Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Balkan city in the Ottoman period (15th–16th century)

View through CrossRef
Arrival of the Ottomans to the Balkans has witnessed major changes in the development of cities in the area. They have played particularly important role in the construction of new as well as in the changes of existing late antique and medieval towns and their adaptation to Islamic civilization which they brought. The uniqueness of these cities is that they were denselypopulated with predominantly Muslim population; they had monumental Islamic buildings and a large bazaar where a variety of crafts were developed. Ottoman cadastral records (defteri) show that over 200 cities were in the Balkans in the second halfof the fifteenth and sixteenth century. Example of Sarajevo reveals a concept planned established city – residence, which Gazi Isa Bey started to build on the shores of Miljacka by his endowments and numerous other officials, wealthy merchants, artisans and other citizens of Sarajevo continued, including the particularly important role of Gazi Husrev Bey. His complexof buildings still witnesses the planned construction, which was aimed to transform this city not only to administrative but also economic, educational and cultural centre of Bosnia.  When we talk about cities in the Balkans in the Ottoman period, it is necessary to speak about the role of waqfin the creation and development of urban settlements. Raising the waqf facilities for various purposes, began with the urban formation of the citysettlements, and further development of waqf buildingsserved as the basis of that development. Waqf were established by province governors, military commanders and other officials of the Ottoman Empire, as well as wealthy merchants and artisans. Balkan cities population was in the rise in the fifteenthcentury, and during the sixteenth century it was doubled. Most of the city’s population were Muslims. They were not, as is often thought, mostly officers and soldiers of the Ottoman Empire or foreigners, but the majority of the urban population were localpeople, artisans and merchants, and various officers. Sarajevo has been developed within one civilization, along with other cities in the Balkans. The most intensive development of Sarajevo during the Ottoman period was in the sixteenth century, so it became the largest and most important city in Bosnia and one of the major cities in the Balkans. All characteristicsof an Islamic Ottoman town, both in urban development, division into two zones of housing and economic (mahala – bazaar), as well as the development of trade and their guilds and development of trade, were expressed. It was the administrative, economic, cultural and educational center of the Bosnian Sanjak, later eyalet.  
Academy of Sciences and Arts of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Title: Balkan city in the Ottoman period (15th–16th century)
Description:
Arrival of the Ottomans to the Balkans has witnessed major changes in the development of cities in the area.
They have played particularly important role in the construction of new as well as in the changes of existing late antique and medieval towns and their adaptation to Islamic civilization which they brought.
The uniqueness of these cities is that they were denselypopulated with predominantly Muslim population; they had monumental Islamic buildings and a large bazaar where a variety of crafts were developed.
Ottoman cadastral records (defteri) show that over 200 cities were in the Balkans in the second halfof the fifteenth and sixteenth century.
Example of Sarajevo reveals a concept planned established city – residence, which Gazi Isa Bey started to build on the shores of Miljacka by his endowments and numerous other officials, wealthy merchants, artisans and other citizens of Sarajevo continued, including the particularly important role of Gazi Husrev Bey.
His complexof buildings still witnesses the planned construction, which was aimed to transform this city not only to administrative but also economic, educational and cultural centre of Bosnia.
  When we talk about cities in the Balkans in the Ottoman period, it is necessary to speak about the role of waqfin the creation and development of urban settlements.
Raising the waqf facilities for various purposes, began with the urban formation of the citysettlements, and further development of waqf buildingsserved as the basis of that development.
Waqf were established by province governors, military commanders and other officials of the Ottoman Empire, as well as wealthy merchants and artisans.
Balkan cities population was in the rise in the fifteenthcentury, and during the sixteenth century it was doubled.
Most of the city’s population were Muslims.
They were not, as is often thought, mostly officers and soldiers of the Ottoman Empire or foreigners, but the majority of the urban population were localpeople, artisans and merchants, and various officers.
Sarajevo has been developed within one civilization, along with other cities in the Balkans.
The most intensive development of Sarajevo during the Ottoman period was in the sixteenth century, so it became the largest and most important city in Bosnia and one of the major cities in the Balkans.
All characteristicsof an Islamic Ottoman town, both in urban development, division into two zones of housing and economic (mahala – bazaar), as well as the development of trade and their guilds and development of trade, were expressed.
It was the administrative, economic, cultural and educational center of the Bosnian Sanjak, later eyalet.
  .

Related Results

Wars of Balkan Liberation, 1878–1913
Wars of Balkan Liberation, 1878–1913
Revolts against Ottoman rule erupted in the Balkans in 1875 and in 1876. Wars in which Montenegro, Romania, Russia, and Serbia fought against the Ottoman Empire broke out soon ther...
I. BALKAN SAVAŞI’NDAN SONRA BALKAN DEVLETLERİNİN “MADDİ TALEPLERİ”
I. BALKAN SAVAŞI’NDAN SONRA BALKAN DEVLETLERİNİN “MADDİ TALEPLERİ”
Osmanlı Devleti’nin “Düvel-i Muazzama” olarak adlandırdığı Büyük Güçler, I. Balkan Savaşı’ndan sonra Osmanlı kamu borçları ve iktisadi imtiyazlarının Balkan devletlerine devredilme...
Ottoman Women
Ottoman Women
The emergence of women’s studies in the 1970s and 1980s significantly broadened the scope of sources and methods in the study of the socio-economic, cultural, and legal history of ...
The Balkan Wars
The Balkan Wars
Described as the "sick man of Europe" by the Great Powers, the Ottoman Empire in the early twentieth century was in terminal decline. The newly independent Balkan states—Greece, Se...
BALKAN ANTANTI BASIN KONFERANSLARI
BALKAN ANTANTI BASIN KONFERANSLARI
Balkan Antantı Basın Konferansları, 9 Şubat 1934’te kabul edilen Balkan Antantı’nın yol açtığı önemli gelişmeler arasında yer almaktadır. Birincisi 1936 yılında Bükreş’te düzenlene...
The Ottoman Legal Framework and the Economic History of Bulgarian Lands in the 15th – 18th Centuries
The Ottoman Legal Framework and the Economic History of Bulgarian Lands in the 15th – 18th Centuries
The focus of this chapter is on several main issues. The changes in the approaches and methodology of researching the Ottoman economy and the economic history of the Bulgarians in ...
The Balkan War and Its Implications for Islamic Socio-Political Life in So utheast Europe (1876-1914 AD)
The Balkan War and Its Implications for Islamic Socio-Political Life in So utheast Europe (1876-1914 AD)
This research describes the historical series of the occurrence of the Balkan Wars and the implications thereof for Muslim life there. This study took three main problems, namely (...
Ottoman Navy
Ottoman Navy
This article deals with the literature dedicated to the history of the Ottoman navy from the early fourteenth century up to the making of the modern Turkish Republic in 1923. The O...

Back to Top