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{{Era|ACR|ACRE|Rbook}}
{{Era|ACR|ACRE|Rbook}}
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{{Merge|Ottomans}}<br>
{{Faction infobox
[[File:The view 3.png|thumb|250px|Ezio Auditore and Yusuf Tazim gazing out over Constantinople, capital of the Ottoman Empire]]
|name        = Ottoman Empire
|image        = Ottoman_Emblem.svg
|founder      = {{Wiki|Osman I}}
|leader      = Sultan
|headquarters = [[Constantinople]]
|religion    = {{Wiki|Sunni Islam|Islam}}
|formed      = 1299
|reorganised  = 1511
|collapsed    = 1923}}
The '''Ottoman Empire''' was a Turkish state that ruled over most of the territories of the former [[Byzantine Empire]] and beyond, with [[Constantinople]] as its capital.
The '''Ottoman Empire''' was a Turkish state that ruled over most of the territories of the former [[Byzantine Empire]] and beyond, with [[Constantinople]] as its capital.


Following the {{Wiki|Fall of Constantinople}} in 1453 at the hands of the [[Ottomans]], the Byzantine Empire effectively ceased to exist. Some time afterwards, the [[Templars]], who had deeply ingrained themselves in the Byzantine nobility, began opposing the Ottoman Empire and working to undermine it. [[Vlad Tepes]], Prince of {{Wiki|Wallachia}}, was one of those that made active attempts at conquering the Ottomans' land, until he was defeated in 1476 by the [[Assassin leader|leader]] of the [[Turkish Assassins|Ottoman Assassins]], [[Ishak Pasha]], and subsequently killed.
==Rise of the Ottomans==
{{Quote|Shahkulu, try to moderate your anger. I know the Sultan humiliated your people. But there is no need to spit on men who are beneath us.|Manuel Palaiologos regarding Shahkulu's behaviour towards Ottoman prisoners.|Assassin's Creed: Revelations}}
The Ottomans first came into light to the West in 1227 when they migrated westward into the {{Wiki|Seljuk Empire}}, in {{Wiki|Anatolia}}, where the Ottomans created a state along with establishing a principality in Western Anatolia, under {{Wiki|Ertugrul}}.


By 1509, the Templars had returned to Constantinople under the banner of the Byzantine Empire and the leadership of [[Manuel Palaiologos]], in an attempt to reclaim the Empire from within. While Sultan [[Bayezid II]] fought with his son [[Selim I|Selim]] over the succession of the throne, the Templars managed to gain an easy foothold within the Empire, and Bayezid's eldest son and presumed heir, Prince [[Ahmet]], eventually joined the Templars' cause and easily took over Manuel's place as the leader of the Byzantine Templars.
His son Osman I expanded the principality, after whom both the empire and its people were named as "Ottomans". Along the way, the Ottomans created enemies from conquered states, such as [[Shahkulu]], who was a Turkmen from Eastern Anatolia. However, the Ottoman Empire came into its own when [[Mehmet II]] captured the city of Constantinople from the Byzantines on 29 May 1453, deposing the Byzantine Empire's last Emperor, [[Constantine XI Palaiologos]] .<ref name="Recollection">''[[Assassin's Creed: Recollection]]''</ref>


In 1511, thanks to the combined efforts of [[Yusuf Tazim]] and [[Ezio Auditore da Firenze]], the leader of the Ottoman Assassins and [[Mentor]] of the [[Italian Assassins]] respectively; and Prince [[Suleiman I|Suleiman]], grandson of the ruling Sultan, the Templars were repelled from Constantinople. After the deaths of Manuel and Ahmet, the latter at the hands of [[Selim I|his own brother]], Templar influence throughout the Ottoman Empire significantly collapsed.
==War with Wallachia==
{{Quote|Once your Creed was as vital to me as air and water... but when the Turks marched into Wallachia, and you Assassins did nothing to stop it, how could I continue to believe?|Vali cel Tradat, regarding the Ottoman Assassins|Assassin's Creed: Revelations}}
In 1476, the Ottomans under the Grand Vizier [[Ishak Pasha]] participated in the Ottoman military crackdown on a Hungrarian uprising, entering a war with [[Wallachia]] and defeating the rebel prince, a [[Templars|Templar]] named [[Vlad Tepes]].


==Reference==
During the later half of the 15th century, they brokered a truce with the [[Assassins]], via their leader Ishak Pasha, who was also a secret Assassin himself. This act led [[Vali cel Tradat]] to defect to the Templars, after he had served the Assassins for nearly a decade, as he considered the truce with the Ottomans and Assassins as a betrayal of his Wallachian heritage.<ref name="Rev">''[[Assassin's Creed: Revelations]]''</ref>
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Revelations]]''


==Internal rifts==
{{Quote|Not just one - two angry sons. It's a familiar pattern with these royals. When the Sultan coughs - ahem! - the Princes draw their swords.|Yusuf Tazim, on the political tensions between Ahmet and Selim|Assassin's Creed: Revelations}}
[[Bayezid II|Sultan Bayezid II]] led the Ottomans into a war with the remnants of the Byzantine Empire, led by [[Manuel Palaiologos]], a Templar, who was trying to take the empire back and restore it to its Byzantine roots.
While Bayezid had originally chosen his son [[Ahmet]] as the next Sultan, he soon faced fierce opposition from the Ottoman [[Janissaries]], who supported his other son, [[Selim I|Selim]], and aiding him in his ascension to the throne. Selim then begun a tough war against his father in order to dethrone him from the title of Sultan. In 1512, Bayezid eventually handed over the throne to Selim instead of Ahmet, and Selim became the new Sultan of the Ottoman Empire.
[[File:End road 22.png|250px|thumb|Selim letting Ahmet fall to his death]]
As soon as he became the Sultan, Selim marched over to Constantinople to find his brother Ahmet facing off against the Assassin [[Ezio Auditore da Firenze]]. As he approached his brother, Selim revealed to Ahmet that their father had ultimately chosen him as his successor, before he began to strangle Ahmet and eventually pushed him off a nearby cliff, killing him.
It was his reasoning that Ahmet, who was secretly a high-ranked member of the Templars, had betrayed the Ottomans when he formed an alliance with the Byzantines.<ref name="Rev"/>
==Under Suleiman==
In 1520, a tragedy robbed Selim of the Sultanate, and Suleiman, at 26, succeeded him. His reforms greatly improved the Empire's bureaucratic system, which would later be described as a "well-oiled engine," despite its significant size.
During his rule, Suleiman expanded his Empire to its furthest points, stretching it from Algeria to the Persian Gulf, and from Austria down to Egypt. Respecting the diversity of those under his authority, he was always careful to honor their cultures, traditions, and religions.<ref name="Rev"/>
==The Janissaries==
{{main|Janissaries}}
[[File:TAG_4.png|thumb|left|250px|A pair of Janissaries harassing a merchant]]
The Ottoman Janissaries were specially trained elite soldiers who served as the private [[Guards|guard]] to the Sultan of the Ottoman Empire. They were also the first standing Ottoman army, and the mainstay of the Ottoman army during the 1453 invasion of Constantinople, led by Sultan Mehmet II.
During 16th century Constantinople, the citizens greatly feared the Janissaries, as they were prone to mistreating them. The Janissaries also patrolled the city, looking for any Byzantine guards, in order to drive them out of the city. As such, Ezio used this to his advantage by creating tension between the two factions, by using [[bombs]] or dead bodies to provoke conflict between them.
==Ottomans and the Assassins==
{{main|Turkish Assassins}}
{{Quote|For the first time in many decades, the Assassins have a strong presence here. It wasn't always that way. Under the Byzantine Emperor, the Assassins were hunted down and killed on the spot.|Yusuf Tazim, about the Assassins in the 16th century.|Assassin's Creed: Revelations}}
[[Levantine Assassins|Levantine Assassin]] [[Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad]] journeyed to Constantinople in 1204, while the city was under Byzantine rule, in order to establish an Assassin Order there, but he was proved unable to do so in the face of the {{wiki|Fourth Crusade}}. Later on in time, the Polo brothers, [[Niccolò Polo|Niccolò]] and [[Maffeo Polo|Maffeo]], were able to establish the Constantinople Assassins Guild.<ref name="SC">''[[Assassin's Creed: The Secret Crusade]]''</ref>
Following this, Ishak Pasha brokered a truce between the Ottomans and the Assassins and began recruiting Ottoman citizens to the Brotherhood. After he died, the task fell to the [[Master Assassin]] [[Yusuf Tazim]], himself a recruit of Pasha.<ref name="Rev"/>
When Sultan Bayezid II gave refuge to escaped Jews from the Inquisition of [[Isabella I of Castile|Queen Isabella I]] in [[Spain]] and [[Manuel I of Portugal|King Manuel I]] in [[Portugal]], realizing the people will make his own empire stronger, the King of Spain, [[Ferdinand II of Aragon|Ferdinand II]] – under the influence of the Templars – tried to send his own agents with the refugees to infiltrate Constantinople. This was foiled by the [[Italian Assassins]], who killed the agents and took their places, before working to establish the guild there further.<ref name="PL">''[[Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy]] - [[Contracts in Project Legacy|Contracts]]''</ref>
Yusuf also successfully led the Turkish Assassins, alongside the Venetian Assassins, to help end the Venetian-Ottoman war. [[Rodrigo Borgia]] tried to disrupt this peace by sending his mercenaries to Constantinople. However, the Assassins, in constant vigil of such tactics by the Borgia, attacked the ship which headed for Constantinople and thwarted this attempt.<ref name="PL"/>
Initially, the Assassins had stolen maps from the famed Ottoman admiral and cartographer [[Piri Reis]], in order to keep up with Templars' expedition of the New World.<ref name="PL"/> Despite this, Reis later joined the Assassin Order as a scholar and a technician, eventually becoming a Master Assassin who specialized in bomb crafting.
[[File:Upgrade 3.png|thumb|250px|Ezio being introduced to the Ottoman Assassins]]
In 1511, the Mentor of the Italian Assassins, Ezio Auditore da Firenze, journeyed to the Ottoman Assassins' headquarters in Constantinople with the intention of finding the [[Masyaf Keys|five keys]] needed to open [[Altaïr's library]], underneath the fortress of [[Masyaf]].
Greeted by Yusuf Tazim, Ezio was quickly taken in and introduced to various techniques that the Ottoman Assassins used, including bombs and the [[Hookblade]], a modification made to the Hidden Blade by the Ottoman Assassins themselves. From there, Ezio, along with Yusuf and a handful of his high-ranked subordinates, led the Ottoman Assassins against the Byzantine Templars and ''Shehzade'' Ahmet, who was a Templar himself that aspired to earn the title of Sultan.
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{ACR}}
{{ACR}}
[[Category:Former empires]]
[[Category:Former empires]]

Revision as of 21:30, 21 July 2013


The Ottoman Empire was a Turkish state that ruled over most of the territories of the former Byzantine Empire and beyond, with Constantinople as its capital.

Rise of the Ottomans

"Shahkulu, try to moderate your anger. I know the Sultan humiliated your people. But there is no need to spit on men who are beneath us."
―Manuel Palaiologos regarding Shahkulu's behaviour towards Ottoman prisoners.[src]

The Ottomans first came into light to the West in 1227 when they migrated westward into the Seljuk Empire, in Anatolia, where the Ottomans created a state along with establishing a principality in Western Anatolia, under Ertugrul.

His son Osman I expanded the principality, after whom both the empire and its people were named as "Ottomans". Along the way, the Ottomans created enemies from conquered states, such as Shahkulu, who was a Turkmen from Eastern Anatolia. However, the Ottoman Empire came into its own when Mehmet II captured the city of Constantinople from the Byzantines on 29 May 1453, deposing the Byzantine Empire's last Emperor, Constantine XI Palaiologos .[1]

War with Wallachia

"Once your Creed was as vital to me as air and water... but when the Turks marched into Wallachia, and you Assassins did nothing to stop it, how could I continue to believe?"
―Vali cel Tradat, regarding the Ottoman Assassins[src]

In 1476, the Ottomans under the Grand Vizier Ishak Pasha participated in the Ottoman military crackdown on a Hungrarian uprising, entering a war with Wallachia and defeating the rebel prince, a Templar named Vlad Tepes.

During the later half of the 15th century, they brokered a truce with the Assassins, via their leader Ishak Pasha, who was also a secret Assassin himself. This act led Vali cel Tradat to defect to the Templars, after he had served the Assassins for nearly a decade, as he considered the truce with the Ottomans and Assassins as a betrayal of his Wallachian heritage.[2]

Internal rifts

"Not just one - two angry sons. It's a familiar pattern with these royals. When the Sultan coughs - ahem! - the Princes draw their swords."
―Yusuf Tazim, on the political tensions between Ahmet and Selim[src]

Sultan Bayezid II led the Ottomans into a war with the remnants of the Byzantine Empire, led by Manuel Palaiologos, a Templar, who was trying to take the empire back and restore it to its Byzantine roots.

While Bayezid had originally chosen his son Ahmet as the next Sultan, he soon faced fierce opposition from the Ottoman Janissaries, who supported his other son, Selim, and aiding him in his ascension to the throne. Selim then begun a tough war against his father in order to dethrone him from the title of Sultan. In 1512, Bayezid eventually handed over the throne to Selim instead of Ahmet, and Selim became the new Sultan of the Ottoman Empire.

Selim letting Ahmet fall to his death

As soon as he became the Sultan, Selim marched over to Constantinople to find his brother Ahmet facing off against the Assassin Ezio Auditore da Firenze. As he approached his brother, Selim revealed to Ahmet that their father had ultimately chosen him as his successor, before he began to strangle Ahmet and eventually pushed him off a nearby cliff, killing him.

It was his reasoning that Ahmet, who was secretly a high-ranked member of the Templars, had betrayed the Ottomans when he formed an alliance with the Byzantines.[2]

Under Suleiman

In 1520, a tragedy robbed Selim of the Sultanate, and Suleiman, at 26, succeeded him. His reforms greatly improved the Empire's bureaucratic system, which would later be described as a "well-oiled engine," despite its significant size.

During his rule, Suleiman expanded his Empire to its furthest points, stretching it from Algeria to the Persian Gulf, and from Austria down to Egypt. Respecting the diversity of those under his authority, he was always careful to honor their cultures, traditions, and religions.[2]

The Janissaries

Main article: Janissaries
A pair of Janissaries harassing a merchant

The Ottoman Janissaries were specially trained elite soldiers who served as the private guard to the Sultan of the Ottoman Empire. They were also the first standing Ottoman army, and the mainstay of the Ottoman army during the 1453 invasion of Constantinople, led by Sultan Mehmet II.

During 16th century Constantinople, the citizens greatly feared the Janissaries, as they were prone to mistreating them. The Janissaries also patrolled the city, looking for any Byzantine guards, in order to drive them out of the city. As such, Ezio used this to his advantage by creating tension between the two factions, by using bombs or dead bodies to provoke conflict between them.

Ottomans and the Assassins

Main article: Turkish Assassins
"For the first time in many decades, the Assassins have a strong presence here. It wasn't always that way. Under the Byzantine Emperor, the Assassins were hunted down and killed on the spot."
―Yusuf Tazim, about the Assassins in the 16th century.[src]

Levantine Assassin Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad journeyed to Constantinople in 1204, while the city was under Byzantine rule, in order to establish an Assassin Order there, but he was proved unable to do so in the face of the Fourth Crusade. Later on in time, the Polo brothers, Niccolò and Maffeo, were able to establish the Constantinople Assassins Guild.[3]

Following this, Ishak Pasha brokered a truce between the Ottomans and the Assassins and began recruiting Ottoman citizens to the Brotherhood. After he died, the task fell to the Master Assassin Yusuf Tazim, himself a recruit of Pasha.[2]

When Sultan Bayezid II gave refuge to escaped Jews from the Inquisition of Queen Isabella I in Spain and King Manuel I in Portugal, realizing the people will make his own empire stronger, the King of Spain, Ferdinand II – under the influence of the Templars – tried to send his own agents with the refugees to infiltrate Constantinople. This was foiled by the Italian Assassins, who killed the agents and took their places, before working to establish the guild there further.[4]

Yusuf also successfully led the Turkish Assassins, alongside the Venetian Assassins, to help end the Venetian-Ottoman war. Rodrigo Borgia tried to disrupt this peace by sending his mercenaries to Constantinople. However, the Assassins, in constant vigil of such tactics by the Borgia, attacked the ship which headed for Constantinople and thwarted this attempt.[4]

Initially, the Assassins had stolen maps from the famed Ottoman admiral and cartographer Piri Reis, in order to keep up with Templars' expedition of the New World.[4] Despite this, Reis later joined the Assassin Order as a scholar and a technician, eventually becoming a Master Assassin who specialized in bomb crafting.

Ezio being introduced to the Ottoman Assassins

In 1511, the Mentor of the Italian Assassins, Ezio Auditore da Firenze, journeyed to the Ottoman Assassins' headquarters in Constantinople with the intention of finding the five keys needed to open Altaïr's library, underneath the fortress of Masyaf.

Greeted by Yusuf Tazim, Ezio was quickly taken in and introduced to various techniques that the Ottoman Assassins used, including bombs and the Hookblade, a modification made to the Hidden Blade by the Ottoman Assassins themselves. From there, Ezio, along with Yusuf and a handful of his high-ranked subordinates, led the Ottoman Assassins against the Byzantine Templars and Shehzade Ahmet, who was a Templar himself that aspired to earn the title of Sultan.

References