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Also called:
Battle of Angora
Date:
July 20, 1402
Location:
Ankara
Turkey
Participants:
Ottoman Empire
Turkic peoples
Key People:
Bayezid I
Timur

Battle of Ankara, military confrontation on July 20, 1402, in which forces of the Ottoman sultan Bayezid I, “the Thunderbolt,” victor at the Battle of Nicopolis in 1396, were defeated by those of the Turkic ruler Timur (Tamerlane). Bayezid’s humiliating loss came close to destroying the Ottoman Empire.

Bayezid I, who came to the throne in 1389, spent much of his early reign expanding the Ottoman domain to both the east and west, campaigning against numerous Turkish emirates, or beyliks, in eastern Anatolia, lands in which Timur also took strategic interest. Bayezid was at the height of his power, besieging the Byzantine capital, Constantinople, when he was drawn away from fighting the Christians by the threat of Timur’s army advancing from Iraq, where he had besieged and devastated Baghdad the year before. Recruiting Turkish allies from those emirates along the way, Timur advanced quickly. Bayezid marched his army across Anatolia in the summer heat to face Timur, but Timur outmaneuvered him. As Bayezid marched eastward, Timur cut behind him and besieged the vital Ottoman city of Ankara with an army that by some estimates comprised as many as 140,000 fighters.

Thirsty and exhausted, Bayezid’s troops, estimated to number about 85,000, had to turn back to attempt the relief of the city. Timur drew up his forces in battle order, taking a defensive stance and forming a line with cavalry corps on either flank and war elephants in the center. In preparation for battle, the Mongol forces dammed a stream that provided the only water for Bayezid’s troops. This forced Bayezid to attack the Mongols’ center in order to capture the heavily defended stream. Serbian cavalry, fighting as auxiliaries of the Ottomans, opened the battle with an effective charge, but Timur’s mounted archers and flanking cavalry took a heavy toll on Bayezid’s army. Thousands of Ottoman infantry were slaughtered, even as thousands more Anatolian troops deserted to join the beyliks. Bayezid’s Tatar regiments also crossed over to Timur’s side, leaving him virtually without an organized army. Bayezid fled from the battle with a cavalry force, but Timur pursued and surrounded him.

Louis IX of France (St. Louis), stained glass window of Louis IX during the Crusades. (Unknown location.)
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Bayezid became the only Ottoman ever to be captured by an enemy. He died in captivity in 1403, after allegedly being kept by Timur in a golden cage as a trophy. Timur advanced to the Aegean, forcing Bayezid’s sons to flee Anatolia. Yet ultimately Timur’s army were only raiders; they established no permanent presence, and after spending the next year pillaging the countryside, they returned to the east. The Timurid Empire declined rapidly after Timur’s death in 1405. For the Ottomans, decline was only temporary; Bayezid’s sons engaged in a war of succession in the ensuing 11-year period known as the Ottoman interregnum until Mehmed I finally gained full control of the throne in 1413, a year that marks the beginning of the Ottoman Empire’s rise to status as a world power.

Losses: Timurid, 15,000 dead or wounded; Ottoman, 30,000 dead or wounded.

Tony Bunting
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Ottoman Empire, empire created by Turkish tribes in Anatolia (Asia Minor) that grew to be one of the most powerful states in the world during the 15th and 16th centuries. The Ottoman period spanned more than 600 years and came to an end only in 1922, when it was replaced by the Turkish Republic and various successor states in southeastern Europe and the Middle East. At its height the empire encompassed most of southeastern Europe to the gates of Vienna, including present-day Hungary, the Balkan region, Greece, and parts of Ukraine; portions of the Middle East now occupied by Iraq, Syria, Israel, and Egypt; North Africa as far west as Algeria; and large parts of the Arabian Peninsula. The term Ottoman is a dynastic appellation derived from Osman I (Arabic: ʿUthmān), the nomadic Turkmen chief who founded both the dynasty and the empire about 1300.

The Ottoman state to 1481: the age of expansion

The first period of Ottoman history was characterized by almost continuous territorial expansion, during which Ottoman dominion spread out from a small northwestern Anatolian principality to cover most of southeastern Europe and Anatolia. The political, economic, and social institutions of the classical Islamic empires were amalgamated with those inherited from Byzantium and the great Turkish empires of Central Asia and were reestablished in new forms that were to characterize the area into modern times.

Origins and expansion of the Ottoman state, c. 1300–1402

In their initial stages of expansion, the Ottomans were leaders of the Turkish warriors for the faith of Islam, known by the honorific title ghāzī (Arabic: “raider”), who fought against the shrinking Christian Byzantine state. The ancestors of Osman I, the founder of the dynasty, were members of the Kayı tribe who had entered Anatolia along with a mass of Turkmen Oğuz nomads. Those nomads, migrating from Central Asia, established themselves as the Seljuq dynasty in Iran and Mesopotamia in the mid-11th century, overwhelmed Byzantium after the Battle of Manzikert (1071), and occupied eastern and central Anatolia during the 12th century. The ghazis fought against the Byzantines and then the Mongols, who invaded Anatolia following the establishment of the Il-Khanid (Ilhanid) empire in Iran and Mesopotamia in the last half of the 13th century. With the disintegration of Seljuq power and its replacement by Mongol suzerainty, enforced by direct military occupation of much of eastern Anatolia, independent Turkmen principalities—one of which was led by Osman—emerged in the remainder of Anatolia.