Subdivisions of the Ottoman Empire
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State organisation of the Ottoman Empire |
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House of Osman | ||
Grand Vizier (1320-1922) Divan (1586? - 1908) |
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Imperial Government (1908 - 1920) | ||
See also | Subdivisions - Phanariotes |
Subdivisions of the Ottoman Empire is the "military administration" part of the state organisation of the Ottoman Empire. There were two main eras. The first one was the initial organization and the second one was the organization after the administrative reform of 1864. The initial organization dates back to the beginnings as a Seljuk vassal state (Uç Beyliği) in central Anatolia. The Ottoman Empire over the years became an amalgamation of pre-existing polities, the Anatolian beyliks, brought under the sway of the ruling House of Osman.
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[edit] Initial Organization
The initial extension was on already established administrative structure by the Seljuk system in which the hereditary rulers of these territories were known as beys. These beys (local leadership), which were not eliminated, continued to rule under the suzerainty of the Ottoman sultans. The term bey came to be applied not only to these former rulers but also to new governors appointed where the local leadership had been eliminated.
The Ottoman Empire was, at first, subdivided into the sovereign’s sanjak and other sanjaks entrusted to the Ottoman sultan’s sons. Sanjaks were governed by sanjak beyis, military governors who received a flag or standard – a "sanjak" (the literal meaning) – from the sultan. As the Empire expanded into Europe, the need for an intermediate level of administration arose and, under the rule of Murad I (r. 1359-1389), a beylerbeyi or governor-general was appointed to oversee Rumelia, the European part of the empire. About the same time a beylerbeylik was also established for Anatolia, excluding however the Rum area around Amasya, then the seat of the Empire, which remained under the sultan’s direct control (usually through his grand vizier). Following the establishment of beylerbeyliks, sanjaks became second-order administrative divisions, although they continued to be of the first order in certain circumstances such as newly conquered areas that had yet to be assigned a beylerbeyi. In addition to their duties as governors-general, beylerbeyis were the commanders of all troops in their province.
[edit] First-order administrative units
[edit] Eyalets in 1299-1609
From the mid-14th century until the late 16th century, only one new beylerbeylik (Karaman) was established.
[edit] Eyalets disappeared before 1609
The eyalets that existed before 1609 but disappeared and eyalets created after 1609.
- Abkhazia (Abhaz) (1578-?) (also called Sukhum [Sohumkale] or Georgia [Gürcistan] and included Mingrelia and Imeretia as well as modern Abkhazia – nominally annexed but never fully conquered)
- Akhaltsikhe (Ahıska) (c. 1603-?) (either split from or coextensive with Samtskhe)
- Dagestan (Dağıstan) (1578-?) (also called Demirkapı – assigned a serdar [chief] rather than a beylerbeyi)
- Dmanisi (Tumanis) (c. 1584-?)
- Ganja (Gence) (c.1588-1604)
- Gori (Gori) (c. 1588-?) (probably replaced Tiflis after 1586)
- Győr (Yanık) (1594-1598)
- Kakheti (Kaheti) (c. 1578-?) (Kakhetian king was appointed hereditary bey)
- Lorri (Lori) (c. 1584-?)
- Moldavia (Boğdan) (1595 only)
- Nakhichevan (Nahçivan) (c. 1603) (possibly never separate from Yerevan)
- Poti (Faş) (1579-?) (may have also been another name for Trabzon)
- Sanaa (San'a) (1567-1569) (temporary division of Yemen)
- Shemakha (Şamahı) (c. 1583) (may have also been another name for Shervan)
- Szigetvár (Sigetvar, Zigetvar) (c. 1596) (later transferred to Kanizsa)
- Shervan (Şirvan) (1578-1604) (overseen by a serdar [chief] rather than a beylerbeyi)
- Tabriz (Tebriz) (1585-1603)
- Tiflis (Tiflis) (1578-1586) (probably replaced by Gori after 1586)
- Wallachia (Eflak) (1595 only)
- Yerevan (Erivan) (1583-1604) (sometimes also included Van)
- Zabid (Zebid [Zebit]) (1567-1569) (temporary division of Yemen)
[edit] Eyalets in 1609
Conquests of Selim I and Suleyman I in the 17th century required an increase in administrative units. By the end of the latter half of the century there were as many as 42 eyalets, as the beylerbeyliks came to be known. The chart below shows the administrative situation as of 1609.
Province Name | Ottoman Turkish Name and Transliteration (Modern Turkish) | Year Established | Current Location | |
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Abyssinia | Habeş | c. 1554 | Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Eritrea, Somalia | Included areas on both sides of the Red Sea. Also called "Mecca and Medina" |
Adana | آضنه Ażana (Adana) | c. 1608 | Turkey | |
Aegean Archipelago | Cezayir | mid-1500s | Greece | Domain of the Kapudan Pasha (Lord Admiral); Also called Denizi, later Cezayir Bahr-i Sefid |
Aleppo | حلب Ḥaleb (Halep) | c.1516-1521 | Syria, Turkey | |
Algiers | جزاير غرب Cezâyîr-i Ġarb (Cezayir Garp) | 1519 | Algeria | |
Anatolia | Anadolu | c. 1365 | Turkey | |
Baghdad | بغداد Baġdâd (Bağdat) | 1535 | Iraq | |
Basra | بصره Baṣra (Basra) | c. 1552 | Iraq | |
Bosnia | Bosna | c. 1520s | Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croatia, Serbia, Montenegro | |
Buda | Budin | 1541 | Hungary, Croatia, Serbia | |
Cyprus | قبرص Ḳıbrıṣ (Kıbrıs) | 1571 | Cyprus, Turkey | c. 1660-1703 and 1784→ part of Aegean Archipelago Province |
Diyarbekir | دياربكر Diyârbekir (Diyarbakır) | 1515 | Turkey, Iraq | |
Eger | اكر Egir (Eğri) | 1596 | Hungary | |
Egypt | مصر Mıṣır (Mısır) | 1517 | Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Saudi Arabia | |
Erzurum | Erzurum | c. 1514-1534 | Turkey | |
Al-Hasa | Lahsa | c. 1579 | Saudi Arabia | Seldom directly ruled |
Kefe (Theodosia) | Kefe | c. 1581 | Ukraine, Russia | |
Kanizsa | Kanije | 1600 | Hungary, Croatia | |
Karaman | Karaman | c. 1470 | Turkey | |
Kars | Kars | 1579 | Turkey, Georgia | Merged with Samtskhe in 1604. Finally bounded to *Erzurum in 1845. |
Maraş | Maraş, Dulkadır | c. 1522 | Turkey | |
Mosul | Musul | c. late 1500s | Iraq | |
Ar-Raqqah | Rakka | c. late 1500s | Syria, Turkey, Iraq | Also called Ruha (Urfa) |
Rumelia | Rumeli | c. 1365 | Bulgaria, Greece, Macedonia, Albania, Serbia, Montenegro, Turkey | With Anatolia, one of the original two eyalets |
Samtskhe | Çıldır | c. 1579 | Georgia, Turkey | Also called Meskheti, later possibly coextensive with Akhaltsikhe (Ahıska) Province. Most of eyalet passed to Russia in 1829. Remained parts of eyalet bounded to Erzurum in 1845. |
Shehrizor | Şehrizor | c. mid-1500s | Iraq, Iran | Also Shahrizor, Sheherizul, or Kirkuk. In 1830, this eyalet bounded to Mosul province as Kirkuk sanjak. |
Silistria | Silistre | c. 1599 | Bulgaria, Romania, Moldova, Ukraine | Later sometimes called Ochakiv (Özi); First beylerbeyi was the Crimean khan |
Sivas | Sivas | c. early 1500s | Turkey | |
Syria | Şam | 1516-17 | Syria, Lebanon, Israel, Palestinian Authority, Jordan, part of present Turkey and part of present Iraq. | |
Timişoara | Tımışvar | 1552 | Romania, Serbia, Hungary | Also called Temesvar Province |
Trabzon | Trabzon | c. late 1500s | Turkey, Georgia | Also called Trebizond Province |
Tripoli (Tripoli-in-the-East) | Trablusu-Şam (Trablusşam) | c. 1570s | Lebanon, Syria | |
Tripolitania (Tripoli-in-the-West) | Trablusu-Garb (Trablusgarp) | 1551 | Libya | |
Tunis | Tunus | 1574 | Tunisia | |
Van | Van | 1548 | Turkey | |
Yemen | Yemen | 1517-18, 1539 | Yemen, Saudi Arabia |
Sources:
- Colin Imber. The Ottoman Empire, 1300-1650: The structure of Power. (Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire, UK: Palgrave Macmillan, 2002.)
- Halil Inalcik. The Ottoman Empire: The Classical Age 1300-1600. Trans. Norman Itzkowitz and Colin Imber. (London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1973.)
- Donald Edgar Pitcher. An Historical Geography of the Ottoman Empire (Leiden, Netherlands: E.J.Brill,1972.)
[edit] Eyalets established 1609–1683
- Crete (Girid [Girit]) (1669/70– )
- Morea (Mora) (1620–1687) and (1715–1829) (originally part of Aegean Archipelago Province)
- Podolia (Podolya) (1674–1699 only) (overseen be several serdars [chiefs] rather than a beylerbeyi)
- Sidon (Sayda) (1660– )
- Neuhäusl (Uyvar) (1663–1685)
- Oradea (Varad) (1661–1692)
[edit] Eyalets established 1683–1864
[edit] Second-order administrative units
The provinces were divided into sanjaks (also called livas) governed by sanjakbeys and were further subdivided into timars (fiefs held by timariots) and zeamets (also ziam; larger timars). Some, such as the Mutasarrifate (Sanjak) of Jerusalem, were not part of a province. Sanjak governors also served as military commanders of all of the timariot and zeamet-holding cavalrymen in their sanjak. Some provinces such as Egypt, Baghdad, Abyssinia, and Al-Hasa (the salyane provinces) were not subdivided into sanjaks and timars.
[edit] Administrative reform, 1864
As the Ottoman Empire began to decline, the administrative structure came under pressure. After 1861 there existed an autonomous Mount Lebanon with a Christian mutasarrif, which had been created as a homeland for the Maronite Christians under European pressure. As part of the Tanzimat reforms, an Ottoman law passed in 1864 provided for a standard provincial administration throughout the empire with the eyalets becoming smaller vilayets governed by a wali or governor still appointed by the Porte but with new provincial assemblies participating in administration. The vilayets were subdivided into sanjaks, mutasarrifates and vassal states such as Serbia, Romania, and Montenegro remained separate from the provincial system.
[edit] Vilayets, 1877
- Western
- Bosnia (Bosna)
- Çatalca (Çatalca) (autonomous sanjak, not a vilayet) (Çatalca Sancağı)
- Crete (Girit)
- Cyprus (Kıbrıs) (island with special status) (Kıbrıs Adası)
- Danube (Tuna)
- Eastern Rumelia, autonomous
- Edirne (Edirne) (Also called Adrianople)
- Herzegovina (Hersek)
- Istanbul (İstanbul) (Also called Constantinople)
- Janina (Yanya)
- Kosovo (Kosova)
- Monastir (Manastır)
- Salonica (Selanik)
- Shkodër (İşkodra)
- Samos (Sisam) (island with special status) (Sisam Beyliği)
- Sofia (Sofya)
- Mecca (Mekke) (autonomous sharifate, not a vilayet) (Mekke Şerifliği)
- Mosul (Musul) (from 1879)
- Mount Lebanon (Cebel-i Lübnan [Cebeli Lübnan]) (mutasarrifate of Beirut, not a vilayet) (Cebel-i Lübnan Mutasarrıflığı)
- Serfije Sanjak (Serfije, Servia), not attached to a vilayet
- Syria (Şam) (Also called Damascus)
- Tripolitania (Trablusu-Garb [Trablusgarp])
- Tunis (Tunus) (autonomous eyalet, ruled by hereditary beys) (Tunus Eyaleti)
- Anatolia
- Adana (Adana)
- Aegean Archipelago (Cezayir-i Bahr-i Sefid [Akdeniz Adaları])
- Aleppo (Haleb [Halep])
- Ankara (Ankara) (also called Angora)
- Aydın (Aydın)
- Biga (Biga) (also called Kale-i Sultaniye) (autonomous sanjak, not a vilayet) (Biga Sancağı)
- Bitlis (Bitlis)
- Diyarbekir (Diyarbekır [Diyarbakır])
- Erzurum (Erzurum)
- Van (Van)
- Eastern
- Baghdad (Bağdad [Bağdat])
- Basra (Basra)
- Beirut (Beyrut)
- Benghazi (Bingazi) (autonomous sanjak, not a vilayet) (Bingazi Sancağı)
- Deir ez-Zor (Deyr-i Zor)
- Egypt (Mısır) (autonomous khedivate, not a vilayet) (Mısır Hidivliği)
- Hejaz (Hicaz)
- Hudavendigar (Hüdavendigar) (Also called Bursa)
- İzmit (İzmid [İzmit]) (autonomous sanjak, not a vilayet) (İzmid Sancağı)
- Jerusalem (Kudüs-i Şerif) (mutasarrifate, not a part of any vilayet) (Kudüs-i Şerif Mutasarrıflığı)
- Kastamonu (Kastamonu)
- Konya (Konya)
- Mamuret-el-Aziz (Mamuret-ül Aziz [Mamuretülaziz]) (also called Kharput, now Elazığ)
- Sivas (Sivas)
[edit] Vilayets, 1915
After 1885, with the governing reforms of Tanzimat, the control of the Ottoman land in Asia Minor divided into 15 vilayets, one sanjak and one mutersaflik of the vilayet of Constantinople (both being on the Asiatic side of the Bosporus).
Every vilayet was further divided in a number of sanjaks.
More specifically the political division of Asia Minor in 1915 was as follows;
- Western
- Independent vilayet of the Dardanelles
- the sanjak of Uskudar
- Anatolia
- Vilayet of İzmir divided in the sanjaks of Manisa, İzmir, Aydın, Denizli, Mentese
- Vilayet of Bursa divided in the sanjaks of Balıkesir, Bursa, Erdogrul, Kütahya, Afyon
- Vilayet of Konya divided in the sanjaks of Burdur, Hamid abad, Atalya, Konya, Nigde
- Vilayet of Kastamonu divided in the sanjaks of Bolu, Çankırı, Kastamonu, Sinop
- Vilayet of Ankara divided in the sanjaks of Ankara, Kırşehir, Yozgat, Kayseri
- Vilayet of Adana, divided in the sanjaks of Icel (Mersin), Adana, Kozan, Osmaniye
- Vilayet of Sivas divided in the sanjaks of Sivas, Tokat, Amasya, Şebinkarahisar
- Vilayet of Trabzon divided in the sanjaks of Samsun, Trabzon, Gümüşhane, Lazistan
- Vilayet of Erzurum
- Vilayet of Bitlis divided in the sanjaks of Muş, Genç, Siirt
- Vilayet of Van divided in the sanjaks of Van, Hakkari
- Independent mutersaflik of İzmit and
- Eastern
- Vilayet of Mosul divided in the sanjaks of Mosul, Sehrizor (Kirkuk), Suleymaniyeh
- Vilayet of Mamure-ul-Azil divided in the sanjak of Diyarbakır and the mutersaflik of Zor
- Vilayet of Halep divided in the sanjaks of Halep, Urfa, Maraş
Also the
[edit] Vilayets, 1918
- Western
- Istanbul
- Anatolia
- Vilayet of Adana
- Vilayet of Ankara
- Vilayet of Aydın
- Vilayet of Bitlis
- Vilayet of Diyarbekir
- Vilayet of Edirne
- Vilayet of Erzurum
- Vilayet of Hudavendigar (Bursa)
- Vilayet of İzmit
- Vilayet of Konya
- Vilayet of Mamuret-el-Aziz (Elazığ)
- Vilayet of Sivas
- Vilayet of Trabzon
- Vilayet of Van
- Eastern
- Vilayet of Mosul divided in the sanjaks of Mosul, Sehrizan, Suleymanih
[edit] See also
[edit] References and further reading
- Colin Imber. The Ottoman Empire, 1300-1650: The Structure of Power. (Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire, UK: Palgrave Macmillan, 2002.)
- Halil Inalcik. The Ottoman Empire: The Classical Age 1300-1600. Trans. Norman Itzkowitz and Colin Imber. (London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1973.)
- Paul Robert Magocsi. Historical Atlas of Central Europe. (2nd ed.) Seattle, WA, USA: Univ. of Washington Press, 2002)
- Nouveau Larousse illustré, undated (early 20th century), passim (in French)
- Donald Edgar Pitcher. An Historical Geography of the Ottoman Empire. (Leiden, Netherlands: E.J.Brill,1972.) (Includes 36 color maps)
- Westermann, Großer Atlas zur Weltgeschichte (in German) (includes maps)
- Map of Europe in year 1500 with the subdivisions of the Ottoman Empire
- WorldStatesmen Turkey; see also other present-day countries
House of Osman | Ottoman Dynasty | Imperial Harem | Palace Schools | Ottoman Caliphate |
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Porte (Divan) | Grand Vizier | Vizier | Sheikh ul-Islam | Ottoman Senate (2nd Constitutional Era) |
Imperial Government | Prime Minister | Minister of War | Education Minister | List of parties |
Provincial Governing | Bey, Millet (Ottoman Empire), Elder (religious) | |
Vassal States |