1. The growth of French influence in Istanbul.
- Author
-
Frazee, Charles A.
- Abstract
THE CAPITULATIONS In the autumn of 1556, when the army bearing the corpse of Süleyman reached Belgrade, his heir, Selim II, came to pay final respects to his father and receive the homage of the troops. To gratify the soldiers, especially the Janissaries, Selim distributed a bonus to each man, a dangerous custom which, once begun, could never be omitted by his successors. The politics of Istanbul were dominated in the early part of his reign by Mehmet Sokullu who held the office of grand vezir. He, in turn, was supported by the financial power of several wealthy Sephardic Jewish families of the capital, especially Doña Gracia and her son Joseph Nasi. Another, less influential group, dominated by the sultan's principal wife, opposed Mehmet Sokullu and sought to increase Venetian interests over French in Selim's council. Since Sokullu hoped to revive the French alliance, inoperative since the death of Francis I, new talks were commenced between the vezir and the French ambassador in Istanbul. These resulted in an agreement known as the Capitulations of 18 October 1569, the first of a long series of such agreements between Paris and Istanbul which made France the most important ally of the Turks as long as the Empire existed. The implications for the future of Catholicism in the sultan's domain were most important, for under the shield of the Capitulations it was possible for the church to send missionaries into Ottoman lands to provide for Catholic Christians. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1983
- Full Text
- View/download PDF