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  1. Hace 1 día · Britain‘s drive to partition the Ottoman Empire after World War One was the product of a complex interplay of strategic, economic, and ideological factors. From the need to secure imperial lifelines to India to the desire to control vital oil resources, British policymakers saw the postwar Middle East as a crucial arena for extending and ...

  2. Hace 3 días · The demographics of the Ottoman Empire include population density, ethnicity, education level, religious affiliations and other aspects of the population. Lucy Mary Jane Garnett stated in the 1904 book Turkish Life in Town and Country, published in 1904, that "No country in the world, perhaps, contains a population so heterogeneous ...

  3. Hace 2 días · See also: Crimean–Nogai slave raids in Eastern Europe. The first Russo-Turkish War (1568–1570) occurred after the conquest of Kazan and Astrakhan by the Russian tsar Ivan the Terrible. The Ottoman Sultan Selim II tried to squeeze the Russians out of the lower Volga by sending a military expedition to Astrakhan in 1569.

  4. Hace 3 días · The Greco-Turkish War of 1919–1922 was fought between Greece and the Turkish National Movement during the partitioning of the Ottoman Empire in the aftermath of World War I, between 15 May 1919 and 14 October 1922.

  5. Bayezid II (born December 1447/January 1448?, Demotika, Thrace, Ottoman Empire—died May 26, 1512, Demotika) was an Ottoman sultan (1481–1512) who consolidated Ottoman rule in the Balkans, Anatolia, and the eastern Mediterranean and was the first Ottoman sultan challenged by the spread of the Safavid empire of Persia.

  6. Hace 5 días · The Ottoman Empire, 1300–1650: the Structure of Power. Basingstoke, Palgrave, 2002, ISBN: 333613873X; 419pp.; Price: £16.99. Ottoman histories – better put: histories of the Ottoman state – have some right to be regarded in a pseudo-Braudelian sense as une historiographie du longue durée. Richard Knolles’s massive folio, Generall ...

  7. Hace 5 días · Mehmed I (died May 26, 1421, Edirne, Ottoman Empire) was an Ottoman sultan who reunified the dismembered Ottoman territories following the defeat of Ankara (1402). He ruled in Anatolia and, after 1413, in the Balkans as well.