Who were the Janissaries? Elite Troops of the Ottoman Empire

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  • Опубликовано: 2 окт 2024
  • The Janissary, Elite troops of the Ottoman Empire
    The Janissaries were elite infantry units that formed the Ottoman Sultan's household troops, bodyguards and that expanded into the first modern standing army in Europe.
    This video is sponsored by Michael Böhmert and my other patrons over on Patreon
    / epimetheus1776
    sources:
    The Janissaries by David Nicolle
    The Janissaries by Godfrey Goodwin

Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @rubz1390
    @rubz1390 5 лет назад +854

    Like the Praetorian guard, their influence would become a problem for the people they where supposed to serve.

    • @SupremelyFly
      @SupremelyFly 5 лет назад +97

      It seems as the Varangians were the only truly loyal bodyguards that didn't cause problems. Then again, maybe they weren't given enough time to.

    • @arawn1061
      @arawn1061 5 лет назад +54

      @@SupremelyFly there was a tradition amongst the varangian guard where they would plunder the imperial treasury in order to "take their promsised share of the treasure". They were Vikings after all

    • @lewisw3436
      @lewisw3436 5 лет назад +30

      @@SupremelyFly I mean they were one of the most loyal units rome ever commanded throught their history. So long as they were paid that is. In 1453 they abandoned the city when a new emporer was crowned during the siege of constantinople because he couldn't afford to pay them

    • @hannybenny7632
      @hannybenny7632 5 лет назад +5

      The praetorian guard was not mostly abducted childrens, uprising and living without family 'til death..

    • @henriquebitencourt4280
      @henriquebitencourt4280 5 лет назад

      @@hannybenny7632 like the jannisaries

  • @466chalk
    @466chalk 5 лет назад +1358

    "As their political power increased... their military prowess declined."
    DJ Khaled, Suffering from Success

    • @ricardoguanipa8275
      @ricardoguanipa8275 5 лет назад +102

      They literary played themselves

    • @undrgrnd734
      @undrgrnd734 5 лет назад +70

      praetorian guard syndrome

    • @ottomanpower976
      @ottomanpower976 5 лет назад +18

      TÜRKİYE is still one of the most powerful countries in the world! nobody and I mean really NO BODY ever dares to mess with TÜRKİYE!! anyone who has messed with TÜRKİYE, ended up being losers!

    • @Omegaeon1
      @Omegaeon1 5 лет назад +14

      Each time the military takes power in a country, that country is doomed

    • @huseyincelik6946
      @huseyincelik6946 5 лет назад +30

      @@ottomanpower976 When a turk dislikes your comment about Turkey you know you fuc*ed up

  • @dankeykang868
    @dankeykang868 5 лет назад +449

    The Janissary-Ulema Alliance was a big reason for the Ottoman downfall. The Ulema was able to dismiss reforms with the help of the Janissaries and the Ulema passed laws that made the Janissaries even more privileged

    • @tasinal-hassan8268
      @tasinal-hassan8268 5 лет назад +91

      The biggest downfall of the Ottomans began with Sultan Suleiman's dumbass decision to have his only brave,morally upright competent son killed because he thought his son was going to overthrow him and usurp the Ottoman throne. This also caused his youngest Cehingar to die,since he looked upto Mustafa as a role model.
      Truly sad. Cehingar was a hunchback and didn't even claim his right to a throne. He was a bookworm who invested his time reading books and becoming a Islamic scholar and a scientist,but the depression defeated him.

    • @Fakeslimshady
      @Fakeslimshady 5 лет назад +13

      the "priest-warrior" combo.

    • @Fakeslimshady
      @Fakeslimshady 5 лет назад +9

      @@tasinal-hassan8268 yes, that's what Muhtesem Yuzyil told us so it must be true

    • @tasinal-hassan8268
      @tasinal-hassan8268 5 лет назад +21

      @@Fakeslimshady I never watched Magnificent Century. My parents watch it however. The show is pure cringe.

    • @thedoruk6324
      @thedoruk6324 5 лет назад +26

      @@tasinal-hassan8268 one part is True however; ottoman padishah's succession failure and immense manipulation/drama created by harem woman

  • @silveryuno
    @silveryuno 5 лет назад +159

    A Janissarie and a Samuria meet up at coffee house in Sarajevo.
    Samurai: Tried a revolt to preserve your social class?
    Janissarie: yeah...
    Samurai: I understand you.

    • @kagtkalem7115
      @kagtkalem7115 5 лет назад +15

      Wonder how samurai get to Sarajevo

    • @ihsanulfikri9812
      @ihsanulfikri9812 5 лет назад +5

      Up

    • @IJ72
      @IJ72 5 лет назад +4

      @@kagtkalem7115 He was looking for dad.

    • @rodelle-run4871
      @rodelle-run4871 5 лет назад +3

      Pony4Koma /
      Samurais were butchered by their own government because they were very traditional and were stopping Japan from advancing.
      Just watch the “ last samurai “ with Tom Cruise.

    • @silveryuno
      @silveryuno 5 лет назад +1

      @@rodelle-run4871 I know (And I have.) It was, kinda, the same thing with the Janessaries.

  • @RayshiaRoman
    @RayshiaRoman 5 лет назад +93

    One of the first modern professional military and the source of marching bands.

    • @RIFLQ
      @RIFLQ 5 лет назад +4

      Then why the Ottoman Empire losses WW1?

    • @tasinal-hassan8268
      @tasinal-hassan8268 5 лет назад +41

      @@RIFLQ Traitors within the Empire are responsible for that. One of those traitors' great grandson is now UK's Prime Minister.

    • @MerdoKhan1905
      @MerdoKhan1905 5 лет назад +26

      Luke Work ww1 is centuries later? Russia, and Armenians on east.. Great Britain and her colonies Australia, New Zealand, India sent armies, France and Greek on west all attack at same times

    • @RIFLQ
      @RIFLQ 5 лет назад +3

      I mean if the Ottomans is that modern professional of military, then why did the Ottomans asking Germany to help out with their old school military, which lead the Ottomans into WW1, which the Ottomans got no solid reason to join the war?

    • @tasinal-hassan8268
      @tasinal-hassan8268 5 лет назад +13

      @@RIFLQ Lol what? No solid reason? The Caliph called the whole Muslim world to Jihad. Resisting colonialism was one of the many reasons they went to war. Ottomans wanted to liberate Muslim lands from the specter of colonialism.

  • @turcoslav9942
    @turcoslav9942 5 лет назад +225

    Sir,there was no Ottoman Emirate.It was Ottoman Beylik, then empire.

    • @EpimetheusHistory
      @EpimetheusHistory  5 лет назад +41

      Good catch, Beylik is correct as the leader was a Bey. On the maps I used as reference to make my map the territory is listed as "Ottoman Emirate" In addition to Bey might the early leaders of the Ottoman state have had the title of Emir? As later leaders had the titles of Sultan and Caliph...I was unsure on that.

    • @turcoslav9942
      @turcoslav9942 5 лет назад +28

      Yes it's reasonable since when Yavuz took the caliph title after conquering Levant plus Egypt and rulers started to call themselves Sultan instead of Bey but Turks never used Emirates in Turkey,it was all diffrent Beyliks and Ottomans was one of them.Turks who established nations in Iraq,Syria,Egypt,Yemen,Oman,Arabian peninsula had to use emir title sometimes for high arabic culture impact in their nation.

    • @KadirAksu28
      @KadirAksu28 5 лет назад +1

      @@turcoslav9942 The Turks of Anatolia started with the 'Bey'. Later on adopte the title of Sultan Padişah and Hakan. Further in to time started to use Kayser (Caesar) as well. Though Padişah was pretty much the official title.

    • @unknownmf2599
      @unknownmf2599 5 лет назад

      @@EpimetheusHistory We don't

    • @RandomGuy-df1oy
      @RandomGuy-df1oy 5 лет назад +4

      @@EpimetheusHistory Ottoman sultans used lots of titles. Khan, Kayser-i Rum(Caesar of Rome), Padishah, Sultan. For example, in Turkey we mostly call as Padişah, not Sultan.

  • @garabic8688
    @garabic8688 5 лет назад +198

    You should also do a video on the Persian immortals, Varangian guard, Praetorian guard, Safavid army, medieval knights and stuff too

  • @elmasmelih
    @elmasmelih 5 лет назад +141

    İt was called Ottoman Beylik rather than emirate.

    • @rodelle-run4871
      @rodelle-run4871 5 лет назад

      Melih Elmas the name was Ottoman Caliphate and Caliphate is a Saudi system of government and in that system they have Emirates.

    • @emirkeremklc
      @emirkeremklc 5 лет назад +24

      @@rodelle-run4871 that makes no sense. they are turkish, if they were arabic, they would be named emirates. because emirate means duchy in arabic, beylik means duchy in turkish. and ottomans were not even a caliphate during their ''duchy'' (beylik) period.

    • @RandomGuy-df1oy
      @RandomGuy-df1oy 5 лет назад +14

      @@rodelle-run4871 Saudi? Saudis is an Arabic dynasty from the deserts. Ottoman Sultans used the title "Caliphate" when they conquered the Mamlukes and took the title from the last (hostage) Abbasid Caliph. You seem nothing but a salty butthurt. Bey and Emir are also different titles.

    • @cossaizy6309
      @cossaizy6309 5 лет назад +1

      @@emirkeremklc ottoman actually used a lot of titles from many cultures mainly Turkic, Arabic and Persian, the main title used by sultans for example was Padishah, a persian title, and titles usually underwent many changes, Mehmet ii even wanted to integrate Roman titles. But yes they used kinda used beylik which was interchangble with emirate or khanate, and actually the ottoman turks simply called themselves al-osman before the empire was actually established till the name eventually evolved to devlet aliye osmaniye

    • @magnusthelame3608
      @magnusthelame3608 4 года назад

      Okay gaylick then

  • @slowdown7x
    @slowdown7x 5 лет назад +80

    Good video but the Ottomans were never an emirate. There were only a few Turkic "Beyliks" who adopted that title but they quickly went down. Turks either used Beylik or Khangnate and bigger ones like the Ottomans later on added caliphate as well after starting to control most Muslim lands.

    • @bilgeturkkan6095
      @bilgeturkkan6095 5 лет назад +13

      The ottoman sultans preferred the title of 'Khan', rather than 'sultan'

    • @copperbeard7196
      @copperbeard7196 5 лет назад +1

      khanate, yabgu-dom, like kingdom, and many other, actually

    • @bedrantje
      @bedrantje 4 года назад

      Araturk

  • @podcastler
    @podcastler 5 лет назад +48

    yeniçeri/janissary
    means new soldier yeni(new) çeri(soldier)

    • @konradvonschnitzeldorf6506
      @konradvonschnitzeldorf6506 5 лет назад

      Thanks

    • @_semih_
      @_semih_ 5 лет назад +5

      @@mehdiaghaei1792 no

    • @podcastler
      @podcastler 5 лет назад +3

      @@mehdiaghaei1792 is not

    • @bilgeturkkan6095
      @bilgeturkkan6095 5 лет назад +9

      @@mehdiaghaei1792 No, that's not true. Sipahi is indeed a Persian word, but Yeniçeri is not. İt means new (= yeni) soldier (=çeri) in Turkic. The Europeans pronounced the yeniçeri as the janisary

    • @hussamabdallah4776
      @hussamabdallah4776 5 лет назад

      I know it's mean new solider We learnt that in third class of secondary school in Sudan 🇸🇩 and their leader called agha is that true? I thought English pronunciation is worst but I think it's better than arabic one Inkishari انكشارية

  • @eroleluciusferrum9550
    @eroleluciusferrum9550 5 лет назад +56

    Can you make a Video about the Byzantine Cataphract?

  • @nikolap92
    @nikolap92 5 лет назад +319

    There is a great book by Ivo Andrić called "The Bridge on the Drina". The bridge that is a center of the story through the ages was built by Mehmed Paša Sokolović, Ottoman statesman who was taken from his Serbian Orthodox Christian family, converted to Islam, raised and educated to serve as a janissary. He rose through the ranks of the Ottoman imperial system, eventually holding positions as commander of the imperial guard... He never forgot where he came from, so as a part of his legacy he built the bridge that the book is based on. It exists to this today...
    Ivo Andrić won the Nobel Prize in Literature for his book.

    • @EpimetheusHistory
      @EpimetheusHistory  5 лет назад +50

      That sounds like a very interesting book.

    • @Dorya9
      @Dorya9 5 лет назад +20

      Very interesting. I'll check this book out. Sometimes though the "never forgot where they were from" part seems to be a bit romanticized because they were taken when they were like 10 years old. None the less I heard of Sokolovic but I'll check this book out, I'm a fan of the stories of these Balkan Christians may it be Serbians, Greeks, Bulgarians, Albanians or whoever that were taken by the Devrshime tax.
      Edit: found it used for $5 on Amazon! Ordered it. Thanks!

    • @nikolap92
      @nikolap92 5 лет назад +13

      @@Dorya9 I hope you will enjoy reading the book...
      It is truly a classic of a Serbian literature... You'll probably also get a glimpse into mentality of the people living on this area. that didn't changed much to this day...

    • @rexsclavorum
      @rexsclavorum 5 лет назад +20

      Interesting fact. That year for Nobel prize nominations in literature, Tolkin, with his creation called Lord of the Rings, finished second behind Ivo Andrić.

    • @StefanMilo
      @StefanMilo 5 лет назад +5

      I love that book!

  • @SarudeDanstorm
    @SarudeDanstorm 5 лет назад +132

    Liked the video solely because of that randomly abrupt ending: "So ended the Janissaries."

    • @saimalishahid1406
      @saimalishahid1406 5 лет назад

      lol

    • @JunSian1001
      @JunSian1001 5 лет назад +6

      It is so strange that the video ended so abruptly.. :/

    • @hansihobr
      @hansihobr 5 лет назад +2

      He made it simple, no fancy ending.

    • @Zappuify
      @Zappuify 5 лет назад

      Long live Mahmud The Second !

  • @iraqimapper8625
    @iraqimapper8625 5 лет назад +68

    Turkish history is interesting

    • @dreas4010
      @dreas4010 5 лет назад +5

      Lol what history? Most is stolen Kurdish history 😂

    • @thedoruk6324
      @thedoruk6324 5 лет назад +32

      @@papazataklaattiranimam He spamms almost every video, He got his ass handed over to him at his 'comments' about Iraq

    • @midsummernightswork
      @midsummernightswork 5 лет назад +6

      Son of Mountain kurdish history? First time i hear of this joke. Can you show me where your country is on the world ma- oh yeah , doesn't exist

    • @simurgsimurg3316
      @simurgsimurg3316 5 лет назад +3

      @yaşa a butthurt greek.

    • @simurgsimurg3316
      @simurgsimurg3316 5 лет назад +3

      Xaris hi alban.

  • @grandadmiralzaarin4962
    @grandadmiralzaarin4962 5 лет назад +61

    Sad how they went from elite cutting edge unit to a decadent, corrupt mob.

    • @miracleyang3048
      @miracleyang3048 5 лет назад +43

      Grand Moff
      Thats what happened when you use your elite fighters as Administrators the same happened to the praetorian guard, Samurais and Mamelukes

    • @grandadmiralzaarin4962
      @grandadmiralzaarin4962 5 лет назад +35

      @@miracleyang3048 it happens faster when you allow their descendants to inherit their position rather than by merit and selection.

    • @temptemp4174
      @temptemp4174 5 лет назад +2

      Cevat Paşa reform Ottoman Empire, Pakistan stand with you until the day of judgement

    • @allengordon6929
      @allengordon6929 4 года назад

      @Association of Free People Pretty much.

    • @haitamc5611
      @haitamc5611 4 года назад

      Same happened to the Moroccan black guard who were also a slave army of moulay ismael.

  • @ibrahmkz
    @ibrahmkz 3 года назад +8

    Ottoman have not Emir and Emirate
    Emir is Arabic but Turks are not Arab.
    Turks are Middle Asian Nation
    Turks have Bey or Beylik

    • @islammehmeov2334
      @islammehmeov2334 2 года назад

      What about EMIR TIMUR from CENTRAL ASIA

    • @ibrahmkz
      @ibrahmkz 2 года назад

      @@islammehmeov2334 actually Emir Timur use the Khan for himself.
      But he is not from Cenghis family, for this İranian and Eastern Asian people used the Âmr so "Commander" for Timur.
      So Amr generally used by Arabian territorys.

  • @pedjapantelic8090
    @pedjapantelic8090 5 лет назад +21

    In Serbia back at the beginning of 19th century, there were 4 janissary commanders called Dahijas who rebelled and killed Pasha of Belgrade Pashaluk. And for some time territory of Central Serbia was basically in their control Janissary rebel territory. And Serbian revolution that eventually resulted in nominal independence of Serbia originally started as rebellion against Dahijas, because they were even more brutal than the official Ottoman rulers(they killed majority of Serb leaders in 1804 which lead to start of rebellion in that same year).

    • @TUNC66
      @TUNC66 5 месяцев назад +1

      I've never heard of this before, I got new information today, thank you.

  • @rtrdedn00b54
    @rtrdedn00b54 4 года назад +13

    Janissaries were actually no slaves when their recruitment was done. Since their education included converting to Islam, they became muslims. And it was forbidden to have another muslim as a slave hence janissaries were technically no slaves.

    • @Lukas_6_ayat_12
      @Lukas_6_ayat_12 4 года назад +1

      which is a Western story, you know what happened with historical facts?

    • @brtn3231
      @brtn3231 2 года назад +1

      No they were slaves. Slaves can be Muslim too .Sultan can't kill any free Muslim by his own will.But Sultan can kill janissaries because they were his slaves. This is called a " Kulluk Hakkı". They were elites but still they were property of Sultan.

  • @ceyhunozkan9919
    @ceyhunozkan9919 5 лет назад +31

    part of their training was, they were slapping marble walls which covered with olive oil.. so after years, their hands and wrists become so strong, when they see a horseman who advanced to them on the battlefield they were able to slap the horse (if they dont have weapon at the moment etc) from its neck and bring the horse down with its rider.

    • @theodorospadelidis6537
      @theodorospadelidis6537 2 года назад

      i own a greco turkish friendship discord server if you want to join send me your account

    • @Markussiemens658
      @Markussiemens658 4 месяца назад

      And thus the ottoman slap was born

  • @dzpower189
    @dzpower189 5 лет назад +6

    thank you for this great work

  • @R3GARnator
    @R3GARnator 5 лет назад +24

    Nepotism is what did in the Jannisaries. If they'd never allowed fathers to recruit their sons, they could still be around today. Now that would be strange.

  • @mannypardo1080
    @mannypardo1080 5 лет назад +28

    Devşirme was such a brutal system. The damage that the Janissary system did to the various Christian populations is still talked about today.

    • @thedoruk6324
      @thedoruk6324 5 лет назад +28

      +Manny Pardo Its nothing 'new' - several empires've used similiar methods to assimilate the population. Heck; even newer empires've used similiar methods to assimilate as the 'Mandatory' 'schooling' system for Australian Aborgines and Canadian Natives would tell

    • @radagoon1
      @radagoon1 5 лет назад +20

      Even byzantines used muslim mercenaries tho

    • @Kingtot
      @Kingtot 5 лет назад +21

      Yeah, being ripped from your family either as a child or captive is certaintly the same as mandatory schooling. Yup. /facepalm

    • @franciscomm7675
      @franciscomm7675 5 лет назад +10

      @@thedoruk6324 good point

    • @radagoon1
      @radagoon1 5 лет назад +1

      Ottomans were much brutal though they converted them and not allowed them to marry so if it was their only son the bloodline would end but it was much profitable than being a villager

  • @AGS363
    @AGS363 5 лет назад +10

    Fun Fact: They used spoons and pots as insignia.

  • @KillerBPlaying
    @KillerBPlaying 5 лет назад +6

    Thank you for the informations !

  • @MasterOfCydonia
    @MasterOfCydonia 5 лет назад +77

    Epimetheus, will you be doing a video on the Hashashin?

    • @Storming360
      @Storming360 5 лет назад +18

      That would be awf...(feels a dagger on his back)... very cool

    • @dreas4010
      @dreas4010 5 лет назад +2

      Ancient Kurdish state 😊🇹🇯

    • @OwnTrick
      @OwnTrick 5 лет назад +16

      @@dreas4010 it wasn't ancient, a state nor kurdish as well. More like a group recruiting members by false promise of paradise to limit foreign influences over the iranian mainland, many attempts of assasination was made to caliphs and seljuks by them.

    • @bobsvagene3021
      @bobsvagene3021 5 лет назад +3

      @@dreas4010 they were Persian not kurds lol

    • @solitudeguard1932
      @solitudeguard1932 5 лет назад +1

      You must've played Assassin's Creen Revelations.

  • @owenb8636
    @owenb8636 5 лет назад +5

    So basically all the things that made the Janissaries ideal as bodyguards in the beginning were slowly taken away

  • @precursors
    @precursors 3 года назад +7

    Ottoman army consisted of 70-80% cavalry (heavy Sipahi, light Akinji, heavy and light horse archers), only 15-20% of the army was Janissary. What is this western fascination and the need to romanticize janissaries? Roman Empire did the exact same thing, took boys from Gaulic and Germanic tribes and trained them as Roman soldiers. I don't see anyone calling Roman Legionnaires a "Slave Army". Grow up!

    • @euronbuci3664
      @euronbuci3664 2 года назад

      Where's the problem, ottomans were shet they had to take balkanic soldiers

    • @precursors
      @precursors 2 года назад

      ​@@euronbuci3664 If Ottomans were "shet", how did they conquer entire Balkans? They recruited Janissaries from Balkan kids AFTER conquering the Balkans. 😂

    • @razinghavoc7419
      @razinghavoc7419 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@precursorsI mean why take them If you didn't need them huh? Salty that your own soldiers weren't good enough.

    • @UmitSeyhan75
      @UmitSeyhan75 2 месяца назад +1

      @@razinghavoc7419 As a tax, of course. At those times, subjugated and conquered settlements were supposed to provide troops in addition to money. This is the same for all the states/empires, and nothing specific to the Ottomans. By default, most of those levy men power were meat shield to be used in battles and die for the empire's actual free/noble warriors. Only very few empires put the effort to educate/train and provide armor/weapon to those men to make them actual full-fledged warriors. Ottomans were one of them.

    • @glimmerxp
      @glimmerxp 2 дня назад

      @@UmitSeyhan75so the initial use of them was just another batch of troops to use ?

  • @HikmaHistory
    @HikmaHistory 5 лет назад +23

    Great capture of an important topic!

    • @dreas4010
      @dreas4010 5 лет назад +1

      Important if you are a turk lol 😂

  • @thornndog
    @thornndog 5 лет назад +46

    Nice man I would love to see more Ottoman content!

  • @berk1154
    @berk1154 5 лет назад +18

    It Should be Ottoman Beylik not emirate. Emirate is for arabians

    • @fatihsaidduran
      @fatihsaidduran 5 лет назад +1

      I'll remind you Timur was an Emir.

    • @AlexGarcia-fk7cf
      @AlexGarcia-fk7cf 5 лет назад +2

      @@fatihsaidduran Timur emir lakapını kullanıyordu. Fakat Osmanlı beylikdi. Sonradan imparatorluk oldu.

    • @ChromeMan04
      @ChromeMan04 4 года назад

      Arabs don’t only have emirates

    • @Soykancelik7
      @Soykancelik7 3 года назад +1

      @@fatihsaidduran Timur just made up this title for himself, because he was not a descendant of Ghengis Khan so he was not able to claim the Khan title. Almost all of Khans in any Turkic state argued that they are descendants of The Great Khan, except the Ottomans.

  • @jupitervolcano
    @jupitervolcano 5 лет назад +10

    Osmans used every bit of culture around them and the lands they conquered to make their empire, using the sons of the lands as their elite core would be no different. Greeks, serbs, albanians etc. should feel some bit of pride when thinking of the Ottomans, you're ancestors helped build it.

    • @itzikashemtov6045
      @itzikashemtov6045 5 лет назад +6

      There is a huge difference, They simply didn't have a choice, Go back even 70 years ago and look at Nazi Germany and how other people cooperated with them, Simply out of choice if you wish to survive.

    • @imRenzae
      @imRenzae 5 лет назад

      There is no pride, nothing to be proud of. The Ottoman Empire is the reason the Balkans is a shithole like backwards Turkey. Had it not been for the Ottoman Empire, the Balkans would be on par with the rest of Europe.

    • @almalayuwiyyah2512
      @almalayuwiyyah2512 5 лет назад +1

      @@imRenzae no, balkan is a shithole is because of communist,war that they themself made. yugoslavia broken up and many of it. pax ottomana is real. ottoman rule with order. when there is no ottoman. look at how balkan and middle east fighting each other.

  • @ibnmohammed6328
    @ibnmohammed6328 5 лет назад +33

    So they ended like samurai.

    • @arfn1973
      @arfn1973 5 лет назад

      @Soundwave 47 Good ridance, they always stopping reformation. I am not as extreme like the young group, a reformation is necessary to protect Ottoman from downfall which happen too long because this "Soldier" stopping reformation. The day the entire group destroyed is literally called "Lucky Day" if i remember.

    • @onurdemir3261
      @onurdemir3261 5 лет назад +2

      @Real history is unpleasant! According to Bozkurt (1992), the name "Türk" first appears as "t'ou-kiue" in Chinese sources in the 6th Century. This transliteration must have originated from "türküt" in Turkish, which meant "powerful", but later on gained other meanings such as "maturity", "youth", "brave", "hard" in Diwan poetry. Another hypothesis is that the word goes back to "türük", a derivative of "türe", which meant something like law, cultural norm and tradition (Modern Turkish "töre"). So, "türük" was probably used to denominate people who abide by customs and traditions. Indeed, the word "tüzük" still exists in Modern Turkish and means "law" or "regulation". The /r/-/z/ sound change, which is also attested in other forms, is probably the reason how "türük" became "tüzük". As such, this latter explanation sounds more plausible. Naturally, the word must have gained other meanings throughout history such as "powerful", "brave", "youthful" in Diwan poetry, as mentioned above.
      Sources:
      Fuat Bozkurt (1992). Türklerin Dili. 5. Baskı. Kapı Yayınları.

    • @onurdemir3261
      @onurdemir3261 5 лет назад +1

      @Real history is unpleasant! dude uygurs are turks and they form a nation at 745 if you do some research you will see stop being a ignorant person

    • @allengordon6929
      @allengordon6929 4 года назад

      They were kind of the equivalents of samurai and knights, especially in training, internal culture, and discipline. They have been compared to religious orders like the knight's templar.

  • @thomasturner6980
    @thomasturner6980 5 лет назад +9

    Who will win, the janissary or PewDiePie's PeePeePoo Army

  • @hwasiaqhan8923
    @hwasiaqhan8923 5 лет назад +9

    So they weren’t Turks but Europeans

    • @gcrecords1731
      @gcrecords1731 5 лет назад

      first time mamluke of turks selgiuks ws mamluke kipcak of delhy romakipcak mamluke of delhy sultanat and army of ghaznvids after roma peoples indo mongolics persan aafter much army was remainse in balkans from huns avars uygur karluks when they lose againt tatars army ottomans vs stefan the great of moldavia in dobrogeas black sea romania and mamluke kipcak is formed the best army cuman kipcak forces who fights for vlad the impalers cumans in transilvania from huns and stefan the greaat among tatars kipcak from mangalia constance romania and echilibrated the forces betwen great ottomans and balkans east europe was most war ottomans vs cuman kipcak kazar and mamluke roma gypsie and bulgaryans forces who remine in balkans bulgarya and transilvania romania good echitations of balance power of kuman kipcak roma bulgaryans and romaanians roma cumans becouse vlad impaler was cuman kipcak from house of basrab kipcak cumans from huns avars uygur aand uygur is tribes of roma gypsie indo mongolic persan mamluk of delhy nd kazaak hebrew from kazkstan vs ottomans is real facts is not bulsit the kazak kipcak is was mercenary who pay moore they fight for them the kazar kipcak they was never slave warriors only roma gypsie of ghznavid and mamluke of delhy and selciuk

    • @hwasiaqhan8923
      @hwasiaqhan8923 5 лет назад +2

      پاسدار فرد Александр So they are european. Converted Turks

    • @hwasiaqhan8923
      @hwasiaqhan8923 5 лет назад

      پاسدار فرد Александр but before Asian Turks conquered Anatolia, anatolia had no Turks.

  • @gabe6158
    @gabe6158 5 лет назад +26

    I would like to learn more about the training that these men and their peers from other nations would go through mentioned in 3:27, particularly strength training, and what their methods of getting strong were

    • @cunningham.s_law
      @cunningham.s_law 5 лет назад +11

      taijutsu training

    • @gabe6158
      @gabe6158 5 лет назад +2

      honeyspoon ok boomer

    • @lastword8783
      @lastword8783 5 лет назад +4

      Look up ottoman slap lol. It was one of their unarmed techniques on a battlefield.

    • @gabe6158
      @gabe6158 5 лет назад +6

      Last Word I know what that is but I’m more interested in how these elite warriors gained muscle, because weightlifting was very basic until the 1870’s, and wasn’t mainstream for another 100 years, and there is a higher gap between Greeks throwing rocks and cowboys lifting weights that isn’t really explained

    • @anlyuksel2194
      @anlyuksel2194 5 лет назад +17

      Gabe6158 _ traditional Turkish strengh training consist of lifting heavy maces named “gürz” and wrestling. Those who did the former were called “gürbaz”, whereas the wrestlers were called “pehlivan”. Mace training was for the arms. Lifting cannon balls was also a popular exercise among Janniseries. Apart from obvious weapon trainin, some kind of kettlebell called “girya” was also used in trainings. Sultan Murad the VI, who was known for his physical strength, had a famous 100kg kettlebell for example.

  • @error5202
    @error5202 5 лет назад +8

    0:36 ah! his eyes moved!

  • @Artur_M.
    @Artur_M. 5 лет назад +38

    The Janissaries are certainly a fascinating topic, which you presented splendidly. The best detail is obviously the change of facial expression of the weight-lifting Janissary cadet at 3:33. :)
    I might add that the young King Władysław III who literary lost his head at Warna in 1444 was also (and first) King of Poland. Afterward, there were many rumors claiming that actually, somebody else's head was brought to Sultan and Władysław somehow survived the battle. He was supposedly seen in various places (particularly in Portugal), allegedly living in a self-appointed exile out of shame of defeat, and leading to it breaking of a truce.
    BTW His untimely death (or disappearing, if we believe the legend) led to his younger brother Casimir becoming the King of Poland, renewing the union with Grand Duchy of Lithuania, without which probably the Commonwealth wouldn't be eventually created.

    • @EpimetheusHistory
      @EpimetheusHistory  5 лет назад +11

      "He was supposedly seen in various places" that is very interesting...and in a time before mass-media and photographs it was always word of mouth and what you were told happened that people had to rely on. Makes me think of the false Dimitris thing in Russia, and man in the iron mask. Much harder to verify who someone was back then. even a "legitimate ruler" could be denied if the ruling class agreed to do so potentially.

    • @Artur_M.
      @Artur_M. 5 лет назад +5

      @@EpimetheusHistory Yeah, it was part of the reasons why that interregnum in Poland was unusually long, lasting three years. Very similar stories were told much earlier about King Olaf Tryggvason of Norway, who was rumored to survive falling into the sea during the lost battle of Svolder in 999 or 1000, becoming a pilgrim.

    • @historyrhymes1701
      @historyrhymes1701 5 лет назад +4

      Wladislav is still remembered and honoured as a national hero here in Bulgraria. Our last ruler who claimed the title "Tsar" -Frujin , fought alongside him and was one of the few noblemen who survived the massacre. The westerners who prided themselves to be the greatest warriors of christ scratched their balls and engaged in petty wars among themselves while the christian balkans were being slawoled by the ottomans. The only people who seemed to care - the poles . We remember !

    • @bigboyrambo2009
      @bigboyrambo2009 5 лет назад +3

      @@historyrhymes1701 do you remember when Poland never existed and the only state that recognize Poland was the Ottomans and allowed Polish people to live in Constantinople.

  • @geoffreyM2TW
    @geoffreyM2TW 5 лет назад +8

    Funnily enough some Turkic Sultans and their ministers, e.g. in the Ghaznavid Empire, were themselves once slaves or slave warriors. The Mamluks of Egypt who at some point took control of the country were also slave warriors.

    • @copperbeard7196
      @copperbeard7196 5 лет назад

      whats the relation though

    • @copperbeard7196
      @copperbeard7196 5 лет назад

      someone didint study history

    • @unknownmf2599
      @unknownmf2599 5 лет назад

      @@copperbeard7196 You can't make a slave out of a Turk tho. It never happend. They fought or they died.

    • @copperbeard7196
      @copperbeard7196 5 лет назад

      still blaburing the same shit... there were many turkic slaves thourgh out the history. mamlukes overthrowing the monarch eventually doesnt change shit. and btw, those mamlukes were captured and sold by other turkic men. why are we so proud that we are blind?

    • @copperbeard7196
      @copperbeard7196 5 лет назад

      everyone enslaved and enslaves. youre ignorant as fuck.

  • @bretalvarez3097
    @bretalvarez3097 5 лет назад +5

    One small correction, the Ottomans didn’t enter Europe until 1353 but the 1350 map shows them having control of Gallipoli and the surrounding area.

  • @turkaytoklu2237
    @turkaytoklu2237 5 лет назад +50

    this video is good but not long enough for janissary history, there were janissary rebellions in ottoman history, even janissaries murdered sultan osman II, and they took several sultans from the throne

    • @turkaytoklu2237
      @turkaytoklu2237 4 года назад

      @ismart genius ismart genius osman 2 murdered by jannisaries because he wanted to close down the jannisary army, during the polish-ottoman war jannisaries were responsibles of failure and he wanted to build an army with turks of anatolia instead of devshirme jannisaries, and jannisaries took some other sultans from the throne, reason is money payment named culus

    • @stupidcommentmaker
      @stupidcommentmaker 4 года назад +1

      So basically the Praetorian Guard

    • @theodorospadelidis6537
      @theodorospadelidis6537 2 года назад

      @@turkaytoklu2237 i own a greco turkish friendship discord server if you want to join send me your account

  • @micahistory
    @micahistory 5 лет назад +4

    I never realised that people actually wanted to be janissaries

  • @thedoruk6324
    @thedoruk6324 5 лет назад +21

    1:30 - *Improved Politics Depictions* :)

  • @Zappuify
    @Zappuify 5 лет назад +8

    After the revolution in the Galata Oğlanları Ocağı, in the begining of 18th century, The Turks started to be accepted to Jannissary troops. This was the point in which the population of jannissaries started to grow perpetually.
    Glad to Mahmud The Second for kicking the ass of these troops. They were helpful in the begining but they caused more harm to empire rather than the other states afterwards.

  • @kedici2583
    @kedici2583 5 лет назад +10

    Every year about 3000 Christian children were taken from their families by the empire. Those children were schooled, educated to be the prime ministers, ministers and commanders. When the most clever ones got the managerial positions the rest were sent to the janissary army. Many historians critisized this saying that for centuries Christian converts ruled the Turks. In the Ottoman Empire there was no aristocratic class. This system was done to prevent nopotism. All of the government officers were from those children. Janissary army was the special force of the sultan. They were salary paid professional soldiers. They were not the soldiers to be perished on the front lines.

  • @TheBullethead
    @TheBullethead 4 года назад +8

    I have read that the Janissaries played a key role in Ottoman succession. Basically, the Sultan let his many sons murder each other until only 2 were left, then posted those two to command opposite ends of the empire. When the Sultan died, these 2 were expected to fight a civil war, the winner becoming the next Sultan, on the theory that Allah must obviously favor him as he's the sole survivor. But the Janissaries, being the only troops allowed in the capitol city, were the trump card., as they could capture the government for one prince or the other. So the Janissaries put their loyalty up for auction, forcing the princes to continually out-bid each other with offers of bribes and privileges until the Sultan died. Whoever won the auction then was assured of being Sultan and the loser would get murdered. And each generation, the auction got more expensive because the Janissaries already had whatever the previous Sultan had given them. So after a while, the Janissaries had become pretty much exempt from going on campaign (so they could keep their grip on the capitol), had a huge bankroll, and could always extort the Sultan for more stuff. IOW, politically powerful but militarily useless, and a huge expense to maintain. This is why they had to be destroyed eventually.

  • @minatodroger7890
    @minatodroger7890 5 лет назад +50

    The janissaries badass but damn did they mess up in the 19 th and 18th century

    • @Euzuner41
      @Euzuner41 5 лет назад +6

      Not 20th century Janissary forces were removed in 1826.

    • @minatodroger7890
      @minatodroger7890 5 лет назад +5

      @@Euzuner41 sorry meant 18 and 19th lol

    • @tasinal-hassan8268
      @tasinal-hassan8268 5 лет назад

      The Tanzimat reforms were really disliked.

    • @Euzuner41
      @Euzuner41 5 лет назад

      @@minatodroger7890 nema problema

    • @yurichtube1162
      @yurichtube1162 5 лет назад +1

      @Soundwave 47 the ottomans shouldn't have recruited christians as jannisiars. You can't trust anyone except your own. Even if they converted, that wouldnt erase the hate they would feel for the ottomans.

  • @princecharming1903
    @princecharming1903 5 лет назад +10

    an oriental view says Ottomans kidnapped christian kids unwillingly.Yet this is not true.Just imagine the era and how villagers lived.They either worked as farmer or fisherman.They could only live in their village a routine and ordinary life.Whenever Ottoman officers came their village many of them wished their kids to be taken.Cus they would go to capital.They would be edecated in Enderun Palace School and become Viziers even Grand Vizier or they could be recruited by Janissaries.Either way they would become the lords of Europe.How come that would be a curse its a blessing.Even now I would like to be recruited as a Janissary :)

    • @shorewall
      @shorewall 5 лет назад +1

      Muslims always lie to make themselves seem better.

    • @princecharming1903
      @princecharming1903 5 лет назад +2

      Shorewall I forgot to mention that they would not recruit any useless and ignorant backgrounded boys and grant them the opportunity of their lives just like you are.your kinda people had always lived as losers.the rest ruled the Ottomans for centuries even though the Anatolian Muslim population didn't favor non-Muslim born rulers the Christian born kids achieved victories and ruled the great empire.the was a saying in Europe about the Janissaries: fear walked before Janissaries victory followed.

  • @menaseven9093
    @menaseven9093 5 лет назад +4

    The Janissary elite troops remind me of the Mamluk slave army of the Fatimid sultans of Egypt, the Praetorian guard of the Roman emperors, and the Varangian guard of the Eastern Roman emperors. A slave army is a misnomer because a slave with weapons will not remained a slave for long time. The Mamluk slave army of Egypt deposed the Fatimid sultan and become the ruler of Egypt. In the Ottoman empire the Janissary slave army became the power behind the throne.

  • @alexanderthegreat445
    @alexanderthegreat445 5 лет назад +9

    Waiting for the Turks to arrive.

  • @ZBott
    @ZBott 5 лет назад +4

    To quote Clutch: Shadow of the new Preatorian.

  • @tessjuel
    @tessjuel 4 года назад +7

    On a tangent but a cool one I think. The Norwegian word for a military style marching band is janistjarkorps, and yes, it is indeed named after the janissaries. I think it's the smae in several other European languages too but I can't remember which off the top of my head.

  • @Alejandro-te2nt
    @Alejandro-te2nt 5 лет назад +23

    wrestling weightlifting horsemanship and the use of all manner of weapons you say? sounds like a good time. "expected to remain celibate during the course of their training..." oh... nvm.

    • @Brutian96
      @Brutian96 5 лет назад +4

      Alejandro later janissaries doesnt really care about those rules

    • @tasinal-hassan8268
      @tasinal-hassan8268 5 лет назад +10

      Semen retention helps in combat.

  • @LM-pd6wj
    @LM-pd6wj 5 лет назад +15

    Make a video about the tocharian people!

  • @kastryotanepos3580
    @kastryotanepos3580 5 лет назад +7

    George Kastrioti skanderbeg the most legendary Sultan s warrior bey jenissar and most after 1443 most terrible enemy of Ottomans ..

    • @_semih_
      @_semih_ 4 года назад +1

      Also Skanderbeg's name is Turkish. It's "Iskender Bey" bey/beg is a title. Like saying Pasha

    • @turkishpunisher6386
      @turkishpunisher6386 4 года назад +2

      The one whose head rolled in Istanbul?

    • @landsknecht9941
      @landsknecht9941 3 года назад +1

      @@turkishpunisher6386 not really

  • @diegomaine7331
    @diegomaine7331 5 лет назад +13

    Mke a video about the excubitors, the late roman emperor guard!

  • @benavraham4397
    @benavraham4397 5 лет назад +12

    That was an amazing story. Keep them coming! Your little charactor looked very real.

  • @tanz4286
    @tanz4286 5 лет назад +12

    Please do about the spies agency in the Ming! (Jinyiwei(also act as body guard), eastern depot, western depot, etc.)

    • @allengordon6929
      @allengordon6929 4 года назад

      Jinyiwei were often taken from their parents and conscripted at a young age just like the janissaries. They were created for much the same reason (avoid giving too much power to the nobility over the emperor).

  • @PUNISHERMANIA
    @PUNISHERMANIA 4 года назад +6

    After their downfall and the destruction of their barracks with cannon fire in 1826, many of them died, but some of them escaped and returned their homeland. It was a huge manhunt by the way, led by Sultan and the new army and the public. Some stayed. Those who survived the great purge eventually became gangsters (Kabadayı) and received extortion from the public. But not in the sense of Italian Mafia, they didnt have any organization. Mafia has no rules, they do only one thing making profit. A Kabadayı has some certain rules (Racon), a Kabadayı works alone, demonstrates brute force, bravery, cuts the Racon (establishing a certain rule for doing a job), gains fame and that's so. Everyone fears him in a particular territory, pays homage and sees him as the unofficial authority in his own territory. They were notorius for their Stilletto duels. Their culture endured so many years, even in modern times.

  • @sagagis
    @sagagis 5 лет назад +36

    You could've mentioned that Janissaries had already been doing coupe d'etats in 1600s-1700s and replacing many Sultans

    • @thedoruk6324
      @thedoruk6324 5 лет назад +1

      +Mirochi true

    • @sagagis
      @sagagis 5 лет назад +16

      @@thedoruk6324 he could've also mentioned the first attempt to disband Janissaries by Osman II. Then he was killed by them

    • @thedoruk6324
      @thedoruk6324 5 лет назад

      @@sagagis precisely

    • @Ugurcan191
      @Ugurcan191 5 лет назад

      They even behaded 1 sultan LOL.

    • @thedoruk6324
      @thedoruk6324 5 лет назад +10

      @@Ugurcan191 Indeed, similiar to how revolutionories Guillotione'd the Royal Family of France

  • @TheMugenVideos
    @TheMugenVideos 5 лет назад +7

    Why do you abrupt end the video in that kinda way? Anyway great video! Can you do more about ottoman history?

  • @suleimanthemagnificent7862
    @suleimanthemagnificent7862 5 лет назад +14

    Wish if I could be a Janissary Commander!
    They are Awesome and they have unique formalities that Europeans and at the reign of Suleiman the magnificent......
    They were the most powerful military forces in world......

    • @allengordon6929
      @allengordon6929 4 года назад

      If I was alive in the ottoman balkan I woud do whatever thefuck it took to be a janissary.

  • @Dalmenco
    @Dalmenco 5 лет назад +7

    They are muslims....

  • @thomasturner6980
    @thomasturner6980 5 лет назад +12

    *time for the 69th crusade*

    • @thedoruk6324
      @thedoruk6324 5 лет назад +8

      +ThomasTurnipples69 *#NİCE**#*

  • @paolostival6972
    @paolostival6972 5 лет назад +9

    Nothing about the bektashiya?

  • @alexanderhanooman
    @alexanderhanooman 5 лет назад +6

    Just like the praetorians! Hahaha history repeating itself over and over.

  • @francofzg8259
    @francofzg8259 5 лет назад +10

    Great video

  • @stone8905
    @stone8905 3 года назад +1

    Awesome video! thanks
    Assassins next please

  • @seribelz
    @seribelz 5 лет назад +11

    it's like you read my mind Yay Janissaries! Evet

  • @dopaminesignalling838
    @dopaminesignalling838 5 лет назад +2

    They were similar in origin to the domestication of dogs. I.e take and mould the young submissive bitch, into an ally. Good video btw.

  • @micahistory
    @micahistory 5 лет назад +7

    Ironic how they were supposed to protect the sultan but later on ended up killing them

  • @rogerwilson9892
    @rogerwilson9892 5 лет назад +7

    The Janissary became king makers as in the past when they became trouble were broken up by someone seen it was time to disband them.

  • @finalprophet813
    @finalprophet813 5 лет назад +11

    According to historians the janissaries were the first modern professional standing army in Europe, the Janissaries of the Ottoman Empire, formed in the fourteenth century were proper career army, paid good salaries, pensions, always given new good outfits etc
    It was the first professional career army in Europe since the Romans.

    • @euronbuci3664
      @euronbuci3664 2 года назад

      EUROPEAN KINGDOMS DURING THIS TIME HAD ONLY PROFESSIONAL SOLDIERS PAID REGULARLY, IT LIMITED THEM TO HAVE BIGGER ARMIES

  • @lordnicholasbuzanthefearle2155
    @lordnicholasbuzanthefearle2155 5 лет назад +14

    Fun fact. Bosnian muslims, Bosniaks were the only muslim population in the Empire who gave their sons willingly to the devshirme, and that is in the 15 century, way before the introduction of other muslims into the janissary core.

    • @barisozkaya2710
      @barisozkaya2710 5 лет назад +12

      But many christian families gave their sons voluntarily

    • @tasinal-hassan8268
      @tasinal-hassan8268 5 лет назад +16

      Many Christians gave away their sons,and some even bribed Ottoman officials to take away their sons. Life under Muslim lands was simply wayyyyy better.

    • @shorewall
      @shorewall 5 лет назад +7

      @@tasinal-hassan8268 You mean that life for Christians under Muslims was wayyyyy worse. That is the MO of Islam. Treat the non-muslim like shit. Force them to pay the Jiyza. Have a separate court and laws for non-muslims. And then act like the Muslims had some inherently better way of life.
      It's interesting that the best Ottoman warriors weren't turks at all.

    • @barisozkaya2710
      @barisozkaya2710 5 лет назад +9

      @@shorewall you are brainwashed.

    • @barisozkaya2710
      @barisozkaya2710 5 лет назад

      @@takod323 Dallama dallama eko yapma lan DalEko. you even dont know what you are shitting.

  • @kullancad643
    @kullancad643 5 лет назад +5

    Janissaries mostly taken from balkan childs . And become Ottoman warriors.

  • @saltycitizen8948
    @saltycitizen8948 5 лет назад +2

    I have a question. How to janissarie soldiers are ELITE SLAVE soldiers. The aren't elite slaves. They are devşirme in Turkish language dictionary. Slave and devşirme have so many differences. I'm not angry. Cuz u aren't Turk. Pls make ur researches much clear. And pls don't tell me any bad words to me cuz u don't know anything about Turks and absolutely janissary troops.

    • @saltycitizen8948
      @saltycitizen8948 5 лет назад

      And I liked your videos

    • @shorewall
      @shorewall 5 лет назад +3

      What you call devsirme, we call kidnapped child slaves. It's what YOU don't understand. You lie and pretend like you can be part of the west, but Islam is about conquest and slavery, and always has been.

  • @micahistory
    @micahistory 5 лет назад +5

    Just like the Praetorians, they soon became the biggest danger to the sultan

  • @MrFusionCube
    @MrFusionCube 5 лет назад +8

    "And so ended the Janissaries" - And so too did the video

  • @vegapunk100
    @vegapunk100 5 лет назад +26

    Was this unique to the ottomans? A human tax to make an elite bodyguard, then army?

    • @vegapunk100
      @vegapunk100 5 лет назад +1

      @Soundwave 47 where they taken from within the kingdom or from conquered lands?

    • @tasinal-hassan8268
      @tasinal-hassan8268 5 лет назад +12

      @E. R. Conscription is universal.

    • @vegapunk100
      @vegapunk100 5 лет назад

      @Soundwave 47 of course, still didn't really answered my question black n white but I got an idea thx

    • @tasinal-hassan8268
      @tasinal-hassan8268 5 лет назад +3

      @E. R. ????

    • @drederaghtretre9756
      @drederaghtretre9756 5 лет назад +25

      @E. R. You really are biased; aren't you?
      If the Ottoman empire's devhsirme' was anything 'close' to ethnic cleansing;
      you would have a -USA & North America- a %96.9 Turkic Balkan, a %89.9 Turkic Caucasia; but even the decandent and fall of empire; the balkans and caucasia were still diverse

  • @janne4518
    @janne4518 5 лет назад +6

    I just love how that Balkan boy turns into Aladdin

    • @user-sb3yq5hi5p
      @user-sb3yq5hi5p 4 года назад

      Alaaddin is arabic Ottoman is TÜRK

    • @janne4518
      @janne4518 4 года назад

      @@user-sb3yq5hi5p a joke. he looks like the character.

    • @miltonalencar94
      @miltonalencar94 3 года назад

      @@user-sb3yq5hi5p Ottoman is Muslim Greek

    • @user-sb3yq5hi5p
      @user-sb3yq5hi5p 3 года назад

      @@miltonalencar94 Greeks are muz of Albanian ,Slav Macedonian ,Bulgar Pomak and Turks

    • @miltonalencar94
      @miltonalencar94 3 года назад +1

      @@user-sb3yq5hi5p All the ones you mentioned are remixed remixed, Greeks are Pellasgians, Minoans and Mycennaens.

  • @humzabhatti6745
    @humzabhatti6745 5 лет назад +8

    Great video

  • @micahistory
    @micahistory 5 лет назад +7

    They ended up like the Praetorian Guards

  • @HoundofOdin
    @HoundofOdin 5 лет назад +6

    Another video on the Ottomans? Is it my birthday?

  • @micahistory
    @micahistory 5 лет назад +6

    Decadence and intrigue always cause empires to collapse

  • @montvilleo
    @montvilleo 2 месяца назад +3

    As someone who is of European descent, does this mean that I am eligible for reparations from the Turks ???

    • @notkingali1798
      @notkingali1798 10 дней назад

      You’re trying to be smart and slightly make fun of black people in America, but No a Janissary was not equal to an American slave. Did you even see the video? The system was horrible but to compare it to American/Western slavery is just disingenuous.

    • @montvilleo
      @montvilleo 10 дней назад +2

      @@notkingali1798 wrong. I'm calling out this whole reparations thing for what it is: a political football !

    • @notkingali1798
      @notkingali1798 10 дней назад

      @@montvilleo not really you’re just coping because I called out EXACTLY what you were doing. Second like I said Janissaries were paid really really well and were respected members of society but were black people in America paid well……….. Third American government purposely kept black Americans poor even after slavery was abolished, have you ever heard of Jim Crow laws?? And many more horrible stuff. Do me a favor and stop watching Fox News and stop using 4 Chan

  • @LeviathanSpeaks1469
    @LeviathanSpeaks1469 5 лет назад +5

    The moral of the story... Don’t fix it if it ain’t broke...

  • @quentasilmarillion552
    @quentasilmarillion552 5 лет назад +14

    This is the most neutral explanation of the Janissery system. This one became short but well explained as much as it can. Most people think that Janisseries were forced to fight, work as straight slaves of these times but the truth is different. They were raised as a normal Turkish person and educated in Turkish military system. They became the most skilled warriors in almost all of the European history. They had too many rights beside the Sultan, in the army and inside the population. They were a part of the Empire as they were supposed to be. Ottoman Empire didn't suffer to people people who chose to live under their rule,just gave non-Muslim ones more tax rates as a Muslim State.

    • @greekgirlsofia2937
      @greekgirlsofia2937 2 года назад

      Their conversion to Islam was forcefull, christian parents were obliged to hand over Their boys to the sultan they werent happy believe me, also why the taxes should be heavier to non muslims? What kind of discrimination is that? So christians having a good time under their rule ha? History is written

  • @slavdefendov1499
    @slavdefendov1499 5 лет назад +2

    The best Jannisarries were Serbs,Greeks and Romanian Christian boys who were raised as Muslims

  • @Emrek157
    @Emrek157 5 лет назад +11

    I've never seen a foreign video about our history that objective. Great video. Foreigners think that we stole Christian kids, Turks think that it was a luck for them. Probably both of them are right at some parts and you included both opinions about the situation in the video. It's not something happens a lot tho.
    Foreign pov when it comes to Turkish history is unrealistic and biased.
    Greetings from Istanbul (:

    • @allengordon6929
      @allengordon6929 4 года назад

      @Real history is unpleasant! Watch the outlaw king. That 14-year old was damn lucky.

    • @euronbuci3664
      @euronbuci3664 2 года назад

      They were captured or by force or for money. BALKAN EUROPEAN SOLDIERS WERE THE BESTS THAT'S WHY

    • @Emrek157
      @Emrek157 2 года назад

      @@euronbuci3664 If they were the best why did they lose to Ottomans in the first place?
      If they were the best why were they raised as a Turk?

  • @generalmichaelconstantine4598
    @generalmichaelconstantine4598 5 лет назад +5

    You should make a video about the Klephts / Enzones.

  • @Realite58
    @Realite58 5 лет назад +10

    The special forces of the Ottomans are ‘Akincilar’ the traditional nomadic Turks. There is no emirates in Turkic history, it is Beyliks and the rulers are not Emir but ‘Bey’.

    • @torikeqi8710
      @torikeqi8710 4 года назад +1

      Also the Akniclar war used very rarley and had no mportance.
      By 1480 they were not used anymore.
      Sipahis were more important.

  • @ricardoguanipa8275
    @ricardoguanipa8275 5 лет назад +8

    The transformation from a European Christian to a Turk at 3:12 is hilarious

    • @sephikong8323
      @sephikong8323 5 лет назад +3

      This is what wearing a fez does to your mood
      This post was made by anti fez gang

    • @kamilkaze-ku7ys
      @kamilkaze-ku7ys 5 лет назад

      Lolll

  • @chrisgaming3373
    @chrisgaming3373 5 лет назад +17

    Star Wars: The Clone Wars

    • @wasi6798
      @wasi6798 4 года назад +3

      Janissaries are more like the Storm Troopers from the Sequel movies, rather than the Clone Troopers from the originals and the prequels.

    • @allengordon6929
      @allengordon6929 4 года назад

      @@wasi6798 The first order stormtroopers are an exceptionally dark take on the idea of the derivişhme

    • @zahranmohammad3880
      @zahranmohammad3880 3 года назад

      @@wasi6798 execpt stormtroopers werent elite bodyguatds

  • @micahistory
    @micahistory 5 лет назад +5

    Explaining how being a janissary could get your rich was very interesting.I never saw it from that perspective

    • @micahistory
      @micahistory 5 лет назад +1

      @George Pavlov they were paid well

  • @okok-ky4in
    @okok-ky4in 5 лет назад +6

    one of the factors that took the remnants of the roman empire down

  • @HD-mp6yy
    @HD-mp6yy 5 лет назад +2

    The European part of the 1444 and 1453 maps is wrong the Ottoman empire hadn't conquered Belgrad or Wallachia yet.
    BTW i like your videos keep making them.

  • @zulthyr1852
    @zulthyr1852 5 лет назад +14

    inb4 SJWs ruin the Ottoman Empire by calling it the Ottowoman Empire

    • @pladimir_vutin
      @pladimir_vutin 5 лет назад

      lmao😂

    • @flimpeenflarmpoon1353
      @flimpeenflarmpoon1353 5 лет назад

      What year is it?

    • @zulthyr1852
      @zulthyr1852 5 лет назад

      @@flimpeenflarmpoon1353 2019, but apparently this number is offensive to the Cult of Karen, so I'm typing this from an SJW gulag.

  • @TheGreyPeregrine
    @TheGreyPeregrine 5 лет назад +14

    You should have mentioned that jannisaries were practicing a very different type of Islam called Bektashism, a Sufi doctrine that incorporated many elements from Christianity, Zoroastrianism and even Buddhism.

    • @youraverageimperialguard7932
      @youraverageimperialguard7932 5 лет назад +1

      That's completely false. Also Sufi Islam is not influenced by Christianity, Buddhism or any other religion. It's the most devout/extreme sect of Islam, it doesn't accept outside influences. Sufi Islam is solely focused on complete and total submission to Islam regardless of your life or environment. Stop lying.

    • @TheGreyPeregrine
      @TheGreyPeregrine 5 лет назад +12

      @@youraverageimperialguard7932 As a matter of fact you are the one who has no idea what he's talking about. You confuse Sufism with Sunni Islam.

    • @brinjoness3386
      @brinjoness3386 4 года назад

      @@youraverageimperialguard7932 you don't think it would have been in the sultans interest to give a watered down version of his religious beliefs? He probably told them their were 140 virgins in the sky waiting for them, he certainly had no problem with them sleeping together.

    • @youraverageimperialguard7932
      @youraverageimperialguard7932 4 года назад +1

      @@TheGreyPeregrine Sufism is apart of both Sunni and Shia Islam, you complete moron.

    • @youraverageimperialguard7932
      @youraverageimperialguard7932 4 года назад

      @@brinjoness3386 No, it would not. Sufism is not "watered down" either. It's the most strict/extreme sect of Islam. Lots of famous jihadists in history have been Sufis. Like I said Sufism is the most extreme puritan form of Islam. Hence why most Sufis don't even eat watermelon or other foods because Prophet Muhammad(pbuh) didn't. To suggest such a thing is EXTREMELY Stupid and highlights a intense ignorance of what Sufism is. Sufism is widely accepted and highly regarded by the vast majority of Muslims everywhere in the Muslim world for their devotion to Islam and the last Prophet.

  • @RuneOverW
    @RuneOverW 5 лет назад +6

    Oooooh yes, I’ve been waiting for this one

  • @ricoman486
    @ricoman486 5 лет назад +1

    Getting kidnapped from your homeland and then having your original identity wiped from existence; that’s pretty fucked ngl

  • @opus53waldstein70
    @opus53waldstein70 5 лет назад +7

    Reminds me of Black army (حراطين) of Alaouite sultan Moulay ismail

    • @BoqPrecision
      @BoqPrecision 5 лет назад +1

      Or the Blackwater/XE/Academi mercenaries currently operating in UAE.

    • @ooopppp1
      @ooopppp1 5 лет назад +1

      the one who sold a bunch of land in exchange for a bicycle ?

    • @jiren-geek9757
      @jiren-geek9757 5 лет назад +2

      @@ooopppp1 No he is talking about sultan Moulay Ismail at that time his kingdom spread until Senegal an Niger river and control the city of timbuctu in 1700 his empire was in fact bigger than the Ottomans
      That Empire was known as cherifien Empire

    • @BALLARDTWIN
      @BALLARDTWIN 5 лет назад +1

      @@jiren-geek9757
      That dude was a sex addict
      But very strong ruler
      Bit crazy
      But still powerful