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The Rise and Fall of the Islamic Gunpowder Empires: The Ottomans, Safavids, and Mughals, Study Guides, Projects, Research of World History

This lecture by prof. Steven muhlberger from nipissing university explores the great islamic empires of the early modern period, focusing on the ottoman, safavid, and mughal empires. The political changes after the collapse of timur's empire, the importance of central asia, and how these empires became major gunpowder states. It also covers the founding, religious establishments, and eventual downfall of these empires.

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2021/2022

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The Gunpowder Empires
This lecture, by Prof. Steven Muhlberger of Nipissing University, focuses on the great Islamic empires of what in Europe is called the early
modern period, roughly 1500 to 1800.
After the collapse of Timur’s empire in the early 15th century,
politics changed quite a bit. The empires of the later period had
quite a different character from the ones that went before. Simply,
they were much more stable, much more identified with a
particular piece of territory, and much more involved in the life of
the local communities that made them up.
Why did this happen? Why the greater stability? This is
actually a question of some importance, and one that is
seldom thought about.
From about 200 A.D. to 1400 A.D., Central Asia, all too often
ignored in world history, was an extremely important danger
zone. There is a stretch of territory from the Austrian border to
Manchuria that during the Middle Ages was dominated by
nomads, who sloshed back and forth in it, sometimes spilling out
the eastern end to attack China, or the western end to attack
Europe, or over the southern border to attack India or the Middle
East. Although there weren’t actually that many people in this
zone, their mastery of horses and their belligerent culture made
them an important military resource for either their own leaders or
for outside rulers.
But after 1400, the importance of these nomads and this zone
decreased dramatically.
There seem to be two reasons for this.
Despite all the cities and villages leveled and depopulated
by various Mongol and Turkic warlords, urban and
agricultural culture was encroaching on the steppes. This
is precisely the period when the Ukraine, for instance, ceased
to be dominated by herders and began to be dominated by
peasants and their landlords. So the nomadic zone shrank.
More and more Turks settled down.
After about 1400, the key military resource ceased to be
well-trained mounted men. Instead, the key resource was
gunpowder weaponry -- both the large cannons that could
demolish or defend a walled city or fortress, and the
handguns, that trained infantry could use to destroy any force
that did not have them. After 1400, throughout the world, in
some place more quickly than others, armies were
reorganized to take advantage of the new type of weapons.
Reorganizing armies meant reorganizing the societies that
supported them. Rulers who did that job well were able to put
together strong states. Rulers who failed lost control in favor
of ones who did a better job of it.
Now it is a common assumption that however important Islamic
societies were in the Middle Ages, in modern times Western
Europe left Islam behind -- Europe successfully modernized and
the Islamic countries did not. Different people have different
ideas of what modernism means. But if modernism means the
gunpowder revolution, then this idea is completely false.
During the 16th century and the beginning of the 17th century, the
greatest gunpowder states, whether one is talking about
population, area, or sheer military power, were not European
states, but Islamic ones: the Ottoman Empire based in
Constantinople (Istanbul); the Safavid Empire based in Iran; and
the Timurid or Mughal Empire based in India. In fact some
historians of Asia and Islam call these “the gunpowder empires.”
Each of these empires had its own particular character, and I will
discuss them in a moment. But they have some important things
in common, which should be outlined first.
Each of the gunpowder empires lasted a fairly long time.
The Safavid empire in Iran, the shortest lived, was founded
about 1500, and lasted till 1722.
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The Gunpowder Empires

This lecture, by Prof. Steven Muhlberger of Nipissing University, focuses on the great Islamic empires of what in Europe is called the early modern period, roughly 1500 to 1800.

After the collapse of Timur’s empire in the early 15th century, politics changed quite a bit. The empires of the later period had quite a different character from the ones that went before. Simply, they were much more stable, much more identified with a particular piece of territory, and much more involved in the life of the local communities that made them up.

Why did this happen? Why the greater stability? This is actually a question of some importance, and one that is seldom thought about.

From about 200 A.D. to 1400 A.D., Central Asia, all too often ignored in world history, was an extremely important danger zone. There is a stretch of territory from the Austrian border to Manchuria that during the Middle Ages was dominated by nomads, who sloshed back and forth in it, sometimes spilling out the eastern end to attack China, or the western end to attack Europe, or over the southern border to attack India or the Middle East. Although there weren’t actually that many people in this zone, their mastery of horses and their belligerent culture made them an important military resource for either their own leaders or for outside rulers.

But after 1400, the importance of these nomads and this zone decreased dramatically.

There seem to be two reasons for this.

Despite all the cities and villages leveled and depopulated by various Mongol and Turkic warlords, urban and agricultural culture was encroaching on the steppes. This is precisely the period when the Ukraine, for instance, ceased to be dominated by herders and began to be dominated by peasants and their landlords. So the nomadic zone shrank. More and more Turks settled down.

After about 1400, the key military resource ceased to be well-trained mounted men. Instead, the key resource was gunpowder weaponry -- both the large cannons that could demolish or defend a walled city or fortress, and the handguns, that trained infantry could use to destroy any force that did not have them. After 1400, throughout the world, in some place more quickly than others, armies were reorganized to take advantage of the new type of weapons. Reorganizing armies meant reorganizing the societies that supported them. Rulers who did that job well were able to put together strong states. Rulers who failed lost control in favor of ones who did a better job of it. Now it is a common assumption that however important Islamic societies were in the Middle Ages, in modern times Western Europe left Islam behind -- Europe successfully modernized and the Islamic countries did not. Different people have different ideas of what modernism means. But if modernism means the gunpowder revolution, then this idea is completely false. During the 16th century and the beginning of the 17th century, the greatest gunpowder states, whether one is talking about population, area, or sheer military power, were not European states, but Islamic ones: the Ottoman Empire based in Constantinople (Istanbul); the Safavid Empire based in Iran; and the Timurid or Mughal Empire based in India. In fact some historians of Asia and Islam call these “the gunpowder empires.” Each of these empires had its own particular character, and I will discuss them in a moment. But they have some important things in common, which should be outlined first.  Each of the gunpowder empires lasted a fairly long time. The Safavid empire in Iran, the shortest lived, was founded about 1500, and lasted till 1722.

o The Mughal empire of India began in the 1500s and lasted effectively until the mid-1700s and in name until the 1850s; o the Ottoman empire began in the late 1300s, became a major empire in the 1400s, and lasted until 1918.

Each of the empires had fairly stable boundaries and became identified with a particular region. This is clearest in the case of the Safavid empire. Its boundaries are not identical with those of present-day Iran, but they are close enough to fool most of us. In general, it is important that these were not nomad empires (though the Ottoman and Timurid ruling classes had a nomadic heritage), with a ruling class equally at home or not at home anywhere in the Islamic world. Also, you can now make fairly direct connections between things that happened in these empires in the gunpowder era with things that are happening now in some of the same places.

Finally each of the empires had an important impact on the religious composition of society. The impacts were different, and its these differences that I am going to discuss now.

First, let’s have a brief look at Iran. The Safavid empire gives us the most important example of a Muslim state created by a sufi order.

The Safavid family went back to the fourteenth century, when a member who claimed to be a descendent of Ali founded a sufi order. By the fifteenth century, the order controlled the mountainous area on the modern boundary of Turkey and Iran, and had become a disciplined, organized military force called the Kizil-bashes, or Red-Heads. In 1501, their leader Shah Ismail seized the Iranian capital of Tabriz. His descendants, especially his great-grandson Shah Abbas, made Iran a mighty empire supported by modern artillery and musket-bearing infantry, and by an important share of the world silk market.

From the very beginning, the legitimacy of the Safavid dynasty was its Shi’ite nature. Shah Ismail made Shi’ism the official

religion of Iran, suppressed the Sunni leaders, and set up a Shi’ite religious establishment in each city. His descendants consistently followed that policy, and eventually Iran became a Shi’ite country. This had two major effects.  First, Iran became diplomatically and politically isolated from other Islamic countries, at least much of the time. Shi’ite teachings in Iran stressed that Sunnis were as bad as infidels and maybe worse; Sunni rulers outside of Iran didn’t have a very high opinion of the Safavids, either.  Second , the establishment of Shi’ism in Iran eventually helped undermine the Safavid dynasty and alienate the central government from local Muslim communities. Although Shi’ism owed its predominance to royal authority, the ulama did not feel particularly grateful. In fact, they did not really believe the Safavids represented the true line of Ali. In the end, the skepticism of the urban religious leadership helped undermine the dynasty, which came to an effective end in 1722. And although a new dynasty arose to unify the country before 1800, there remained a division between the local communities and the monarchy reminiscent of the Middle period. The conflict between the Shah and the ayatollahs in the 1970s is directly connected with Safavid developments. So is Iran’s status as the main home of Shi’ism. In India during the same period, the monarchy faced quite a different religious situation. By the 1500s, when the Mughals or Timurids took over, North India and large parts of the south had been ruled by Muslims for centuries. Yet the local religious tradition was still thriving. Muslims, though numerous, were a small minority, and Hindu princes and generals were still an important factor. One of the big questions of imperial politics was how should a Muslim sultan rule such a country. One approach was to find as much common ground with members of the Hindu elite as possible, so that their talents and local connections could be used to the benefit of the imperial court. This led to a politics of elite accommodation, where rich, influential and powerful families from

I should point out that the Ottomans had in the sixteenth century a highly trained and loyal bureaucracy to match their army. Although I haven’t mentioned it before, this was something all the gunpowder empires had in their early days. The modern armies and the overall strength of these empires depended on the monarch’s control of local resources; and since all of the empires were essentially new in the sixteenth century, they made a pretty big impact simultaneously.

The Ottoman rulers used their efficient administration to create a two pronged religious policy.

 The Ottomans found themselves by 1530 the masters of a tremendous amount of Christian territory. It was not possible to Islamicise this area in a hurry. So the sultans turned the Christian populations over to the rule of their own bishops, who were mostly very cooperative with the imperial authorities. This spared Christian sensibilities in the new conquests and gave the sultans reliable deputies over large areas. The same applied for Jews where they lived.

 The second part of the religious policy applied to the Muslim population. The Sultans, partly in reaction to the Shi’ite threat from Iran, were intent on establishing a Sunni uniformity on their subjects. They did this by controlling the education of religious scholars and keeping important religious appointments under their control. In the heyday of the Ottoman Empire, the religious life of the Muslim population -- and maybe of the Christians and Jews -- was under more effective government supervision than ever in the past.

The prestige of the sultans was very great in the Muslim world outside of Iran, and they could claim to be caliphs without fear of contradiction -- again, outside of Iran and other Shi’ite areas.

The Islamic gunpowder empires were among the most impressive political and military powers of the 16th century. But by the middle of the 18th century, they were all looking a bit rocky. Christian powers were taking control of territory formerly ruled by Muslims, not just in Europe, but even in India! I don’t want to end this lecture without looking very briefly for an explanation of this

phenomenon. These are, after all, the last Islamic communities that could feel superior to Christian Europe in power and civilization. Why did they fall so quickly from such an impressive position to one of long-term weakness? Two things come to mind. I have said more than once in this class that the dar-al-Islam was the center of the world, and represent the center of culture and innovation for much of the rest of the Eastern Hemisphere. But by 1600, it was clear that the major communication routes of the world no longer went through the Middle East. They went through the world’s oceans, which were increasingly under European control. The advantages of contact with the outside world, access to its resources and opportunities went to Europe. This had a very bad effect on the economic situation of the Islamic world. Second, the center of innovation in culture was no longer in the Islamic world either. Though Islamic governments had latched onto guns as early as European governments, the other great new machine of the early modern period had almost no effect on Islam. That is the printing press. Perfected in Germany in the 1450s, it was in use throughout Europe by 1500 -- there was even one in Constantinople. But the Constantinopolitan press was only used for Christian literature. Religious authorities forbade its use for Islamic texts. Maybe in the short run, the Islamic world avoided a lot of turmoil by rejecting the press and its uncontrolled dissemination of information. In the long run, however, it would pay a high price for standing pat with what it already knew. Source. Steve Muhlberger. History 2805 -- History of Islamic Civilization. Nipissing University http://www.nipissingu.ca/department/history/muhlberger/2805/gunpow.htm Steve Muhlberger