- Karamanoğlu
Infobox Former Country
conventional_long_name = Karamanoğlu
common_name = Karamanoğlu
continent = moved from Category:Asia to the Middle East
region = the Middle East
country = Turkey
era = Late Medieval
government_type = Monarchy
year_start = 1250
year_end = 1487
p1 = Seljuk Sultanate of Rûm
flag_p1 =
s1 = Ottoman Empire
flag_s1 = Flag of the Ottoman Empire (1453-1844).svg
image_map_caption = The Karamanid Emirate and other easter Mediterranean states in 1450
capital =Larende
Ermenek
Konya
Mut
Ereğli [http://www.temha.net/tarih/turktarih96cf.html?name=Tarih&islem=sayfa_goster&sayfanu=71 Türk Tarih Sitesi, Türk Tarihi, Genel Türk Tarihi, Türk Cumhuriyetleri, Türk Hükümdarlar - Tarih ] ]
common_languages = Turkish
religion = Muslim
leader1 = Kerimeddin Karaman Bey
leader2 = Turgutoğlu Mahmud
year_leader1 = 1256?
year_leader2 = 1483 – 1487
title_leader = BeyBeylik of Karaman or of Karamanoğlu ("Karamanoğulları" in Turkish plural), also called the Karamanid Dynasty or the Karamanids, was an
Anatolian Turkish Beylik state centered in south-centralAnatolia , around the present-dayKaraman Province . From the13th century until its fall in 1467, Karamanoğlu was one of the most powerful states inAnatolia .History
The Karamanids traced their ancestry back to Hoca Sadeddin and his son
Nure Sufi , who emigrated fromAzerbaijan toSivas . He moved from there to the westernTaurus Mountains , near the town ofLarende , where he worked as a woodcutter. Nure Sufi's son, Kerimeddin Karaman Bey, gained a tenuous control over the mountainous parts ofCilicia in the middle of the13th century . A persistent but spurious legend, however, claims that the Seljuk Sultan of Rum,Kayqubad I instead established Karaman in these lands. [Claude Cahen, "Pre-Ottoman Turkey: a general survey of the material and spiritual culture and history c. 1071-1330", trans. J. Jones-Williams (New York: Taplinger, 1968), 281-2.]Karaman expanded his territories by capturing castles in
Ermenek , Mut, Ereğli,Gülnar ,Mer , andSilifke . As a reward for this expansion of Seljuk territory, the sultanKilij Arslan IV gave the town ofLarende (nowKaraman in honor of the dynasty) to the Karamanoğlu. In the meantime, Bunsuz, brother of Karaman Bey, was chosen as a bodyguard (Candar ) forKilij Arslan IV . Their power rose as a result of the unification of Turkish clans that lived in the mountainous regions of Cilicia with the new Turkish elements transferred there by Kayqubad.Good relations between the Seljuks and the Karamanids did not last. In
1261 , on the pretext of supportingKaykaus II who had fled to Constantinople as a result of the intrigues of the chancellorPervâne , Karaman Bey and his two brothers, Zeynül-Hac and Bunsuz, marched toward Konya, the capital of Seljuks, with 20,000 men. A combined Seljuk and Mongol army, led by the chancellor Mu'in al-Din Suleyman, the Pervane, defeated the Karamanoğlu army and captured Karaman Bey's two brothers.After Karaman Bey died in
1262 , his older son, Şemseddin Mehmet I, became the head of the house. He immediately negotiated alliances with other Turkmen clans to raise an army against the Seljuks. During the1276 revolt of Hatıroğlu Şemseddin Bey against Mongol domination in Anatolia, Karamanoğlu also defeated several Mongol-Seljuk armies. In theBattle of Göksu in 1277 in particular, the central power of the Seljuk was dealt a severe blow. Taking advantage of the general confusion, Mehmed Bey capturedKonya on 12 May and placed on the throne a pretender calledJimri who claimed to be the son of Kaykaus. In the end, however, Mehmed was defeated by Seljuk and Mongol forces the same year, and executed with some of his brothers.Despite these blows, Karamanoğlu continued to increase their power and influence, largely aided by the
Mamluks ofEgypt , especially during the reign ofBaybars . Karamanoğlu captured Konya on two more occasions in the beginning of the14th century , but were driven out the first time by emirChupan , the Ilkhanid governor for Anatolia, and the second time by Emir Chupan's son and successorTimurtash . An expansion of Karamanoğlu power occurred after the fall of the Ilkhanids. A second expansion coincided with Karamanoğlu Alâeddin Ali Bey's marriage to Nefise Sultan, the daughter of the Ottoman sultan Murad II, the first important contact between the two dynasties.As Ottoman power expanded into the
Balkans , Aleaddin Ali Bey captured the city ofBeyşehir , which had been an Ottoman city. However, it did not take much time for the Ottomans to react and march onKonya , the capital city of Karamanids. A treaty between the two kingdoms was made and peace existed until the reign ofBayezid I .Timur gave control of the Karamanid lands to Mehmet Bey, the oldest son of Aleaddin Ali Bey. After Bayezid died in1403 , the Ottoman Empire went into a political crisis. During this time, the Ottoman family fell prey to an internecine strife. It was an opportunity not only for Karamanoğlu, but also for all of the Anatolian beyliks. Mehmet Bey assembled an army to march on Bursa. He captured the city and damaged it; this would not be the last Karamanid invasion of Ottoman lands. However, Mehmet Bey was captured by Bayezid Pasha and sent to prison. He apologized for what he had done and was forgiven by the Ottoman ruler.Ramazanoğlu Ali Bey captured Tarsus while Mehmet Bey was in prison. Mustafa Bey, son of Mehmet Bey, retook the city during a conflict between the Emirs of
Sham andEgypt . After that, the Egyptian sultan sent an army to retake Tarsus from the Karamanids. The Egyptian Mamluks damagedKonya after defeating the Karamanids, and Mehmet Bey retreated fromKonya . Ramazanoğlu Ali Bey pursued and captured him; according to an agreement between the two leaders, Mehmet Bey was exiled to Egypt for the rest of his life.During the
Crusade of Varna against the Ottomans in 1443-4, Karamanid İbrahim Bey marched onAnkara andKütahya , destroying both cities. In the meantime, the Ottoman sultan Murad II was returning fromRumelia with a victory against the Hungarian Crusaders. Like all other Islamic emirates in Anatolia, the Karamanids were accused of treason. Hence, İbrahim Bey accepted all Ottoman terms. The Karamanid state was eventually terminated by the Ottomans in 1487, as the power of their Egyptian allies was declining.Flag
According to the A. Cresques' Catalan Atlas of 1375, flag of Karamanoğlu consists of a blue 6-edged star [] . The flag of Karamanoğlu may be confused with
Star of David , the Jewish symbol, used by Israel today. However, it is not a Jewish symbol. In medieval times, this star was also an Islamic symbol known as theSeal of Solomon (Suleiman) and was extremely popular amongst the Turkish Beyliks of Anatolia. The seal was also used by Ottomans in their mosque decorations, coins and personal flags of pashas, including that of Hayreddin Barbarossa. [http://www.fahnenversand.de/fotw/misc/tr~barb.jpg] Another state known to use the seal on their flag was theCandaroğlu .Power of the Karamanid state in Anatolia
According to Mesâlik-ül-Ebsâr, written by Şehâbeddin Ömer, the Karamanid army had 25,000 riders and 25,000
saracens . They could also rely on some Turkmen tribes and their warriors.Their economic activities depended mostly on control of strategic commercial areas such as
Konya and the ports ofLamos ,Silifke ,Anamur , andManavgat .Karamanid architecture
66
mosque s, 8hammam s, 2caravanserai s and 3medrese s built by the Karamanoğlu reached our day. Some among notable works of Karamanoğlu architecture are as follows:* Hasbey Medrese (1241)
* Şerafettin Mosque (XIII century)
* İnce Minare (Dar-ül Hadis) Medrese (1258-1279)
* Hatuniye MedreseList of rulers
#
Nûre Sûfî Bey (Capital City: Ereğli) (1250-1256)
#Kerîmeddin Karaman Bey (Capital City:Ermenek ) (1256?-1261)
# Şemseddin I. Mehmed Bey (1261-1277)
#Güneri Bey (1283-1300)
#Bedreddin Mahmud Bey (1300-1308)
#Yahşı Han Bey (1308-1312) (Capital City:Konya )
#Bedreddin I. İbrahim Bey (1312-1333, 1348-1349)
#Alâeddin Halil Mirza Bey (1333-1348)
#Fahreddin Ahmed Bey (1349-1350)
#Şemseddin Bey (1350-1351)
#Hacı Sûfi Burhâneddin Musa Bey (Capital City: Mut) (1351-1356)
#Seyfeddin Süleyman Bey (1356-1357)
#Damad I. Alâeddin Ali Bey (1357-1398)
#Sultanzâde Nâsıreddin II. Mehmed Bey (Gıyâseddin )(1398-1399)
#Damad Bengi II. Alâeddin Ali Bey (1418-1419, 1423-1424)
#Damad II. İbrahim Bey (1424-1464)
#Sultanzâde İshak Bey (1464)
#Sultanzâde Pîr Ahmed Bey (1464-1469)
#Kasım Bey (1469-1483)
#Turgutoğlu Mahmud Bey (1483-1487)Notes and references
*cite book | title = The Origins of the Ottoman Empire ISBN 0791408191 | author =Mehmet Fuat Köprülü (translated by Gary Leiser | publisher =State University of New York Press | year = 1992 [http://books.google.com/books?id=D-WaKed2iNgC&pg=PA36&lpg=PA37&vq=germiyanid&dq=beylik&ie=ISO-8859-1&output=html&sig=vzENqPi4ZWXYa6Q4oP2NLXxXo9w (limited preview)]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.