Rise and Fall of the Janissary Corps

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Examine the rise and fall of the Janissary Corps

The origins of the Janissaries are shrouded in mystery, a mix between discernible fact and fable. Historians cannot agree on which Ottoman Bey brought them into existence - most traditional historical accounts name Orhan I (1281-1362) as the father of the Janissaries, growing from a need to supplement and reform the standing army of the time, the Yaya. There is also a modern school of thought which claims that Murad I (1326-1389) was the father of the Janissaries. While this has not been conclusively proved either way, this essay will base its premise on the former.

Although the Yaya were a regular Infantry force, their excessive pay and the highly-strung temperament of the Ghazis (tribal warriors) that made up the Yaya gave Orhan much concern. Orhan wanted a corps of soldiers loyal only to himself, rather than other Turkish nobles. It is this traditional school of though which believes that a consultation with Aleaddin, his brother (and Vizier) and Kara Khalil Çandarlı (who was later to become Vizier for Orhan's son, Murad I), led to the inception and rise of the Janissaries.

The recruitment of the Janissaries stems from the traditional one-fifth of booty in cash taken from those defeated by the Ottomans. During the late 14th century, this metamorphosed into recruiting defeated subjects into the military. Parallels can be drawn between this and the Ghilman slave-soldiers that had been incorporated in armies elsewhere in the Middle East, such as the Sassanid armies. With the pace of Ottoman expansion, demand for soldiers soon outstripped supply of conquered subjects, so this practice was mated shortly after in 1438 with the system of devşirme (boy levy). Devşirme involved boys from the families of Balkan Christian subjects between the ages of eight and eighteen being forcibly taken from their parents, rigorously trained and tested, converted to Islam, and then taken into service by one of the branches of Ottoman rule. Families with only sons, gypsy families and youths from the cities were not subject to devşirme, because it was felt that depriving families of only sons would cause hardship, and that gypsies and youths from the city were untrustworthy. In keeping with the vision of a fiercely loyal and devoted unit, no chances were taken on raw materials. Whether this made a difference is nigh on impossible to predict, but it demonstrates how much care and attention was taken with the minutiae in the creation and rise of the Janissaries.

The four branches of the Ottoman Empire consisted of the administrative, the scribal, the cultural and the military. The administrative consisted of the palatial (or inner) service and the divan (or cabinet), the scribal branch took care of revenue, and met government obligations such as salaries. The cultural branch, or the ulama were responsible for education and healthcare, religious duties and justice. The need for incorruptible, impressionable soldiers was met by this system, because as recent Islamic converts, the youths would have no tribal affiliations or anything preventing them showing complete loyalty and dedication to the Ottoman ruler, something the Ghazis could not be relied upon for. The system itself caused mixed feelings – many families resented the 'theft of their pre-adolescent sons', but others realised that the devşirme system had the benefit of enabling the youths to reach great heights both socially and politically in the meritocratic atmosphere of the Ottoman empire. Also, evidence that many Janissaries stayed in touch with their Christian families, so after the initial shock and disgust with the policy, it was generally seen as a benign system, and many Christian (and even Muslim) families even resorted to bribing the officials to pick their son. A position in the Janissaries, while not as prestigious as palatial service, was nonetheless a coveted position. As a result of this, the Janissaries were never short of recruits, facilitating the rise of the corps.

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The discipline and cohesive nature of the Janissary corps is due in no small part to the training process the recruits underwent. The boys destined to become Janissaries were those who had not been picked as iç oğlan – the most intelligent boys whose future lay in the inner service, but rather acemi oğlan (foreign boys). Selection was an involved process for the Ottomans, blending both bizarre and modern methods of selection, from strenuous mental tests to physiognomy examinations, the whole process being overseen by a board of examiners. A key factor in the success of the Ottoman empire, and ...

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