Koƈu Bey
- In full:
- Kuricali Koƈu Mustafa Bey
- Kuricali also spelled:
- Göriceli
- Koƈu also spelled:
- Koƈi
- Died:
- c. 1650, Constantinople
- Also Known As:
- Koƈi Bey
- Kuricali Koƈu Mustafa Bey
- Göriceli Koƈu Mustafa Bey
- Notable Works:
- “Risale-i Koƈu Bey”
- Subjects Of Study:
- Ottoman Empire
Koƈu Bey (born, Korƈa, Ottoman Empire—died c. 1650, Constantinople) was a Turkish minister and reformer, a notable early observer of the Ottoman decline. Originally from Albania, Koƈu Bey was sent to Constantinople, where he was educated in the Imperial Palace. He later entered the service of a number of Ottoman sultans, finding particular favour with Murad IV (1623–40) and İbrahim I (1640–48), whose adviser he became. Koƈu Bey is best known for his treatise Risale-i Koƈu Bey (“The Treatise of Koƈu Bey”), a brilliant study of the decline of the Ottoman Empire. Written during a period when the empire was beginning to encounter serious problems at home as well as abroad, Koƈu Bey’s work sheds a great deal of light on the Ottomans’ awareness of their plight. Unacclaimed at the time of their writing, this treatise and a similar later one are now regarded by scholars as some of the finest analyses of Ottoman decline.