Mughal and Ottoman Empires
The Mughal dynasty ruled the area that is now considered India and Persia between the years 1526 and 1857. The Ottoman Empire was able to sustain power from July 1299 to the end of the First World War in 1923. Both empires used a form of monarchy which was called absolutism; that is the governmental belief that the monarch has supreme and absolute power. Absolutism was a form of monarchial power where the ruler's authority was unchecked. No group: not the clergy, not courtiers, not legislatures, or members of the social elite had the power to prohibit the monarch from doing whatever he or she pleased. It was a system of government controlled by one individual with absolute power over the entirety of his or her realm. Those that dared challenge the monarch met swift ends which would deter others from attempting to thwart the ruler. Among the nations where evidence exists that the rulers of the country were able to create absolutist regimes were the Ottoman Empire and Mughals. The Ottoman Empire was able to retain power for more than 600 years while the Mughal were only able to keep control for half of that time, proving that the former was a far more successful government structure than the latter.
Both the Ottoman and Mughal Empires had certain characteristics in common. Both had a majority population of Muslim peoples, although the two nations were of different sects of Islam. They were able to use the religious fervor of their respective populations to ensure their retention of power, the monarchs comparing themselves to Muhammad and to their rule as the will of God (Stearns). This made challenging the monarchs even more hazardous and unlikely because now they were not only defying their leader by rebelling, but defying God himself who was working through their leader. Fear of punishment through religious dogma has been a powerful tool toward maintaining subordination and subjugation since the founding of organized religion.
One of the most frequent characteristics of an absolutist monarchy was the erection and possession of at least one extremely lavish palace. Such extravagant homes could be found in France and many other European nations. Those who desired to show a similar standing of power would build equally or even more extravagant castles in order to prove a point to their political adversaries. The palace, which was the home of the monarch, was intended to reflect the power of that individual. The home of the Ottoman ruler was the Topkapi Palace in Istanbul. Necipo-lu writes:
The vast imperial palaces, conceived as architectural metaphors for three patrimonial-bureaucratic empires with their hierarchical organization of state functions around public, semi-public, and private zones culminating in gardens, constituted elaborate stages for dynamic representation. Animated by court rituals, each of them projected a distinctive royal image, invented with a specific theory of dynastic legitimacy in mind (303).
The idea was that the larger and more opulent the home, the more grand the perception of the person who inhabited it. This same sentiment is true of the other forms of art surrounding these governments. All works of art: paintings, music, architecture, and literature in an absolutist society will face the scrutiny of that government's leader. Each piece is representative of that culture and will reflect the leader of that culture. Consequently, the leaders of absolutist nations were heavily interested in the artistic representations which would come about from inside the country.
Under the absolutist regime of the Ottoman Empire, the area of the world became primarily agrarian. The realm was controlled by agriculture, but the farmers had no power and were little more than medieval serfs (Allcock 179). This governmental form, known as the millet system intentionally segregated "all kinds of political, economic and cultural activities, long after the displacement of the Ottoman authority" (282). Leaders of absolutist regimes...
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