Gedik Ahmed Pasha

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Gedik Ahmet Pasha Mosque (1477) in Afyonkarahisar, part of a magnificent religious and educational compound (source&permission: Municioality of Afyonkarahisar).
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Gedik Ahmet Pasha Mosque (1477) in Afyonkarahisar, part of a magnificent religious and educational compound (source&permission: Municioality of Afyonkarahisar).

Gedik Ahmet Pasha was a distinguished Ottoman grand vizier as well as an army and navy commander during the reigns of sultans Mehmed the Conqueror (1451 – 1481) and Beyazid II (1481 – 1512).

His background remains largely unknown. Some sources claim that he was of Albanian descent, but this theory is almost exclusively based on his refusal to participate in a campaign to İşkodra (Shkoder) on one occasion. He undertook virtually all of his construction enterprises in Anatolia, and their preferences in this domain usually give a clue on the respective origins of Ottoman statesmen.

Leading the Ottoman Army, he defeated the last principality resisting Ottoman expansion in Anatolia, the Karamanids. The Karamanids had been the strongest principality in Anatolia for nearly 200 years, even stronger than the Ottomans in the latter's beginning. They effectively succeeded the Anatolian Selçuk Sultanate in the amount of possessions they held, among them the city of Konya, the former Selçuk capital. In this sense, Gedik Ahmet Pasha's victory against the Karamanids in 1471, conquering their territory as well as the Mediterranean coastal region around Ermenek, Mennan and Silifke, proved crucial for the future of the Ottomans.

Gedik Ahmet Pasha also fought against Venetians in the Mediterranean and was dispatched in 1475 by the Sultan to aid the Crimean Khanate against Genoese forces. In Crimea, he conquered Caffa, Soldaia, Cembalo and other Genoese castles as well as the Principality of Theodoro with its capital Mangup and the coastal regions of Crimea. He rescued the Khan of Crimea, Meñli I Giray, from Genoese forces. As a result of this campaign, Crimea and Circassia entered into the Ottoman sphere of influence.

In 1479, in a daring move, Sultan Mehmet II ordered him to lead the Ottoman Navy in the Mediterranean Sea as part of the war against Naples and Milan. During his campaign, Gedik Ahmet Pasha conquered the islands of Aya Mavra, Kefalonya and Zanta). Since he had conquered Constantinople in 1453, Mehmed II saw himself as the inheritor of the Roman Empire and seriously considered the conquest of Italy to reunite Roman lands under his dynasty. As part of this plan, Gedik Ahmet Pasha was sent with a naval force to the heel of the Italian peninsula and successfully tookOtranto in 1480.

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