History of Ottoman Turks: From the Beginning of Their Empire to the Present Time. Chiefly Founded on Von HammerR. Bentley, 1854 |
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... attack on Rhodes -Capture of Otranto - Death of Mahomet PAGE . 120 CHAPTER VI . Institutes of Mahomet II . - Turkish Government - Armies - Tenures of land - Institutions - Education - The Ulema - The Rayas - Slavery -Renegades - Turkish ...
... attack on Rhodes -Capture of Otranto - Death of Mahomet PAGE . 120 CHAPTER VI . Institutes of Mahomet II . - Turkish Government - Armies - Tenures of land - Institutions - Education - The Ulema - The Rayas - Slavery -Renegades - Turkish ...
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... to them his intention to attack the lord of the important Greek fortress of K©¡prihissar . The * Von Hammer , vol . i . p . 72 . old uncle opposed the enterprise ; and urged the danger 14 HISTORY OF THE OTTOMAN TURKS .
... to them his intention to attack the lord of the important Greek fortress of K©¡prihissar . The * Von Hammer , vol . i . p . 72 . old uncle opposed the enterprise ; and urged the danger 14 HISTORY OF THE OTTOMAN TURKS .
15 ÆäÀÌÁö
... attacked , and fell ; and numerous other strongholds in the vicinity of Nice soon shared the same fate . In 1301 , Othman encountered for the * Von Hammer , i . p . 78 . first time a regular Greek army , which was led OTHMAN I. A.D. ...
... attacked , and fell ; and numerous other strongholds in the vicinity of Nice soon shared the same fate . In 1301 , Othman encountered for the * Von Hammer , i . p . 78 . first time a regular Greek army , which was led OTHMAN I. A.D. ...
16 ÆäÀÌÁö
... attack Othman's southern dominions . Othman sent his son Orchan against the invaders , and the young prince utterly defeated them . Age and infirmity began now to press upon Othman , but his gallant son filled his place at the head of ...
... attack Othman's southern dominions . Othman sent his son Orchan against the invaders , and the young prince utterly defeated them . Age and infirmity began now to press upon Othman , but his gallant son filled his place at the head of ...
45 ÆäÀÌÁö
... attack , and the great superiority of their numbers . After this vigorous blow , the Christians relaxed in their exertions . The vacillations and delays , which usually mark the movements of a confederacy , kept the forces of the ...
... attack , and the great superiority of their numbers . After this vigorous blow , the Christians relaxed in their exertions . The vacillations and delays , which usually mark the movements of a confederacy , kept the forces of the ...
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admiral Adrianople Alaeddin ambassador Amurath arms Asia Minor Asiatic attack Bajazet battle besieged brother Brusa Caliphs campaign captured Caramania cavalry century chief Christendom Christian command conquered conqueror conquest Constantinople cruelty death defeated defence Djem dominions Dragut Egypt enemy Ertoghrul Europe father favour favourite feudal fiefs fleet force galleys garrison Grand Vizier Greek emperor Hammer historian honour House of Othman Hungarian Hungary Hunyades Ismail Janissaries King Knights land Lord Mahomet Mahomet II Mahometan Mamelukes marched master military Mufti Mustapha officers Orchan Ottoman empire Pacha Persian person Pope Porte possession Prince prisoner provinces rank Rayas reign Rhodes royal rulers Schah Selim sent Servia siege Sinan Sokolli soldiers Solyman sought sovereign Spahis spirit Sublime Porte Sultan Solyman Tartar thee thou thousand throne Timour took treaty troops Turkey Turkish army Turks Tzympe Ubicini Ulema valour Venetian victory Von Hammer Wallachia Ziamets Zriny
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368 ÆäÀÌÁö - The One remains, the many change and pass; Heaven's light forever shines, Earth's shadows fly ; Life, like a dome of many-coloured glass, Stains the white radiance of Eternity, Until Death tramples it to fragments.
317 ÆäÀÌÁö - The Turkish dominions in his time comprised all the most celebrated cities of biblical and classical history, except Rome, Syracuse, and Persepolis. The sites of Carthage, Memphis, Tyre, Nineveh, Babylon, and Palmyra were Ottoman ground ; and the cities of Alexandria, Jerusalem, Damascus, Smyrna...
17 ÆäÀÌÁö - I am dying ; and I die without regret, because I leave such a successor as thou art. Be just ; love goodness, and show mercy. Give equal protection to all thy subjects, and extend the law of the Prophet. Such are the duties of princes upon earth ; and it is thus that they bring on them the blessings of Heaven.
262 ÆäÀÌÁö - It is not without regret that I force this brave man from his home in his old age." Such indeed was the esteem with which, the valour of the Knights had inspired the Turks, that they refrained from defacing their armorial bearings and inscriptions on the buildings.
317 ÆäÀÌÁö - An empire of more than forty thousand square miles, embracing many of the richest and most beautiful regions of the world, had .been acquired by the descendants of Ertoghrul, in three centuries from the time when their forefather wandered a homeless adventurer at the head of less than five hundred fighting men.
23 ÆäÀÌÁö - In memory of that benediction, the Janissaries ever wore, as part of their uniform, a cap of white felt, like that of the dervish, with a strip of woollen hanging down behind, to represent the sleeve of the holy man's mantle, that had been laid on their comrade's neck. The Christian children, who were to be trained as Janissaries, were usually chosen at a tender age. They were torn from their parents, trained to renounce the faith in which they were bom and baptised, and to profess the creed of Mahomet.
251 ÆäÀÌÁö - ... century, at a cheaper rate than they could obtain it from Egypt, where it was then extensively made. The first sugar plantations established in Spain were at Valencia, but they were soon after extended to Granada and Murcia. Prince Henry, the navigator, carried sugar-cane from Sicily to Madeira. Towards the end of the fifteenth and the commencement of the sixteenth centuries, it was conveyed to the Canary islands, where plantations were formed, especially on Gomera and Grand Canary. From Gomera...
304 ÆäÀÌÁö - ... are coming like a thundercloud upon us; and, if the banner of the cross must quail to the unbeliever, let us remember that it is a signal that Heaven demands from us the lives which we have solemnly devoted to its service. He who dies in this cause dies a happy death ; and, to render us worthy to meet it, let us renew at the altar those vows which ought to make us not only fearless but invincible in the fight.
392 ÆäÀÌÁö - Embassy," p. 22. which he regarded as irretrievable. He employs almost the same metaphor which, in our time, has been applied to the Turkish power by one " whose wish was father to the thought," and who has spoken of it " as a sick man about to die upon one's hands," Roe says : " It has become, like an old body, crazed through many vices, which remain when the youth and strength is decayed.
138 ÆäÀÌÁö - ... had a general taste for literature ; he was intimately acquainted with the writers of Greece ; he delighted in the society of men of talent ; and he was himself long and carefully engaged in recording the history of his own actions ; yet no man was ever more stained with cruelty, nor was ever any more degraded by habitual and gross profligacy. Nor is this at all wonderful, if we consider that the intellectual faculties, like the sensual, are gratified by exercise; and that the pleasure derived...