No article found for “Edmonton Senior Precision Team?action=edit&redlink=1”.

Beylik of Aydın

☆ Save On Wikipedia ↗
Beylik of Aydin
1308–1426
Location of Aydinids
CapitalBirgi
Selçuk
Common languagesOld Anatolian Turkish
Religion
Islam
GovernmentBeylik
Bey 
 1308–1334
Muharizalsîn Gazi Mehmed Bey (first)
 1405–1426
İzmiroğlu Cüneyd Bey (last)
History 
 Collapse of the Sultanate of Rum
1308
 Annexation by the Ottoman Empire
1426
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Sultanate of Rum
Ottoman Empire
Today part of Turkey

The Aydinids or Aydinid dynasty (also known as the Principality of Aydin and Beylik of Aydin (Aydın Beyliği), was one of the Turkish Anatolian beyliks and famous for its seaborne raiding.

History

The Beylik of Aydin at its greatest territorial extent
İsa Bey Mosque in Selçuk, built by the Aydinids in 1375

The Beylik of Aydin, originally began as a vassal of the Germiyanids. Along with Sasa Bey of the Beylik of Menteshe, the sons Aydin conducted a series of raids and conquests, in which they captured the city of Ephesus in October 1304, where they expelled,[1] killed or enslaved much of the local Christian population and pillaged the Basilica of Saint John the Theologian.[2] However, soon after the capture and sack of the city, Sasa fell out with Mehmed, the eldest son of Aydin, before being killed in 1308, which caused Mehmed to declare his independence from the Germiyanids and establish his own Emirate.[3]

From 1317–1329, the Aydinids besieged Smyrna. After the son of Mehmed, Umur, finished the conquest of the city, the Aydinids used it as base for piracy and banditry in the southeastern Mediterranean, conducting raids on Aegean islands and devastating the surrounding coastal regions.[4][3] In 1332 and 1333 Umur launched piratical raids across the Aegean, attacking the Venetian island of Negroponte, along with the Greek mainland.[5]

The Aydinids also participated in the Byzantine civil war of 1341–1347, as Umur was an ally and friend of John VI Kantakouzenos, providing him with material and soldiers for his military exploits, in return for hyperpyria.[5]

The danger of Turkish piracy in the Aegean, the preying upon Christians and the threat the Aydinids posed to Venice and the Knights of Rhodes, were the main causes for the Smyrniote crusades, in which the Crusader coalition conquered Smyrna in 1348 and killed Umur in battle. The Crusaders held the city for nearly 60 years, until it fell to the Timurids in 1402.[6][7]

List of rulers

  1. Muharizalsîn Gazi Mehmed Bey (1308–1334)[8]
  2. Umur Bey (1334–1348)[8]
  3. Khidr b. Mehmed (1348–1360)[8]
  4. Isa b. Mehmed (1360–1390)[8]
  • Ottoman rule (1390–1402)
  1. İsaoğlu Musa Bey (1402–1403)
  2. Musaoğlu II. Umur Bey (1403–1405)
  3. İzmiroğlu Cüneyd Bey (1405–1426)

Genealogy of House of Aydin

House of Aydin

Aydinid Beylik

'Mehmed Bey
r.1308–1334
Umur I
r.1334–1348
Khidr
r.1348–1360
Isa
r.1360–1390
Ibrahim
Musa
r.1402–1403
Umur II
r.1403–1405
Junayd
r.1405–1426

See also

References

  1. Vryonis 1971, p. 227.
  2. Foss 1979, p. 144.
  3. Nicol 1972, p. 151, 152.
  4. Savvides 2006, p. 1116.
  5. Nicol 1972, p. 178.
  6. Stetton 1976, p. 184–223.
  7. Hans Theunissen. "Venice and the Turkoman Begliks of Menteşe and Aydın" (PDF). Utrecht University. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-02-27.
  8. C.E. Bosworth, The New Islamic Dynasties, (Columbia University Press, 1996), 221.

Sources

Bibliography

38°05′21″N 27°44′16″E / 38.08917°N 27.73778°E / 38.08917; 27.73778