Simple Page Options

Add Site to Favorites
Add Page to Favorites
Make Homepage
Print Page

Change Language

mod_vvisit_counterToday:63
mod_vvisit_counterYesterday:94
mod_vvisit_counterThis week:350
mod_vvisit_counterThis month:2364
mod_vvisit_counterFrm 13.10.08:59707

We Are Listed On


biber hap?
ac? biber hap?
Top Travel blogs
Travel Blogs

photo blogs, top photoblogs
Top Blogs
Travel (Tours) - TOP.ORG
Clicky Web Analytics
istanbul hotels, istanbul hotel, cheap hotels istanbul, small hotels istanbul, istanbul turkey hotels, istanbulhotels, istanbulhotel, hotels in istanbul, istanbul hotels reservation, travel to istanbul, travelling istanbul, budget hotels, laleli hotels, sirkeci hotels, taxim hotels, pera hotels, istanbul lodging, istanbul accommodation, istanbul hostels, istanbuls hotels, luxury hotels, hotel in istanbul, sultanahmet hotels, taksim hotels, airport hotels, historical hotels istanbul, boutique hotels istanbul, turkey hotels, turkey hotels, istanbul hotels directory, istanbul hotels list, 4 star, 5 star, 3 star, 2 star, car rental istanbul, rent a car istanbul, airport transfer istanbul, airport shuttle, travel agency

Other Links
www.turkeyphototour.com www.come4photo.com
www.tr-sites.com
www.bysaka.com
www.eskipazarci.com
www.maskeizolasyon.com



Köprülü Era

Ottoman imperial decadence was finally halted by a notable family of imperial bureaucrats, the Köprülü family, which for more than forty years (1656-1703) provided the empire with grand viziers, combining ambition and ruthlessness with genuine talent. Mehmet, followed by his son Ahmet, overhauled the bureaucracy and instituted military reforms. Crete and Lemnos were taken from Venice, and large provinces in Ukraine were wrested temporarily from Poland and Russia. The Köprülü family also resumed the offensive against Austria, pushing the Ottoman frontier to within 120 kilometers of Vienna. An attempt in 1664 to capture the Habsburg capital was beaten back, but Ahmet Köprülü extorted a huge tribute as the price of a nineteen-year truce. When it expired in 1683, the Ottoman army again invaded Austria, laying siege to Vienna for two months, only to be routed ultimately by a relief force led by the king of Poland, Jan Sobieski.

The siege of Vienna was the high-water mark of Ottoman expansion in Europe, and its failure opened Hungary to reconquest by the European powers. In a ruinous sixteen-year war, Russia and the Holy League--composed of Austria, Poland, and Venice, and organized under the aegis of the pope--finally drove the Ottomans south of the Danube and east of the Carpathians. Under the terms of the Treaty of Karlowitz in 1699, the first in which the Ottomans acknowledged defeat, Hungary, Transylvania, and Croatia were formally relinquished to Austria. Poland recovered Podolia, and Dalmatia and the Morea were ceded to Venice. In a separate peace the next year, Russia received the Azov region (see fig. 6).

The last of the Köprülü rulers fell from power when Mustafa II (r. 1695-1703) was forced by rebellious janissaries to abdicate. Under Ahmet III (r. 1703-30), effective control of the government passed to the military leaders. Ahmet III's reign is referred to as the "tulip period" because of the popularity of tulip cultivation in Istanbul during those years. At this time, Peter the Great of Russia moved to eliminate the Ottoman presence on the north shore of the Black Sea. Russia's main objective in the region subsequently was to win access to warm-water ports on the Black Sea and then to obtain an opening to the Mediterranean through the Ottoman-controlled Bosporus and Dardanelles straits. Despite territorial gains at Ottoman expense, however, Russia was unable to achieve these goals, and the Black Sea remained for the time an "Ottoman lake" on which Russian warships were prohibited.

Source: U.S. Library of Congress

 

Login Form

Sign up for get more.