Ottoman–Mamluk War (1516–17)

The Ottoman–Mamluk War of 1516–1517 was the second major conflict between the Egypt-based Mamluk Sultanate and the Ottoman Empire, which led to the fall of the Mamluk Sultanate and the incorporation of the Levant, Egypt, and the Hejaz as provinces of the Ottoman Empire.[1] The war transformed the Ottoman Empire from a realm at the margins of the Islamic world, mainly located in Anatolia and the Balkans, to a huge empire encompassing much of the traditional lands of Islam, including the cities of Mecca, Cairo, Damascus, and Aleppo. Despite this expansion, the seat of the empire's political power remained in Constantinople.[2]

Ottoman–Mamluk War
(1516 – 22 January 1517)
Part of Ottoman wars in the Near East

Outline of the Ottoman Empire, from the Theatro d'el Orbe de la Tierra de Abraham Ortelius, Anvers, 1602, updated from the 1570 edition.
Date1516 – 22 January 1517
Location
Result

Ottoman victory

Belligerents
Ottoman Empire Mamluk Sultanate
Commanders and leaders

Background

The relationship between the Ottomans and the Mamluks had been adversarial since the Fall of Constantinople to the Ottomans in 1453; both states vied for control of the spice trade, and the Ottomans aspired to eventually take control of the Holy Cities of Islam.[3] An earlier conflict, which lasted from 1485 to 1491, had led to a stalemate.

By 1516, the Ottomans were free from other concerns—Sultan Selim I had just vanquished the Safavid Persians at the Battle of Chaldiran in 1514[2]—and turned their full might against the Mamluks, who ruled in Syria and Egypt, to complete the Ottoman conquest of the Middle East.[2]

The Mamluks drafted farmers and peasants from rural areas as soldiers for their upcoming war with the Ottomans. In response, these men fled to avoid being drafted. This led to shortages in rural workers required for food production and a shortage of bread, resulting in a near famine that devastated towns from Cairo to Anatolia.[4]

Both the Ottomans and Mamluks assembled 60,000 soldiers. However only 15,000 Mamluk soldiers were trained warriors, the rest were mere conscripts who did not even know how to fire a musket. As a result, most of the Mamluks fled, avoided the front lines, and even committed suicide. In addition, as had happened in the Battle of Chaldiran, the blasts of the Ottoman cannons and guns scared the Mamluk horses which raced uncontrollably in every direction.[5]

Operations

The war consisted of several battles. The Mamluk army was rather traditional, mainly consisting of cavalry using bows and arrows, whereas the Ottoman army, and especially the Janissaries, was quite modern, using arquebus.[6] The Mamluks remained proud in their tradition and tended to disregard the usage of firearms.[7][8]

Operations in the Levant (1516)

The Ottomans first captured the city of Diyarbekir in southeastern Anatolia.[2] The Battle of Marj Dabiq (24 August) was decisive, and the Mamluk ruler Kansuh al-Ghuri was killed.[2] The Ottomans apparently outnumbered the Mamluks by a factor of 3 to 1.[8] Syria fell under the rule of the Ottomans with this single battle.[8]

The Battle of Yaunis Khan occurred near Gaza (28 October) and was again a defeat for the Mamluks.

Operations in Egypt (1517)

Ottoman volley gun with 9 barrels, early 16th century

Al-Ghuri's successor as Mamluk sultan, Tuman Bay, frantically recruited troops from various classes of society and Bedouins, and attempted to equip his armies with some quantity of cannons and firearms, but all at the last minute and on a limited scale.[7][8] Finally, at the doorstep of Cairo, the Battle of Ridaniya (24 January) took place, in which the Ottoman commander Hadım Sinan Pasha lost his life.[9] In this battle, Selim I and Tuman Bay faced each other. The firearms and guns deployed by Tuman Bay turned out to be almost useless, as the Ottomans managed an attack from the rear.[8]

The campaign had been supported by a fleet of about 100 ships that supplied the troops during their campaign to the south.[10]

A few days later, the Ottomans captured and sacked Cairo,[8] capturing Caliph Al-Mutawakkil III.[11] Tuman Bay regrouped his troops in Giza, where he was finally captured and hanged at the gate of Cairo.[12][2]

Operations in Red Sea (1517)

The Ottoman fleet of Selman Reis was already stationed in the Red Sea by 1517. Fearing Portuguese fleets the blockade on Bab Al Mandab to continue. Selman's fleets aimed to clash with the Portuguese to free the trade route with India and to protect the holy land of Hejaz. Despite the on-going war with the Mamluks, the Ottomans defended Jeddah in December 1517, the last garrison of the Mamluk regime. As a consequence the Sharif of Mecca, Barakat ibn Muhammad also submitted to the Ottomans eight years later, placing the holy cities of Mecca and Medina under Ottoman rule as a Vassal state, while Jeddah became a direct Beylerbeyliks to the Ottoman Empire.[13][2]

Ottoman power extended as far as the southern reaches of the Red Sea, although control of Yemen remained partial and sporadic.[2]

Consequences

Ottoman helmet, with markings of Saint-Irene arsenal, Constantinople, c. 1520, Musée de l'Armée

Mamluk culture and social organization persisted at a regional level, and the hiring and education of Mamluk "slave" soldiers continued, but the ruler of Egypt was an Ottoman governor protected by an Ottoman militia.[2][14] The fall of the Mamluk Sultanate effectively put an end to the Portuguese–Mamluk naval war, but the Ottomans then took over the attempts to stop Portuguese expansion in the Indian Ocean.

The conquest of the Mamluk Empire also opened up the territories of Africa to the Ottomans. During the 16th century, Ottoman power expanded further west of Cairo, along the coasts of northern Africa. The corsair Hayreddin Barbarossa established a base in Algeria, and later accomplished the Conquest of Tunis in 1534.[2]

Following his capture in Cairo, Caliph Al-Mutawakkil III was brought to Constantinople, where he eventually ceded his office as caliph to Selim's successor, Suleiman the Magnificent.[12] This established the Ottoman Caliphate, with the sultan as its head, thus transferring religious authority from Cairo to the Ottoman throne.[11]

Cairo remained in Ottoman hands until the 1798 French conquest of Egypt, when Napoleon I claimed to eliminate the Mamluks.[15]

The conquest of the Mamluks was the largest military venture any Ottoman Sultan had ever attempted. In addition, the conquest put the Ottomans in control of two of the largest cities in the world at the time- Constantinople and Cairo. Not since height of the Roman Empire had the Black, Red, Caspian, and Mediterranean seas been governed by a single empire - the Ottomans.[16]

The conquest of Egypt proved extremely profitable for the empire as it produced more tax revenue than any other Ottoman territory and supplied about 25% of all food consumed. However, Mecca and Medina were the most important of all the cities conquered since it officially made Selim and his descendents the Caliphs of the entire Muslim world until the early 20th century.[17]

See also

References

  1. Dictionary of Battles and Sieges by Tony Jaques xxxiv
  2. The Ottoman Empire: A Short History by Saraiya Faroqhi p.60ff
  3. Ottoman seapower and Levantine diplomacy in the age of discovery by Palmira Johnson Brummett p.52ff
  4. Mikhail, Alan (2020). God's Shadow: Sultan Selim, His Ottoman Empire, and the Making of the Modern World. Liveright. ISBN 978-1631492396.
  5. Mikhail 2020
  6. Daily Life in Ancient and Modern Cairo by Joan D. Barghusen, Bob Moulder p.41
  7. Firearms: A Global History to 1700 by Kenneth Warren Chase p.104
  8. The Cambridge History of Egypt by M. W. Daly,Carl F. Petry p.498ff
  9. E. J. Brill's First Encyclopaedia of Islam, 1913–1936 by Martijn Theodoor Houtsma p.432
  10. Ottoman Seapower and Levantine Diplomacy in the age of discovery by Palmira Johnson Brummett p.110
  11. Drews, Robert (August 2011). "Chapter Thirty – The Ottoman Empire, Judaism, and Eastern Europe to 1648" (PDF). Coursebook: Judaism, Christianity and Islam, to the Beginnings of Modern Civilization. Vanderbilt University.
  12. Muir, William (1896). The Mameluke; Or, Slave Dynasty of Egypt, 1260–1517, A. D. Smith, Elder. pp. 207–13.
  13. http://www.slashdocs.com/minmyw/the-emirs-of-mecca-and-the-ottoman-government-of-hijaz-1840-1908-mekke-emirleri-ve-hicazda-osmanli-idaresi-1840-1908.html
  14. Islamic Monuments in Cairo: The Practical Guide by Caroline Williams p.6
  15. Cairo by André Raymond p.189
  16. Mikhail, Alan (2020). God's Shadow: Sultan Selim, His Ottoman Empire, and the Making of the Modern World. Liveright. ISBN 978-1631492396.
  17. Mikhail 2020

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