JBO'C's Historical Reference

Sultan Bayazid I

BAYAZID I., surnamed ILDIRIM, or ' the Lightning,' in allusion to the rapidity of his military achievements, was the son of the sultan of the Ottoman, Murad I. He was born A.H. 748 (A. D. 1317), and came to the throne in A.H. 792 (A. D. 1389), after his father had been killed in an engagement with the Serbians near Kosovo. The Ottoman dominions at this epoch extended from the Danube to the Euphrates; and Bayazid at the head of his army was almost incessantly moving from one extremity of his empire to the other, to reduce his Mohammedan neighbors to obedience, or to add to his possessions by conquests from the Christian powers of Europe. Bursa and Adrianople were respectively the Asiatic and European capitals of his dominions, and the erection of a magnificent mosque in each of them is one of the earliest acts of his reign that we find recorded. This seemingly pious act forms a strong contrast with his behavior to Yakoub his only brother, whom he put to death almost immediately on ascending the throne, from no other motive than an apprehension that the example of other Eastern princes might encourage him to rebel, and dispute Bayazid's right to the throne.

The conquests of the Ottoman had, in the beginning of the eighth century of the Mohammedan era (the fourteenth after Christ), put an end to the Seljuk dominion in western Asia, and on its ruins several small dynasties had sprung up, the principal of which were that of Sinope and Castemuni on the northern coast of Asia Minor, and those of Aidin, Zarukhan, and Kermiyan. These dynasties Bayazid determined to destroy, and to embody their territories in his empire. Within the first year after his ascending the throne he had conquered Zarukhan, Aidin, and part of the northern coast of Anatolia: nor did his previous marriage (in A.D. 1381) with a daughter of the prince of Kermiyan prevent him from leading an expedition against his father-in-law, whom he took prisoner and deprived of his territory. Bayazid had to encounter greater difficulties in subduing the principality of Caramania. Timurlash, his general, had conquered part of the country .when Ala-nidi1; the reigning sovereign, defeated him in a battle and took him prisoner. When this happened, Bayazid was on the banks of the Danube engaged in a war with Stephan, the prince of Moldavia, who been instigated by Koeturum Bayazid (i. e. 'Bayazid the Lame'), a Moslem chief on the borders of the Black Sea, to invade Wallachia and Bessarabia. On receiving the news of Timurtash's defeat. Bayazid hastened from Europe into Asia, and within a very short time subdued the whole of Caramania, besides which he now added to his empire the towns of Konya, Aksehir. Akserai, Larenda, Sivas (Sebaste), Tokat, and Kayseri. Soon after he took away the dominions of Kotureous Bayazid on the Black Sea ; and when Kœeturum Bayazid allowed his son, Isfendiar, to retain possession of Sinope.

The year 1391 is remarkable also for the capture of Philadelphia, or Alashehr (i. e. ' The Variegated City) the last Greek town in Asia Minor that continued faithful to the Byzantine Empire. Its Greek commander made a vigorous resistance to the besieging forces of Bayazid, and rejected his invitation to surrender the fortress: while the Emperor Joannes and his son Manuel, then the confederates of the sultan, were actually assisting in the siege.

In 1393 Bayazid undertook another expedition into Europe, in which he took possession of the towns of Salonika and Yenishehr (Larissa), and for the first time besieged Constantinople. He compelled the emperor to give up ? plan of adding to the strength of the capital by new fortifications, and to assign a separate suburb to the Turks with a mosque and a kadhi, or judge, of their own. Bayazid at the same time built the fort of Guzeljc, or Anatoli hissar.i n the eastern side of the Bosporus, which secured to him tic command of that channel.

In 1396 Bayazid gained an important victory near Nicopolis on the Danube over an army of a hundred thousand Christians, including many of the bravest knights of France and Germany, who had assembled under the standard of Sigismond, the king of Hungary, to check the further progress of the Mohammedan power in Europe. The greater part of the Christian forces were slain or driven into the Danube. Sigismond escaped to Constantinople, sixty thousand Turks are stated to have fallen in the same battle. and when Bayazid became aware of the extent of his loss, he gave orders to put to death all the prisoners with the exception of twenty-four nobles, who were subsequently ransomed. This great victory was soon followed by further conquests in Greece. The Morea was taken, and in 1347 (according to the oriental authorities quoted by M. von Hammer, Gesch. dts Osman-Reichs, i. 252) Athens fell into the power of the Ottoman.

The dominions of Bayazid and those of the Tartar conqueror Timur now touched each other in the neighborhood of Erzurum and on the banks of the Euphrates. With doubtful limits between the two empires, which had never been defined by treaty, a cause for war between two jealous sovereigns could not long be wanting. Timur had taken possession of Sivas(the ancient Sebaste), on the Halys, then one of the strongest and most flourishing cities of Western Asia, and had treated its inhabitants with great cruelty. Bayazid was then engaged in his European dominions, which prevented him from resenting this violation. of his territory. About the same time two Moslem princes, Ahmed Jelair and Kara Yusuf, whom Timur had deprived of their possessions, (led for protection first t: Seifeddin Barkuk, the Sultan of Egypt, and subsequent!* to Bayazid, who received them with kindness, and married: his son, Mustafa Chelebi, to a sister of Ahmed Jelair. Timur sent two embassies for the purpose of demanding the surrender of the princes: but Bayazid refused to comply, and, instigated by the advice of the princes, took possession of Erzurum, a town situated on the Euphrates within the dominions of Timur. Timur, who now determined to commence an open war against Bayazid, begun the campaign by taking Haleb, Antakya, and other Syrian towns that were subject to the Ottoman. He was at Sivas when he received information of the approach of Bayazid from the west. The two sovereigns at the heart of their armies met in the plains of Angora, the capital of the antatoli Galatia. A decisive battle took place (according to M. von Hammer's calculations on the 19th of Zulhaj. A.H. 804, i. e. the 20th of July, A.d. 1401), in which the Ottoman were totally defeated, and Bayazid became a prisoner in the hands of Timor. The conqueror, according to his Persian biographer, Sherif-eddin, received Bayazid with great kindness, assigned him suitable accommodations, and continued to treat him with distinction till he died, A. Heg. 806 (a.d. 1403). D'Herbelot (Bibliothèque Orient., art. Timour, .p. 876, edit. 1776) and M. Von Hammer express themselves satisfied with this account, and reject the common report which would charge Timur with ujreat cruelty towards his prisoner. But Sir William Jones (Works, vol. v. p. 547) draws our attention to a passage in another contemporary historian, Ibn Arahshah's life of Timur, which had been overlooked by D'Herbelot, and in which the Arabian author expressly affirms that Timur did enclose his captive, Ilderim Bayazid, in a cage of iron, in order to retaliate the insult offered to the Persians by a sovereign of Lower Asia, who had treated Shapor, king of Persia, in the same manner ; that he intended to carry him in this confinement into Tartary, but that the miserable prince died in Syria, at a place called Akshehr.' (See Ahmedis Arabsiadae, Vita Timuri, ed. Manger, torn. ii. pp. 225, 276, &c.)

We will not venture to decide a question on which there is such conflicting evidence; but we must notice a curious passage of Busbequius, who visited Constantinopleas ambassador from the German emperor about the middle of the sixteenth century, as it seems to have escaped the notice of M. von Hammer. The passage is to the following effect: that Bayazid, after his defeat, became a prisoner in the hands of Timur, who treated him with great cruelty; that his wife, who was also made a prisoner, was grossly insulted before his face; and that from this time till the age of Suleiman I., who reigned from A.d. 1520 to 1566, the Ottoman sultans have never married, for fear that the reverses of fortune might expose them to similar insults. (Aug. Gislenii Busbequii Legationis Turciate Epístola Prima, pp. 26, 27, ed. London 1660, 16 months.)

Bayazid was succeeded upon the throne of the Ottoman empire by his son Mohammed I. (Joseph von Hammer, Geschichte des Omanischen Reichs, vol. i. p. 216, &c. ; Sherif-eddin's Life of Timur, translated by P. De La Croix.)

THE PENNY CYCLOPAEDIA OF THE SOCIETY FOR THE DIFFUSION OF USEFUL KNOWLEDGE.

VOLUME IV. LONDON: CHARLES KNIGHT, 22, LUDGATE STREET MDCCCXXXV.

Sale: L02309 | Location: London, New Bond Street
Auction Dates: Session 3: Wed, 29 May 02 10:00 AM
LOT 1172
[Tatikian, B., attributed to] Chronologie des empereurs ottomans. [Smyrna: 1852]
3,500—5,000 GBP
Lot Sold. Hammer Price with Buyer's Premium: 11,950 GBP
MEASUREMENTS
N/A
DESCRIPTION
FIRST EDITION, folio (312 x 228mm.), lithographed title with text in French and Turkish, 2 lithographed tables (one in French, one in Turkish), 31 HAND-COLOURED PLATES OF THE SULTANS, 30 HEIGHTENED WITH GOLD, numbered 1-30 and with captions in French and Turkish, 1 unnumbered and with caption in French, the title and Turkish table printed in gold, contemporary cloth-backed boards, some spotting, fly-leaf detached, binding rubbed
A RARE PRODUCTION, possibly from the press of Tatikian. The thirty numbered plates differ in style from the bulk of his work and only the unnumbered plate bears his imprint, but the work has been attributed to him by the Gennadius Library (see Atabey, note).
References: Atabey 1198; Blackmer 1886
Provenance: bookplate of Bernhard Cremer; book label of Henry Blackmer

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