The Janissaries (Saqi Essentials)
Saqi Books
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$19.95 |
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$18.95 |
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$12.22 |
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$12.05 |
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DVD Details:
- Starring:
- Director:
- Format:
- Rated:
- Studio: Saqi Books
- Theatrical Release Date: Dec 31, 1969
- DVD Release Date: Dec 31, 1969
- Run Time:
- ASIN: 0863567401
- UPC:
- Sales Rank: 825561
Editorial Review from Product Description:
br / br /From the fifteenth to the sixteenth century, the janissaries were the scourge of Europe. Their ferocious spirit allowed their masters to extend their conquests from the Danube to the Euphrates. Their power was such that even sultans trembled. br / br /But by the end of the eighteenth century, they were more interested in trade than war. Ill-disciplined and arrogant, both rulers and ruled turned against them. Yet their political power was so extensive it took years before they could be suppressed.
Amazon Customer Reviews:
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
    The frown of a Janissary, 2008-07-10
The Janissary Corps sprung from the Christian levy of male youths from the Ottoman Empire's European lands following their conquest of Gallipoli and Adrianople in the 15th Century.
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br /The youths were shipped off to Adrianople, named Edirne by the Ottomans, converted to Islam and formed into the empire's crack corps. And what a corps it was, sweeping across Europe under Suleiman the Magnificent, its most glorious victory was the defeat of King Louis of Hungary at Mohacs in 1526 of which Goodwin gives a rivetting account
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br /It was not to last and the corps descended into a wretched, brutal rabble, scared of the enemy and the terror of the empire's peoples. Various efforts at reform, under Sultans Osman II and Selim III, for example, failed when the corps, often aided by the reactionary religious hierarchy, the ulema, faced down the other powers of the empire and, in the above cases, saw the sultans put to death.
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br /Their end did not come until 1826 when Sultan Mahmud II and his prime minister finally faced the inevitable task and butchered the corps in its headquarters in Istanbul and throughout the empire.
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br /Goodwin marshalls his facts well and leavens the betimes dense material with an elegant, funny or startling phrase that brings the reader back to the essence of the Ottoman Empire and the corps "by this time [Sultan] Ibrahim was so demented that he might have raped his close stool", "[Prime Minister] Kopruluzade was regarded with awe but also suspected of madness because, unlike normal ministers, he habitually thought out his policies.", "...as so often in war which, in reality, is an infernal game played by grey children in a vast nursery."
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br /Grey children, nicely put, that.
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