COMPOSER SULTANS

COMPOSER SULTANS

SULTAN II. BAYEZİD

He was born in Dimetoka in 1448. He is the eldest son of Fatih Sultan Mehmed from Gülbahar Hatun. He was sent to the Amasya Sanjak Bey when he was seven years old. He was circumcised in Edirne together with his brother Mustafa in the spring of 1457. 

During his Sanjak Beyship in Amasya, the main political events that took place in the region were the defection of Dulkadiroglu Alaüddevle to the Ottomans and the destruction of Tokat by the Akkoyunlu forces under the command of Yusufca Mirza (1472). Bayezid, who joined the army in Kazova in the Otlukbeli War, was on the right wing. The forces he sent after the goods of the merchants coming from Iran were looted, annexed Torul and its region to the Ottoman lands in 1479. 

Bayezid, who studied under Muarrifzade, took calligraphy lessons from Sheikh Hamdullah, and experienced statesmen such as Candarli Ibrahim and Yahyâ Pasha were appointed as tutors. He had a falling out with his father for a while because he used opium, but Fatih ordered the killing of Hızır Paşazade Mahmud and Müeyyedzade Abdurrahman, who had led his son into this, but Bayezid protected his companions and asked for forgiveness by informing his father that he had given up some of the “extras” he had taken to lose weight (TSMA, no. E. 6366). Apart from this, Bayezid’s relations with his father deteriorated due to a few minor incidents such as his slowness in implementing the restrictions imposed on properties and foundations and his refusal to hand over a merchant who was asked to be sent to Istanbul. 

Fatih Sultan Mehmed’s death on May 3, 1481 brought Bayezid and his brother Cem, the governor of Karaman, face to face on the issue of succession to the throne. The fact that Fatih gave those who would become sultans the right to kill their brothers for the sake of “the order of the world” in the law code he organized also gave the struggle for the throne among the princes a nature like a desire to live. 

The records that Fatih was not happy with Cem’s birth and kicked his cradle or that he willed Bayezid to take his place (İbn Kemal, p. 178; Hezârfen Hüseyin, vr. 110b) are far from reflecting the truth. However, it is known that Grand Vizier Karamânî Mehmed Pasha supported Cem, and in return, the Istanbul guard İshak Pasha and Bayezid’s sons-in-law Anatolian Beylerbeyi Sinan and Janissary Agha Kasım wanted Bayezid. When Fatih died, Keklik Mustafa from the doormen was sent to Bayezid and a message was sent to Cem. However, the messenger to Cem was cut off, Karamani Mehmed Pasha was killed in the chaos that broke out in Istanbul, and the Janissaries began to demonstrate in favor of Bayezid in the streets. Ishak Pasha sent invitations to Bayezid to come as soon as possible, and he placed his son Korkut, who was in Istanbul, on the throne as his father's proxy. 

Learning of his father's death on May 7, Bayezid set off with 4,000 horsemen and reached Üsküdar on May 21. He went to Istanbul by galley and attended his father's funeral ceremony before entering Topkapı Palace. The Imperial Council convened on May 22, 1481, and declared that Prince Korkut had left the throne to his father. 

Bayezid first distributed three thousand silver coins as a gratuity to the janissaries and increased the janissary salaries to five silver coins; he also assigned villages to the viziers and beys wherever they wished. However, Cem, who considered himself more worthy of the sultanate, started an armed struggle, which led to a bloody civil war and then to an inter-state problem. He entered Bursa with the forces he gathered, declared his sultanate by having a sermon read in his name and minting coins; then he offered to share the empire. Bayezid refused this, stating that the sultanate could not be divided, and marched against Cem. Cem, who was defeated in the Battle of Yenişehir (June 22), fled to Egypt; upon the call of Karamanoğlu Kasım, he returned to Anatolia and tried his luck once more, but in the end he had to take refuge with the Knights of Rhodes (July 29, 1482). Bayezid felt the need to make great efforts and make some concessions in order to prevent his brother from being released. An agreement was made that the knights would be paid 40,000 ducats every year to keep Cem under surveillance and that they would be granted the right to trade freely in Ottoman lands. In addition, the right hand of Jean Baptiste (Hz. Yahya), which was considered sacred by Christians and kept in a golden case decorated with precious stones, was presented to the knights.

After Cem was transferred to Europe, an intensive correspondence began between the Ottoman Palace and Rhodes, Venice, Savoia, France and the papacy. Bayezid sent messengers to ask whether Cem was alive and at the same time sought ways to kidnap or kill him. However, the Italian campaign of King Charles VIII of France led to unexpected changes. Pope Alexander VI asked the Ottoman sultan for financial aid, but was later forced to hand Cem over to Charles VIII. Cem fell ill during this time and died on February 25, 1495, most likely as a result of poisoning. 

The Cem incident and the hopes that arose in Europe for retaking Istanbul as a result of this incident led Bayezid to follow a very careful and peaceful policy. However, he did not hesitate to fight when necessary, and thus new lands were added to Ottoman lands. 

The first result of Bayezid's war with Cem for the throne was the loss of Otranto. After Bayezid captured Otranto (August 11, 1480), Gedik Ahmed Pasha, who had returned to gather forces, did not allow him to go back to Italy, and the Turkish garrison, which was in a difficult situation, surrendered to the Naples forces (September 10, 1481). After the base provided in Italy was thus lost, an agreement was made with the Kingdom of Naples, which provided for the return of the prisoners and granted freedom of trade to the subjects of the parties. 

When the Voivode of Moldavia Stefan cel Mare attacked Bulgaria and the pirates based at the mouth of the Danube harmed the Turkish fleet, Bayezid was forced to go on a campaign himself. In this campaign to Moldavia, the castles of Kili (July 15, 1484) and Akkirman (August 4) were captured, Stefan was made to pay an annual tax, and land transportation was provided to Crimea. Stefan, who was trying to regain the lost territories, realized that he would not be able to do so and signed a new peace with the Ottomans in 1501. During the Moldavia campaign, Crimean forces had captured the Bessarabia region, which had brought Poland into direct contact. Ottoman-Polish relations, which had not started out friendly due to mutual raids, turned for the better with the mediation of Hungarian King Ulaszlo II. 

When the rebellion started by Skanderbeg (George Castriota) in Albania expanded with the support of the papacy and the Kingdom of Naples, Bayezid advanced as far as Tepedelen in 1492 and sent Grand Vizier Davud Pasha against the rebels. Although many prisoners were taken during this campaign, complete calm could not be achieved in Albania. 

The greatest fluctuation in foreign policy during Bayezid's reign can be seen in relations with Venice. Initially, a new agreement was reached that changed some provisions of the existing 1479 agreement in favor of Venice (January 6, 1482). However, when Venice did not pay the annual 10,000 ducats it was giving to the Ottoman treasury, Bayezid, who felt freer after Cem's death, closed the Turkish ports to Venetian trade (1496). In the meantime, the Ottoman fleet under the command of Kemal Reis began to attack the Dalmatian coast. When Venice made an alliance with France against the Turks, the Venetian merchants in Istanbul were arrested and their goods were confiscated, and then war was declared (1498). In this war that lasted four years, the Turkish fleet first captured the ports of Modon on August 9 and Koron on August 15. The Turkish raiders who attacked the Friuli region also advanced as far as Venice. On the other hand, the Venetians, who made an alliance with Pope Alexander VI and the Hungarian King Ulaszlo II, attacked Midilli and Çeşme in the summer of 1501 with the participation of Spanish and French ships, but they did not achieve any results. Finally, when the Venetian Republic saw that the Pope's call for a crusade was ineffective, II. He felt the need to make an agreement with Bayezid. According to the agreement, drawn up in Greek in Istanbul on December 14, 1502, but approved by Doc Leonardo Loredano on May 20, 1503, Venice would pay 10,000 ducats annually as before, and return the 34,000 ducats it had seized in Santa-Maura. In return, it would regain freedom of trade and would gain the right to have a bailo in Istanbul that would change every three years (Melikoff, I, 123-149). 

The state of war with Hungary during the Fatih period continued in the form of mutual raids during the reign of Bayezid. The armistices between the parties in 1483 and 1494 could not ensure peace because of Hungary's interference in Moldavian affairs and its participation in alliances against the Turks. Finally, in 1503, a treaty was reached with Moldavia, which agreed that Wallachia and Ragusa would pay taxes to both sides and granted mutual freedom of trade.

One of the striking features of Bayezid's period was the establishment of relations with Russia and Andalusia for the first time. After the preliminary negotiations held through the mediation of Crimean Khan Mengli Giray, Tsar Ivan III wrote a letter to Bayezid on August 31, 1492 (Hammer, IV, 34) complaining about the difficulties caused by the Pashas of Azak and Kefe to Russian merchants. A Russian ambassador came to Istanbul in 1495 in order to establish free trade, and this was followed by a new embassy in 1499. On the other hand, the Beni Ahmer State in Granada, which was under pressure by the King of Castilla, the Catholic Ferdinand (Fernando), requested assistance, but due to the weakness of the Ottoman naval power and the Cem incident at that time, the necessary assistance could not be provided, and a fleet under the command of Kemal Reis hit the coasts of Spain and carried some of the Andalusian Muslims to the coasts of Africa and the Ottoman lands. Meanwhile, some of the Jews who escaped the persecution of the Inquisition in Spain took refuge in Ottoman lands and settled in various cities. 

The most important event of the Bayezid era was the six-year war with the Mamluks. The race to establish superiority in Çukurova and the Dulkadiroğulları Principality and the Mamluks' support for Cem brought the two states face to face. The parties could not win a decisive victory in the Ottoman-Mamluk war that started in 1485. An agreement was reached in 1491 through the mediation of Osman Hafsî, the Ruler of Tunisia. As a result of the agreement, the castles of Adana and Tarsus were left to the Mamluks because they were connected to the Haremeyn foundations (İbn İyas, II, 261-272). The war with Egypt also negatively affected the Ottomans' relations with Karaman and the Dulkadiroğulları. Although the Karaman Principality was eliminated during the Fatih period, the Cem incident and the support of Egypt rekindled the issue. The independence efforts of Karamanoğlu Kasım and then Turgut’s son Mahmud and Mustafa could only be ended in 1501. Ottoman-Dulkadır relations, which showed great fluctuations, were restored after an agreement was made with the Mamluks and Alaüddevle asked for forgiveness. 

Bayezid’s peaceful and reserved policy also developed against the Ottomans in relations with the Safavids. While Shah Ismail’s Shiite policy was showing its effect in Anatolia, the person who persistently tried to prevent this spread was Trabzon Sanjak Bey Prince Selim. When the advance of a 20,000-strong Safavid force to Ankara showed the magnitude of the danger, 16,000 people suspected of being Shiites were deported from Anatolia to Rumelia. However, the Şahkulu Rebellion that broke out in 1511 stained Anatolia with blood. During these revolts, a sermon was even read in the name of Shah Ismail in Tokat. The increasing unrest would play a major role in Bayezid losing the throne. 

Bayezid aimed to establish peace domestically and to establish an administrative system in the empire that developed with the conquests. However, from time to time he was forced to implement certain practices in line with the wishes of the powers that brought him to power. During the reign of Fatih, the foundations that were converted into timars and abolished because they were thought to reduce state revenues were returned to their former owners, while the institution of naqīb al-ashraf, which had been abolished before, was reestablished. Gedik Ahmed Pasha was executed not for ending the devshirme influence but for being a Cem supporter. 

On the other hand, some measures were also taken during the reign of Bayezid to strengthen the army. The most important of these was the establishment of a new class called ağa squadrons in the Janissary Corps. The timarli sipahis used to feed a cebelü for 5000 akçe, but this amount was reduced to 3000 akçe. The first ship of the galleon class called Göke was built in the navy and long-range cannons began to be used. In order to manage the increasing financial affairs, a second treasury office called şıkk-ı sânî belonging to Anatolia was established, and the Galata Palace School was opened in order to train the domestic boys to be taken to the palace. 

Although Bayezid was a sultan who loved peace, wanted to see his country prosperous and the people prosperous, he could not achieve this goal. Among the many reasons for this was his increasing lack of tolerance and leaving the administration to incompetent people. The plague epidemics in 1492 and 1502 caused many deaths, and a six-year famine caused great hardship. The earthquake that started on September 11, 1509 in Istanbul and lasted for forty-five days was called the “little apocalypse” because it caused the destruction of 1070 houses and 109 mosques and the loss of more than 5000 lives. The struggle for the throne that started among the princes and the Şahkulu Rebellion that was added to it, first dethroned Bayezid and then his life.

Bayezid, whose age was advancing and whose health was deteriorating due to the disease of nikris, wanted to enthrone his eldest son Ahmed, whose behavior was similar to his, and this caused a very early struggle between his sons. Andrea Gritti, the Venetian ambassador who came to Istanbul in 1503, stated that Korkut saw himself as the prince most worthy of the throne against this tendency of the sultan, and that Selim had gained fame due to his war with the Shah of Iran. 

Korkut, who took action first, was angry that he was not transferred from Antalya to Saruhan (Manisa) and went to Egypt in 1509, but he returned the following year. However, his leaving his sanjak and going to Manisa gave Nureddin Ali, known as Şahkulu, a great opportunity to rebel. When Şahkulu, who was trying to establish Safavid sovereignty in Anatolia, rebelled in the spring of 1511, a great Sunni-Shiite conflict began. Having defeated the forces sent against him, Şahkulu spread terror in the places he passed and advanced until he reached the vicinity of Bursa, then headed towards Sivas and took refuge with the Safavids. The failure of Şehzade Ahmed, who was assigned to suppress this rebellion, increased Selim’s chances even more. Selim, who went to Kefe, where his son Süleyman was the sanjak bey, asked to be transferred to Silistre. When his offer was not accepted, he crossed to Kili with the forces he gathered and marched towards Edirne (June 1511). In this case, Bayezid transferred Selim to Semendire and promised not to enthrone Ahmed, but this agreement did not last. After a while, Selim, who marched against his father, was defeated in the battle of Uğraşköy and returned to Kefe. However, Ahmed’s call to Istanbul provoked the janissaries who did not want him (September 21, 1511). Ahmed, who returned, captured Konya. This time, the Janissaries claimed that the sultan was incompetent and demanded that Selim be appointed as their serdar. In the end, Bayezid was forced to accept this offer. According to Antonio Menovino, a Genoese who was in Bayezid’s service during the events, Selim arrived in Istanbul on April 19, set up his headquarters in Yenibahçe, then went to the palace and kissed his father’s hand. When Bayezid asked him to go to Anatolia, he stated that he could fight with peace of mind if he took the throne. Thereupon, Bayezid left the throne to him (Antonio Menavino, vr. 50b). Thus, Bayezid, who ascended to the throne with the support of the Janissaries, abdicated the throne on April 24, 1512, after a reign that lasted 30 years, 11 months and 2 days, again under pressure from the Janissaries. Taking four loads of silver coins with him, Bayezid left Istanbul for Dimetoka. Selim saw his father off outside the city. Bayezid, who rode a sedan chair, could travel 5-6 km per day. He fell ill when he reached the village of Abalar near Çorlu and died on 5 Rebiülevvel 918 (21 May 1512). The cause of Bayezid’s death is highly suspicious, but according to some local and foreign sources, it is possible that he was poisoned. His body was brought to Istanbul and buried next to the mosque he had built in Beyazıt Square, which is named after him today. Later, a mausoleum was built over him. 

Bayezid, who was taller than average, had a dark complexion, hazel eyes, and a broad chest, had a gentle, even melancholic nature. Although he lived a free life in his youth, he focused on worship and charity during his reign. For this reason, he was known as Bayezid-i Veli. He was careful to stay away from war unless necessary, and preferred not to leave Istanbul for the sake of “the order of the country.”

Since his princedom, he had gathered famous scholars around him and tried to educate himself. Bayezid, who was also a poet and used the pen name Adlî in his poems, had a small volume of divan printed (Istanbul 1308), the majority of which consisted of ghazals (about 125). The sultan, who was a poet of moderate level, was quite talented in calligraphy. There are also records that he learned to read the Uyghur script and knew a little Italian. However, he was not as tolerant and open-minded as his father. It was during this period that the paintings made by G. Bellini were removed from the palace and sold, and Tokatlı Molla Lutfî was accused of infidelity and executed. 

On the other hand, Bayezid attended Molla Gürânî's funeral and paid his debt from the treasury. Ottoman historiography produced its first great works during his time. He had İdris-i Bitlisî write an Ottoman history in Persian and İbn Kemal in Turkish. In addition, many works were written in his name. Many scholars, artists and poets were raised in his time, and many scholars and poets such as Molla Lutfi, Mueyyedzade Abdurrahman, Ibn Kemal, Idris-i Bitlisî, Tacizade Cafer and Sadi Celebi, Zenbilli Ali Efendi, Necatî, Zati, Visâli, Firdevsi received his great support. The fact that the names of many poets, artists, scholars and sheikhs are found in an In‘âmat Defteri containing the gifts and grants given to various people between the years 909-917 (1503-1511) clearly shows the value he gave to science and culture. Bayezid was also not completely indifferent to the artistic movements in Europe and did not hesitate to establish contact with some artists. Leonardo Da Vinci stated in a letter to the sultan (TSMA, no. E. 6184) that he was ready to build a bridge over the Golden Horn and the Bosphorus, and when Michelangelo heard that the bridge was being built, he wanted to come to Istanbul at one point. However, these attempts did not materialize. In some decrees and imperial edicts written during this period, Greek, Italian and Slavic were used, as in the time of Fatih. 

Bayezid is also known as a sultan who married many women and had many children. The number of his known wives is eight. It is known that he had eight sons and eleven daughters. According to Ibn Kemal's record, the number of his children and grandchildren exceeded 300. 

Bayezid had many charities built in Istanbul, Amasya, Edirne, Osmancık, Geyve and Saruhan. His complex in Amasya, consisting of a mosque, a madrasah, an imaret and a fountain, was built between 1481-1486. The construction of the soup kitchen in Istanbul was started in 1501 and completed in 1505. Initially consisting of a mosque, caravanserai and double bath, the complex later included a school, madrasah and soup kitchen. Its architect was Yakub Ağa. The foundation of the soup kitchen in Edirne was laid on 26 Rebiülevvel 889 (April 23, 1484) and completed in 1488. The neighborhood where the complex, which included a mosque, madrasah, hospice, soup kitchen and hospital, was located was called the İmâret-i Cedîd (today Yeniimaret) neighborhood and Bayezid exempted the residents from all the avârız-ı dîvâniyye. In addition to these, he had a bridge built over the Tunca in Edirne, over the Kızılırmak in Osmancık, in Geyve and over the Sakarya. The Pirinç Inn (1507) in Bursa is also among his charitable works.

SULTAN IV. MURAD
SULTAN I. MAHMUD
SULTAN III. SELİM
SULTAN II. MAHMUD
SULTAN ABDÜLAZİZ
SULTAN V. MURAD
SULTAN MEHMED REŞAD
SULTAN VI. MEHMED VAHDETTİN

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