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- Q815841 subject Q17392111.
- Q815841 subject Q19356868.
- Q815841 subject Q7057166.
- Q815841 subject Q7062063.
- Q815841 subject Q7291886.
- Q815841 subject Q8363234.
- Q815841 subject Q8367365.
- Q815841 subject Q8375779.
- Q815841 subject Q8407513.
- Q815841 subject Q8706970.
- Q815841 subject Q9477151.
- Q815841 abstract "Devşirme (literally "collecting" in Turkish), also known as the blood tax or tribute in blood, was chiefly the annual practice by which the Ottoman Empire sent military to take boys, ages 8 to 18, sons of their Christian subjects in the villages of the Balkans and Anatolia. They were then converted to Islam with the primary objective of selecting and training the ablest children for the military or civil service of the Empire, notably into the Janissaries.Started by Murad I as a means to counteract the growing power of the Turkish nobility, the practice itself violated Islamic law. Yet by 1648, the practice was slowly drawing to an end. An attempt to re-institute it in 1703 was resisted by its Ottoman members who coveted its military and civilian posts. Finally in the early part of Ahmet III's reign, the practice of devşirme was abolished.".
- Q815841 thumbnail Janissary_Recruitment_in_the_Balkans-Suleymanname.jpg?width=300.
- Q815841 wikiPageExternalLink Janissary_Recruitment_in_the_Balkans-Suleymanname.htm.
- Q815841 wikiPageExternalLink devsirme.htm.
- Q815841 wikiPageExternalLink janitscharen.html.
- Q815841 wikiPageWikiLink Q1145236.
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- Q815841 wikiPageWikiLink Q17392111.
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- Q815841 comment "Devşirme (literally "collecting" in Turkish), also known as the blood tax or tribute in blood, was chiefly the annual practice by which the Ottoman Empire sent military to take boys, ages 8 to 18, sons of their Christian subjects in the villages of the Balkans and Anatolia.".
- Q815841 label "Devşirme".
- Q815841 depiction Janissary_Recruitment_in_the_Balkans-Suleymanname.jpg.