings as well as from the tax
farm and poll-tax revenues, were detained by the central administration. The imperial decree
relevant to this arrangement explains the reason for detainment as an aid for the provisioning,
ordnance and salaries of the troops participating in the military campaign.40 Lastly, in 1689,
the central administration requested the financial contribution from the hundreds of waqfs
dispersed throughout the Empire.
Imperial Waqfs and Their Financial Contributions to the Central Treasuries
The waqf system occupied a significant place in economic order of the Ottoman Empire,
in particular the imperial waqfs called “evkâf- selâtîn”, which were established by the ruler
and his family, and the large waqfs of the high officials called “vüzerâ” and “agayân” waqfs
were the largest economic institutions holding vast agricultural lands and diverse revenue-
36 Tabako lu, Gerileme Dönemine Girerken Osmanl Maliyesi, p. 191.37 Tabako lu, Gerileme Dönemine Girerken Osmanl Maliyesi; Darling, Revenue-Raising and Legitimacy.38 Tabako lu, Gerileme Dönemine Girerken Osmanl Maliyesi, p. 261f.39 Tabako lu, Gerileme Dönemine Girerken Osmanl Maliyesi, p. 263f, p. 263 note 11 also see notes 12 and 13there.40 Tabako lu, Gerileme Dönemine Girerken Osmanl Maliyesi, p. 271.
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yielding real estates.41 They performed various charitable services and functioned as an
instrument of poor-relief in the society.42 The imperial waqfs distributed food to the poor and
needy through public kitchens (‘imâret), provided free cure for the patients in their hospitals
(dârü’ ifâ, bîmârhâne), paid stipends to some sections in the society from their income
surpluses.43 The imperial waqfs employed a large number of employees in various offices.
The salary payments were usually the major expense items in the waqf budgets.44 Through the
salary payments to their employees and to the beneficiaries, the imperial waqfs undertook a
re-distributive function in the economy and society.45
The imperial waqfs were not completely independent in terms of their administration
and financial decision-making. The central administration was the ultimate authority
supervising their operations. The most effective tool for regular monitoring and control of the
waqfs was the annual account books submitted by the waqfs to the central offices.46
Many imperial waqfs together with hundreds of other waqfs were forwarding funds to the two
Holy Places of Mecca and Medina as stipulated in their endowment deeds. The collection and
delivery of these funds as well as other revenues devoted to the Holy Places was the
responsibility of two central offices, the Two Holy Places Accountancy (Haremenyü’ -
41 For the importance of the imperial waqfs in the Ottoman economy, see Ömer Lütfi Barkan, “Edirne veCivar ndaki Baz maret Tesislerinin Y ll k Muhasebe Bilançolar ”, Türk Tarih Belgeleri Dergisi, I/2, 1964, pp.236-237; Bahaeddin Yediy ld z, “XVIII. As r Türk Vak flar n ktisadi Boyutu”, Vak flar Dergisi, 18, 1984, 5-41; Haim Gerber, “The Waqf Institution in Early Ottoman Edirne”, Asian and African Studies, 17, 1983, 29-45.42 For the charitable aspect of the waqfs and the waqfs as poor-relief institutions see Oded Peri, “Waqf andOttoman Welfare Policy”, Journal of Economic and Social History of the Orient, XXXV, 1992, 167-186; AmySinger, Constructing Ottoman Beneficence, An Imperial Soup Kitchen in Jerusalem, State University of NewYork Press, 2002; Miriam Hoexter, “Charity, the Poor, and Distribution of Alms in Ottoman Algiers”, in Povertyand Charity in Middle Eastern Contexts, edi. M. Bonner et al., State University of New York Press, 2003.43 Miri Shefer, “Charity and Hospitality”, in Poverty and Charity in Middle Eastern Contexts, edi. M. Bonner etal., State University of New York Press, 2003, pp. 121-143. The retired members of the Ottoman “militaryclass”, some religious persons and widows were entitled to receive stipend from the waqfs.44 Ömer Lütfi Barkan, “ maret Sitelerinin Kurulu ve leyi Tarz na Ait Ara rmalar”, stanbul Üniversitesiktisat Fakültesi Mecmuas , 23/1-2, (1962-63), 239-296; Haim Gerber, Economy and Society in an Ottoman
City: Bursa, 1600-1700, Jerusalem, The Hebrew University, 1988.45 For the re-distributive function of the waqfs see Barkan, “Edirne ve Civar ndaki Baz maret Tesislerinin”, pp.235f, Inalc k, “The Ottoman State: Economy and Society”, p. 47. Also see Murat Çizakça, “Cash Waqfs ofBursa, 1555-1823”, Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient, 38,3, 1995, p. 351.46 During the 16th and 17th centuries, several central offices were charged with the supervision and inspection ofthe waqfs. These were the offices of Chief Black Eunuch (Dârü’s-sa‘âde A as ), Chief White Eunuch (Bâbü’s-sa‘âde A as ), eyhü’l-islâm Efendi, the Grand Vizierate (Sadr- ‘Alî), and some local judges were alsosupervising the waqfs as well.
14
erifeyn Muhâsebesi) and the Two Holly Places Tax Farms (Haremenyü’ erifeyn
Mukâta‘as ). In the year 1691, the revenues held by these offices were 25 and 20 million akça
respectively, which formed 5% of the central budget.47 In the following year, these revenues
declined to 12 and 19 million akça respectively and provided about 3% of the budget income
in the 90s. The revenues accumulated in these offices were not supporting only the Holy
Places but also the Outer Treasury and its military expenditures.
In addition to the above mentioned waqf contributions, at the end of each accounting
year, some of the imperial waqfs forwarded large sums from their budget surpluses to the
treasury of the office of Chief Black Eunuch as seen in plenty of delivery records in the waqf
account books. An archival register records the aggregated figures for the financial
contributions (‘avâ’id) and the deliveries from budget surpluses (zevâ’id) of the waqfs to the
treasury of the Chief Black Eunuch between 1670 and 1679.48 In this register, the total
amount of the contributions from the waqfs was nearly four million akça in 1670 and it
amounted to more than 31 million akça for nine years. Another register compiled from the
reports for the revenue collections and expenditures submitted by the Chief Black Eunuch to
the Sultan shows that beside some other expenditure, the largest part of the treasury of Chief
Black Eunuch was transferred to the Inner Treasury.49 The same register provides the total
figures for the collections as contributions (‘avâ’id) and as surpluses (zevâ’id) from the waqfs
and records the sum that remained uncollected (bâkî) as well. According to this register, about
eight million akça were expected to be collected in 1640. The treasury delivered two and a
half million akça to the Inner Treasury from the mentioned sum, as well as the salaries of
some employees in the imperial dockyard, which were normally paid by the Outer Treasury,
were paid from the treasury of the Chief Black Eunuch.
47 Tabako lu, Gerileme Dönemine Girerken Osmanl Maliyesi, p. 104f.48 EV-HMH 236.49 MM 6040.
15
Financing the Warfare Through the Waqfs
According to the available budget figures, the revenues of the central treasury were
about 700 million akça in the fiscal year of 1687-88. The expenditures exceeded the revenues
about 200 million akça in the same year. In the following fiscal year, the budget deficit rose to
247 million akça and the budget deficit occurred in every single year throughout the 1690s.50
Such large deficits called for extraordinary financial measures, and one of them was drawing
money from the revenues held by the waqfs.
It seems that the central administration first conducted surveys to find out the available
funds from the waqfs. Then, the imperial decrees were sent out to the provincial governors
and to the waqf administrators, as well as the revenue collectors were appointed. The receipts
and the remaining amounts from the requested waqf funds were recorded in the separate
registers through which the extent of the funds supplied by the waqfs can be partially seen. I
suggest that the financial contribution of the hundreds of waqfs –though the total sum is
unknown- amounted to considerable sums and therefore should be taken into account with
regard to both the relationship between the central treasury and the foundations and to the
waqfs’ role in financing warfare.
As far as I could know, Tabako lu has first mentioned the demand of the central
administration for the financial contribution from the waqfs. He dealt with this subject briefly
by using mainly the records in the registers of important affairs (mühimme defterleri) and
wrote that in 1689, about sixteen and a half million akça was collected from the waqfs of
sultans, viziers and of some other persons. He also noted that the central administration
50 Tabako lu, Gerileme Dönemine Girerken Osmanl Maliyesi, p. 14-16; Pamuk, A Monetary History of theOttoman Empire, p. 133.
16
requested six months salaries from the waqfs in Istanbul, in Jerusalem and in Damascus in the
same year.51
As mentioned before, the annual account books of the large imperials waqfs and the
books of many waqfs under the authority of the Two Holy Places Accountancy have been
audited in central offices. It seems that based on the data in these accounts the central
administration wanted to know how much revenue could be drawn from the waqfs. An
archive register for instance, which was compiled in 1688 upon the imperial decree, contains
the main revenue and expenditure figures of all the imperial – including that of the high
officials- and several other waqfs that were under the authority of the Two Holy Places
Accountancy.52 The register first records the waqfs under the supervision of the grand
vizierate, then the waqfs belonging to the other offices follow. The register gives the annual
expected revenue and expenditure figures for each waqf. The total expenditures are singled
out as simply the expenses and the salary payments; in other words, only the salary payments
were stated precisely in recording expenditures. Lastly, based on these figures, the budget
surplus was estimated for each waqf. The register gives a particular emphasis recording of
these surpluses, certain parts of which were annually sent to the central treasuries. The salary
payments of the waqfs, which -as will be seen- will be requested a year later, were also given
a particular importance in the register. For instance, additional notes are written for each waqf
showing the monthly sum of salary payments while all the other records give only the annual
aggregated figures.
The importance given to the record of salary payments can be seen at the end of each
section in the book. After the waqfs under the supervision of the grand vizierate, the register
records the total sum of the expected waqf revenues as more than fifteen million akça. Then
the total amounts of the salaries and expenditures are recorded. The salary payments are,
51 Tabako lu, Gerileme Dönemine Girerken Osmanl Maliyesi, p. 271 note 34 and p. 272 note 35.52 MM 1876.
17
however, recorded both on a monthly and annual basis. And lastly the expected amount of
budget surpluses is recorded which is more than three million akça. It is striking that only the
monthly sum of salaries and the total amount of waqf budget surpluses were recorded in red
ink, which implies that the registrar was specifically instructed to highlight these records.
The register also recorded the other waqfs whose supervision was under the authority of
the office of the eyhü’l-islâm, of the Chief White Eunuch and of judge of Istanbul. The total
expected revenues of the waqfs is given as more than fifty-three million akça. Almost half of
this sum, nearly twenty-four million akça is to be paid for the salaries.
In the remaining parts of the register, the waqfs located in the provinces of Anatolia and
Rumili (Ottoman Balkans) under the supervision of the office of the Chief Black Eunuch are
recorded in the same manner. At the end of the register, the sum of monthly salaries for the all
waqfs was written in red ink as 3.352.382 akça which means that the central administration
would draw nearly twenty million akça from the waqfs by demanding six months salaries.
The register in question preceded the central administration’s request for the waqf funds and it
is therefore an examination for estimating the available resources.53 Although the registers are
not available, the central government must have ordered the compilation of similar registers
for the waqfs in the other parts of the empire as the registers recording the collection of
salaries from such waqfs clearly imply.
After the total amount of revenue to draw from the waqfs had been estimated, the
imperial decrees were sent, ordering the actual collections in 1689. Few archival registers are
available today to reveal the whole process of financing warfare by the waqf funds. In a
register compiled for the collections from waqfs in the province of Tripoli, each waqf is
recorded with its six months salaries.54 According to the register, 73.209 akça was collected
from the waqfs in the town of Tripoli and 316.260 akça was collected from the waqfs in the
53 The register MM 4774 seems to be the same type of register showing the sums of salary payments for manywaqfs under the authority of “haremeynü’ erifeyn mukâta‘as ”.54 MM 1864.
18
rest of the province. In another register, the waqfs in the Province of Damascus are recorded
each with its annual and six months salary levels which latter totals about two million akça.55
The contribution from the waqfs in the province of Karaman was about half a million akça
according to another register of the same type.56
Let me remind you that the central administration had ordered compilation of a register
in 1688 in order to be informed about the financial situation of the imperial, the viziers’ and
some other large waqfs under the authority of the Two Holy Places Accountancy, another
register probably dated 1689 was kept, in which the actual collections from these waqfs were
recorded.57 In this register, each waqf was recorded with its annual salary payments and then
the sum of salaries for six months was calculated. A certain part of this sum was removed
from the total sum for several reasons. For instance, some funds were allocated to the
distribution of meals, and some were needed for important waqf affairs or expenses
(mühimme), and the salaries of part of the personnel etc. were not requested and left to the
waqfs, and the rest was collected for the central treasury. The remaining sums, which could
not be collected, are also recorded. According to the register, more than eight million akça
was collected while about two million akça was removed from the initially planned sum, and
about 300.000 akça remained uncollected. The same register also recorded the waqfs whose
contributions were not delivered yet or more correctly their collection of requested funds was
not started at all. The total sum expected to collect from these waqfs was exceeding one
million akça. In addition, more than three million akça was received from the budget
surpluses of three imperial waqfs in Istanbul.
55 MM 1883.56 MM 5917. Another register MM 18518 was compiled for the district of Aleppo. In this register, not the actualcollections but the waqfs from which collection was not possible are recorded.57 MM 7042. The register of MM 14935 dated 1100/1689 is a small register of two pages. It contains the recordsof collections only from two waqfs under the supervision of the Two Holy Places Accountancy. A longexplanatory writing is also provided in the register which tells that recording of the annual sum of waqf salariesand the collection of six months’ equivalents was ordered by the central for the reason that the central treasuryfell into difficulty due to the military campaign.
19
The central treasury followed the arrears (bakâyâ) in separate registers. Another register
dated 1690, for instance, records the arrears from the waqfs in the province of Karaman which
totals about half a million akça.58 It is likely that the central administration requested funds
from the waqfs for financing warfare again in 1105/1693-94 as several registers kept for the
waqfs in Istanbul and in Sivas imply.59
Concluding Remarks
In a process beginning from the late 16th century, in which the military needs of the
Empire and the financing of war occupied a particular place, the Ottoman fiscal system went
through changes and transformations and fell into a fiscal crisis. In the 17th century, in order
to increase revenues several wartime taxes were combined and assessed on a regular basis,
and new taxes were levied. To meet the treasury’s need for ready cash, new methods of tax
collection were applied. The last two decades of the 17th century were the time of multi-front
wars and were particularly difficult years of the central treasury. In this period, the central
administration introduced new taxes, attempted to coin copper money excessively, detained
the salary payments as well as resorted to some other financial measures which were
previously unheard of in the Ottoman financial system.
The waqfs were traditionally enjoying tax-exempt status, the central administration
could not intervene with this since the waqfs were made in accordance with the long-
established traditions and Islamic law. However, the central administration still sought a way
for drawing vast resources from these institutions. Some waqfs devoted certain parts of their
revenues to the Holy Places. The funds for this purpose were collected in the central treasury
and these were partly transferred to the expenditure items of the central treasury. At the same
time, several imperial waqfs were forwarding their income surpluses to the treasury of the
58 MM 1874.59 For Istanbul see MM 1881 and EV-HMH 811. For the province of Sivas see MM 3687. The register MM 5303for the province of Erzurum seems to be a similar register.
20
Chief Black Eunuch. This treasury was also supporting both the Inner and Outer treasuries.
However, the central administration asked for more contribution from the waqfs directly for
the reason that these funds would support the army on campaign. The central administration
demanded the delivery of six months’ salaries of the waqf employees in 1689 and maybe in
1693-94. These contributions from the waqf salaries were imposed on the waqfs as a forced
loan as the central administration ordered the high officials to lend in the same period.
The money transfers from waqfs to the central treasury have profound implications for
the waqfs. The regular contributions of the waqfs through their budget surplus left very
limited resources for the waqfs better to perform their services and more importantly to make
any investment for additional revenue sources. Secondly, the waqfs, in particular the large
imperial waqfs, were redistributive institutions. Their salary and stipend payments, which
constituted half of the waqf budgets, functioned as one of the most effective tools for income
distribution. When the central authority requested the delivery of large funds normally to be
paid for salaries, it interfered directly with the redistributive function of the waqfs and re-
determined it according to its own priorities. In this case, it requested not only the waqf
sources but also the daily earnings of a large section, thereby directly affecting their daily life.
Thus, these financial contributions from the waqfs reveal the financial and social effects of the
warfare on the social institutions and society at large.
Archival Registers 60
MM 6040 dated 1639-40 MM 1876 dated 1100/1689 MM 1881 dated 1105/1693-94MM 4774 dated 1099/1688 MM 1883 dated 1100/1689 MM 3687 dated 1105/1693-94EV-HMH 236 dated 1091/1680 MM 5917 dated 1100/1689 MM 7042 dated 1105/1693-94MM 1864 dated 1100/1689 MM 14935 dated 1100/1689 EV-HMH 811 dated 1105/1693-94MM 1874 dated 1100/1689 MM 18518 dated 1100/1689 MM 5303 dated 1106/1694-95
60 All the registers are housed in the Prime Ministerial Ottoman Archive (Ba bakanl k Osmanl Ar ivleri) inIstanbul. MM is for the “Maliyeden Müdevver” Collection, EV-HMH is for the “Nezaret Öncesi Evkaf”Collection.
21
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