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Sultan Bayezid The Lightning

Sultan Bayezid The Lightning (Yildirim Bayezid)
Bayezid I
His Father's Name: Amurath The First
His Mothers Name: Gulchichek Khatum
Date of Birth: 1360 (A.D.)
Date of Death:March 8th, 1403 (A.D.)
His Reign: 1389-1403 (13 years)
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byname YILDIRIM (The Thunderbolt) (b. c. 1360--d. March 1403,
Aksehir, Ottoman Empire), Ottoman sultan in 1389-1402 who
founded the first centralized Ottoman state based on traditional
Turkish and Muslim institutions and who stressed the need
to extend Ottoman dominion in Anatolia.
Bayezid's father was Amurath the First,
his mother Gulchuchek Khatoun. He was born in 1360 and died
on March 8th, 1403. He ruled over the Empire for 13 years,
from 1389 until 1403.
Bayezid's appearance was round faced, pale
with light brown hair, grayish-blue eyes, a thick beard and
broad shoulders. He was given the surname Yilderim (lightning)
because of his bravery and success on the battlefield. When
he was only fourteen he was ruling the Ottoman Empire in the
absence of his father who was fighting a war in Serbia.
During his sultanate a great army of Crusaders was gathered
together to rout the Turks, reconquer Byzantium end seize
Jerusalem. They were besieging Nighbolou fortress near the
Danube and Bayezid arrived to lift the siege. One night he
battled, alone, through the enemy troops and reached the castle
walls. Leaning casually against the wall he shouted up at
the ramparts. Hearing his voice Doghan Bey, the Commander
of the Castle, hurriedly asked what was the matter. "I
have come with my army to relieve you," Bayezid replied.
"Do not surrender!" He then sped back to his headquarters
and continued the fight.
In the early years of Bayezid's reign, Ottoman
forces conducted campaigns that succeeded in controlling vast
Balkan territories. Later, Venetian advances in Greece, Albania,
and Byzantium and the extension of Hungarian influence in
Walachia and Danubian Bulgaria compelled Bayezid to blockade
Constantinople (1391-98), to occupy Tirnova, in what is now
Bulgaria (July 1393), and to conquer Salonika (April 1394).
His invasion of Hungary in 1395 resulted in a Hungarian-Venetian
crusade against the Ottomans. Bayezid inflicted a crushing
defeat on the crusaders at Nicopolis (Sept. 25, 1396).
When he was first made Sultan he easily
subdued rebellions in Anatolia, conquered the territories
of Germian, Aydm, Menteshe and Saroukhan and in 1391 gained
Shile from the Byzantine Emperor. He besieged Constantinople
for seven months and crossed the Danube, and subjected Romania
to the Ottoman Empire.
In 1396 the Frankish Crusaders were, once
more, put to flight at Nighbolou and thousands of prisoners
taken. In 1397 the Bishop of Salona invited him to save his
people from tyranny and so he captured Silivri, Morea and
Attica from the Byzantines. This was how the Turks came to
conquer Greece. The Principality of Caramania was conquered
in 1397 and Constantinople besieged once more. A third siege
of Constantinople began in 1400 and in 1402.
To build a strong Islamic and Turkish base
for his domain, Bayezid began to widen Ottoman suzerainty
over the Turkish-Muslim rulers in Anatolia. He annexed various
Turkmen emirates in Anatolia and defeated the Karaman emirate
at Akçay (1397). These conquests brought Bayezid into
conflict with the Central Asian conqueror Timur (Tamerlane),
who claimed suzerainty over the Anatolian Turkmen rulers and
offered refuge to those expelled by Bayezid. Without the permission
of the Mufti on a point of Islamic law, he waged war on Tamerlane
or Timour but was totally defeated at the Battle of Angora
in Çubukovasi near Ankara (July 1402).
Sultan Bayezid was taken prisoner but died
of grief after seven months imprisonment. He was just 43 years
old. His corpse was brought to Bursa and interred in his mausoleum.
One of his most important triumphs was the
Battle of Nighbolou, when, alone against the Christian European
countries the Turks had emerged victorious. The whole of Europe,
as far north as the Atlantic, had to recognise a new Moslem
Turkish Empire in Asia Minor. Central Europe was opened up
for Ottoman attacks. The Byzantines abandoned assaults on
Europe, concentrating on defence instead.
Also as a consequence of the victory, Eastern
Moslem countries learned of the existence of the Ottoman Empire
and of its superiority.
Some of the eminent people of the reign
were Hadje Bahaoud-din Attar, Kemal-ud-din Hodjendee (the
writer of Commentary of Purposes) and Cadi Ibn-ee Khaldoun.
Bayezid had six sons, called Mousa Chelebi,
Solyman Chelebi, Isa Chelebi, Mehemed Chelebi, Ertoughroul
Chelebi, Kasim Chelebi. His one daughter was Sultana Fatima.
Some info. were compiled from
"Bayezid I" Britannica Online.
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