I recently came across this book, "The Ottoman Age of Exploration" by Giancarlo Casale, which focuses on the expanding horizons of the Ottomans in the 16th century, and in particular the struggle for supremacy in the Indian Ocean against the Portuguese.
I wasn't very familiar with the Ottoman perspective of those events, and I think the book does a good job of documenting it (though it is clearly very biased towards the Ottomans, but the bias is transparent enough that it is easy to compensate for it). I thought I might share with the forum some of the main points from the book that I wasn't previously aware of or which I found interesting (and I hope you find this post interesting as well!)
- In the west we tend to think of the Muslim world as a monolithic block, and that the knowledge of geography was commonly shared between all Muslim countries. In reality, the author argues there is no evidence that the Turks were much more knowledgeable about the Indian Ocean than the Europeans, and it was only as they began to expand and placed Egypt in their sights (and went for the claim of global Caliphate), that they began to seriously research and explore the wider world (hence the title of the book);
- One of the major causes for the fall of the Mamluks were the Portuguese actions in the Indian Ocean. The loss of revenue from the blockading of the spice trade, the loss of prestige as Defenders of the Holy Cities when the Christians started raiding deep in the Red Sea, and finally the massive expenditure of outfitting an Indian Ocean fleet (which counted with the help of the Ottomans, that would very soon be attacking them!) to fight the Portuguese and ended up being destroyed -- all of these together left the Mamluks in an extremely fragile position, ready to be steam-rolled by the Ottoman juggernaut;
- After taking Egypt and claiming the title of Defenders of the Holy Cities, the Ottomans took the lead in the fight against Portugal. The struggle against Portugal was a major concern in the court in Istanbul. There was a significant fear that Portugal might raid Mecca and Medina, so taking control of the Red Sea and Yemen became a major priority. They managed to stop the advance of the Portuguese and would eventually succeed in turning the Red Sea into an Ottoman Sea;
- Yemen was a constant headache to whoever controlled it;
- The survival of Christian Ethiopia was extraordinary;
- The biggest obstacle for the Ottomans to fighting the Portuguese was not technology, tactics, able commanders, etc. (they won plenty of engagements that showed that was not the case), it was a simple matter of basic economics -- building a large fleet in their main bases in the Red Sea was prohibitively expensive due to the complete lack of wood and other naval supplies, which all had to be imported from elsewhere in the Empire. It is also what led to repeated attempts to construct a Suez Canal, which all failed;
- The Ottomans successfully created a giant network of influence across the Indian Ocean during the 16th century, using diplomacy, military support, the prestige from the title of Caliph, and the common Portuguese enemy. For certain periods, I don't think it would be inaccurate to consider Gujarat, Kolkata, Aceh, the Maldives, Mombasa, Mogadishu, etc. as tributaries of the Ottomans. They used this Muslim league in the second half of the 1500s to launch coordinated attacks against the Portuguese (which mostly failed), and to re-route the spice trade and bypass the Portuguese blockade (which was a huge success);
- The initial priority for the Ottomans for the spice trade was to restore the free trade in the Indian Ocean that the Portuguese had restricted, as can be seen by several peace deal proposals made to Lisbon. However, as they consolidated their control of the Red Sea and Mesopotamian land trade routes, they quickly shifted to Imperial monopolies, which proved immensely profitable;
- For a while, the Ottomans entertained the imperial ambition of controlling the entire Indian Ocean. To cut off the Portuguese and other Europeans, they planned to attack all the way down the East African coast and take control of the Mozambique channel. The book even implies that part of these plans involved coordinating with the French, who were to send corsairs to intercept in the Atlantic the annual Portuguese Indian Armadas;
- When Portugal fell under the Spanish Habsburgs, the Ottomans became paranoid, afraid that Spain, their main rival in the Mediterranean, would add its strength to the Portuguese and deal a decisive blow in the Indian Ocean. This precipitated their plan to attack the Portuguese in East Africa and establish a forward base in Mombasa, which ended in catastrophic failure. However, the Spanish actually had no intention of helping the Portuguese in the Indian Ocean, the orders of Philip II were in fact to stop all offensive activity and dig in (he was preparing his invasion of England instead);
- The rise of the Mughals in India would put an end to Ottoman influence in India; the fall of Baghdad to Persia would cut off the Ottomans from Basra, which had been disputing the Persian Gulf with Portuguese Hormuz; the disaster in Mombasa would end influence in the Swahili coast; and palace coups, wars in Europe and Persia, etc. would end up fully consuming the attention of the Ottomans, so as the 17th century started they would no longer be able to project power in the Indian Ocean. Simultaneously the state of war with England (who helped Persia take Hormuz for example) and the United Provinces (that would became the main power in the Indian) that came as a result of the Iberian Union and lack of support/exhaustion from Portugal proper would lead to the fall of Portuguese India, which would from then on be more of a burden for the crown than a source of profit;
OK, that's a lot for now. I would be very interested in the perspective of other forum members, especially those more familiar with Turkish and Arabic history. Was my interpretation of the events correct? Is the book giving an accurate portrayal of what happened in the Indian Ocean in the 1500s from the Ottoman perspective? Are there major "plot points" that I missed? What about the Shia Persian perspective (something that the book makes no mention of)?
I think the history of the Indian Ocean in the 16th century is a really interesting topic, that is somewhat overlooked since at the same time in the Atlantic an entire New World was being discovered. So I look forward to your thoughts and thanks for reading!
I wasn't very familiar with the Ottoman perspective of those events, and I think the book does a good job of documenting it (though it is clearly very biased towards the Ottomans, but the bias is transparent enough that it is easy to compensate for it). I thought I might share with the forum some of the main points from the book that I wasn't previously aware of or which I found interesting (and I hope you find this post interesting as well!)
- In the west we tend to think of the Muslim world as a monolithic block, and that the knowledge of geography was commonly shared between all Muslim countries. In reality, the author argues there is no evidence that the Turks were much more knowledgeable about the Indian Ocean than the Europeans, and it was only as they began to expand and placed Egypt in their sights (and went for the claim of global Caliphate), that they began to seriously research and explore the wider world (hence the title of the book);
- One of the major causes for the fall of the Mamluks were the Portuguese actions in the Indian Ocean. The loss of revenue from the blockading of the spice trade, the loss of prestige as Defenders of the Holy Cities when the Christians started raiding deep in the Red Sea, and finally the massive expenditure of outfitting an Indian Ocean fleet (which counted with the help of the Ottomans, that would very soon be attacking them!) to fight the Portuguese and ended up being destroyed -- all of these together left the Mamluks in an extremely fragile position, ready to be steam-rolled by the Ottoman juggernaut;
- After taking Egypt and claiming the title of Defenders of the Holy Cities, the Ottomans took the lead in the fight against Portugal. The struggle against Portugal was a major concern in the court in Istanbul. There was a significant fear that Portugal might raid Mecca and Medina, so taking control of the Red Sea and Yemen became a major priority. They managed to stop the advance of the Portuguese and would eventually succeed in turning the Red Sea into an Ottoman Sea;
- Yemen was a constant headache to whoever controlled it;
- The survival of Christian Ethiopia was extraordinary;
- The biggest obstacle for the Ottomans to fighting the Portuguese was not technology, tactics, able commanders, etc. (they won plenty of engagements that showed that was not the case), it was a simple matter of basic economics -- building a large fleet in their main bases in the Red Sea was prohibitively expensive due to the complete lack of wood and other naval supplies, which all had to be imported from elsewhere in the Empire. It is also what led to repeated attempts to construct a Suez Canal, which all failed;
- The Ottomans successfully created a giant network of influence across the Indian Ocean during the 16th century, using diplomacy, military support, the prestige from the title of Caliph, and the common Portuguese enemy. For certain periods, I don't think it would be inaccurate to consider Gujarat, Kolkata, Aceh, the Maldives, Mombasa, Mogadishu, etc. as tributaries of the Ottomans. They used this Muslim league in the second half of the 1500s to launch coordinated attacks against the Portuguese (which mostly failed), and to re-route the spice trade and bypass the Portuguese blockade (which was a huge success);
- The initial priority for the Ottomans for the spice trade was to restore the free trade in the Indian Ocean that the Portuguese had restricted, as can be seen by several peace deal proposals made to Lisbon. However, as they consolidated their control of the Red Sea and Mesopotamian land trade routes, they quickly shifted to Imperial monopolies, which proved immensely profitable;
- For a while, the Ottomans entertained the imperial ambition of controlling the entire Indian Ocean. To cut off the Portuguese and other Europeans, they planned to attack all the way down the East African coast and take control of the Mozambique channel. The book even implies that part of these plans involved coordinating with the French, who were to send corsairs to intercept in the Atlantic the annual Portuguese Indian Armadas;
- When Portugal fell under the Spanish Habsburgs, the Ottomans became paranoid, afraid that Spain, their main rival in the Mediterranean, would add its strength to the Portuguese and deal a decisive blow in the Indian Ocean. This precipitated their plan to attack the Portuguese in East Africa and establish a forward base in Mombasa, which ended in catastrophic failure. However, the Spanish actually had no intention of helping the Portuguese in the Indian Ocean, the orders of Philip II were in fact to stop all offensive activity and dig in (he was preparing his invasion of England instead);
- The rise of the Mughals in India would put an end to Ottoman influence in India; the fall of Baghdad to Persia would cut off the Ottomans from Basra, which had been disputing the Persian Gulf with Portuguese Hormuz; the disaster in Mombasa would end influence in the Swahili coast; and palace coups, wars in Europe and Persia, etc. would end up fully consuming the attention of the Ottomans, so as the 17th century started they would no longer be able to project power in the Indian Ocean. Simultaneously the state of war with England (who helped Persia take Hormuz for example) and the United Provinces (that would became the main power in the Indian) that came as a result of the Iberian Union and lack of support/exhaustion from Portugal proper would lead to the fall of Portuguese India, which would from then on be more of a burden for the crown than a source of profit;
OK, that's a lot for now. I would be very interested in the perspective of other forum members, especially those more familiar with Turkish and Arabic history. Was my interpretation of the events correct? Is the book giving an accurate portrayal of what happened in the Indian Ocean in the 1500s from the Ottoman perspective? Are there major "plot points" that I missed? What about the Shia Persian perspective (something that the book makes no mention of)?
I think the history of the Indian Ocean in the 16th century is a really interesting topic, that is somewhat overlooked since at the same time in the Atlantic an entire New World was being discovered. So I look forward to your thoughts and thanks for reading!