The
Ottoman Empire had a number of
tributary and
vassal states throughout its history. Its tributary states would regularly send
tribute to the Ottoman Empire, which was understood by both states as also being a token of submission. In exchange for certain privileges, its vassal states were obligated to render support to the Ottoman Empire when called upon to do so. Some of its vassal states were also tributary states.
These
client states, many of which could be described by modern terms such as
satellite states or
puppet states, were usually on the periphery of the Ottoman Empire under
suzerainty of the
Sublime Porte, over which direct control was not established, for various reasons.
Functions
Ottomans first demanded only a small yearly tribute from vassal princes, as a token of their submission. They later demanded that a vassal prince's son should be held as hostage, that the prince should come to the Palace once a year and swear allegiance, and that he should send auxiliary troops on the sultan's campaigns. Vassal princes were required to treat the sultan's friends and enemies as their own. If the vassal failed in these duties, his lands would be declared as darülharb (lit. territory of war) open to the raids of the
Ghazis.[1]
Forms
Some states within the eyalet system included
sancakbeys who were local to their
sanjak or who inherited their position (e.g.,
Samtskhe, some
Kurdish sanjaks), areas that were permitted to elect their own leaders (e.g., areas of
Albania,
Epirus, and
Morea (
Mani Peninsula) was nominally a part of Aegean Islands Province but Maniot beys were tributary vassals of the Porte, or de facto independent eyalets[2] (e.g., the Barbaresque 'regencies'
Algiers,[3]Tunisia,
Tripolitania in the Maghreb, and later the
Khedivate of Egypt).
Outside the eyalet system were states such as
Moldavia,
Wallachia and
Transylvania which paid tribute to the Ottomans and over which the Porte had the right to nominate or depose the ruler, garrison rights, and foreign policy control. They were considered by the Ottomans as part of
Dar al-'Ahd, thus they were allowed to preserve their self-rule, and were not under Islamic law, like the empire proper; Ottoman subjects, or Muslims for that matter, were not allowed to settle the land permanently or to build
mosques.[4]
Some states such as Ragusa paid tribute for the entirety of their territory and recognized Ottoman suzerainty.
Others, such as the
Sharif of Mecca, recognized Ottoman suzerainty but were subsidized by the Porte. The Ottomans were also expected to protect the
Sharifate militarily – as suzerains over
Mecca and
Medina, the Ottoman sultans were meant to ensure the protection of the
Hajj and
Umrah pilgrimages and safe passage of pilgrims. The
Amir al-hajj was a military officer appointed by the Sultanate to ensure this.
During the nineteenth century, as Ottoman territory receded, several breakaway states from the Ottoman Empire had the status of vassal states (e.g. they paid tribute to the Ottoman Empire), before gaining complete independence. They were however de facto independent, including having their own foreign policy and their own independent military. This was the case with the principalities of
Serbia,
Romania and
Bulgaria.
Some states paid tribute for possessions that were legally bound to the Ottoman Empire but not possessed by the Ottomans such as the
Habsburgs for parts of
Royal Hungary or
Venice for
Zante.
There were also secondary vassals such as the
Nogai Horde and the
Circassians who were (at least nominally) vassals of the
khans of
Crimea, or some
Berbers and
Arabs who paid tribute to the North African beylerbeyis, who were in turn Ottoman vassals themselves.
Khedivate of Egypt (Mısır), 1867–1914: de jure under Ottoman suzerainty, in effect fully autonomous, and
from 1882 under British occupation; broke away from Ottoman suzerainty upon Ottoman entry into
World War I on the side of the
Central Powers and reformed as the "
Sultanate of Egypt" which was declared a
British protectorate on 5 November 1914, the day when Britain and France declared war against the Ottoman Empire. Britain also formally annexed
Cyprus (under British administration since the
Cyprus Convention in 1878, but nominally still an Ottoman territory) until 5 November 1914.
Principality of Samos (Sisam), 1835–1912: established as an autonomous tributary principality under a Christian Prince; annexed to Greece during the
First Balkan War
Eastern Rumelia (Doğu Rumeli), 1878–1885: established by the
Treaty of Berlin on 13 July 1878 as an autonomous province; in a personal union with the tributary Principality of Bulgaria on 6 September 1885 but remained de jure under Ottoman suzerainty; annexed by Bulgaria on 5 October 1908.
Cyprus (Kıbrıs), 1878–1914: established British administration under Ottoman suzerainty with the
Cyprus Convention of 4 June 1878; annexed by Britain on 5 November 1914, upon Ottoman entry into World War I.
Cretan State (Girit), 1898–1912/13: established as an internationally supervised tributary state headed by a Christian governor; in 1908 the Cretan parliament unilaterally declared union with Greece; the island was occupied by Greece in 1912, and de jure annexed in 1913
^Romanian historian Florin Constantiniu points out that, on crossing into
Wallachia, foreign travelers used to notice hearing church bells in every village, which were forbidden by Islamic law in the Ottoman empire. Constantiniu, Florin (2006). O istorie sinceră a poporului român [A sincere history of the Romanian people] (IV ed.). Univers Enciclopedic Gold. pp. 115–118.
^Riedlmayer, András, and Victor Ostapchuk. Bohdan Xmel'nyc'kyj and the Porte: A Document from the Ottoman Archives. Harvard Ukrainian Studies 8.3/4 (1984): 453–73. JSTOR. Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute. Web.
^Kármán, Gábor, and Lovro Kunčević, eds. The European Tributary States of the Ottoman Empire in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries. Leiden: Brill, 2013. Print. p.137
^Kármán, Gábor, and Lovro Kunčević, eds. The European Tributary States of the Ottoman Empire in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries. Leiden: Brill, 2013. Print. p.142
^Magocsi, Paul Robert. History of Ukraine: The Land and Its Peoples. 2nd ed. Toronto: U of Toronto, 2010. Print. p.369