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Mehmed II.
Mehmed II (March 30, 1432
- May 3, 1481; nicknamed el-Fatih, 'the
Conqueror') was the sultan of the Ottoman Empire for a short time from 1444 to 1446, and later from 1451 to 1481.
Mehmed brought an end to the Byzantine Empire by capturing
Constantinople in 1453 (during
the well-known Siege of Constantinople), and other
Byzantine cities left in Anatolia and the Balkans. The invasion of Constantinople and successful campaigns against small kingdoms in the Balkans and Turkic
territories in Anatolia bestowed immense glory and prestige on the country and the
Ottoman State started to be recognized as an empire for the first time. Mehmed's advance toward the heart of Europe was stopped by the unsuccessful Siege of Nándorfehérvár in 1456, however.
His reign, mostly known for his capture of Constantinople, is also well known for the unusual tolerance with which he treated
his subjects, especially among the conquered Byzantines. Within the vanquished city he established a milet or an
autonomous settlement, and he appointed the former Patriarch as essentially governor of the city. However, his authority extended
only unto the Christians of the city, and this excluded the Genoese and Venetian settlements in the suburbs, and excluded the coming Muslim and Jewish settlers
entirely. This method allowed for an indirect rule of the Christian Byzantines and allowed the occupants to feel relatively
autonomous even as Mehmed began the Turkish remodeling of the city, eventually turning it into the Turkish capital, which it
remained until the 1920s.
As can be guessed from his successful campaign against Otranto in southern
Italy and his adopting the title Roman Caesar (Kayser-i-Rüm), he was presumably trying to vitalize the Eastern Roman Empire. For a probably similar reason, he gathered Italian humanists and Greek scholars at his court, kept the Byzantine Church functioning, ordered the patriarch to translate the Christian faith into Turkish and called Gentile
Bellini from Venice to paint his portrait.
He is also recognized as the first sultan to codify criminal and constitutional law long before Suleyman the Magnificent (also "the Lawmaker") and he thus
established the classical image of the autocratic Ottoman sultan (padishah). After the fall of Constantinople, he
founded many universities and colleges in the city, some of which are still active.
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