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  1. Hace 4 días · Ottoman architecture is an architectural style or tradition that developed under the Ottoman Empire over a long period, undergoing some significant changes during its history.

  2. Hace 4 días · Early Ottoman architecture corresponds to the period of Ottoman architecture roughly up to the 15th century. This article covers the history of Ottoman architecture up to the end of Bayezid II's reign (r. 1447–1512), prior to the advent of what is generally considered "classical" Ottoman architecture in the 16th century.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Mehmed_IIMehmed II - Wikipedia

    Hace 1 día · Mehmed, pronounced [icinˈdʒi ˈmehmet]; 30 March 1432 – 3 May 1481), commonly known as Mehmed the Conqueror (Ottoman Turkish: ابو الفتح, romanized: Ebū'l-fetḥ, lit. 'the Father of Conquest'; Turkish: Fâtih Sultan Mehmed ), was twice the sultan of the Ottoman Empire from August 1444 to September 1446 and then later from February 1451 to May 1481.

  4. Hace 5 días · Istanbul, largest city and principal seaport of Turkey. Historically known as Byzantium and then Constantinople, it was the capital of the Byzantine Empire and the Ottoman Empire. Istanbul straddles the Bosporus strait, one of two waterways that separates the European and Asian parts of Turkey.

    • Blake Ehrlich
  5. Hace 4 días · In the 16th and 17th centuries Aleppo was the third largest city in the Ottoman Empire, after Constantinople (now Istanbul) and Cairo, and hosted Venetian, British, Dutch, and French consulates and trading offices.

  6. Hace 4 días · The first, The Ottoman Empire 1300–1481 (Istanbul, 1990), is densely factographic and linear, recalling, in its approach to the subject, the now largely forgotten traditions of sound east European scholarship embodied in such works as Klyuchevsky’s Course of Russian History or (albeit on a much larger scale) Hrushevsky’s ...

  7. Hace 4 días · Although Ottoman and Persian characters are sometimes placed side by side as counterparts or foils to each other in the drama of the period—witness the old sultan and the young Sophy as the Crusaders’ adversaries in The Four Prentices of London, or the matching Turk and Persian figures appearing at two corners of the stage in one of the six tableaux of Thomas Dekker’s civic pageant ...