About: Gedik Ahmed Pasha   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/4OOunMt5mcGuQDwypD1gRQ==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Gedik Ahmed Pasha (died 18 November 1482) was an Ottoman grand vizier as well as an army and navy commander during the reigns of sultans Mehmed the Conqueror and Beyazid II. His background remains largely unknown. Some sources claim that he was of Albanian descent and others that he was of Greek or Serbian descent. He undertook virtually all of his construction enterprises in Anatolia.

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Gedik Ahmed Pasha
rdfs:comment
  • Gedik Ahmed Pasha (died 18 November 1482) was an Ottoman grand vizier as well as an army and navy commander during the reigns of sultans Mehmed the Conqueror and Beyazid II. His background remains largely unknown. Some sources claim that he was of Albanian descent and others that he was of Greek or Serbian descent. He undertook virtually all of his construction enterprises in Anatolia.
sameAs
Office
  • Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire
monarch
dcterms:subject
honorific suffix
dbkwik:military/pr...iPageUsesTemplate
term start
  • 1474(xsd:integer)
death place
  • Adrianople, Ottoman Empire
Name
  • Ahmed
Title
Data
  • Unknown; thought to be Albanian, Greek, or Serbian
term end
  • 1477(xsd:integer)
death date
  • 1482-11-18(xsd:date)
blank
  • Ethnicity
Successor
Before
Religion
  • Sunni Islam
Years
  • 1474(xsd:integer)
After
honorific prefix
  • Gedik
Nationality
Predecessor
abstract
  • Gedik Ahmed Pasha (died 18 November 1482) was an Ottoman grand vizier as well as an army and navy commander during the reigns of sultans Mehmed the Conqueror and Beyazid II. His background remains largely unknown. Some sources claim that he was of Albanian descent and others that he was of Greek or Serbian descent. He undertook virtually all of his construction enterprises in Anatolia. Leading the Ottoman Army, he defeated the last beylik (principality) resisting Ottoman expansion in Anatolia, the Karamanids. The Karamanids had been the strongest principality in Anatolia for nearly 200 years, even stronger than the Ottomans in the latter's beginning. They effectively succeeded the Anatolian Seljuk Sultanate in the amount of possessions they held, among them the city of Konya, the former Selçuk capital. Gedik Ahmed Pasha's victory against the Karamanids in 1471, conquering their territory as well as the Mediterranean coastal region around Ermenek, Mennan and Silifke, proved crucial for the future of the Ottomans. [citation needed]. Gedik Ahmed Pasha also fought against Venetians in the Mediterranean and was dispatched in 1475 by the Sultan to aid the Crimean Khanate against Genoese forces. In Crimea, he conquered Caffa, Soldaia, Cembalo and other Genoese castles as well as the Principality of Theodoro with its capital Mangup and the coastal regions of Crimea. He rescued the Khan of Crimea, Meñli I Giray, from Genoese forces. As a result of this campaign, Crimea and Circassia entered into the Ottoman sphere of influence. In 1479, when he was a sanjakbey of the Sanjak of Avlona, Sultan Mehmet II ordered him lead a siege force of between 10,000 and 40,000 troops in the siege of Shkodra. Later that year, the sultan ordered him to lead the Ottoman Navy in the Mediterranean Sea as part of the war against Naples and Milan. During his campaign, Gedik Ahmed Pasha conquered the islands of Santa Maura (Lefkada), Kefalonia and Zante (Zakynthos). Since he had conquered Constantinople in 1453, Mehmed II saw himself as the inheritor of the Roman Empire and seriously considered the conquest of Italy to reunite Roman lands under his dynasty. As part of this plan, Gedik Ahmed Pasha was sent with a naval force to the heel of the Italian peninsula. After a failed attempt to conquer Rhodes from the Knights of St. John he took the harbor city Otranto in 1480. Eight hundred Christians were beheaded after refusing to convert to Islam. (These victims were canonized by Pope Francis on May 12, 2013.) But due to lack of food, he had to return with most of his troops to Albania in the same year, planning to continue the campaign in 1481. The death of Mehmed II prevented this. Instead he sided with Beyazid II in the struggle for who would succeed the Sultan. However Beyazid II did not fully trust Gedik Ahmed Pasha and had him imprisoned and later killed on November 18, 1482 at Adrianople.
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