Ottoman Empire
In 1683, when the Ottoman forces were besieging Vienna, the empire reached its high-water mark and then began its slow, steady decline after suffering a major defeat in this battle. Only very gradually did Europeans come to perceive it as the Sick Man of Europe, however, since it was still formidable enough to play an important role in the defeat of Russia in the Crimean War of 1854-56. This was its last major victory, however, since by 1878 it had lost most of the Balkans, or Rumelia as it was known to the Ottomans, and with it much of its tax revenue and the recruitment ground for the Janissaries. It lost Crete in 1896 and Macedonia and Thrace after the Balkan Wars in 1912-13, and ceased to be a European power. Compared to the Western powers that were becoming urban and industrialized in the 19th Century, the Ottoman Empire lagged far behind in science, manufacturing and technology, while foreigners took control of its banking and trade (Quataert, 2005, p. 57). At the same time, none of the Great Powers could afford to let it collapse completely, lest one of their rivals take over Constantinople and the Straights. This had been a longstanding Russian goal, of course, but it was not in the interest of any of its imperial rivals. Therefore the Ottoman Empire lingered on until the First World War, when Britain, Italy, Greece, France and Russia signed secret agreements to partition it. Russia never received the Turkish Straights, though, and after the 1917 revolution the Bolsheviks publicized all the secret agreements, much to the embarrassment of the Western powers. Britain and France occupied Constantinople and partitioned the Arab Middle East among themselves, according to the provisions of the 1916 Sykes-Picot Agreement.
Greece in particular had the Megali Idea, the Great or Grand Idea of nationalist irredentism, and their dream was to reestablish the Hellenistic Empire that had existed ever before Alexander the Great, when the Greeks dominated the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East. It had continued on in the form of the Byzantine or Eastern Roman Empire with its capital at Constantinople, at least until the Arabs and Turks conquered it. After the defeat of the Ottomans in 1918, Greece, Britain and France attempted to put the Megali Idea into practice but were defeated by Ataturk in 1922. As a result, over a million Greeks were expelled from Turkish lands, including from communities where they had lived for 3,000 years: none of these exist any longer. Crete and Cyprus were also scheduled to be part of this revived Greek Empire, and on Crete the Turkish minority was expelled. This would also have occurred on Cyprus had it reunified with Greece, except that the Turks landed troops there to protect the Turkish minority, and the conflict has not yet been fully resolved. For the Turks, this fight was no longer to preserve the empire that Ataturk despised, but a war for "the liberation of a Turkish homeland in Anatolia" (Quataert, p. 61).
In Nikos Kazantzakis's great novel Freedom or Death, set in the town of Megalokastro on Crete in 1889 with yet another rebellion against the Turks is brewing in the background, the Christian and Turkish leaders both look forward to the future with dread and pessimism. For the Orthodox Metropolitan of Megalokastro, who was of course a nationalist and supporter of the rebellion, Crete has taken the place of the crucified Christ in one of his paintings, and he replied to a visitor who thought the picture sinful that she was, "but she is worth it" (Kazantzakis 164). Only the two town idiots think that the Greeks and Turks should be able to get along, and even the Turkish Pasha agreed that they were wiser than himself and the Metropolitan, but the war went on regardless. In addition, the Pasha lamented the decline of the Ottoman Empire, saying "but now I've grown old. The State, too, has grown old. And it's the fault of this damned Crete" (Kazantzakis 122). When the Turks suppress the revolt, an army of medieval Dervishes lands on Crete, wearing "green skirts and pointed white hats, and with daggers in their belts. They clambered on to the mole, unrolled the green flag of the Prophet in front of the Harbor Gate, and began dancing round it, slowly, clapping their hands" (Kazantakis 267). They finally defeat the rebellion and drive Michalis and his men back up into the mountains, where they engage in a suicidal and pointless last stand at the climax of the novel. Captain Michalis saluted his nephew as an honorable...
Ottoman Empire is among the most fascinating periods in the history of civilization, and it remains the subject of scholarly study because of the impact it had on the world, and continues to have today. The empire began around as a medieval state in the late 13th Century around what is now known as Turkey; the region had largely been unaffected, either socially, militarily or economically by the social progress
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