the ottoman empire in east africa

3
The Ottoman Empire in East Africa see also this book The Ottoman Empire began its march to dominance as a band of Turcoman nomads from Central Asia. Several centuries later, they were the globally dominant military, political, and economic power. Analysis of the Ottomans as a world power especially their diplomatic relations with emerging European powers such as Portugal, Venice, and France is not new in the historiography, but sustained monographic treatments of the Ottoman relationship with their eastern neighbors, especially the Safavids and the Mughals, have been rare. Moreover, Ottoman naval power has only recently given its proper place in the historiographical analysis. Historians such as Palmira Brummett, Andrew Hess, and Salih Ozbaran detail how the Ottomans were not only a ‘gunpowder empire’ with wel l organized armies; they also built and provisioned trading ships in the Mediterranean, Baltic, and Red Seas. S systemic monographic treatment of their presence in the Indian Ocean is yet to be written. The knowledge of Ottoman presence in the Indian Ocean was initially facilitated by Portuguese historians, while on the Turkish side, the pioneering works of Salih Ozbaran have been collected in The Ottoman Response to European Expansion: Studies on Ottoman Portuguese Relations in the Indian Ocean and Ottoman administration in the Arab lands

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the slavery trade by the Ottoman empire

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Page 1: The Ottoman Empire in East Africa

The Ottoman Empire in East Africa

see also this book

The Ottoman Empire began its march to dominance as a band of Turcoman nomads from

Central Asia. Several centuries later, they were the globally dominant military, political, and

economic power. Analysis of the Ottomans as a world power—especially their diplomatic

relations with emerging European powers such as Portugal, Venice, and France—is not new

in the historiography, but sustained monographic treatments of the Ottoman relationship with

their eastern neighbors, especially the Safavids and the Mughals, have been rare. Moreover,

Ottoman naval power has only recently given its proper place in the historiographical

analysis. Historians such as Palmira Brummett, Andrew Hess, and Salih Ozbaran detail how

the Ottomans were not only a ‘gunpowder empire’ with well organized armies; they also built

and provisioned trading ships in the Mediterranean, Baltic, and Red Seas. S systemic

monographic treatment of their presence in the Indian Ocean is yet to be written.

The knowledge of Ottoman presence in the Indian Ocean was initially facilitated by

Portuguese historians, while on the Turkish side, the pioneering works of Salih Ozbaran have

been collected in The Ottoman Response to European Expansion: Studies on Ottoman

Portuguese Relations in the Indian Ocean and Ottoman administration in the Arab lands

Page 2: The Ottoman Empire in East Africa

during the Sixteenth Century.

Ozbaran’s work of collecting and presenting primary sources and interpretation of Ottoman

diplomatic relations and naval power is particularly valuable. He details how in the late 15th

century, having conquered Istanbul and established hegemony over Anatolia and several

Baltic and Arab provinces, the Ottomans turned to Venetian shipbuilders to challenge the

Portuguese in the Indian Ocean. At the head of the Red Sea, the Ottomans completed their

new fleet, and in 1507, Amir Husayn led the fleet to fight the Portuguese at Diu. Despite their

defeat by the Portuguese in 1509, the Ottomans remained a viable naval power in the Red

Sea, with outposts on the Horn of Africa and control over the strategic port of Aden on the

Yemeni coast.

Furthermore, the hostility of the Swahili city-states to Portuguese hegemony meant that

Ottoman incursions down the East coast of Africa were perceived as a real threat. In about

1585, a single Turkish ship promising support was sufficient to bring on a general revolt of

Swahili towns, which the Portuguese promptly quelled. A couple of years later, Amir Ali

Bey—whom some sources picture as an Ottoman official, but others as a mere buccaneer—

appeared with a small force. Again, several city states immediately broke away from

Portuguese control. At Pemba, the townspeople annihilated the occupying garrison, and an

attack was mounted against Malindi, Portugal's staunchest ally. Again a Portuguese fleet

from India restored control with appalling brutality. At Faza, they slaughtered the entire

population, destroyed its vessels and plantations, and sent the head of its king as a grizzly

trophy to Goa.

Ali Bey returned with a somewhat larger force two years later and took possession of

Mombasa. Another Portuguese relief force was dispatched, and sailed into the harbor to find

the Turks had come under siege by invaders they called Zimba, reportedly a savage people

who had already destroyed Kilwa. The Portuguese fleet attacked and pillaged the city, and

then, as they departed, the Zimba rushed in to complete the devastation. Advancing farther

north, the Zimba finally were defeated at Malindi by a force of warlike pastoralists whom the

Portuguese called Masseguejos. Portugese control would continue until the Omanis (invited

by Mombasa city leaders) finally wrested control of the coast from the them in 1698.

Of course there are other stories here too: the conflict between the Ottomans and the

Ethiopian emperor Minas over the coastal imperial stronghold of Debarwa, the intermittent

treaties between the two parties over the trading entrepots at Massawa and Arkiko. During

the 15th century the Ottomans had used local Muslim intermediaries to wage war against the

Ethiopian emperor, while the Portuguese backed the Ethiopians but tried to make them

submit to Papal authority in Rome. As both Ottoman and Portuguese power declined in the

17th century, these machinations died down.

The larger point in all is that the histories of these liminal spaces on the edges of the great

empires often have their own unique and compelling stories which get lost amidst the focus

on a perceived 'center'. If a historian came along who knew Kiswahili, Arabic, Portuguese,

Ottoman Turkish, French, German, and English, and perhaps Gujarati he or she could write a

comprehensive history of the Western Indian Ocean from antiquity to the present, including

some of the arcane bits of minutiae which help give life to the larger sketch. As it now stands,

Page 3: The Ottoman Empire in East Africa

learning two languages is a daunting enough task, so this herculean effort is still a future

endeavor for some aspiring genius.