How the Ottomans Trained their Future Kings

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  • Опубликовано: 10 фев 2025
  • The Ottomans had a system to figureout which Heir is the best suited to rule. but what was this system?
    Sources:
    God's Shadow: Sultan Selim, His Ottoman Empire, and the Making of the Modern World
    By Alan Mikhail
    Istanbul and the Education of Crown Princes - Turgut Var*, Seval Ozbalci** - Department of Business Administration, Faculty of Economics and Administrative Sciences, Izmir University of Economics, 35330 Balçova, İzmir - Türkiye
    www.peramuseum...
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Комментарии • 647

  • @muhammadomer5301
    @muhammadomer5301 2 месяца назад +104

    It's not just sultans, their whole bureaucratic structure was spectacularly well organised.
    The cracks began to arrive in the era of Suleiman and the figure of sultan declined dramatically after him.

    • @ferdousshiekh4893
      @ferdousshiekh4893 2 месяца назад +13

      sounds misogyny but women started to lean in power.

    • @Titan54123
      @Titan54123 2 месяца назад

      That's where the fall of empire started. When you'll study about Sultans of Ottoman Empire untill Sultan Suleiman, then you'll realise the amount of damage empire got after they started lacking visionary sultans. Yes women or sulatanas does prevent empire to fell into the hands of Europe but we can't just run away from the facts. ​@@ferdousshiekh4893

    • @iiiiiiaaaandidiwinnnneo
      @iiiiiiaaaandidiwinnnneo 2 месяца назад +12

      Crazy how Suleiman took the empire to it's peak and then he himself kinda ruined it. Through many mistakes in the ending years of his reign.

    • @Sosunny35
      @Sosunny35 2 месяца назад +16

      At a time when Jews were not wanted anywhere, the Ottomans protected Jews and somehow they reached very high positions. I think this was one of the biggest mistakes. As far as I know, during the reign of Sultan Suleiman, Jews rose to very high levels.

    • @eatlikethelocals93
      @eatlikethelocals93 Месяц назад

      @@ferdousshiekh4893 Women took over when they thought they will manage better than sultans, because at that time you will succeed the succession race only if you have intelligent mother. Their sons may or may not have been intelligent, and some were very younger when they became sultans. How can an intelligent women let the empire be ruined? Ofcourse they had to take over. And they really managed it well during "Sultanat of women". They stabilised the empire. But women naturally have different management style than men. They avoided starting wars. Thats why people think empire got down. No, it didn't. It was stabilised first, rather than starting wars. They were strong women indeed who took control when men were going to lose it. They gave it back to men when they were ready, and we centuries of rule after that too.

  • @mkbijnaam8713
    @mkbijnaam8713 Месяц назад +59

    Im born and raised in Europe , ive had what i would say a ''good'' education here yet my education never mentioned the Ottomans or any other Turkic empires like Timurs empire or the Seljuks they just were called ''The Muslims'' for example the last crusades were always mentioned in history class yet the Ottomans not they were just called ''The Muslims'' and to be honest the older i get and the more i learn about the Ottomans and other Turkic empires i come to the realization that its a deep running pain they still got left for the Ottomans . Anything Turkic or Turkic is in Total denial , Yoghurt is Greek uhh Doner is German and Baklava is Arabic like the whole world joined together to demonize the Turks it seems like meanwhile you dig deeper and you see how much Turks or Turkic people have shaped world history everyone thinks the first Turk in Europe was Mustafa working at Calve in the 80s but in reality the Turks came here Thousands of years ago like the Volga Bulgars.

    • @ETRUSCANSTURAN
      @ETRUSCANSTURAN 28 дней назад +2

      I saw this comment, now I have hope, thank you very much.

    • @AysegulSaidNazar
      @AysegulSaidNazar 7 дней назад +1

      @@mkbijnaam8713 the true Turkish history is not even taught in Turkey what do you expect…

    • @mkbijnaam8713
      @mkbijnaam8713 6 дней назад

      @@AysegulSaidNazar still more then what they teach in Europe , also i think Turkish history is abit contraversial in Turkey because some stuff we believe is Turkish or is true is kinda just made up by Ataturks early goverment to push Turkism and nationalism . Instead of teaching real Turkish or Turkic history they teach stories like that of Kursad ( which is partly made up and the rest is taken from Chinese sources ) or Tomiris was not Turkic she was Scythian who where a Iranian people and not Turkic again like many Turks today where taught .

    • @AysegulSaidNazar
      @AysegulSaidNazar 6 дней назад

      @ yeah some Turkish people think that Turkish history started after ataturk in fact Turkish history has at least 2000 years not only 100 years

    • @mkbijnaam8713
      @mkbijnaam8713 6 дней назад +1

      @@AysegulSaidNazar well Turkish history started a 100 years ago , Turkic history can be traced back indeed 2000 years ago maybe even older where people like the Xiongnu being the possible ancestors of the Turkic people the problem is we only have Chinese sources about the first Turks and the Chinese dont really want to share because of there one China policy .

  • @AliSidTex
    @AliSidTex 2 месяца назад +385

    That was how the bloody succession system worked in the Ottoman Empire. But it was not the reason the Ottoman Empire was successful. The Ottoman Empire was successful because they followed the Islamic principles of serving justice and freedom of worship to ALL citizens without bias, be they Muslim or non Muslim. This is what made them distinct from the Crusaders, the Byzantines, the Mongols, the Saffavids and all the other competing powers that failed. Marrying into the local population and promoting non elites into high ranking positions was part of that process.

    • @sushanth1689
      @sushanth1689 2 месяца назад +12

      Good joke😂

    • @grapeshott
      @grapeshott 2 месяца назад +14

      Mongols were more religiously tolerant before they converted to Islam. Chengez Khan and his descendants for a few generations had zero problems with religious diversity. And it were the Ottomans under whom the Christians revolted because they had second class status.

    • @AliSidTex
      @AliSidTex 2 месяца назад +47

      @@grapeshott wrong. The majority of the supporters of the Ottoman Empire were Christians. In fact they formed the majority of Ottoman citizens for centuries. And there was no "religous" revolt against the Ottomans. When the empire started to collapse, those who fought against it included Muslim Arabs, Muslim Bosnians. Muslim Albanians, Muslim Sudanese, Muslim Egyptions etc. As for the Mongols, they were quite well known for carrying out ethnic cleansing against Sunni Muslims. For example, the sacking of Baghdad. Ironically the majority of Mongols eventually converted to Sunni Islam after coming more into contact with Muslims.

    • @help123research4
      @help123research4 2 месяца назад +2

      ​@@AliSidTexOttomans were great warriors, they had no justice or equality , they were brutal . What's that got do to with Islamic principles

    • @AliSidTex
      @AliSidTex 2 месяца назад +19

      @@help123research4 the Ottomans were not superior warriors to anyone else in their region. The man reason they succeeded is because they allowed people to keep their religion, culture and language and protected them from the brutal medieval world around them. This is the reason why the former Ottoman lands are the most culturally diverse lands in the world. The same can be said for the Mughal lands.

  • @abdurahman90982
    @abdurahman90982 2 месяца назад +152

    Respect Muslim history is very underrated and we have very good examples to share to the world one example is the civilisation in Spain and Portugal al -andalus ruled by Muslims for 800 years the best nation in Europe for hundred of years, alhambra palace

    • @Kjellmagneask
      @Kjellmagneask Месяц назад +1

      @@abdurahman90982 Please tell me you are joking😂

    • @mizfarm6103
      @mizfarm6103 Месяц назад

      @@Kjellmagneask Nope, you are a joke yourself

    • @TheSeanjohn2012
      @TheSeanjohn2012 Месяц назад +1

      @@Kjellmagneask The only joke here is westerners pretending like they know everything better than history, just look up Islamic rule in Europe from sources that DON'T confirm your existing biases.

    • @Ubadka
      @Ubadka Месяц назад +3

      Why should it be a joke? ​@@Kjellmagneask

    • @Kjellmagneask
      @Kjellmagneask Месяц назад +1

      @@Ubadka Islam deserves no respect

  • @maxwellanderson007
    @maxwellanderson007 Месяц назад +32

    One thing we need to mention is inbreeding. Inbreeding was common practice in European monarchies. That's why Ottoman Princes were smart. Because inbreeding creates children with poor health and limited physical abilities. Ottomans on the other hand by mixing gene pools from other ethnicities not only make them smart, strong, but also beautiful kids. Mixing with different blood pool creates strong children and future men. I am also from one of the turkic nations - Kyrgyz. In our Epic Hero Manas also married women from different cultures. In that epic poem about Manas it's considered good thing because mixing blood creates strong and beautiful babies.

    • @birdost5781
      @birdost5781 11 дней назад

      We Turkic people are an exogamous people. Consanguineous marriages are not tolerated in our culture. This situation has not changed even after we converted to Islam. Although cousin marriages are very common in other Muslim people for example, cousins are like siblings to us. In fact, some Turks don't even marry a person who has a blood relation that goes back 7 generations. Idk if the situation is the same with Kyrgyzs like Kazakhs, but as far as i know, the Kazakhs and Balkan Turks are better in these matters than us Anatolian Turks.

    • @maxwellanderson007
      @maxwellanderson007 11 дней назад

      @@birdost5781 Kyrgyz and Kazakhs don't practice inbreeding. My brother is married to Kazakh woman. My sister got married to a guy whose mother is Ukrainian. That's why my nephews and niece are really attractive children and smart. We know that inbreeding creates weak babies and non-attractive. Before marriage we research our genealogy so we don't have common ancestors. Like you said up to 7 gen. But if it is 8th gen, It's acceptable. We also consider cousins as brothers and sisters. In our culture, every child knows his ancestors names up to 7 gen. We make kids memorize those names. I remember when I was a kid my father made me learn name of male ancestors by heart - 7 generations.

  • @johannaliceaga5936
    @johannaliceaga5936 2 месяца назад +35

    There are so many western movies on European kings and queens but I wish they had more on either ottoman rulers, middle eastern rulers, East Asian etc…. There are so many historic rulers outside of the European monarchies that have really interesting stories

    • @khizerhussain7613
      @khizerhussain7613 Месяц назад +2

      west asia and china had best histories but got neglected because they are not judeo-christian

    • @davudiok7923
      @davudiok7923 Месяц назад +2

      There are many turkish movies and series about sultans. I suggest you google them. Some of them should have english subtitles. Especially on islamic history I would prefer not to rely on western sources ..

    • @lovepeace3069
      @lovepeace3069 Месяц назад

      😂😂😂 the west is the cancer of the world .... they think they are superior to the rest ....

    • @fareedwaghoo7304
      @fareedwaghoo7304 Месяц назад +1

      @johannaliceaga5936
      Try
      1)kudus fatihi sultan salahuddin ayyubi(saladin the conqueror of Jerusalem)
      2)payithat abdul hamid(story of the last ottoman sultan)
      3)Dirilis ertugrul{story of father of osman(1st ottoman sultan)}

    • @johannaliceaga5936
      @johannaliceaga5936 Месяц назад

      @ yes I have watched all of those and I loved them thank you

  • @Centurio-LegioX-Equestris
    @Centurio-LegioX-Equestris 2 месяца назад +203

    The Ottomans helped the Mughals many times with military or economic aid. The last Ottoman Sultan was the father in law of The Nizam of Hyderabad. Babur may have gotten his first artillery from the Ottomans.

    • @majidjehangir8229
      @majidjehangir8229 2 месяца назад

      Totally incorrect. Mughals were among the richest in the world. There were occasional diplomatic exchanges but no such aid you speak of. There were vast expanses of land between the two empires. Nizam of Hyderabad was an English stooge, a big ass licker. Have you seen his Emblem. Go check it.

    • @zwpm
      @zwpm 2 месяца назад +6

      Empires help and assist each other that is a given. Babur initially in the 1st battle of panipat was supported by ottoman cannon makers(a political move) thats about it. What came after Akbar until Aurangzeb...The ottomans ..safavids...infact no empire in the world was a match to the Mughals.

    • @linduLandatan-bk2ob
      @linduLandatan-bk2ob 2 месяца назад

      Mughal took help of many out siders to rule India like Ottomans,Safavids,afghans

    • @TerrorbelliDecuspacis-w5f
      @TerrorbelliDecuspacis-w5f 2 месяца назад +4

      Babur's early with the Ottoman dynasty were poor because Selim I provided Babur's Uzbek rival Ubaydullah Khan with powerful matchlocks and cannons. When Selim I offered Shah Babur to accept him as his rightful suzerain, Babur refused even to accept those envoys. They were not even allowed to enter Kabul

    • @TerrorbelliDecuspacis-w5f
      @TerrorbelliDecuspacis-w5f 2 месяца назад +5

      @@zwpm Mughal Empire or Saltanat e Gurkaniye, was the rightful successor of Timurid dynasty in Indian subcontinent. There could no word about comparing Mughals with any other middle eastern sultanate.
      1) Mughals controlled 35% of entire economy of the world!
      2) Mughals had 7 times bigger economy that Ottomans and Safavids together
      3) Ottomans and Safavids were rather regional powers in the Middle East without any presence in world ocean and without any leverage to impact world events.

  • @FuzailBaig-cj2qf
    @FuzailBaig-cj2qf 2 месяца назад +17

    You really have a good taste in history.
    Seems like u learned history from genuine sources.

  • @hamzaehsankhan
    @hamzaehsankhan Месяц назад +5

    "...mirrored the larger nuances of the Ottoman empire..." A feauture of any cosmopolitan city. Excellent description.

  • @GammaFZ
    @GammaFZ 2 месяца назад +36

    This was an awesome vid as usual. Keep this stuff up, ignore any random hate comments down below. I really agree with the part where the west wants us to forget the insane thriving of the east, it’s part of their ‘domination’ way to completely change the narrative of the thrival of the east’s past and position themselves as superior just because they had a phase of an intellectual golden age. The narrative of a people’s heritage that they embrace (and not distance themselves away from saying it’s just the past, or even worse, taking ‘false pride’ in their past like most Indians do), is very important in setting the standards of their current position in global order since they would have a ‘benchmark’ to meet.

    • @learnings.academy
      @learnings.academy 2 месяца назад

      I haven't read any hate comment, lol fake sympathy
      overall she is doing great

    • @PeachyMushroom
      @PeachyMushroom Месяц назад

      Why are you dragging Indians' name into this? What did Indians do? You're basically instigating for no reason while on the other hand talking about glory of east.
      Who is east? Just you?

  • @checkMATe-TR
    @checkMATe-TR 5 дней назад +1

    In the light of today's knowledge, Turkish history, which can be dated back to 3000 BC, has a continuity of over 5000 years and is of great importance in terms of human history in terms of its contributions to world civilization.

  • @highonncert4160
    @highonncert4160 2 месяца назад +6

    I had this question stuck in my mind for many days.Thank you for making a video on this intresting topic. I would love to learn more about Ottomans. Keep it up 🤍👍

  • @sajidsayyad3323
    @sajidsayyad3323 2 месяца назад +24

    Well Researched video didi 👍🏽. Just keep doing well
    Was quite informative for the one who is interested in the historicity of the Ottoman Empire...

  • @Scalpaslan
    @Scalpaslan Месяц назад +3

    An unknown important feature of the Ottoman Empire is that it acted like a modern institutional state, especially during its establishment and rise, unlike all other states in the world. The number of people and animals in villages and cities, the monitoring of agricultural and livestock production, the determination of mining areas, and the registration of all people as ethnic-religious-lineage-family. Compared to European armies, the Ottoman army was disciplined and organized, so it usually won wars even if it was small in number.

  • @pol1656
    @pol1656 2 месяца назад +41

    Excellent video, you definitely deserve more views

  • @Army_of_gazwa_e_hind
    @Army_of_gazwa_e_hind 2 месяца назад +8

    During Sultan Mehmed's long 30-year reign, the Sultan not only conquered Constantinople, but spent his entire life fighting, as summarized below, viz...
    1. Conquest of Constantinople (1453)
    Opponent: Byzantine Emperor Constantine XI
    Description: The Byzantine Empire fell with the conquest of Constantinople and it was established as the capital of the Ottomans.
    2. Siege of Belgrade (1456)
    Opponent: John Hunyadi, Hungarian general
    Description: The Ottoman forces were not successful in this battle and it became a hindrance to their advance towards Western Europe.
    3. The Morea Campaign (1458-1460)
    Adversaries: Local rulers of the Byzantine peninsula
    Description: The remaining Byzantine forces on the Morea Peninsula are eliminated.
    4. Conquest of Trebizond (1461)
    Antagonist: David Komenenos, ruler of the Trebizond Empire
    Description: The remnants of the Byzantine Empire at Trebizond fall.
    5. Bosnian Campaign (1463)
    Opponent: King Stephen Tomasevic of Bosnia
    Description: Bosnia became part of the Ottoman Empire and Ottoman power increased in the Balkans.
    6Expedition to Wallachia (Moldova) (1475-1476)
    Antagonist: Vlad Dracula, ruler of Wallachia
    Description: Sultan Mehmed launched a campaign against Vlad, the ruler of Wallachia, but it was considered a long-term war.
    7. Battle of Otluqbeli (1473)
    Opponent: Ak-Koyunlu ruler Uzun Hasan
    Description: Mehmed Ak-Koyunlu defeated the Empire in this battle and strengthened Ottoman influence in Eastern Anatolia.
    #MehmedFetihlerSultanı

  • @Divinejustice.
    @Divinejustice. 2 месяца назад +6

    loved the simple explanation, quite intriguing history of the ottomans

  • @WWE_MMA_VIDEOS
    @WWE_MMA_VIDEOS 5 дней назад +1

    Ertugrul Ghazi, Usman Ghazi and Sultan Abdul hamid, these three are my Favorite. I respect them Love them so much. May ALLAH give these three Higher place in Jannat Ameen

    • @mohdnauman5012
      @mohdnauman5012 3 дня назад

      😂😂tumne inhi ki series dekhi hai, padha to kabhi hai nahi, isliye ye tumhare favourite hai

  • @Arty_scales
    @Arty_scales 13 дней назад +2

    I’m obsessed seriously OBSESSED with ottomans 😩❤️

  • @aishahusain7842
    @aishahusain7842 Месяц назад +11

    Please listen to Dr. Yakoob Ahmed’s lectures. He is THE ONLY Muslim scholar of the Ottoman history and he teaches it from a point of view of a Muslim. A Muslim who was raised in the west. You will not be disappointed.Thanks for this video

  • @jesuisbroke2909
    @jesuisbroke2909 Месяц назад +7

    Very informative video, thank you for mentioning the Western propaganda regarding the Ottomans. As a (half) Turkish person, I believe even if it survived, no empire could not be aligned with today's standards of living. I'm not one of those people who is longing for the Ottomans to come back but I am also quite upset seeing people spread misinformation about the Ottoman Empire. Of course, they must have made mistakes just like any ruler, country or empire that has been on this earth but they were not all so bad. I genuinely respect the founder of my country, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk but I also hugely respect the rulers of the Ottoman Empire. The Western propaganda also dictates Turks to choose the one or the other.

  • @technicalilm8999
    @technicalilm8999 2 месяца назад +4

    Thank you for presenting such an interesting topic in such great detail. I have just finished watching the web series Payitaht: Sultan Abdul Hamid, and I was fascinated by his intelligence and strategic brilliance. I tried to research more about him, but as you mentioned, there isn’t much consolidated material available. Even where information exists, it is scattered all over the internet. I hope you make more videos on ottman Empire, especially sultan abdul hamid II. He had extraordinary political accumen, and i strongly believe that people should know about him

  • @ssa6227
    @ssa6227 2 месяца назад +6

    Excellent video. We need more such channels. Eastern stories deserve space.

    • @TareekhiTales
      @TareekhiTales  2 месяца назад +2

      Thank you! I'm glad you're enjoying. Please do share ☺️

  • @geniusthekid2310
    @geniusthekid2310 День назад

    Sis bringing raw content ❤

  • @Sahinrei
    @Sahinrei Месяц назад +7

    Keep it up my dear friend. 👏👏❤

    • @TareekhiTales
      @TareekhiTales  Месяц назад

      Thank you! 💕 Really appreciate your support

  • @A_curious_chicken
    @A_curious_chicken 2 месяца назад +3

    Great content but you are underrated....you deserve millions

  • @officialbeing3096
    @officialbeing3096 28 дней назад +1

    I really appreciate your work ,And Research

  • @pirir3is
    @pirir3is 2 месяца назад +7

    lot of knowledge and very informative video, keep it up ❤

  • @alperk663
    @alperk663 Месяц назад +1

    Great channel keep up the good work!

  • @mdsaifuddinahmed2199
    @mdsaifuddinahmed2199 Месяц назад +1

    Sultan abdul hamid wasn't the strongest but he is one of the most respected sultan who changed empire and brought it back from bankruptcy

  • @evladifat6322
    @evladifat6322 Месяц назад +1

    The Ottoman Empire was a Balkanic Empire and Albanians had an extremly important role. Same as in Rome Empire

  • @312sohail8
    @312sohail8 11 дней назад

    here is the summary The Ottoman Empire trained its future kings (sultans) through a strict and competitive system:
    1. Royal Family Dynamics - Princes were often sons of concubines, creating competition for the throne.
    2. Education in the Harem - They learned languages, politics, and leadership skills under their mothers' guidance.
    3. Governorship Training - Young princes ruled provinces to gain real-life experience in governance.
    4. Fierce Competition - Brothers fought for the throne, sometimes leading to deadly power struggles.
    5. Multicultural Ruling - They learned to manage different ethnic and religious groups to keep the empire stable.

  • @REHANHAQ-qu5ku
    @REHANHAQ-qu5ku 11 часов назад

    Thanx for teaching deep for
    Their education system

  • @kalpaz405
    @kalpaz405 2 месяца назад +14

    Very informative video, Pakistan and Ottoman have always had good relations especially at the time of khalipeth and let us not forget the engineers of URDU language ottoman generals both from the religion and historical ties we are always in good alignment with our brothers and sisters from Pakistan. Love from Turkiye 🇹🇷 ❤ 🇵🇰

    • @NürhabibHejazAhmed
      @NürhabibHejazAhmed Месяц назад +1

      Evet doğru ❤

    • @Kjellmagneask
      @Kjellmagneask Месяц назад +3

      @@kalpaz405 The Ottoman empire collapsed in 1922 and Pakistan was established in 1947. How comes

    • @fadeout007
      @fadeout007 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@Kjellmagneask Pakistan as a nation might have evolved recently, but the people residing there were always in favor of the Ottoman Caliph.

  • @davudiok7923
    @davudiok7923 Месяц назад +1

    The precision of the unbiased information you are giving is truly astonishing. Thank you for making this gem available to the public.

  • @STMAGMA
    @STMAGMA Месяц назад +1

    Great video and thanks for sharing this information, insightful.

  • @rahatkhanmurad
    @rahatkhanmurad Месяц назад +1

    Thank you for creating a video like this. I am so much obsessed with Ottoman Empire.

    • @MujthabaaZaman
      @MujthabaaZaman Месяц назад

      ​@@Kjellmagneask I'm obsessed by how they captured parts of Europe

    • @anonim7767
      @anonim7767 Месяц назад

      Clasicc serbian tears ​@@Kjellmagneask

    • @Kjellmagneask
      @Kjellmagneask Месяц назад

      🐷🇹🇷🐷@

    • @Kjellmagneask
      @Kjellmagneask Месяц назад

      @MujthabaaZaman You like imperialism

    • @MujthabaaZaman
      @MujthabaaZaman Месяц назад

      @@Kjellmagneask they were not imperialist...they didnt looted like the Britishers...they made those countries their homeland

  • @sardarabdullah-e4j
    @sardarabdullah-e4j Месяц назад +1

    yes i am also very interested in the history of ottomans. and this video gave me the answer of the question that i want.

  • @azsind799
    @azsind799 6 дней назад

    Thank God I found your channel

  • @muteebahafeez6455
    @muteebahafeez6455 Месяц назад

    definitely i would love to hear more stories about Ottoman empire

  • @vempatirahulreddy2158
    @vempatirahulreddy2158 Месяц назад +1

    Excellent.
    Your narration is just at the very sweet spot of engaged active listening and not much engaged to distract from my work
    Free suggestion: It would be a great help for me as well as your channel, if you start story narrations like "the count of monte cristo" by alaxander dumas

  • @TheWartimeLeader
    @TheWartimeLeader 5 дней назад

    Mesha, I just came across your content while scrolling and found your video ideas truly unique and engaging. Your passion for history and curiosity really stand out. Since I also create content, I'd love to collaborate in the future. For now, consider me a subscriber!

  • @enkidugilgamesh
    @enkidugilgamesh 7 дней назад

    The reason, why Ottoman Kings mostly took captured girls as mothers of their sons was, that the Ottoman state doctrin was to prevent any dependency on powerful families, external or internal. Ottomans did not want to be conquered by marriage, as was common in Europe of those times & they submitted everything, even their own life for the safe existence of the state. As the captured girls had no power by bloodline, no financial power & no connections to the state structure, they were fully independent & had to educate their sons accordingly. However, only one of the princes could become the next king and all the others had to perish, including their sons & all the other men who could challenge the next king by blood relationship. That did not apply for the daughters of the Ottomans. They rejected any aristocracy.

  • @HaroonEx-hindu
    @HaroonEx-hindu 5 дней назад +1

    🔴 *_Ottoman empire earn the title of caliphate after they conquest egyptian mamluk sultanat._*

  • @Javed_Khan_.
    @Javed_Khan_. 2 месяца назад +4

    Very informative content

  • @AZRAELDURRANI_jazaakh_95
    @AZRAELDURRANI_jazaakh_95 22 дня назад

    Mashallah u are so virtuous
    We need this kind of modesty
    Not fully covered despite they are intellectually naked
    U have a inner salvation
    Keep robustly growing ❤

  • @ahmedghaithkhlifi1701
    @ahmedghaithkhlifi1701 Месяц назад +1

    Well well well an ottoman prince just comented on your video btw I love the way you spoke well about the ottoman empire

  • @MollyTheSheep
    @MollyTheSheep Месяц назад

    soo good. your speaking style is so elegant

  • @M_F_A_01
    @M_F_A_01 57 минут назад +1

    I clicked on this video to write this comment, not to see this because I want to say now there are no sultan or prince in Turkiya. The Ottoman Empire ended in 1922. Secondly, I am not interested because I was not born into the Sultan's family, nor I am his son how gonna rule Turkiya. Recep Tayyip Erdogan is the President, and I think he is doing his work pretty well.

  • @MdRayhan-tq7yt
    @MdRayhan-tq7yt 2 месяца назад +1

    Great. I think you had spent a good time in Ottoman history. Explanation was clear. I like the accent, cause this is common in this subcontinent

  • @MohdAadilMalik-sj5kd
    @MohdAadilMalik-sj5kd 2 месяца назад +1

    These succession battles are the one of the reasons of declining of the mughal empire. And give East India Company easy access to internal matters of kingdom which eventually led to British Rule in India.

  • @queenzcity2438
    @queenzcity2438 Месяц назад +6

    *_Correcting you, the Ottoman Empire's caliphate ended in 1909_*__. And the __*_last caliph Sultan Abdul Hamid II_* was overthrown in 1909 due to unrest in Constantinople, instigated by Britain and Russia.
    I recommend further research to everyone including you.

    • @eatlikethelocals93
      @eatlikethelocals93 Месяц назад +5

      It was technically ended in 1923. Before that, it was nominal but a sultan did existed after Abdul Hamid ll.

    • @arush_zyt
      @arush_zyt Месяц назад +1

      Mehmed V and VI wants to know your location

    • @queenzcity2438
      @queenzcity2438 Месяц назад +2

      @@arush_zytyes sorry to say but they are considered as puppet sultan, because the were just sultan by name not by their work as they were designated as sultan to control the conditions in istanbul but eventually were exiled

    • @arush_zyt
      @arush_zyt Месяц назад +3

      ​@@queenzcity2438 puppet states are still a state and it doesn't mark an end, She was right on her point too and ur kinda right at yours too.

    • @MAnasO
      @MAnasO Месяц назад +1

      Is your suggestion to do more research actually ask to watch more TV serials?

  • @nasreengul1940
    @nasreengul1940 Месяц назад

    I will definitely try but I love to watch Kirk’s Osman . What a man , what a courage and what a strong belief he had on Allah and himself. 😢

  • @TheAhmadiMuslimGirl
    @TheAhmadiMuslimGirl Месяц назад

    Thank you so much for highlighting the incredible history and contributions of these great rulers. Not a surprise why the west wants us to forget and unfortunately they have been very successful in achieving this goal.

  • @_hamzah03
    @_hamzah03 Месяц назад

    I think we need to clarify that in the early years of the Ottoman Empire, basically from when Osman the 1st founded the 'empire' up until the death of Orhan the empire wasn't an empire if you get what I mean. It was a beylic, which translates to principality. Osman the 1st and Orhan at that time weren't known as Sultans, they were known as Bey, which translates to chieftain. I'm mentioning this as when the empire was founded in 1299 the sayings such as "There are no ties of kinship between princes" didn't exist in the first 63 years of it's foundation as it was still a beylic (principality). I've heard or read somewhere that Murad the 1st was the first one to declare himself Sultan of the Ottomans.

  • @sarwanofficial7666
    @sarwanofficial7666 2 месяца назад +20

    Very good content. keep it up.

  • @NavneetShankar-x8v
    @NavneetShankar-x8v Месяц назад

    With this story It seems like ottomans were so organised and disciplined in finding their future sultans . Similar kinds of things happened here in India during mughal empire during the regime of Emperor Shahjahan his son Emperor Aurangzeb did the same to pick the throne and was also seen as master in many languages and the religion.

  • @SeLaM_98
    @SeLaM_98 Месяц назад +2

    Wow ur such a good story teller bcuz u didn't show much pictures and I watched the whole thing trust me my attention span is horrible 😅 literally search up new videos while watching an intro so I can change it right away if I'm not interested....yeah

  • @zeux1
    @zeux1 Месяц назад

    Thank you for your video

  • @olfruits
    @olfruits Месяц назад

    Mothers are so important, the first institution a kid have.

  • @wonderingmind
    @wonderingmind Месяц назад

    You are right even in India we learnt about Alexander but never ottoman empire in atleast gujarat syllabus.

  • @aliiqbaljavidchodhary6487
    @aliiqbaljavidchodhary6487 2 месяца назад

    This is so good, but more animation would be much appealing, alongwith better fonts. 😍

  • @AhmedJamal-ji2he
    @AhmedJamal-ji2he 2 месяца назад +4

    Very good video Masha'ALLAH, You just gained a subscriber.
    A little correction: GulBahar wasn't Bayezid's wife but rather His mother.

    • @TareekhiTales
      @TareekhiTales  2 месяца назад +5

      There is more then one Gulbahar, I think his mother was also named Gulbahar. But the woman who had selim I was also named the same

    • @AhmedJamal-ji2he
      @AhmedJamal-ji2he 2 месяца назад

      ​@@TareekhiTalesVery Well, Thank You.

  • @hirazera3362
    @hirazera3362 2 месяца назад +1

    The Ottoman Empire is often considered the third great Islamic caliphate, following the Rashidun and Umayyad Caliphates. Unlike other empires the holy cities of Mecca and Medina, which strengthened its claim to leadership in the Muslim world

  • @najmeeazwir9527
    @najmeeazwir9527 Месяц назад

    really good perspective, I owe you this liberating knowledge. Thank you

  • @sahibashahabkhan385
    @sahibashahabkhan385 Месяц назад

    Its nice to hear about the ottoman's. Keep going❤🎉

  • @learnings.academy
    @learnings.academy 2 месяца назад

    Good work, keep it coming

  • @Zamzam-j3x
    @Zamzam-j3x 2 месяца назад

    I just watched till end... thanx for sharing the knowledge.. so i can teach to my kids how to survive in this world..

  • @toxicjoker3998
    @toxicjoker3998 Месяц назад

    Great video!

  • @Doublettss
    @Doublettss Месяц назад

    Excellent Video.Great Topic

  • @koushikahmed3955
    @koushikahmed3955 11 дней назад

    I am also obsessed with ottoman tales😂

  • @kotyo82
    @kotyo82 Месяц назад +2

    Turkish Empire were very opened ,at the begining and mid of empire times , than they became more conversitive and lost power , corruption came ....

  • @checkMATe-TR
    @checkMATe-TR 5 дней назад

    For some reason historians do not want Turkish history to be told in the world

  • @AA-SOM
    @AA-SOM Месяц назад

    Similar rules were followed by the Mughal Empire of India who were from Turkic origins similar to the Ottomans.. btw what a great title of a film!
    HOW TO TRAIN YOUR SULTAN

  • @JK15N
    @JK15N Месяц назад +1

    West dont want us to know about this amazing history of the ottomans

  • @rizahaq4845
    @rizahaq4845 Месяц назад

    The Harem politics also the instrument of their own undoing. Harem influenced politics, puppet Sultans could never really influence or take charge of big picture stuff. Everyone had a motive here, it’s quiet contrasting to notice that the most successful Sultans were the ones who knew how to manage all the sides so it left with little interference.

  • @nearoblivion4510
    @nearoblivion4510 2 месяца назад +35

    Unpopular opinion: The over-involvement of women (wives/mothers/concubines) in politics is what led to the destabilization and fall of so many of these empires and dynasties, including Roman julio-claudian as well as ottoman.

    • @akashpatro9393
      @akashpatro9393 2 месяца назад

      Nope. You're just a sexist

    • @seventhheavenmall
      @seventhheavenmall 2 месяца назад +4

      agreed no doubt

    • @jtjisan9757
      @jtjisan9757 2 месяца назад +3

      If you were in their place, what would you have done to help the Ottoman Empire thrive and prevent its destabilization and fall?

    • @thegem597
      @thegem597 2 месяца назад +6

      Involvement of women led to some extremely successful regimes too. That cannot be the reason

    • @Sosunny35
      @Sosunny35 2 месяца назад +2

      No, but it’s most probably because the Jews came to very high positions in the administration and they favored themselves and made many changes in the administration of the empire. I think this was very effective in the collapse.

  • @zubairhasanspersonaljourne7819
    @zubairhasanspersonaljourne7819 2 месяца назад

    Love your videos. You are an amazing content creator.

  • @Northromeliquor
    @Northromeliquor Месяц назад +1

    ज़िन्दा रहते ही, रिश्तों को वक़्त दो साहिब..!
    ताजमहल को, लोगों ने तो देखा है मगर मुमताज़ ने नहीं..!
    -BADASHAH OF INDIA 🇮🇳 ☪️TAIMOOR SAIF ALI KHAN

  • @Studywithayaz1
    @Studywithayaz1 Месяц назад

    Excellent video

  • @PraetorAkin
    @PraetorAkin 2 месяца назад

    Excellent video, great work ❤

  • @khalidawanmailk7634
    @khalidawanmailk7634 Месяц назад

    Very informative and well presented

  • @arahmandeshmukh617
    @arahmandeshmukh617 Месяц назад

    Great topic: I love this topic

  • @slightlyopinionated8107
    @slightlyopinionated8107 2 месяца назад

    great video mashallah love the narration flow as well

  • @Musicjunction98
    @Musicjunction98 2 месяца назад +1

    What a great video is this. A perfect blend of knowledge and decent editing and on the top of that, the youtuber is a female which is gaining views just by sharing her knowledge with zero nu*ity and bad words.

  • @Abuzar_Kakar
    @Abuzar_Kakar Месяц назад

    Suggestion Sister:
    I hope this message finds you well. I’ve been following your channel and truly appreciate the effort and depth you bring to historical topics. Your content is both engaging and informative, which makes learning history so much more enjoyable.
    However, I noticed that most of your videos are in English. While English is widely understood, a significant portion of your potential audience, particularly in Pakistan and surrounding regions, might connect better with your content if it were delivered in Urdu. Many popular RUclipsrs in India and neighboring countries are successfully using Hindi/Urdu for their history-related channels, which has allowed them to reach a broader and more engaged audience.
    By creating content in Urdu, you could tap into a massive viewer base that resonates with the language and culture. Additionally, using Urdu would make your videos more accessible to those who may not be fluent in English but have a keen interest in history.
    Of course, you could still consider bilingual content or subtitles in both languages to cater to a global audience. This way, you would reach a larger and more diverse group of viewers while maintaining inclusivity.
    Thank you for your incredible work, and I look forward to seeing your channel grow even more.

    • @Abuzar_Kakar
      @Abuzar_Kakar Месяц назад

      U can observe it form ur subscribers where are they from if majority of them are from Urdu understanding countries then do it what I sayed!!

  • @Arty_scales
    @Arty_scales 13 дней назад

    Why these stories don’t thought us in schools

  • @cakabey3323
    @cakabey3323 Месяц назад +4

    Today's leaders having their education in USA or online by CIA.

  • @hassaanalisiddiqui3827
    @hassaanalisiddiqui3827 2 месяца назад +12

    After 1566 or during the reign of Sultan Murad lll they started to lack the training of young princes

    • @highonncert4160
      @highonncert4160 2 месяца назад

      Unfortunately true...

    • @akashpatro9393
      @akashpatro9393 2 месяца назад

      Nope. The empire generally stagnated because of the loss of hegemony over eastern trade and lagging behind the rest of Europe in technology and military organisation

  • @asynchronous7683
    @asynchronous7683 2 месяца назад +1

    What I've heard about sending princes to other provinces is that after sultan Suleiman when his drunk son selim II ascented to throne he didn't sent his sons to any province and it was the beginning of the destruction of Ottoman Empire. I've also heard that his son Mehmet III or murad III had 124 ladies and they were just enjoying in Palace and their vezirs were running the empire all by themselves. First 10 Sultans were the only real and most intelligent sultans of ottomans... Yes Murad VI (the brutal according to west) was the last sultan who was powerful but he was killed by his mother 😔

    • @AbdurrehmanRiaz-u4e
      @AbdurrehmanRiaz-u4e 2 месяца назад +3

      you are talking about murad the fourth not the sixth
      and dont forget abdulhamid the second

    • @TechySkills
      @TechySkills 2 месяца назад +2

      @@AbdurrehmanRiaz-u4e Abdul hamid was a sultan which was intelligent and tried to save the empire but failed as their forefathers had destroyed it to such an extent

  • @mizfarm6103
    @mizfarm6103 Месяц назад +1

    Before sulieman, everyone was working in their own domain, the bureaucrats or viziers or pashas in their own domain, and the women in their own domain, and not contesting the power with the sultan. That's why the empire was successful. But Sulieman ruined the empire by being biased towards his competent children i.e. firstly, shehzade mustafa, I think he would have been the greatest sultan of all time if he was alive. As, most of the ottoman bureaucrats feared him and wanted to keep the power in their hands and he also had support of yeniçeri. But sulieman killed him thinking that he was a traitor. Then secondly, shehzade bayezid, supporting the incompetent selim II against him, which resulted in the power being in the hands of viziers or bureaucrats controlled by women in the era of Selim I.
    The main cause of failure was "The lack of competent successors and contested power between different people in the mid era and in the late era the nationalisation and secularisation also broke the empire apart, because the only thing which held the other Muslim ethnicities from rebelling was being officially an Islamic realm"

  • @AkibJahangirChoudhury
    @AkibJahangirChoudhury 2 месяца назад

    A very detailed analysis 👍

  • @aminanoor6337
    @aminanoor6337 2 месяца назад

    Very informative, thank you

  • @taimurhumayun5036
    @taimurhumayun5036 2 месяца назад

    appreciate
    Great work

  • @abnkh
    @abnkh Месяц назад

    great narration

  • @socialbox6397
    @socialbox6397 2 месяца назад

    cfbr, keep up the good work.

  • @Islamiat
    @Islamiat Месяц назад

    watching from India, it was great to listen the story. great video try to cover Mughal history in deep dive.

  • @AaraizBaig
    @AaraizBaig 2 месяца назад

    Amazing content

  • @HaroonEx-hindu
    @HaroonEx-hindu 5 дней назад +1

    Wanna a documentery video on ottoman sultans especial force janesary army✅

  • @sonofmercury8310
    @sonofmercury8310 2 месяца назад

    Very educational video. Thanks.