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6 - Ottoman Sovereignty on the Cusp of Universal Empire

from Part II

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 August 2019

Christopher Markiewicz
Affiliation:
University of Birmingham
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Summary

The Aqquyunlu – and subsequent Ottoman and Mamluk – adaptation of the Timurid vocabulary of sovereignty does not suggest that these sultanates lacked terminological innovation in their own right. In fact, many of the polities of the fifteenth century, and perhaps particularly the Aqquyunlu, were concerned with developing innovative titles to describe their sovereignty.1 To be sure, such innovations shared the basic presuppositions of the Timurid vocabulary of sovereignty of the early fifteenth century. In most instances, the terminology and its underlying epistemological references rejected, or at least sidestepped, juridical or genealogical definitions of sovereignty, which tended to exclude the legitimating claims of the men who actually wielded political authority in the fifteenth century. As we have seen in , Timurid strategies for legitimation sought to bolster claims to authority through the divine or cosmic favor shown to Timurid princes. These arguments, in contrast to the relatively staid and constricting juridical and genealogical parameters developed by legal scholars and the upholders of Chinggisid tradition, drew upon a wide array of astrological, mystical, philosophical, and occult doctrines and freely mixed ideas from these varied traditions to create a compelling and universalizing conception of kingship.

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Chapter
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The Crisis of Kingship in Late Medieval Islam
Persian Emigres and the Making of Ottoman Sovereignty
, pp. 240 - 284
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2019

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