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Sultan Amurath II

His Father's Name: Mehmed I
His Mothers Name: Amine Khatum
Date of Birth: 1402 (A.D.)
Date of Death:Feb. 3rd, 1451 (A.D.)
His Reign: 1421-1451 (30 years)
(b. June 1404, Amasya, Ottoman Empire [now in Turkey]--d.
Feb. 3, 1451, Edirne), Ottoman sultan (1421-44 and 1446-51)
who expanded and consolidated Ottoman rule in the Balkans
and pursued a policy of restraint in Anatolia.
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Sultan Amurath the Second was a tall, pale,
goodlooking man. He was very fluent and literate and is perhaps
best known as the father of Mahomed or Mehmed the Conqueror.
Amurath was fond of living in peace but
was capable of dynamic, warlike deeds when occasion demanded
it. During his sultanate of 30 years he administered the country
with great skill and energy. Everybody knew him as a just,
religious and fair-minded Emperor.
His childhood passed in Amassia and he became
Sultan at the age of 18. He was a poet and calligrapher but
was also a good soldier. He wrote his poems under the pseudonym
of "Mouradee". His best known poem runs:
"Let us praise Allah the Onmipotent
for all time
For the world and mankind are only mortal."
Early in his reign, Murad had to overcome
several claimants to the Ottoman throne who were supported
by the Byzantine emperor Manuel II Palaeologus and by many
of the Turkmen principalities in Anatolia. By 1425 Murad had
eliminated his rivals, including Moustafa the Duzmedje. He
had reestablished Ottoman rule over the Turkmen principalities
of western Anatolia, and had once again forced Byzantium to
pay tribute. Constantinople was besieged in 1422 and in 1423
Morea was recaptured. He then turned his attention to the
Balkans. In 1430, after a five-year struggle, he captured
Salonika (modern Thessaloníki), in northern Greece,
which had been under Venetian control. At first the Ottoman
armies were successful against a Hungarian-Serbian-Karaman
alliance; but after 1441, when the alliance expanded to include
German, Polish, and Albanian forces, the Ottomans lost Nis
and Sofia (1443) and were soundly defeated at Jalowaz (1444).
After signing a peace treaty at Edirne (June 12, 1444), Murad
abdicated in favour of his 12-year-old son, Mehmed II. Venice
was defeated at Guverdjinlik and in 1430 Salonica was taken
once more. Bosnia came into the Empire in 1438 and a- year
later Belgrade was besieged. The Crusaders were defeated at
the Battle of Derbendi and the Segadin Agreement concluded
with them in 1444. However, they did not keep their promises
and when Amurath appointed his young son Mehmed II, they invaded
Ottoman territories .
European powers, under the auspices of Pope
Eugenius IV, soon broke the truce [with great hopes of victory
since Mehmed the Sultan was only 12 years old]. To the surprise
of the Crusaders Mehmed appointed his father commander-in-chief
of the army and Murad, leading the Ottoman army, inflicted
a severe defeat on the Christian forces at Varna in November
1444. Under pressure from court notables and faced with external
threats, Murad reassumed control of the state in 1446. In
1448 he defeated the Hungarians at the second Battle of Kosovo
(October 17), and in 1451 all prisoners of war were set free
Sultan Amurath Khan died at Edirne when
he was 47 years old. He was buried next to the Mouradiye Mosque
in Brusa, as he desired. In his will he asked for his grave
not to be covered and for seats to be built around it for
the reciters of Qur'an to read until the Friday, the day of
the funeral ceremony. This was carried out.
During Murad's reign the office of grand
vizier (chief minister) came to be dominated by the Çandarli
family. The Janissary corps (elite forces) gained in prominence,
and the hereditary Turkish frontier rulers in the Balkans
often acted independently of the sultan.
A great many mosques, Schools of Theology,
palaces and bridges were built during Amurath's reign. The
Mosque with three sherefes (a gallery of a minaret from which
the call to prayer is made) is one of these. Next to this
mosque is a Moslem School of Theology. The Mouradiye Mosque
at Edirne was built with superb tiles on the interior walls.
The Ouzoun Koepru (Long Bridge) was erected on 170 legs or
columns, over the River Ergene, during Amurath's reign.
The great Muslim personalities of Sultan
Murad II Khan's reign were - Shaykh Ya`kub Al-Charkhi from
the Naqshbandi Tariqa, Shaykh Amir Sultan, Haj Bayram Al-wali,
Ibn Hajar Al-`asqalani, and Yaziji Zadeh Muhammad writer of
the book "Muhammadiah".
Amurath had six sons whose names were Mehmed
the Conqueror, Ahmed, Alauddin, Orkhan, Hassan and Ahmed II.
His two daughters were called Shekh-zade and Fatima Hatoun.
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