The Rise and Fall of The Ottoman Empire - Animated History

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 5 янв 2025

Комментарии • 433

  • @valenox405
    @valenox405 3 года назад +453

    "Either I conquer Constantinople, or Constantinople conquers me." -Mehmed II the Conqueror

    • @minifrost.y1207
      @minifrost.y1207 2 года назад +5

      Lololololololololol

    • @jannyholo539
      @jannyholo539 2 года назад +8

      Mehmed 2 is the worst sultan ever made. Osman 1 conquer the land with his brothers and create foundation of ottoman while mehmed2 create code for kill his own brother and later on. It mark of the down fall. Imagine if his descendants didn't kill any relatives than the world of ottoman might be strong. 19 brothers was strangle lol... Instead using them for government.

    • @valenox405
      @valenox405 2 года назад +35

      @@jannyholo539 Downfall started wayyy after Mehmed Died

    • @masfiqratul7559
      @masfiqratul7559 2 года назад

      @@jannyholo539 Do You remember the Ottoman Civil war ...Now Islamic Law doesn't say that king's Eldest Son will succeed him ...So Every Son have equal Claim to make things never gone that way As the Civil war era They simple Murdered there Brothers For Greater Good but in Some case like some Sultans Didn't actually killed but rather gave them Governorship Farthest From the Empire like Algeria or Yemen from there Claiming the Crown in Istanbul is nearly Impossible
      So Because Europe had a good Succession Rule but Ottoman's didn't so they used to kill in order to not become European Puppet (As Europeans will influence there Politics )

    • @shootwithaws5185
      @shootwithaws5185 2 года назад

      Media propaganda

  • @joshram4354
    @joshram4354 Год назад +219

    Goes to show you nothing last forever. At its peak, there is no way anyone would have imagined the end of such a grand empire.

    •  Год назад +22

      History is literally full of them...

    • @Nilvolentibusje
      @Nilvolentibusje Год назад +11

      Fun fact, back in the days after conquering constantinople, most of the enemies thought that the world will become Turkish.

    • @ethangregg702
      @ethangregg702 Год назад

      Christian shits

    •  Год назад +4

      @@Nilvolentibusje well... almost half of the world known to them, did...

    • @sergiojohannes1843
      @sergiojohannes1843 Год назад +3

      True, Israel is next.

  • @raiderfandew
    @raiderfandew Год назад +58

    This is perhaps the most informative, easy to follow, educational video I've ever watched. Thank you so much for your efforts. We're all smarter for it. I know I am.

  • @CuriousEarthMan
    @CuriousEarthMan Год назад +13

    The maps help a whole lot! Thanks for making and posting!

  • @innocentmushi3036
    @innocentmushi3036 2 года назад +98

    Ottoman empire benefits a lot from war and business through silk road. Silk clothes, ornaments and spices were the main commodities. When Vasco Da Gama a Portuguese discovered a newe route to India then the volume of trade in Ottoman declined significantly.

    • @anonymousnation5235
      @anonymousnation5235 Месяц назад

      New trades or not, the one who has Middle East in hands has the global power. It's been a reality in every age. The trade routes such as Suez Canal is the most effective global shipping route in every aspect. Rest of all the routes have some drawbacks. This is why every new community that desires global dominance either starts or goes towards middle east.

    • @colindaniels945
      @colindaniels945 10 дней назад

      @@innocentmushi3036 Another factor that hit the Ottomans in the pocketbook was the fact that the powers of Europe had found new markets to exploit(ie The New World), markets they didn't need Ottoman permission to access

  • @atorres8
    @atorres8 Год назад +38

    Speaking as a pre-med student, we were always taught that Europeans invented vaccinations. Never once were we ever taught about the ottomans

    • @mewawashaanika
      @mewawashaanika Год назад +11

      Goes to show how real propaganda is.

    • @AndraMikkelsen
      @AndraMikkelsen 7 месяцев назад +6

      We are mistakenly taught that the numeric system/zero that we use, were Arab in origin, when in fact this foundation stems from India from Hindu mathematicians.

    • @loupbleu3177
      @loupbleu3177 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@AndraMikkelsen What they don’t teach us (although it depends on the country) is even more important than the wrong informations that they may give us by accident (obselete knowledge from the past, as the one you underlined, still remain in the current school programs).
      As what they do not teach us is epistemology and skepticism, which could help us filter the wrong informations and get closer to the right informations. « How do we know » « how do we know that we know » « what does it mean to know » « what makes justified beliefs justified » etc
      I guess the reason why they (our governments) don’t want a whole population of enlightened philosophers is because we wouldn’t swallow their lies nor help them in their political agendas which might create problems within society.
      They would rather divide us into political groups so that we -the population- are never united against them, but only divided against each other over things that are none of our business, ignoring the things that actually impact our daily lives and quality of life.

    • @AndraMikkelsen
      @AndraMikkelsen 7 месяцев назад +3

      @@loupbleu3177 : yes, like academia now, intent on telling students what to think, the "required" language to use, and penalising them if they engage in independent, critical and objective thought that goes against the current orthodoxies.

    • @editz51214
      @editz51214 6 месяцев назад

      Ty

  • @MQN_123
    @MQN_123 2 года назад +91

    “If the world was a single state it’s capital would be Istanbul “Napoléon Boneparte I

    • @Nameless-yw6kj
      @Nameless-yw6kj 2 года назад +9

      Istambul was named in 1930

    • @taylorsalomon8240
      @taylorsalomon8240 2 года назад +19

      Constantinople*

    • @muhammadeisa1459
      @muhammadeisa1459 2 года назад +9

      @@taylorsalomon8240 it's not Constantinople anymore.

    • @samiyrchander1546
      @samiyrchander1546 2 года назад +8

      The centre of the world and when napoleon might have said this it was still Called konstantinople

    • @senadneslan1563
      @senadneslan1563 2 года назад +1

      @@samiyrchander1546 come to Stambol and say that name .........

  • @colindaniels945
    @colindaniels945 2 года назад +64

    The Turks were the only one of the members of the Central Powers who were able to successfully force a change in the peace treaty they were made to sign after WW1

    • @absolutdevil9705
      @absolutdevil9705 10 дней назад +1

      Atatürk and the turkish and kurdish warriors showed the occupiers their limits 1923

    • @colindaniels945
      @colindaniels945 10 дней назад

      @absolutdevil9705 It probably also helped that Britain, France, and Italy withdrew from the whole thing fairly quickly as they had more pressing concerns at home,thus leaving Greece on its own

  • @papazataklaattiranimam
    @papazataklaattiranimam 2 года назад +105

    Turks indeed had a decisive role in triggering historical major events like the Migration Period, Crusades, Age of Discovery as well as ending the Middle Ages with the conquest of Constantinople, fall of the Roman Empire.

    • @Baller474
      @Baller474 Год назад +5

      I can make alternate history so Ottomans never collapse well, kinda.
      Basically, Ottoman Empire takes over Kostantiniyye right ? They try to turkify everyone in the empire and since the empire didn't even have 1 million people, the non Turks are advised to only have one child and the Turks have 10 to 15 children. Now, basically everyone in the empire speaks Turkish and they get integrated into Turkic identity. They control their largest extent after a quick expansion. This took like 50 years. Ottoman Empire becomes the Turkish Empire. Then the Turks take over the Sumatra, Borneo, Java, Sulawesi and Malaysia. Then they rapidly increase their army and navy and declare war on Britain and join the 7 year war. The Turks quickly take over British India and some forts in West Africa. Alongside the French fleet, they bombard naval factories on the British coast and land on it. They reach London and Britain surrenders, ending the 7 years war. France takes over all of British North America and British West Africa and Turkey takes over British India which was only ports and forts at the time. Turkish India Company is established and Turkey becomes unstoppable taking over what was in this timeline the British Raj and British East Africa. At WW1, they had Indonesia, Malaysia, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Kenya, Somaliland and Uganda as colonies and their greatest extent as the actual homeland of the Empire. India doesn't exist because it's Muslim and all non Muslim colonies that Turkey has become Muslim. Turkey wins WW1, WW2 does not exist and eventually Turkey becomes a constitutional monarchy.
      Capital: Kostantiniyye
      GDP: 8 trillion
      Population: 200 million
      MIlitary: #9

    • @Brian-vb8bl
      @Brian-vb8bl Год назад +2

      @@Baller474 Not possible with a #9 military

    • @history_repeats8201
      @history_repeats8201 Год назад

      You are absolutely correct. They were only good at triggering historical events but left nothing behind. Where are the Ottoman libraries? Universities, Discoveries, Inventions and so on. Just an efficient killing machine, nothing more. It isn't an accident that out of 1.1 Billion Moslems there is only one Nobel prize winner

    • @abdemouaouia8396
      @abdemouaouia8396 Год назад +1

      ​@@Baller474thanks I am going to use your tecniche in Hearts of iron 4

  • @daredevil6145
    @daredevil6145 3 года назад +7

    Well, just the right time when needed this!!

  • @Jesus_Paid
    @Jesus_Paid Месяц назад

    Dude the background music was also soo good...thanks for the info and the video. Great work!

  • @novaquirk6998
    @novaquirk6998 2 года назад +25

    Thank so much for showing the ottoman empire history, so many people doesn't know them.

  • @hieunt1643
    @hieunt1643 2 года назад +7

    Very good and useful video, thank you very much

  • @strydermclean
    @strydermclean Месяц назад

    You’ve cleared up so much of history for me in such a quick way haha

  • @condemoussa3891
    @condemoussa3891 4 месяца назад

    I can’t believe how much I learned from this ancient history documentary. It’s packed with information!

  • @waseemshahzad6512
    @waseemshahzad6512 26 дней назад

    The Ottoman Empire's war history is legendary, spanning centuries of conflicts like the Siege of Constantinople in 1453, which marked the end of the Byzantine Empire, and battles like Vienna in 1529, showcasing its military might at its peak.

  • @duniagowes
    @duniagowes Год назад +9

    The decline of the Ottoman coincided with the sea exploration of the new world, circumnavigation of the earth, the discovery of spice islands, in which European bypassing the Silk Route as the major economic contributor to the empire, I believe.

    • @nostaljiturkce
      @nostaljiturkce Год назад

      Exactly. And it is those powers Brits and Americans who are controlling the sea trade are now controlling the world order

  • @rickversglaciers
    @rickversglaciers 3 года назад +15

    Wonderful, thank you so much for your effort

  • @zsoltikutya
    @zsoltikutya Год назад +5

    Thx!!! we learned the ottoman empire in school and u teached it so i know it thx!

  • @Jack-of-all-trade01
    @Jack-of-all-trade01 Год назад +3

    i want to say something about that weird "onion hat" thing, it is actually a shroud that they cover you when you die, it is representing being ready to die anytime.

  • @rodgerkoller8962
    @rodgerkoller8962 3 месяца назад +2

    Thank you so much!

  • @3bsiil
    @3bsiil Год назад +2

    either my teacher cant teach or youre a guy who can teach and explain things in a very simple and understanding way

  • @hamantcable
    @hamantcable Год назад +9

    Would have been nice if your explained how the empire expanded

  • @JoaquinArguelles
    @JoaquinArguelles 2 года назад +3

    Thank you. That was amazing.

  • @ahmet18605
    @ahmet18605 3 года назад +5

    Nice video!

  • @Niniene
    @Niniene Год назад +20

    I'd love to see a citation on "most modern navy in the world" considering that the time mentioned corresponds with Magellan. Were Ottoman boats capable of circumnavigating the globe? (They might have been, I have no idea.)
    Also, I usually hear "the Golden Age of Islam" referring to the Umayyad dynasty in Iberia. Which is neither here nor there...

    • @atakanozgun_
      @atakanozgun_ Год назад +1

      In fact, Ottoman's navy was not the most modern but however was the most powerful because of the power of Ottoman's economy. Ottoman's lost several war at Mediterranian Sea but every each time they had capacity to built more after these defeats. The other topic, entire Islam history neither Umayyads not Abbasids were more powerful than Ottomans. There are many reasons for this. Controlled territory size, technology, population, economic activity, etc. I am agree with the idea of Umayyads were the first biggest Islamic state. Yes, this is true but being the first one is not the mean of the biggest one. Of its own time, Umayyads were more powerful than most of European kingdoms. Well, I think everythink is clear now for you :)

    • @Niniene
      @Niniene Год назад +1

      @@atakanozgun_ That doesn't surprise me re: the economics bit. I think it's a fair differentiation. Is the technology the most advanced (probably in the early 16th century, that medal would go to the Portugeuese who were doing some really impressive things!) or richest which...actually might go to the Chinese. (We'd be looking at the late Ming dynasty, which was quite prosperous, but not really interesting in naval exploration...Or heck, maybe even the Castilians which had recently conquered both Mexico and Peru, so were fantastically wealthy at least as far as gold and silver reserves go...and also had some pretty impressive naval technology, even if they were mostly using it to cart metal back from the Americas.)
      I would agree that, as far as strength (and duration) goes, the Ottomans were probably the "dominant" Islamic empire. Not sure that they are necessarily the "golden age" of Islam, though, partially because they were competing intellectually with a far more advanced Christian-European world. (Europe in 700 AD was a backwater, while the same really couldn't be said for Europe in 1450-1900 AD, which were the heyday of the Ottomans). I suppose it's a minor point, all in all. And everything was clear to begin with. But thanks for the condensation...

    • @azadaripoint4611
      @azadaripoint4611 Год назад +2

      @@Niniene I also read that the time during which ummayads were ruling spain is considered golden age of islam. I think he made a mistake here in this video

    • @Niniene
      @Niniene Год назад +1

      I think so too. There seems to be a somewhat odd trend in associating the Ottomans with everything good Islam ever did, bizarrely. As well as often time warping their abilities to eras that were far distant from them. (Like, I'm sure their Navy *was* impressive...as was their wealth. But in the 16th century, they were competing with powers that had empires where the sun literally never did set and had taken so much gold and silver from the Americas that it disrupted trade balances in China.)
      The Ottomans were an impressive power. They made some significant achievements! But other Islamic (and non-Islamic) empires did, too. Why lie?

    • @historyrebel1232
      @historyrebel1232 Год назад

      Mongols are orcs from Lord of the rings
      Orcs mongols invaded Europe
      There is no golden ages in that

  • @nafiskhan8801
    @nafiskhan8801 2 года назад +7

    Love from Bangladesh 🇧🇩 ❤

  • @ابنعناقه
    @ابنعناقه 3 месяца назад

    A truly inspiring ancient history documentary that makes me appreciate our past so much more. 🙏🌌

  • @AbdulRahman-uw4nd
    @AbdulRahman-uw4nd Год назад +4

    Constantinople was built by the Romans. Even the haiga Sophia, was an abandoned church, which you clearly depicted as ottoman built

  • @alokjadhav6621
    @alokjadhav6621 3 года назад +9

    How you edit like this. Please make a video on this

    • @YuvrajRahi
      @YuvrajRahi 3 года назад

      Yes

    • @hieunt1643
      @hieunt1643 3 года назад

      Videos like this are made with After Effects for animation and Adobe illustrator for illustrations, and some audio software.

    • @kaceobrwa7039
      @kaceobrwa7039 3 года назад

      @@hieunt1643 thanks

  • @darkstorm6654
    @darkstorm6654 3 года назад +4

    great video

  • @theaguy5007
    @theaguy5007 6 месяцев назад +1

    I love the concept of "modern-day Mesopotamia"

  • @mlambros79
    @mlambros79 Год назад +4

    Please note that the Hagia Sofia which is shown several times in this video was not built by the Ottomans, but rather from the Byzantine Greeks (or Eastern Roman Empire) as a Christian Church in 537 AD. This is about 900 years before the conquest of Constantinople by the Ottomans in 1453. The Ottomans proceeded to then convert Hagia Sofia to a mosque.

  • @golfhound
    @golfhound Год назад +18

    The Ottomans controlled all trade between Europe and Persia, India, and the Far East. The Ottomans controlled the Silk Road and trade routes by sea. The two main centers of commerce between the East and Europe were Constantinople and Alexandria. The sea routes were far more profitable, lucrative, easier and quicker from the Far East and India sailing to the Northern tip of the Red Sea. All of those goods were transferred the short distance to Alexandria, and then to Western Europe. The Ottomans had a monopoly/stranglehold on all trade between East and West which was why Columbus tried sailing to the west - to create trade routes eliminating Constantinople and Alexandria.

    • @infidelhindu
      @infidelhindu Год назад

      They also controlled, as they do today, the choke point of Russia's European trade, since Russia's other trade would either be overland w/ rest of Asia, or from Vladivostok in their far east

  • @nadalsungkar6851
    @nadalsungkar6851 2 года назад +9

    Thank you! This will help me in my exam so much

  • @WTIF2025
    @WTIF2025 2 года назад +4

    Am I the only one that noticed that they misspelled "achitecture" at 4:29?

  • @BrendanRiley
    @BrendanRiley Год назад +4

    Big mistake by the Allies was not to give Constantinople back to Greece in 1918.

    • @yogiepw
      @yogiepw 10 месяцев назад +1

      never

    • @mp6471
      @mp6471 10 месяцев назад +1

      That would benefit Russia too much, that's why they didn't give Constantinople back to Greece

  • @YuvrajRahi
    @YuvrajRahi 3 года назад +2

    Ery good Just Awesome

  • @atakanozgun_
    @atakanozgun_ Год назад

    Good work, short but concise.

  • @papazataklaattiranimam
    @papazataklaattiranimam 2 года назад +9

    Ottoman legitimacy drew on Turco-Mongol and Islamic precedents. Fleischer sees the Ottoman Empire as a 'unique, if not aberrant, phe nomenon' in Islamic history due to its emphasis on natural justice and the central role of the Ottoman dynasty as rulers of a defined geographic sphere (Fleischer, 1986: 253). The sixteenth-century Ottoman theorists Ebu's-Su'ud and Mustafa Ali upheld broadly similar theses for the legiti macy of the Ottomans which included the manipulation of their lineage to indicate their descent from Oghuz, the eponym of the Ghuzz Turks, their inheritance of Muslim lands from the Seljuk Turks and their dedica tion to justice, understood as a religious, universal concept (Imber, 1997: 73-4; Fleischer, 1986: 282, 287-8). Although the Ottomans adopted a more obviously Islamic profile after their conquest of the Arab lands, including the holy cities of Mecca and Medina, in the early sixteenth century, a distinction remained between religion and the state/dynasty (din-ü-devlet) which was also apparent in the Ottomans' dual legal sys tem based on the Shari'a and 'state' kamun, despite the close partnership between the two.
    Secular attitudes derived from the Turco-Mongol heritage were also qualified by the tendency among Ottoman political theorists of dis cussing international relations using the medieval dar al-islam/dar al-harb formulation and its concomitant, jihad or ghaza. This reflected the ori gins of the Ottoman Empire as a Turkic warrior principality on the frontiers of Byzantium which led generations of Ottoman sultans to style themselves 'holy warriors' (ghazis) until the Empire's demise in the 1920s. Their conquest of the Balkans and Aegean peninsula was legitimised in terms of jihad against the infidel, and their conquest of Constantino ple was celebrated as the culmination of the Islamic conquests which had begun in the seventh century. In much advice literature of the sev enteenth and eighteenth centuries, the need to continue the jihad and expand the Ottoman Muslim domain in order to restore the inner vital ity of the Empire is a recurrent trope alongside more practical suggestions for reform.
    International Society and the Middle East: English School Theory at the Regional Level (Palgrave Studies in International Relations) 2009th Edition by B. Buzan (Editor), A. Gonzalez-Pelaez (Editor) p.55

  • @navdeep-choudhary
    @navdeep-choudhary Год назад

    beautifully summed up n illustrated, thanks

  • @Sandyfw74
    @Sandyfw74 3 года назад +17

    Please do rise and fall of the Roman and the Byzantine empire

  • @zahirhussain5913
    @zahirhussain5913 2 года назад +10

    "The Ottamans set such a good example as pacific conquerors that they won the confidence of many former Byzantine subjects . For example , when Nicaea fell , Orhan allowed all who wanted to leave the city to depart freely , taking with them their holy relics , but few availed themselves of the chance . No reprisals were taken against those who had resisted , and the city was left to manage its internal affairs under its own municipal government . BOOK : Encyclopaedia of the Ottoman Empire . AUTHOR : Gabor Agoston and Bruce Masters . Edition : 2009 page -109 .

    • @kieranfoster8779
      @kieranfoster8779 Год назад

      They also massacred Christians but you muslims celebrate that don't you

    • @stannicolae4623
      @stannicolae4623 Год назад

      Pacific conquerors? What the fuck are you talking about

  • @arienance
    @arienance Месяц назад

    Lasting for more than 6 centuries the ottoman empire has been known as one of the mightiest and longest lasting dynasties in world history. The ottoman empire was initially just a small balik in Anatolia or Asia minor a large peninsula in Western Asian, which originiated from the Seljuk empire.

  • @nikosbarbakos
    @nikosbarbakos Год назад +9

    In 1.47 minutes you are saying "Macedonia" apparently you are referring to the Greek one, and only one Macedonia, right? Or to the new country unfortunately called North Macedonia (ex-Vardarska used to be called with the real name: Vardar Banovina)? If you are referring to NM, please correct your video. As historian you should know about the Vardar Banovina....

  • @yoyosis6387
    @yoyosis6387 2 года назад +1

    So good thank you

  • @meriemmeryouma655
    @meriemmeryouma655 Месяц назад

    The Ottoman Empire, which lasted over 600 years until its fall in 1922, was one of the most powerful empires in history, influencing vast regions in Europe, Asia, and Africa. A *History Documentary* on this vast empire would explore its golden age under Suleiman the Magnificent, who expanded its borders and established a legal system still admired by historians today.

  • @sounddoctrine4473
    @sounddoctrine4473 Год назад +9

    5:24 fact check ✔️ the hagia Sophia was a church built during the byzantine empire and not the ottoman muslims who desecrated it

    • @masrod94
      @masrod94 11 месяцев назад +3

      Its still one of the major attractions of the city and was maintained by the Ottomans for centuries, so calm down.

    • @nuranonal6879
      @nuranonal6879 10 месяцев назад +1

      you didn’t already know?

  • @freemarketspeople3514
    @freemarketspeople3514 2 месяца назад

    Using the Hagia Sophia as the picture extolling the achievements of Ottoman architecture is hilarious.

  • @YuvrajRahi
    @YuvrajRahi 3 года назад +4

    Please tell which software you use

    • @hieunt1643
      @hieunt1643 3 года назад +3

      Videos like this are made with After Effects for animation and Adobe illustrator for illustrations, and some audio software.

    • @YuvrajRahi
      @YuvrajRahi 3 года назад +2

      @@hieunt1643 Thanks Guy I'm india

  • @BrendoIsGaming
    @BrendoIsGaming 11 месяцев назад

    that was a nice movie recap

  • @Gygsd
    @Gygsd 2 года назад +9

    Didn’t even mention mehmed the conqueror the 2nd greatest ottoman leader

  • @Yusuf-lz3cy
    @Yusuf-lz3cy Месяц назад +1

    Actually, you were supposed to talk about what Atatürk did after the Ottoman Empire ended.

  • @kekistaniempire8910
    @kekistaniempire8910 Год назад +3

    Good video, but you should mention the Crimes of the Ottoman Empire aswell

    • @Endgame707
      @Endgame707 Год назад +2

      Hey did you know that in 1715 The Ottoman Empire tried to conquer France? They failed tho

  • @tremblence
    @tremblence 2 года назад +3

    I like the concept: HIstory taught via maps and audio
    However you skipped from 1346 to like 1520 with no explanation at 1:38
    Would be better off a 12-15 minute video with more detail...(like the taking of Constantinople for F sakes)
    Way too basic, in 8 minutes you basically said like 1 minute of information, barely capturing the history

  • @zahirhussain5913
    @zahirhussain5913 2 года назад +15

    Pl read this peace message:
    " The Ottamans set such a good example as pacific conquerors that they won the confidence of many former Byzantine subjects . For example , when Nicaea fell , Orhan allowed all who wanted to leave the city to depart freely , taking with them their holy relics , but few availed themselves of the chance . No reprisals were taken against those who had resisted , and the city was left to manage its internal affairs under its own municipal government . BOOK : Encyclopaedia of the Ottoman Empire . AUTHOR : Gabor Agoston and Bruce Masters . Edition : 2009 page -109 .

  • @DLS_editz2198
    @DLS_editz2198 3 года назад +6

    4:47 well it was Qanun not Kanan

    • @akiyorm
      @akiyorm Год назад +1

      in Ottoman Turkish is actually and officially 'Kanun' means the law, rule

  • @BrendanRiley
    @BrendanRiley Год назад +2

    You forgot to mention the millions of Europeans and Africans that the Ottomans enslaved.

  • @ataguner4740
    @ataguner4740 Год назад +3

    You also should have explained how Turkey became a secular state from an Islamic state, many revolutions and ❤Atatürk❤.

  • @godsglo7281
    @godsglo7281 Год назад

    Bro...THANK YOU 🥲

  • @emirtimur6008
    @emirtimur6008 2 года назад +9

    The Ottoman Empire is one of the largest and most civilized states in Turkish and World history. Especially Mehmet the 2nd ❣️

  • @edwardlewis1963
    @edwardlewis1963 Год назад

    Ok.
    Good.
    I I didn't hear a word you said.
    I was watching waiting to see a map with wrong colors.
    It did not happen!
    Well except for the thumbnail, but i won't be ungrateful.
    So kudos to you!

  • @dezmonasg6708
    @dezmonasg6708 3 года назад +15

    Why did you include Hagia Sophia in things built by the Ottomans? Hagia Sophia was built by the Greeks.

    • @dezmonasg6708
      @dezmonasg6708 3 года назад +3

      Additionally, the map on its fall isn't correct. Greece had already gained independence in 1821, not during the Balkan War of 1913 as indicated.

    • @ela7893
      @ela7893 2 года назад +3

      Propaganda video. These "historians" conveniently forget the large contributions provided by the the natives of the land.

    • @muhammedafou2693
      @muhammedafou2693 2 года назад +1

      hagia sophia mosque was made by turkey the actual building wasnt the same as it was changed

    • @Legendaryium
      @Legendaryium 2 года назад

      @@ela7893 propaganda means: information, especially of a biased or misleading nature, used to promote a political cause or point of view.
      stop using it for everything you dont agree with. you are ruining the whole weight of the word. fucking people use it for fucking everything these days

    • @MQN_123
      @MQN_123 2 года назад +5

      @@muhammedafou2693 No , It was Originally Built by The Eastern Roman Orthodox Christian Byzantine Empire, it was a Christian church after the Ottoman Conquest Of Constantinople lead by Sultan Mehmed II during his second reign he successfully conquered it and the Hagia Sophia was converted to Masjid

  • @zahirhussain5913
    @zahirhussain5913 2 года назад +1

    Pl read this history ;
    ( i ). " The main reason for Ottaman success , however , was the development of stable and permanent institutions of government that transformed a tribal polity into a workable state ".
    ( ii ) " The Ottamans utilized all human resources in their emirate and quickly learned skills in bureaucracy and diplomacy ........ They also did not slaughter every Christian in their path ; rather , they encouraged the Christian inhabitants of the countryside and the towns to join them . Islamic law and tradition declared that enemies who surrendered on demand should be treated with tolerance .
    ( iii ). " The Christians of Bithynia were obliged to pay the ' harac ' , or capitation tax , for the privilege of being tolerated , but this was no more burdensome than the taxes they had paid to the Byzantine government , which had neglected their interests . Once they had made the decision to surrender or defect , the Byzantine population resigned to their fate ". " Some Christians converted to Islam upon joining the Ottamans ; however, this was not demanded . Many local Christians even participated in Ottaman raids against Byzantium ". BOOK : Encyclopaedia of the Ottoman Empire . AUTHOR : Gabor Agoston and Bruce Masters . Edition : 2009 page -109 .
    "Existing sources , such as the 25th century Ottoman census records , suggest that the earliest converts to Islam in the Balkans came from the ranks of the Balkan nobility and military elite that could supply the Ottomans with the manpower ............. BOOK : Encyclopaedia of the Ottoman Empire . AUTHOR : Gabor Agoston and Bruce Masters . Edition : 2009 page -146 .

  • @amitmishra7996
    @amitmishra7996 2 года назад

    Nice

  • @maddoxWolfe
    @maddoxWolfe Год назад

    0:42 that included MODERN day Mesopotamia

  • @shkupjani4ever
    @shkupjani4ever 5 месяцев назад

    01:46 Why Macedonia is mentioned? It is new country. After 2nd World War, Yugoslavia has created this Republic.

  • @colecoleman1499
    @colecoleman1499 2 года назад +6

    Modern day Muslim is a shame. All focus on rigirous rituals nor knowledge. Is the reason of there demise

    • @Noone91875
      @Noone91875 2 года назад +4

      As a Muslim myself. You're spitting bitter facts. Especially Asian Muslims.
      Even most of these rituals are not even in my holy books. Ottoman empire is perfect example for how the knowledge is very important.
      Thanks to my parents.

    • @SimonMichael-zh7hz
      @SimonMichael-zh7hz Год назад

      How??

  • @anonymous95975
    @anonymous95975 Год назад +1

    A 1:50 you list modern countries that lie within the historical boundaries of the Ottoman Empire. You video attempts to be a historical timeline. Palestine? If you must include Palestine (largely unrecognized), why not include the widely recognized economic and democratic powerhouse of the middle east - Israel?

  • @aadityazeo
    @aadityazeo Год назад +3

    The Battle of haifa was the breaking point.

  • @xx_epic.swag_xx
    @xx_epic.swag_xx 10 месяцев назад +1

    These videos never explain WHY the empire wanted to grow in the first place. Was it just power? Was it to establish Islam? Was it just to see if they could? That’s the answer I’m looking for.

  • @dtikvxcdgjbv7975
    @dtikvxcdgjbv7975 3 года назад +11

    Too much map inaccuracies.
    Croatia has never been completely occupied. Croatia made the Forewall of Christianity, together with Hungary and Poland(-Lithuania).
    Croatia was not the posession of Hungary, but in the personal union with it throughcommon king, like Poland-Lithuania or Hannover snd England.

    • @kapetanodbelulau2496
      @kapetanodbelulau2496 2 года назад +1

      Also, big parts of Croatia were liberated from the Ottomans in 1699, map shows as if they were liberated in 1878

    • @nostaljiturkce
      @nostaljiturkce Год назад

      ⁠When will this liberation (war) business end? We keep liberating each other from each other but where are the liberated people? At the end of the day in need of security we hand out our liberty to another organization which doesn’t give a shit of our well being, don’t we? Is liberty a hoax?

  • @vangelisskia214
    @vangelisskia214 2 года назад +6

    "In the parlance of the epoch (early 19th century), all Muslims were referred to as "Turks", regardless of what their ethnicity would be considered today."
    Roderick Beaton, Greece: Biography of a Modern Nation, pp. 123

  • @essidmedamine8130
    @essidmedamine8130 3 года назад +6

    when you want to lecture about the Otto empie but put a picture of an arab bedouin ! lol

  • @shandariiii7810
    @shandariiii7810 2 года назад +2

    As a hamster i can agree this is important for aziz shwani school

    • @godsglo7281
      @godsglo7281 Год назад

      Oohhhhhh! I get it 😅 Your profile pic 🤣🤣

  • @masfiqratul7559
    @masfiqratul7559 2 года назад +13

    Ottoman Empire is example how to exist for so many years Against those European countries who hates them
    Say whatever Ottoman was more diverse, Tolerant society and culture rich then European countries They took this Humbleness very curning benefits 😔💔
    If just they had leader like Mehmed ii in 1910s

    • @OwnM3Z0
      @OwnM3Z0 2 года назад +1

      They committed alot of warcrimes, allowed homosexuality, prosecuted and forced alot of Europeans into their army, they also did not really cause much achievement scientifically in its conquered territories

  • @shihanafridhi9517
    @shihanafridhi9517 Год назад +3

    Love Ottoman Empire from Sri Lanka 🇱🇰❤️🇹🇷

  • @Thegaminggbattle
    @Thegaminggbattle Месяц назад

    Dude, i wanna learn animation

  • @anthonyc7116
    @anthonyc7116 Год назад +1

    Can’t help but think most of those advancements and inventions were simply taken from the Romans and expanded on

  • @Prash1c
    @Prash1c 2 года назад +9

    Great video. Sounds a little romatacized with 0 credence that "ottoman culture" was built on other cultures who flocked to them during the golden age and became their teachers and tutors.

    • @user-xe1lx1pg9q
      @user-xe1lx1pg9q Год назад

      Well they were tolerant just and progressive enough to let multiple cultures live and thrive under them ! So called “diversity” which Europe of 21st century after so much emphasis still is unable to achieve, ottoman did that in fifteenth and sixteenth centuries !

  • @mustafaaustinpowers5748
    @mustafaaustinpowers5748 2 года назад +1

    Modern surgical tools were invented by Al-Zahrawi isn't it?Correct me if im wrong or is he trying to say the Ottomans improvised it?

  • @amuktadir1991
    @amuktadir1991 2 года назад +2

    Now I see new Mughal shomrajjo in east and west.And ottoman in far far west.

  • @chetzu961
    @chetzu961 6 месяцев назад

    While Sulaeman is indeed magnificent, he thrived on the empire that his predecessor previously conquered. That is not a less greatness of achievement.

  • @SalandCuz2941
    @SalandCuz2941 Год назад +33

    My respect for this guy for saying Palestine and not israel 📈

    • @kuroashikun4895
      @kuroashikun4895 Год назад +5

      Its pretty logical they dont exist there's no need to say anything else other than palestine

    • @amandatropp
      @amandatropp Год назад +6

      He called it Palestine because that's what it was called at the time. After the Romans took over Israel, they changed the name to Palestine to remove the historical and religious importance of the land.

    • @NatureGuy18
      @NatureGuy18 Год назад +7

      Palestine has never existed as a nation. False history.

    • @amandatropp
      @amandatropp Год назад +2

      @@NatureGuy18 Yes, Palestine was never a nation because they never governed or conquered the land, they just lived there. But the territory which was controlled by other nations and empires was called Palestine until 1948. I’m pro-Israel but I won’t deny that Palestinians also have a historical significance to the land.

    • @alyanil8524
      @alyanil8524 Год назад

      ​@@amandatropptürküm ve orası OSMANLI döneminde de FİLİSTİN olarak geçiyordu hatta hicaz bölgesi de deniyordu

  • @philmajohnson9150
    @philmajohnson9150 3 года назад +11

    Good video. Was surprised you forgot to mention how important slavery was to the Ottomans

    • @nikhilantony3260
      @nikhilantony3260 3 года назад +7

      And it's persecution including the conversion of Hagia Sophia to a mosque.

    • @ariffaimanehsan4294
      @ariffaimanehsan4294 3 года назад +5

      @@nikhilantony3260 ayo we only change one church in istanbul in mosque don judge the empire by its religion

    • @zayd133
      @zayd133 2 года назад +1

      hate people like this who spread hate for the great and religious sultante/khilafat the Ottoman empire it was the best empire for muslims you idiot look at your racist british americans who dont like black people and treat them as garbage slaves in islam every person is equal.be careful with your words love from paktistan to turkey and erdogan

    • @khanjare
      @khanjare 2 года назад +12

      its not slavery in modern terms tho. its a variation of western serfdom. in Ottoman Empire people did not own other people as property which is slavery. In Ottoman Empire, more like serfs, people were forcibly taken to be educated as statesmen or soldiers. Not exactly slavery

    • @alfredill45
      @alfredill45 2 года назад +4

      Haters gonna Hate☝🏻🇹🇷🐺🐺

  • @rhinolimes
    @rhinolimes 5 месяцев назад

    Does Palestine really exist from the map shown? Seeking for more information and clarification for my research study.

  • @AimlifestyleX
    @AimlifestyleX 3 месяца назад

    People wonder why Kim Kardashian is so Famous in Powerful Armenia is neighbors to Turkey and I'm they benefit from the Ottoman Empire still to this Day.

  • @Ramozanxd
    @Ramozanxd Год назад

    İlk kez osmanlı ile ilgili bir yabancı videosu gördüm video ne kadar doğru bilmiyorum ingilizce bilmiyorum çünkü ama görselerden doğru gibi

  • @luk32505
    @luk32505 2 года назад +1

    Where is Kaliningrad

  • @nahomefiseha2416
    @nahomefiseha2416 Год назад +2

    The didn't build hagia Sophia

  • @jamshidabduqodirov7234
    @jamshidabduqodirov7234 2 года назад +2

    There are many errors related to the map. In general, there is a lot of misinformation❕
    Be careful when displaying history, please

  • @davesmad4646
    @davesmad4646 2 года назад +2

    The way he said Uthman

    • @davesmad4646
      @davesmad4646 2 года назад +1

      Tbh this wasn’t very well made, he referred to Israel as Palestine and when he shows the Ottoman Empire at its height there are missing and extra bits. Most of this is true info but there is false and missing info

    • @ebonymaw8457
      @ebonymaw8457 Год назад

      @@davesmad4646 israel had not been reformed yet

  • @LRSTGS
    @LRSTGS 4 месяца назад

    You think music was in invented in the 1500's? And painting? What are you talking about?

  • @2011lafayette
    @2011lafayette Год назад +1

    Should talk about blood on their hands .

  • @pelasgeuspelasgeus4634
    @pelasgeuspelasgeus4634 Год назад +1

    Also, Macedonia as a country didn't and doesn't exist. Please correct the map.

  • @heikkijhautanen4576
    @heikkijhautanen4576 7 месяцев назад

    didnt the Ottomaans go to war with Dracula?? (Vlad Tepes)

  • @trixielazze189
    @trixielazze189 Год назад

    I think, if they only expanded their empire to southeast asia. For sure, Spanish and Portuguese might think twice on colonizing us..

  • @deadlooks1880
    @deadlooks1880 11 месяцев назад

    The ottoman empire reject printing press

  • @IsaacNamdarMD
    @IsaacNamdarMD Год назад +3

    Just for clarification, the region of the Holy Land was not named Palestine during the Ottoman reign. That name was re-assigned to the Holy Land only after British Mandate starting in 1917. The region is currently called Israel and Palestinian territories.

    • @ibrahimmohammedibrahim9273
      @ibrahimmohammedibrahim9273 Год назад

      Name phalestin since the ancient time

    • @IsaacNamdarMD
      @IsaacNamdarMD Год назад +2

      @@ibrahimmohammedibrahim9273 Exactly. The Philistines are ancient people who lived in parts of the region more than 3000 years ago before they went extinct as a single entity. Once the Romans conquered the holy land around time of Jesus, they sought to rebrand the area and remove the Jewish identity by calling the area Palestina. That name once again disappeared with the fall of the Roman Empire. The name Palestine was revived by the British Mandate in 1917, specifically to detach any association to both the Jewish and the Arab population of the holy land. It was only later that the Arab population came to embrace Philistine -> Palestina -> Palestine are their own name. It was given to them by the British.

    • @ibrahimmohammedibrahim9273
      @ibrahimmohammedibrahim9273 Год назад

      @@IsaacNamdarMD maybe died in romans people, but not in semitic people especially the arabs in arab peninsula

  • @gidousama8511
    @gidousama8511 3 месяца назад

    "ottoman reach its peak under the rule of suleiman
    Ibrahim parga: Wow... Really?