Although the reign of Sultan Bayezid II, the eldest son and successor of Mehmed the Conqueror, was stable in terms of military activities, it was a time of renewal and scientific, economic and administrative developments for future conquests
When Sultan Mehmed II, also known as Mehmed the Conqueror, died in 1481, he left behind two şehzades (princes): 33-year-old Bayezid, who was the governor of Amasya, and 22-year-old Cem, who was the governor of Konya. The viziers sent word to the eldest son Bayezid, while Grand Vizier Karamani Mehmed Pasha, who took sides with Cem, secretly sent a message to Cem Sultan. Meanwhile, Bayezid's son Korkut was made regent in Istanbul.
Cem was a sophisticated and popular şehzade. According to some, his father wanted Cem to be the sultan. Some others associate these events with the struggle between Turkish and devshirme (a system that trained non-Muslim citizens of the empire to be officers of the state) statesmen. And they say that with Bayezid's accession to the throne, the devshirme party won. However, this claim is not true. As a matter of fact, when Bayezid became sultan, he appointed Çandarlı Ibrahim Pasha the younger as a vizier.
2 grooms for 1 bride
Cem Sultan sent his paternal aunt Selçuk Sultan to his elder brother Bayezid and offered to share the country. However, Sultan Bayezid II, who knew the importance of national unity well, said, "There can not be two grooms for one bride!" and denied the offer. After being defeated along with his army, Cem Sultan fled with his family and entourage. He took refuge in the Mamluks. When he marched on Anatolia once again, Sultan Bayezid offered his brother the opportunity to live in Jerusalem with a lifetime stipend, but Cem Sultan didn’t listen to his brother. He and Sultan Bayezid exchanged several letters written in verse in this period.
While he was fleeing to Egypt after being defeated, he was accepted as a guest of the Saint John Knights of Rhodes. The knights did not keep their word, sent him to France and regularly received money from his brother Bayezid for his expenses. The fact that his brother was taken to Europe as a hostage in the hands of Christians left Sultan Bayezid II in a very difficult situation. Cem Sultan was then delivered to the Pope. He died in Naples in 1495 after 12 years in captivity. The sultan paid a large sum to bring his brother's body to the Ottoman lands and had him buried in his tomb in Bursa.
Tolerating conquests
This civil war forced Sultan Bayezid to withdraw from Italy. However, a few years of Ottoman rule in Otranto taught the Italians the technique of building towers and fortification. This period, in which great conquests were not attempted, is seen as the time of preparing for new moves and contemplating the conquests of the Sultan Mehmed the Conqueror’s era. Nevertheless, expeditions were made to Hungary, Moldavia, Albania, Venice, Poland and the Peloponnese, and some strategic places were conquered. Some of these expeditions were commanded by Sultan Bayezid. The military skills of the sultan were not weak. He had participated in the expeditions of his father's time. But he believed that now the time for peace had come.
The Mamluks were jealous of the fact that this small state in Anatolia was growing and now bordered them. That an ambassador sent to Cairo was treated contrary to diplomatic procedure during the reign of Sultan Mehmed the Conqueror offended Istanbul. Moreover, the fact that the Mamluks helped the beys who were enemies of the Ottomans increased the tension. The ambassador sent by Sultan Mehmed the Conqueror to India was arrested by the Mamluks in Jeddah on his way back and also the gifts he brought were extorted.
Cry for help from Spain
The Spaniards began to pressure the only remaining Muslim state in the Iberian peninsula. Upon this, the ambassadors of the Emirate of Granada, also known as the Nasrid Kingdom of Granada, came to Istanbul and asked for help from Sultan Bayezid II. However, in order to provide military aid, it was necessary to have bases in North Africa. The sultan did all he could and sent a naval fleet under the command of Kemal Reis, the great mariner who put long-range cannons on ships for the first time in history, and bombarded the coasts of Spain.
However, this intimidation did not deter the bold-hearted Spaniards. In 1492, Granada fell, and Muslim rule in Spain, which had lasted for 711 years, ended. Some 300,000 Muslim people migrated to Morocco and Algeria. The Ottoman navy protected this migration process with its mighty cannons.
The Ottoman navy defeated the Venetian navy of 200 ships in the Battle of Sapienza, also known as the Battle of Zonchio, in 1499. This was the first open sea battle that the Ottomans had won. After that, the 16th century became the Ottoman century in the seas.
Danger looming in the east
Meanwhile, a new danger arose in the east. Propagandist Ismail, who was a member of a deep-rooted Sufi family of the Safavids but joined the Shiite sect like his father, overthrew the Aq Qoyunlu and seized the Iranian throne. While his men spread Shiite propaganda in Anatolia, Shah Ismail occupied the Beylik of Dulkadir, which was under the auspices of the Ottoman Empire.
The accession of such a person to the Iranian throne meant a threat not only to the Ottoman Empire, but also to Egypt and Turkistan; it was a threat to the entire Sunni world. The progressing illness of Sultan Bayezid II prevented him from completely solving the matter. A rebellion launched by Şahkulu, one of Shah Ismail's propagandists, in Anatolia spread as far as Kütahya until it was suppressed, but a grand vizier fell dead on the battlefield (1511).
This caused a conflict between the şehzades. At that time, four of the eight sons of the sultan were alive. Şehzade Ahmed was the governor of Amasya, Şehzade Korkut was governor of Antalya, Şehzade Selim was the governor of Trabzon and Şehinşah was the governor of Konya. Everyone was considering Ahmed, whom the sultan favored, as the heir of the throne. The soldiers were supporting Selim. Meanwhile, the death of Şehinşah tore the sultan’s heart out. He was very affectionate toward his children.
Abdication of the throne
Sick and tired like his grandfather Sultan Murad II at his reign's end, the sultan was determined to abdicate. Instead of Ahmed, whom the viziers wanted and supported as the successor, he preferred Selim because of his perceptive sensitivity to the Safavid danger. Şehzade Ahmed, who thought that his father had turned away from him, rebelled and declared himself sultan in Konya. After some maneuvering struggles, Sultan Bayezid II abdicated in favor of Şehzade Selim in 1512.
He set out for Dimetoka (Didymoteicho), the city where he was born, to spend the last days of his life. He gave important advice on state affairs to his son, who was walking next to him on foot. However, he died on the way near the modern-day Hafsa town of Edirne. He was around 60 and had ruled for 31 years. The rumor that he was poisoned by his son is weak and unfounded. He had already been very ill before his death. His body was brought to Istanbul and buried in the courtyard of the mosque he had built in today's Bayezid district.
Worldwide reputation
Sultan Bayezid II is considered the most knowledgeable of the Ottoman sultans after his father. He had received an excellent education and knew Arabic and Persian together with their literature. He had a grasp of religious sciences, philosophy, mathematics and music. He read all the works presented to him and encouraged others to read what he saw as valuable. He kept sycophants at a distance. He was fond of reading books and scientific research. He was a composer, poet, master calligrapher and illuminator. He used to write poems under the pseudonym Adni and had a collection of poems called a diwan.
At the same time, he was one of the sultans most fond of Sufism. For this reason, he was known as "Wali," most commonly used by Muslims to indicate an Islamic saint. He was seen as someone with karamats (supernatural wonders). He became a disciple of the Halveti sheikh Çelebi Halife when he was a şehzade. Also at that time, he had gone on a solitary retreat lasting for forty days called "çile" (asceticism) at the lodge of Sheikh-ul-Islam Ebussuud Efendi's father, Halveti sheikh Muhammed Iskilibi (Sheikh Yavsi). He used to have conversations with Baba Yusuf Seferhisari, a sheikh of the Bayrami Sufi order.
The sultan – who could read Uyghur, could speak the Chagatai dialect as well as a little Greek, Serbian and Italian – also had contact with artists in Europe. Leonardo Da Vinci wrote a letter to the sultan and offered to build a bridge over the Golden Horn and the Bosporus, but his project wasn't carried out. Michelangelo is even believed to have visited Istanbul for a while. The claim that Sultan Bayezid II destroyed works of art left from his father's time is not true.
Let's forget the old days
Sultan Bayezid II was born in 1448 or 1452. His mother was probably Sitti Mükrime Hatun, the princess of Dulkadir. One of her daughters married to a prince of Aq Qoyunlu, while his other daughters wed elite bureaucrats of the time. The famous Bosnian Governor Gazi Hüsrev Bey was the son of Sultan Bayezid's daughter.
He was described as medium height and broad-shouldered, with white skin, black hair, hazel eyes and beetle brows. His beard was neither long nor short. Like his father, he wore a turban donned by scholars. He ate little and enjoyed horseback riding and hunting. He was a master archer and even wrote a book about it. No one could make bows and arrows as beautiful as he could. A bow made by him is exhibited in Topkapı Palace today.
First municipal law
Sultan Bayezid remained in the shadow of his father and son; therefore he could not be evaluated correctly. It is clear that he was different in character from both. Even though his period is not considered very bright in military terms by some historians, it was brilliant in science and culture. Many charitable works were built in his time and great progress was made in the fine arts. The continuation of military successes was the result of scientific, economic and administrative developments. For this reason, his time was a preparation period for the great conquests of his son and grandson. At the time of his death, the territory of the country was 2,373,000 square kilometers (916,220 square miles). He added more than 100,000 square kilometers of land to his father's inheritance.
"Sultan II. The Ihtisab Regulations," published in 1501 during the reign of Bayezid II, is the oldest known municipal law in the world. The word "ihtisab" is Arabic and means municipality.
'Little Doomsday'
The Bayezid Mosque, commissioned by the sultan on top of one of Istanbul's seven hills, is a large social complex that includes a madrassa, imaret (soup kitchen), library and children's school. The construction of the complex began in 1497 and lasted for nine years. The sultan conditioned the sheik-al-Islam to give tafsir (exegesis, or interpretation of the Quran) lessons open for the public each week in this complex and allocated separate funds for this purpose. This tradition lasted into our times. The "Altmışlı" madrassa he established in Istanbul took its place in the Ottoman education system as the higher degree facility (equivalent to master's degree) of the Fatih Madrassa established by his father.
The sultan commissioned a mosque, madrassa, imaret, hospital, tabhane (the building where the treated patients spend their convalescence) and a dervish lodge in Edirne in a complex bearing his name, which was completed in 1488 after a four-year construction. The dar al-shifa (hospital), which now serves as a health museum, was a magnificent medical center where especially mental patients were treated either through surgical operations or through means such as different occupations, water and bird sounds or music. In Europe, at a time when the mentally ill were thought to be possessed by the devil and burned to death, Ottomans treated them as patients and made great efforts for their treatment.
During the earthquake in 1509 known as the "Kıyamet-i Suğra" ("Little Doomsday") and 45 days of aftershocks, most of the stone buildings in Istanbul collapsed, killing thousands in the process. Sultan Bayezid had to move to a tent erected on palace grounds and then went to Edirne, which was flooded by the Tundzha River. Following the earthquake, Bayezid had foremen brought to Istanbul from Anatolia and reconstructed the city. This earthquake served as a milestone in Ottoman city architecture as wood replaced stone as the main architectural component for durability against tremors. In many following earthquakes, loss of life and property was relatively low.