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Crash Course: World History, Venice and the Ottoman Empire #19

Venice and the Ottoman Empire #19

Hi, I'm John Green, this is Crash Course World History and today we're going to talk about

a relationship. No, not you, college girlfriend. No, not that kind of relationship either.

No. STAN, THIS IS A HISTORY CLASS. We're gonna talk about the relationship between

a city, Venice, and an empire, the Ottomans, and in doing so, we're going to return to

an old theme here on Crash Course World History: How studying history can make you a better

boyfriend and/or girlfriend. Probably or, but I'm not here to judge.

Mr. Green! Mr. Green! No offense, but you don't really seem like an expert in how to get girls to like you.

Here's something amazing, Me From the Past. You know that girl, Sarah, in 10th grade,

who's super super smart?

Yeah, she's really hot. She's like three or four leagues hotter than I am.

Yeah, I married her. So shut up and listen.

[theme music]

Ten minutes from now, I'm hoping you'll understand how one mutually beneficial relationship, between

the Venetians and the Ottomans, led to two really big deals: the European Renaissance and Christopher

Columbus. Not like his birth, I mean he wasn't like a half-Ottoman, half-Venetian baby, his travels!

So Venice is a city made up of hundreds of islands at the northern tip of the Adriatic

Sea, but walking around it, you can't help but feel that the city is essentially a collection

of floating buildings tied together by some canals. If ever there was a place where geography

was destiny, it was Venice. Venice was literally built for ocean-going trade. As you can imagine,

Venice didn't have a lot of natural resources — except for fish and mustaches — so if

they wanted to grow, they had to rely on trade. Let's go to the Thought Bubble.

First, Venetians became experts in shipbuilding. Remember that when the crusaders needed ships

for their crazy Fourth Crusade, they headed to Venice, because the Venetians were famous

for their ships, including merchant ships like the galley and the cog. Not only could

they build ships; they could also sail them to pleasant locales like Constantinople and

the Levant, so the Venetians formed trade treaties, sometimes called concessions, with

the Byzantines, and then when Constantinople fell to the Ottomans and became Istanbul,

the Venetians were quick to make trade treaties with their new neighbors, famously saying

that while Istanbul had been Constantinople, the matter of Constantinople getting the works

was nobody's business but the Turks.

But even before the Ottomans, Venice had experience trading with the Islamic world: It initially

established itself as the biggest European power in the Mediterranean thanks to its trade

with Egypt's sultan in the outlandishly lucrative pepper business. Can't blame the

Europeans, really, that stuff is delicious. Oh, you mean like actual pepper? Ah, that's

good too, especially since it masks the taste of spoiled meat, which most meat was in the

days before refrigeration. Due to some awkward… Crusades… the Egyptian merchants weren't

terribly welcome in…ya know...Europe. But they had all the pepper, because the Egyptians

imported it from India and controlled both overland and oversea access to the Mediterranean.

And when others cited moral or religious opposition to trade, the Venetians usually found a way.

Which is why the whole freaking town is made of marble. Thanks, Thought Bubble.

To avoid the sticky situation of having to consort with the heathen Egyptians, the Venetians

employed a handy story. This is the Piazza San Marco, the #1 Destination in the Entire

World for People Who Like to Be Pooped on by Pigeons. It's also home to this church,

which includes some bronze horses you may remember that were looted from Constantinople.

And it contains the body of St. Mark, author of the Gospel According to St. Mark, who had

once been the bishop of Alexandria, in Egypt.

So naturally he died and was buried in Alexandria, but the Venetians claimed him as their own,

because apparently one time he visited Venice, and these two merchants hatched a very clever

plan. They went to Alexandria on business, stole St. Mark's body and then hid it in

a shipment of pork, which the Muslims didn't check very carefully because, you know, they were disgusted by it.

You can even see a version of this on the mosaics in the Basilica of St. Mark, complete

with the Muslims shouting an Arabic version of “ewww gross.” And then, forever after,

the Venetians were like, “Listen, we HAVE to trade with these guys. We use it as a secret

way to ferry saint bodies out of Egypt. We don't WANT to become fantastically wealthy.

It's just a necessary byproduct of our saint-saving.”

So what did Venice import? Lots, but notable for us, they imported a lot of grain, because

if you've ever been to Venice, then you might have noticed that it is basically made out

of marble and therefore kind of difficult to farm. The Ottomans, on the other hand,

had abundant grain, even before they conquered Egypt and its oh-so-fertile Nile River in

1517. Also, while trade was certainly the linchpin of Venice's economic success, they had a diverse economy. They also produced things like textiles and glass. And in fact,

Venice is still known for its glass, but they couldn't produce it without a special ash

that they used to make the colors. And you'll never guess where the ash came from. The Ottomans.

Am I making you a better boyfriend yet? You have to add to your partner's life. You

have to color their glass. That sounds like a euphemism. but it's not-- BACK TO HISTORY.

One last thing about Venice that makes it special, at least for its time. Venice was

a republic, not a monarchy or, god forbid, an empire. So its leaders were elected, and

had to answer to the populace- I mean, at least the property-owning male populace. The

ruler was the doge and he got to live in a very nice house and wear a funny hat.

The Sultan of the Ottoman empire also got to live in a nice house and wear a funny hat,

but there the similarities end. To begin, the Ottomans were an empire that lasted from

around 1300 CE until 1919, making it one of the longest-lasting and richest empires in

world history. The Ottomans managed to blend their pastoral nomadic roots with some very

un-nomadic empire building, and some really impressive architecture, like this and this

and this, making them very different from, wait for it, the Mongols.

The empire, or at least the dynasty, was founded by Osman Bey, and Ottoman is a Latinization

of Osmanli, which basically means like the House of Osman. No, Stan, the house, y-, yes.

Oh my Gosh. The Ottomans were greatest in the 15th and 16th centuries under two famous

sultans: First, Mehmed the Conqueror ruled from 1451 to 1481 and expanded Ottoman control

to the Balkans, which is why there are Bosnian Muslims today. But Ottoman expansion reached

its greatest extent under Suleiman the Magnificent, who ruled from 1520 to 1566. He took valuable

territory in Mesopotamia and Egypt, thus securing control over the western parts of the Asian

trade – both overland and oversea. He also defeated the king of Hungary and laid siege

to Vienna in 1526. And he turned the Ottomans into a huge naval power. Also, judging from

his hat, he had the largest brain in human history.

The Ottomans basically controlled about half of what the Romans controlled, but it was

much more valuable because of all the Indian Ocean trade you'll remember from last week.

So all this land brought a lot of wealth, but it needed to be ruled. The Ottomans could

have followed the Roman model, where you send out generals and nobles to rule over conquered

territories, or they could've demanded the allegiance of client kings like the Persians,

or developed a civil service system like the Chinese, but instead, they created an entirely

new ruling class, a system that some historians call the slave aristocracy.

So if you are a King, one of your main problems is hereditary nobles, because they always

want to replace you, and they don't want to give you your money, & they want their ugly sons to marry your gorgeous daughters, etc. One way to deal with this problem is

to make them part of the government so they feel included and shut up. Another way is

to kill them. That's what they usually do in Russia. I'm whispering so Putin doesn't hear me. Ahh! Putin!

The Ottomans just bypassed the problem of hereditary nobles altogether by creating both

an army and a bureaucracy from scratch so they would be loyal only to the Sultan. How?

The devshirme, a program in which they kidnapped Christian boys, converted them to Islam, and

raised them either to be members of an elite military fighting force called the Janissaries,

or to be government bureaucrats. Incidentally, which of those gigs would you prefer? Because

I think that says a lot about you as a person. Either way, you weren't allowed to have

kids, which prevented the whole hereditary nobles problem, and also ensured that the

Ottoman government would contain quite a lot of Eunuchs. Oh, it's time for the Open Letter?

An Open Letter to Ottoman Eunuchs. But first, let's see what's in the secret compartment

today. Oh, its a blow up globe. See what quitting smoking will get you, Me From the Past?

Hey there Ottoman Eunuchs, How's it hanging? I'm just kidding, that was mean. Listen,

there've been eunuchs all around this great planet of ours. But you're special. I'm

not going to give you the details why, because they're horrifying. I'm just going to

link to an article in the video info.

You started out just being harem guards, Ottoman Eunuchs, which is kind of an obvious gig for

you, but then, you expanded. As had happened in China, you made yourselves indispensable,

and you were often the center of palace intrigue.

In fact, few people in the Ottoman Empire were as wealthy and important as many of you

were. Way to turn lemons into lemonade. I'm sorry, I shouldn't have brought up lemons.

Best wishes, John Green

This system eventually broke down as Janissaries (who had guns) lobbied to be allowed to have

families. But until that happened, the Ottomans system of using a mix of slave administrators

and Eunuchs to run everything worked incredibly well. But to return to the relationship between

the Ottomans and the Venetians: After the Ottomans captured Egypt, they pretty much

controlled the flow of trade through the Mediterranean, but the Venetians had centuries of experience

as mariners, and also lots of boats. Speaking of ships, I ship these guys. So the Ottomans

were content to let the Venetians do all the like, trading and carrying of goods, and they just made

their money from taxes. And that worked because both Venice and the Ottomans added value to each other.

Healthy relationships — listen up, Me From the Past — aren't about extracting value;

they have to be mutually beneficial to work. And boy, was that a mutually beneficial relationship.

For instance, Venice became super rich, and being super rich was a prerequisite for the

European Renaissance because all that art and learning required money, which is why

Venice was a leading city at the beginning of the European Renaissance before being eclipsed

by Florence, Rome, and I don't know, say Rotterdam.

Also, this relationship established firm connections between Europe and Islamic world, which allowed

ideas to flow again especially old Greek that ideas had preserved and built upon by Muslims. I mean,

I guess those connections had existed for a long time, but crusades aren't a great way to exchange ideas.

But perhaps the most crucial result of the Venetian and Ottoman control of trade was

that it forced other Europeans to look for different paths to the riches of the East.

And that fueled huge investments in exploration. The Portuguese sailed south and east around

the southern tip of Africa, and the Spanish went west, believing that the Indies and China

were much closer than they turned out to be. Thanks for watching. I'll see you next week.

Crash Course is produced and directed by Stan Muller, our script supervisor is Danica Johnson.

The show is written by my high school history teacher Raoul Meyer and myself. And our graphics

team is Thought Bubble. Last week's Phrase of the Week was: "Unfortunately they didn't

have pizza." If you want to suggest future phrases of the week or guess at this week's,

you can do so in comments where you can also ask questions about today's video that will

be answered by our team of historians.

Thanks for watching Crash Course. And as we say in my hometown, Don't Forget To Be Awesome.


Venice and the Ottoman Empire #19 البندقية والإمبراطورية العثمانية # 19 Venedig und das Osmanische Reich #19 Venice and the Ottoman Empire #19 Venecia y el Imperio Otomano #19 Venise et l'Empire ottoman #19 Venezia e l'Impero Ottomano #19 ヴェネツィアとオスマン帝国 #19 베니스와 오스만 제국 #19 Wenecja i Imperium Osmańskie #19 Veneza e o Império Otomano #19 Венеция и Османская империя #19 Venedik ve Osmanlı İmparatorluğu #19 Венеція та Османська імперія #19 威尼斯和奥斯曼帝国 #19 威尼斯和奧斯曼帝國 #19

Hi, I'm John Green, this is Crash Course World History and today we're going to talk about

a relationship. No, not you, college girlfriend. No, not that kind of relationship either.

No. STAN, THIS IS A HISTORY CLASS. We're gonna talk about the relationship between 不,斯坦,这是历史课。我们要谈谈之间的关系

a city, Venice, and an empire, the Ottomans, and in doing so, we're going to return to 一个城市,威尼斯,一个帝国,奥斯曼帝国,在这样做的过程中,我们将回到

an old theme here on Crash Course World History: How studying history can make you a better

boyfriend and/or girlfriend. Probably or, but I'm not here to judge.

Mr. Green! Mr. Green! No offense, but you don't really seem like an expert in how to get girls to like you. 格林先生!格林先生!无意冒犯,但你看起来并不是一个让女孩喜欢你的专家。

Here's something amazing, Me From the Past. You know that girl, Sarah, in 10th grade,

who's super super smart?

Yeah, she's really hot. She's like three or four leagues hotter than I am.

Yeah, I married her. So shut up and listen. 是的,我娶了她。所以闭嘴,听着。

[theme music]

Ten minutes from now, I'm hoping you'll understand how one mutually beneficial relationship, between 十分钟后,我希望你能明白一种互惠互利的关系,

the Venetians and the Ottomans, led to two really big deals: the European Renaissance and Christopher 威尼斯人和奥斯曼人,导致了两件真正的大交易:欧洲文艺复兴和克里斯托弗

Columbus. Not like his birth, I mean he wasn't like a half-Ottoman, half-Venetian baby, his travels! 哥伦布。不像他的出生,我的意思是,他的旅行不像一个半奥斯曼半威尼斯的婴儿!

So Venice is a city made up of hundreds of islands at the northern tip of the Adriatic

Sea, but walking around it, you can't help but feel that the city is essentially a collection

of floating buildings tied together by some canals. If ever there was a place where geography

was destiny, it was Venice. Venice was literally built for ocean-going trade. As you can imagine,

Venice didn't have a lot of natural resources — except for fish and mustaches — so if

they wanted to grow, they had to rely on trade. Let's go to the Thought Bubble.

First, Venetians became experts in shipbuilding. Remember that when the crusaders needed ships

for their crazy Fourth Crusade, they headed to Venice, because the Venetians were famous

for their ships, including merchant ships like the galley and the cog. Not only could

they build ships; they could also sail them to pleasant locales like Constantinople and

the Levant, so the Venetians formed trade treaties, sometimes called concessions, with

the Byzantines, and then when Constantinople fell to the Ottomans and became Istanbul,

the Venetians were quick to make trade treaties with their new neighbors, famously saying

that while Istanbul had been Constantinople, the matter of Constantinople getting the works

was nobody's business but the Turks.

But even before the Ottomans, Venice had experience trading with the Islamic world: It initially

established itself as the biggest European power in the Mediterranean thanks to its trade

with Egypt's sultan in the outlandishly lucrative pepper business. Can't blame the

Europeans, really, that stuff is delicious. Oh, you mean like actual pepper? Ah, that's

good too, especially since it masks the taste of spoiled meat, which most meat was in the

days before refrigeration. Due to some awkward… Crusades… the Egyptian merchants weren't

terribly welcome in…ya know...Europe. But they had all the pepper, because the Egyptians

imported it from India and controlled both overland and oversea access to the Mediterranean.

And when others cited moral or religious opposition to trade, the Venetians usually found a way.

Which is why the whole freaking town is made of marble. Thanks, Thought Bubble.

To avoid the sticky situation of having to consort with the heathen Egyptians, the Venetians

employed a handy story. This is the Piazza San Marco, the #1 Destination in the Entire

World for People Who Like to Be Pooped on by Pigeons. It's also home to this church,

which includes some bronze horses you may remember that were looted from Constantinople.

And it contains the body of St. Mark, author of the Gospel According to St. Mark, who had

once been the bishop of Alexandria, in Egypt.

So naturally he died and was buried in Alexandria, but the Venetians claimed him as their own,

because apparently one time he visited Venice, and these two merchants hatched a very clever

plan. They went to Alexandria on business, stole St. Mark's body and then hid it in

a shipment of pork, which the Muslims didn't check very carefully because, you know, they were disgusted by it.

You can even see a version of this on the mosaics in the Basilica of St. Mark, complete

with the Muslims shouting an Arabic version of “ewww gross.” And then, forever after,

the Venetians were like, “Listen, we HAVE to trade with these guys. We use it as a secret

way to ferry saint bodies out of Egypt. We don't WANT to become fantastically wealthy.

It's just a necessary byproduct of our saint-saving.”

So what did Venice import? Lots, but notable for us, they imported a lot of grain, because

if you've ever been to Venice, then you might have noticed that it is basically made out

of marble and therefore kind of difficult to farm. The Ottomans, on the other hand,

had abundant grain, even before they conquered Egypt and its oh-so-fertile Nile River in

1517\. Also, while trade was certainly the linchpin of Venice's economic success, they had a diverse economy. They also produced things like textiles and glass. And in fact,

Venice is still known for its glass, but they couldn't produce it without a special ash

that they used to make the colors. And you'll never guess where the ash came from. The Ottomans.

Am I making you a better boyfriend yet? You have to add to your partner's life. You

have to color their glass. That sounds like a euphemism. but it's not-- BACK TO HISTORY.

One last thing about Venice that makes it special, at least for its time. Venice was

a republic, not a monarchy or, god forbid, an empire. So its leaders were elected, and

had to answer to the populace- I mean, at least the property-owning male populace. The

ruler was the doge and he got to live in a very nice house and wear a funny hat.

The Sultan of the Ottoman empire also got to live in a nice house and wear a funny hat,

but there the similarities end. To begin, the Ottomans were an empire that lasted from

around 1300 CE until 1919, making it one of the longest-lasting and richest empires in

world history. The Ottomans managed to blend their pastoral nomadic roots with some very

un-nomadic empire building, and some really impressive architecture, like this and this

and this, making them very different from, wait for it, the Mongols.

The empire, or at least the dynasty, was founded by Osman Bey, and Ottoman is a Latinization

of Osmanli, which basically means like the House of Osman. No, Stan, the house, y-, yes.

Oh my Gosh. The Ottomans were greatest in the 15th and 16th centuries under two famous

sultans: First, Mehmed the Conqueror ruled from 1451 to 1481 and expanded Ottoman control

to the Balkans, which is why there are Bosnian Muslims today. But Ottoman expansion reached

its greatest extent under Suleiman the Magnificent, who ruled from 1520 to 1566. He took valuable

territory in Mesopotamia and Egypt, thus securing control over the western parts of the Asian

trade – both overland and oversea. He also defeated the king of Hungary and laid siege

to Vienna in 1526. And he turned the Ottomans into a huge naval power. Also, judging from

his hat, he had the largest brain in human history.

The Ottomans basically controlled about half of what the Romans controlled, but it was

much more valuable because of all the Indian Ocean trade you'll remember from last week.

So all this land brought a lot of wealth, but it needed to be ruled. The Ottomans could

have followed the Roman model, where you send out generals and nobles to rule over conquered

territories, or they could've demanded the allegiance of client kings like the Persians,

or developed a civil service system like the Chinese, but instead, they created an entirely

new ruling class, a system that some historians call the slave aristocracy.

So if you are a King, one of your main problems is hereditary nobles, because they always

want to replace you, and they don't want to give you your money, & they want their ugly sons to marry your gorgeous daughters, etc. One way to deal with this problem is

to make them part of the government so they feel included and shut up. Another way is

to kill them. That's what they usually do in Russia. I'm whispering so Putin doesn't hear me. Ahh! Putin!

The Ottomans just bypassed the problem of hereditary nobles altogether by creating both

an army and a bureaucracy from scratch so they would be loyal only to the Sultan. How?

The devshirme, a program in which they kidnapped Christian boys, converted them to Islam, and

raised them either to be members of an elite military fighting force called the Janissaries,

or to be government bureaucrats. Incidentally, which of those gigs would you prefer? Because

I think that says a lot about you as a person. Either way, you weren't allowed to have

kids, which prevented the whole hereditary nobles problem, and also ensured that the

Ottoman government would contain quite a lot of Eunuchs. Oh, it's time for the Open Letter?

An Open Letter to Ottoman Eunuchs. But first, let's see what's in the secret compartment

today. Oh, its a blow up globe. See what quitting smoking will get you, Me From the Past?

Hey there Ottoman Eunuchs, How's it hanging? I'm just kidding, that was mean. Listen,

there've been eunuchs all around this great planet of ours. But you're special. I'm

not going to give you the details why, because they're horrifying. I'm just going to

link to an article in the video info.

You started out just being harem guards, Ottoman Eunuchs, which is kind of an obvious gig for

you, but then, you expanded. As had happened in China, you made yourselves indispensable,

and you were often the center of palace intrigue.

In fact, few people in the Ottoman Empire were as wealthy and important as many of you

were. Way to turn lemons into lemonade. I'm sorry, I shouldn't have brought up lemons.

Best wishes, John Green

This system eventually broke down as Janissaries (who had guns) lobbied to be allowed to have

families. But until that happened, the Ottomans system of using a mix of slave administrators

and Eunuchs to run everything worked incredibly well. But to return to the relationship between

the Ottomans and the Venetians: After the Ottomans captured Egypt, they pretty much

controlled the flow of trade through the Mediterranean, but the Venetians had centuries of experience

as mariners, and also lots of boats. Speaking of ships, I ship these guys. So the Ottomans

were content to let the Venetians do all the like, trading and carrying of goods, and they just made

their money from taxes. And that worked because both Venice and the Ottomans added value to each other.

Healthy relationships — listen up, Me From the Past — aren't about extracting value;

they have to be mutually beneficial to work. And boy, was that a mutually beneficial relationship.

For instance, Venice became super rich, and being super rich was a prerequisite for the

European Renaissance because all that art and learning required money, which is why

Venice was a leading city at the beginning of the European Renaissance before being eclipsed

by Florence, Rome, and I don't know, say Rotterdam.

Also, this relationship established firm connections between Europe and Islamic world, which allowed

ideas to flow again especially old Greek that ideas had preserved and built upon by Muslims. I mean,

I guess those connections had existed for a long time, but crusades aren't a great way to exchange ideas.

But perhaps the most crucial result of the Venetian and Ottoman control of trade was

that it forced other Europeans to look for different paths to the riches of the East.

And that fueled huge investments in exploration. The Portuguese sailed south and east around

the southern tip of Africa, and the Spanish went west, believing that the Indies and China

were much closer than they turned out to be. Thanks for watching. I'll see you next week.

Crash Course is produced and directed by Stan Muller, our script supervisor is Danica Johnson.

The show is written by my high school history teacher Raoul Meyer and myself. And our graphics

team is Thought Bubble. Last week's Phrase of the Week was: "Unfortunately they didn't

have pizza." If you want to suggest future phrases of the week or guess at this week's,

you can do so in comments where you can also ask questions about today's video that will

be answered by our team of historians.

Thanks for watching Crash Course. And as we say in my hometown, Don't Forget To Be Awesome.