Janissaries and Urban Notables in Local Politics: Struggle for Power and Factional Strife in the Late Eighteenth-Century Anatolian Town of Adana
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Provincial Notables and Factional Strife in Ottoman Provinces
3. Economy and Society in Eighteenth Century Adana
4. Disorder and Factional Strife in Adana
5. Conclusions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Pseudo-Janissaries were commoners who claimed to be Janissary corps members, even though they were not registered soldiers. For further details, see (Syropoulos and Yıldız 2022, pp. 9–54). |
2 | For a definition of ayans as the warlords in the Balkans, Anatolia, Syria and Egypt who used the wars as a “cover”, see (McGowan 1994, pp. 662–69). |
3 | (Tülüveli 2005, pp. 131–33). In the World-System theory, too, the author underlines that peripheralization is equated with decentralization, p. 139. For the decentralization-decline paradigm, see also (İnalcık 1980, pp. 283–337; İnalcık 1977, pp. 27–53; Yücel 1974, pp. 657–708). |
4 | For a similar argument, see (Khoury 1997, p. 8). |
5 | The other groups consisted of slave soldiers and the descendants of state officials, (Quataert 2005, p. 47). |
6 | For the re-emergence of the same household as a lesser ayan family in the eighteenth-century, see (Dağlı 2000, pp. 145–80). |
7 | Yücel (1974), “Osmanlı İmparatorluğu’nda Desantralizasyon”, pp. 668–71. He gives the examples of some provinces with privileged status (salyaneli), the semi-autonomous (hükümet) sancaks of Eastern Anatolia and the provinces ruled as khanates or voyvodalıks. He also mentions some rights the tımariots had over the lands under their control and the Ottoman practice of delegating tax collection in the hass and arpalık lands to voyvodas (pp. 671–72, 677); the extensive administrative and economic rights of individuals in private or vakf lands (pp. 673–74); and, finally, the taxfarming system (iltizam) itself (pp. 681–83). |
8 | For a critical analysis of the paradigm, see (Gelvin 2006, pp. 19–29). For a list of historians influenced by this paradigm, see (Khoury 1990, pp. 215–30). |
9 | For the origins and history of the great ayan families of Anatolia, see (Özkaya 1992, pp. 809–45; Özkaya 1978, pp. 667–723). |
10 | I have borrowed the concept of “selective obedience” from (Zens 2011, p. 440). |
11 | Zens rightly considers the lesser ayans mainly as the allies of grand ayans, or those in their service. (Zens 2011, p. 435). |
12 | On Aleppo, see (Masters 1991, pp. 151–58; Masters 1978, pp. 75–89; Bodman 1963, pp. 103–40). On Ayntab, see (Canbakal 2012, pp. 33–59). |
13 | For more information, see (Canbakal 2012, pp. 39–40). |
14 | For seyyid/ashraf-Janissary conflict/factional strife in eighteenth-century Ayntab, see (Canbakal 2007, pp. 88–89; Canbakal 2012, pp. 33–59). For Aleppo, see (Bodman 1963, pp. 103–40; Masters 2011, pp. 159–75). |
15 | For some examples of ayan infighting and the disruptive role of the lesser ayans in Karaferye see (Anastasopoulos 2002, pp. 73–88); in Balıkesir, see (İlgürel 1973, pp. 63–74); in İçel, see (Köse 2013); in Kütahya, see (Dağlı 2000, pp. 156–67). For the examples of Janissaries as political actors, see (Spyropoulos 2019, pp. 449–81). |
16 | Up until that period, the Janissary regiments in any given locality rotated every three years, (Spyropoulos 2019, pp. 450–51, 454). |
17 | (Batatu 1981, p. 337). For the connection between migration, the expansion of Janissary networks and the rise in the number of Janissary pretenders in the eighteenth-century Crete, see (Spyropoulos 2019, pp. 468–71); for the representation of the pretenders as “bandits, usually converts, detached from the rest of society”, see (p. 476). |
18 | The hass lands administered by voyvodas also curtailed both the administrative authority of the provincial governors in general and also their revenues, (İnalcık 1977, pp. 29–30; Ergenoğlu 2016, pp. 123, 164). |
19 | (Ergenoğlu 2016, pp. 72, 95–96). For a mapping of the tımar and malikane zones in the Adana, see the same source, p. 92. The map bears out the rapid rise and spread of lands incorporated into malikanes at the expense of the tımar lands. |
20 | (Ergenoğlu 2016, pp. 165, 167–169, 175–177). For the list of eighteenth century malikane owners, see (Ergenoğlu 2016, pp. 177–79, 182–88), and for a list of mültezims, see (Ergenoğlu 2016, pp. 192–95). In the list provided by the author, Serturnai Mehmed Ağa and Karakollukçu Mehmed Ağa were local Janissary officers. |
21 | For further details on the administrative structure of Adana province, see (Ergenoğlu 2016, pp. 70–88). For some examples concerning the revenues granted to governors, see pp. 88–99. |
22 | It seems that it was usually lucrative malikanes who were detached from the governors, see (Ergenoğlu 2016, pp. 100–3, 114). |
23 | By the early eighteenth century, the local ayans had assumed the task of maintaing public order, (İnalcık 1980, p. 311). |
24 | The serdars were the officers responsible for recording the names of the drafted unpaid volunteers in registers they kept locally, a fact which made them the virtual overseers of the entire process, (Uzunçarşılı 1988, p. 330). |
25 | Halil was later exiled to the fortress of Seddülbahir, only to be released with help from his Janissary comrades. He did not send the soldiers demanded by the imperial authorities. He was a wealthy person who held çiftliks in the vicinity of the town, (İlgürel 1973, pp. 67–71). |
26 | BOA, Mühimme Defterleri (henceforth: A.DVNS.MHM.d), no. 127, fl. 270, order no. 1797 (evahir-i Z 1130/15–23 November 1718); A.DVN.SMHM.d. 132, fl. 386, order no. 1433 (evail-i S 1138/9–18 October 1725), fls. 329-330, order no. 1175 (evahir-i L 1137/3–11 July 1725); Adana Şeriyye Sicilleri (henceforth AŞR.), no. 20, fls. 9–12 (22 Za 1137/2 August 1725). |
27 | AŞR. 103, fl. 9 (evahir-i S 1125/ 19–27 March 1713). |
28 | BOA, A.DVN.SMHM.d., no. 119, fl. 213, order no. 881 (evahir-i Ca 1124/26 June–4 July 4 1712). |
29 | BOA, A.DVN.SMHM.d., no. 119, fl. 213, order no. 881 (evahir-i Ca 1124/26 June–4 July 1712); A.DVNS.MHM.d., no. 127, fl. 270, order no. 1797 (evahir-i Z 1130/15-23 November 1718); A.DVN.SMHM.d., no. 132, fl. 386, order no 1433 (evail-i S 1138/9–18 October 1725), fls. 329-330, order no. 1175 (evahir-i L 1137/3–11 July 1725); AŞR., no. 20, fls. 9–12 (22 Za 1137/2 August 1725). |
30 | AŞR. no. 30, fl. 111, order no. 187 (evahir-i B 1138/25 March–2 April 1726). |
31 | BOA, Cevdet Zabtiye (henceforth C. ZB). 32/1585 (13 Ca 1201/3 March 1787). |
32 | AŞR., no. 5, fl. 216 (28 L 1184/14 February 1771). |
33 | BOA, Bab-ı Asafi Divan-ı Hümayun Sicilleri Tahvil (Nişan) Kalemi Defterleri (henceforth: A.DVNS.NŞT.d), no. 16, fls. 263–264. |
34 | He served as rikab kaimmakam from Z 1187/February-March 1774 to 22 M 1188/4 April 1774); (Abdülhamid n.d.), fl. 3. |
35 | BOA, Topkapı Sarayı Müzesi Arşivi Evrakı (TSMA.e) 806/19 (22 M 1188/4 April 1774). |
36 | BOA, A. DVNS.NŞT.d., no. 16, fl. 94. |
37 | Following his dismissal, on 17 June 1775 he was appointed governor of Karaman, where he died in the same year, BOA, A. DVNS.NŞT.d., no. 16, fl. 94; AŞR., no. 48, fl. 33, order no. 76 (7 Ş 1188/13 October 1774); no. 48, fl. 34, order no. 77 (19 Ş 1188/25 October 1774). |
38 | AŞR., no. 48, fl. 69, order no. 117 (undated); fl. 70, order no. 120 (21 N 1188/25 November 1774). |
39 | AŞR., 48, fl. 69, order no. 117 (undated). |
40 | AŞR., no. 52, fls. 127–128 (21 N 1188/25 November 1174); BOA, C.ZB.72/3569 (evail-i M 1190/21 February–1 March 1776). |
41 | AŞR., no. 52, fl. 62 (1 N 1188/5 November 1774), BOA, C.ZB.72/3569 (evail-i M 1190/21 February–1 March 1776). In the latter document, the nezir of the neighborhoods is specified as 337,900 guruş. For some examples of nezir from eighteenth-century Adana, see (Tamdoğan 2006, pp. 135–46). For the legal, social, and economic significance of nezir practices, see (Canbakal 2011, pp. 127–42). |
42 | BOA, C.ZB. 32/1585 (13 Ca 1201/3 March 1787). |
43 | BOA, C.ZB. 32/1585 (13 Ca 1201/3 March 1787). |
44 | All persons on the list were pardoned and permitted to return to Adana by imperial order. For further details, see BOA, C.ZB. 72/3569 (evail-i M 1190/21 February–1 March 1776). |
45 | Turnacıbaşı literally means “the head keeper of the imperial cranes”. Before the late seventeenth century, the title was only conferred on one officer of the Janissary corps, i.e., the leading officer of the 68th regiment. However, from that point onward the title was given to a number of Janissary officers who acted as agents of the Janissary corps in the Ottoman provinces, as well as to the heads of provincial Janissary garrisons. |
46 | He served as the serdar several times: 1 Ca 1185/12 August 1771-22 Ca 1185/2 September 1771; 19 Z 1185/24 March 24 1172-11 S 1186/4 May 1772; 15 S 1187/8 May 1773 to 20 Ra 1187/11 June 1773. AŞR., no. 47, fls. 54, 56. He served as the mütesellim from 26 N 1187/11 December 1773 to 13 L 1187/28 December 1173, AŞR., no. 48, fl. 13 (15 L 1187/30 December 1173). |
47 | He served as mütesellim from 26 N 1187/11 December 1773 to 13 L 1187/28 December 1173, AŞR., no. 48, fl. 13 (15 L 1187/30 December 1173). |
48 | Kademoğlu served as the serdar of the town 26 days in 1185/1771. He then served on several occasions: 11 B 1185/20 October 1771; 7 L 1186/1 January 1773-15 Z 1186/9 March 1773; 11 M 1187/4 April 1773-21 M 1187/14 April 1773, AŞR., no. 48, fl. 13 (15 L 1187/30 December 1173); BOA, C.ZB.91/4515 (evail-i S 1192/1–10 March 1778); Adana Ahkam Defterleri (Henceforth, A.DVNS.AHK.ADN.d.), no. 4, fl. 248 (evasıt-ı Za 1197/8–17 October 1783); A.DVNS.MHM.d., no. 176, fl. 8, order no. 16 (evasıt-ı Z 1191/10–19 January 1778); AŞR, no. 47, fls. 54, 56 (15 S 1187/8 May 1773). |
49 | BOA, C.ZB. 91/4515 (evail-i S 1192/1–10 March 1778); A.DVNS.AHK.ADN.d. no. 4, fl. 248 (evasıt-ı Za 1197/8–17 October 1783); A.DVN.SMHM.d., no. 176, fl. 8, order no. 16 (evasıt-ı Z 1191/10–19 January 1778). |
50 | BOA, Ali Emiri Abdülhamid I (henceforth: AE. SABH.I.) 307/20623 (22 M 1191/2 March 1777). |
51 | BOA, AE. SABH.I. 307/20623 (22 M 1191/2 March 1777). |
52 | BOA, A.DVN.SMHM.d., no. 176, fl. 8, order nos. 16-17 (evasıt-ı Z 1191/10–19 January 1778); no. 176, fl. 9, order no. 20 (evail-i S 1192/1–10 March 1778); BOA, C. ZB. 91/4145 (evail-I S 1192/1–10 March 1778). |
53 | BOA, A.DVN.SMHM.d., no. 176, fl. 10, order no. 23 (evahir-i Ra 1192/19–27 April 1778); BOA, A.DVNS.AHK.ADN.d., no. 4, fl. 248 (evasıt-ı Za 1197/8–17 October 1783). |
54 | For a discussion of connotations of the term tabi/etibba in Ottoman Egypt, see (Hathaway 1997, pp. 21–24; Hathaway 1995, pp. 42–43). |
55 | For an analysis of the socio-political networks of eighteenth-century Adana, see (Tamdoğan 2005, pp. 77–96). |
56 | Devecizâde Yusuf Ağa and Dülüklüzâde Bekir Beyzâde Elhac Ömer Ağa, for instance, had served as the serdars of Ayntab and later became two of the most powerful figures in eighteenth-century local politics. For further details, see (Çınar 2000, pp. 108–10). |
57 | For the rivalry between the Janissaries–mostly of tribal origins—and the ashraf for the control of the town, see (Bodman 1963, pp. 103–39; Masters 1978, pp. 84–85). |
58 | Haseki literally means the “private guard of the sultan”. The title, which ranked lower than that of a turnacıbaşı, was originally given only to the head officers of four Janissary regiments, the 49th, 66th, 67th, and 68th regiments. However, by the eighteenth century the title was widespread among a number of Janissary officers. Abovementioned Hasan is noted as an ex-haseki in 1760s, BOA, AE.SMST.III. 87/6503 (10 Ş 1173/22 January 1766). |
59 | BOA, AE.SABH.I. 175/11711 (evasıt-ı L 1199/17–20 August 1785); AE.SABH.I 62/4365 (7 Z 1192/27 December 1778). For further details on the Hasan Paşazade/Karslızade family, see (Ergenoğlu 2016, pp. 196–203; Kurt 2016, p. 539; Ünlü and Kurt 2012, pp. 57–115; Kurt 2010, pp. 1259–78). |
60 | He was appointed as the mütesellim of Abdi Paşa, BOA, Cevdet Maliye (henceforth: C. ML.) 766/31217 (4 S 1195/30 January 1781). |
61 | “Adana’da sekiz on bin nefer yeniçeri mevcud iken mir-i muma-ileyh bundan akdem yeniçeri neferatı tahririne memur yazıcı ve mübaşir ve çavuşu def ve dört yüz nefer tahrîr etdirdüb maâda her kim tahrir olunur ise katl ederüm”, BOA, A.DVNS.AHK.ADN.d., no. 4, fl. 248 (evasıt-ı Za 1197/8–17 October 1783). |
62 | The execution of 200 Janissaries by İbrahim Paşa was also considered as an offense by the Janissaries: “Such a treatment of ocaklus was unheard of”. For further details, see (Canbakal 2012, p. 38). |
63 | BOA, A.DVNS.AHK.ADN.d., no. 4, fl. 248 (evasıt-ı Za 1197/8–17 October 1783). |
64 | BOA, C. ZB.72/3569 (evail-i M 1190/21 February–1 March 1776). |
65 | BOA, A.DVN.SMHM.d., no. 176, fl. 61, order no. 172 (evail-i C 1193/16–25 June 1779). |
66 | BOA, A.DVN.SMHM.d., no. 176, fl. 61, order no. 172 (evail-i C 1193/16–25 June 1779). |
67 | BOA, Bab-ı Asafi Divan-ı Hümayun Sicilleri Özi ve Silistre Ahkam Defterleri (henceforth: A.DVNS.AHK.ÖZSİ.d) 4, fl. 290, order no. 1210 (evail-i Ca 1161/29 April–8 May 1748). |
68 | BOA, A.DVN.SMHM.d., no. 176, fl. 329, order no. 1010 (evasıt-ı Ş 1194/12–21 August 1780); fl. 257, order no. 790 (evahir-i R 1194/26 April 26–4 May 1780); fl. 286, order no. 872 (evasıt-ı B 1194/13–22 July 1780). |
69 | BOA, A.DVN.SMHM.d., no. 116, fl. 158, order no. 632 (evasıt-ı Ra 1121/21–30 May 1709). |
70 | For an example from Adana, see AŞR., no. 45, fl. 30 (25 Ca 1198/16 April 1784); from Bosnia, see BOA, C. AS. 334/13854 (evasıt-ı S 1161/11–20 February 1748); from Erzurum, see BOA, A.DVNS.MHM.d. no. 126, fl. 262, order no. 1031 (evahir-i M 1130/25 December 1717–2 January 1718); from Ayntab, see BOA, A.DVNS.MHM.d.no. 176, fl. 329, order no. 1010 (evasıt-ı Ş 1194/12–21 August 1780). For the appointment of an inspector to investigate abuses by the Janissary commander in the fortress at İskenderiye, who gave the locals Janisssary outfits in return for two vukiyyes of coffee, see BOA, A.DVN.SMHM.d. no. 122, fl. 57, order no. 177 (evahir-i Ca 1126/4–12 June 1714). |
71 | For an analysis of the social and political impact of clothing laws in the Empire, see (Quataert 1997, pp. 403–25). |
72 | AŞR., no. 13, page unspecified, order no. 231 (1 N 1135/5 June 1723); no. 22, fl. 86 (evasıt-ı L 1133/5–14 August 1721); no. 18, fl. 9 (1 Ra 1131/22 January 1719), fl. 124 (1 B 1131/20 May 1719). |
73 | AŞR., no. 18, fl. 9 (1 Ra 1131/22 January 1719), fl. 124 (1 B 1131/20 May 1719). |
74 | BOA, AE. SABH.I. 95/6516 (evail-i S 1189/3–12 April 1775). |
75 | BOA, AE. SABH.I. 95/6516 (evail-i S 1189/3–12 April 1775). |
76 | The appointments to the post are as follows: 1 Ca 1185/12 August 1771–22 Ca 1185/2 September 1771: Serturnai Esseyyid Hüseyin Ağa; 22 Ca 1185/2 September 1771-1 B 1185/10 October 1771: İnce Elhac Mehmed Ağa for 41 days. Following his resignation, the office was left vacant for 44 days, until Kademoğlu Osman assumed the post for 26 days. Upon Kademoğlu’s resignation on 11 B 1185/20 October 1771, the office was left vacant for 98 days until the appointment of Hüseyin Ağa on 19 Z 1185/24 March 1172, only to become vacant again for 132 days following his resignation on 11 S 1186/14 May 1772. On 1 B 1186/28 September 1772, Musa Balizade Elhac Ömer Ağa became the new serdar, but resigned after a month (1 N 1186/26 November 1772). Following 37 days of vacancy for the same post, Kademzade Osman served as the serdar for two months (7 L 1186/1 January 1773-15 Z 1186/9 March 1773). 15 days later, Kademzade again became serdar for 15 days (11 M 1187/4 April 1773-21 M 1187/14 April 1773). Following a new period of vacancy, Hüseyin Ağa assumed the duty from 15 S 1187/8 May 1773 to 20 Ra 1187/11 June 1773, AŞR., no. 47, fls. 54, 56. |
77 | Musa Balizâde Ömer was from an established Adana family. Another member of the same family, Musa Balizâde Hasan, was a mültezim who had leased farming of the Sheep Tax in Dündarlı and Koyuncular, (Ergenoğlu 2016, p. 143). Mustafa, a member of the 17th Janissary regiment, served as the serdengeçdi ağa of the same town in 1730s. He resigned in the year 1734. For further details, see BOA, A.DVN.SMHM.d. no. 140, fl. 92, order nos. 338 and 339 (evahir-i M 1147/23 June 1734–2 July 1734), fl. 339, order no. 1202 (evahir-i L 1147/16–24 March 1735). |
78 | AŞR, no. 47, fl. 56 (15 S 1187/8 May 1773). |
79 | “Şimdi akçe ile serdar olurlar. Oradaki seferlilerden almasın, yeniçeri olmayıp da yeniçeri kıyafetinde olanlardan almasın, bu tarafta ulûfesi kesilip de orada yeniçeri kimliğinde olanlardan almasın, kimden alsın? Verdiği o rüşveti kimden çıkarsın?”; Kavanin-i Yeniçeriyan, p. 82. |
80 | BOA, Cevdet Dahiliye 253/12641 (29 Z 1198/13 November 1784). |
81 | BOA, AE. SABH.I. 175/11711 (evasıt-ı L 1199/17–20 August 1785). |
82 | BOA, AE. SABH.I. 175/11711 (evasıt-ı L 1199/17–20 August 1785); AE. SABH.I. 159/10609 (evahir-i C 1197/24 May–1 June 1783); AE. SABH.I. 365/25504 (undated). |
83 | BOA, C. ML. 698/28543 (7 C 1201/21 March 1787). |
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Yıldız, A. Janissaries and Urban Notables in Local Politics: Struggle for Power and Factional Strife in the Late Eighteenth-Century Anatolian Town of Adana. Histories 2023, 3, 1-18. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories3010001
Yıldız A. Janissaries and Urban Notables in Local Politics: Struggle for Power and Factional Strife in the Late Eighteenth-Century Anatolian Town of Adana. Histories. 2023; 3(1):1-18. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories3010001
Chicago/Turabian StyleYıldız, Aysel. 2023. "Janissaries and Urban Notables in Local Politics: Struggle for Power and Factional Strife in the Late Eighteenth-Century Anatolian Town of Adana" Histories 3, no. 1: 1-18. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories3010001
APA StyleYıldız, A. (2023). Janissaries and Urban Notables in Local Politics: Struggle for Power and Factional Strife in the Late Eighteenth-Century Anatolian Town of Adana. Histories, 3(1), 1-18. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories3010001