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BAND 34
Edited by
A.C.S. Peacock
Sara Nur Yıldız
WÜRZBURG 2016
Cover Image: Depiction of Alexander the Great (İskander-i Ẕū’l-Ḳarneyn) in Ahmedi’s İskender-
nāme, Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale, MS. ancien fonds turc 309, fol. 149b, copied in Amasya in
819/1416 by Muhammed b. Mevlana Pir Hüseyin, known as Hacı Baba el-Sivasi.
ISBN 978-3-95650-157-9
ISSN 1863-9461
Ergon-Verlag GmbH
Keesburgstr. 11, D-97074 Würzburg
Chapter 1.
A.C.S. Peacock and Sara Nur Yıldız
Introduction.
Literature, Language and History in Late Medieval Anatolia .............................. 19
6 TABLE OF CONTENTS
Index..................................................................................................................... 401
Chapter 10
Mobility of Scholars and Formation of a
Self-Sustaining Scholarly System in the
Lands of Rūm during the Fifteenth Century
Abdurrahman Atçıl
Acknowledgements: I would like to acknowledge that the fellowship of the Brain Circula-
tion Scheme (BİDEB 2236–114C009), co-funded by TÜBİTAK and the Marie Curie Ac-
tion of the Seventh Framework Programme (FP7) of the European Commission, provided
the financial support for the research and writing of this paper. I am grateful to Andrew
Peacock and Sara Nur Yıldız for inviting me to the workshop at the Orient Institut, Istan-
bul where this paper was first presented and discussed. I am especially thankful to Ertuğrul
Ökten who discussed with me this paper several times and made critical interventions.
1 Ertuğrul Ökten, “Scholars and Mobility: A Preliminary Assessment from the Perspective of
al-Shaqāyiq al-Nuʿmāniyya,” Osmanlı Araştırmaları/The Journal of Ottoman Studies 41 (2013):
55–70.
2 Ahmed Taşköprüzade, al-Shaqāʾiq al-Nuʿmāniyya fi ʿUlāmāʾ al-Dawla al-ʿUthmāniyya, ed.
Ahmed Subhi Furat (Istanbul: İstanbul Üniversitesi Edebiyat Fakültesi Yayınları, 1985).
316 ABDURRAHMAN ATÇIL
3 Mobile scholars represent 100 percent of all scholars in the section of the book treating
those in the reign of Osman (d. ca. 724/1324); 60 percent of those in the reign of Orhan
(d. 763/1362); 25 percent of those in the reign of Murad I (d. 791/1389), 61 percent of
those in the reign of Bayezid I (d. 805/1403); 83 percent of those in the reign of Mehmed
I (d. 824/1421); 32 percent of those in the reign of Murad II (d. 855/1451); 16 percent of
those in the reign of Mehmed II (d. 886/1481); and 18 percent, 16 percent, and 11 percent
of those in the reigns of Bayezid II (d. 918/1511), Selim I (d. 926/1520), and Süleyman (d.
974/1566), respectively. For this, see Ökten, “Scholars and Mobility,” 60–61. Ökten’s work
does not specify the geographical boundaries of the lands of Rūm, which included the
whole of Anatolia and the Balkans, as a unit of reference for the mobility of scholars; thus,
he counted as instances of mobility the movement of scholars from Anatolian lands not
under Ottoman rule to Ottoman lands. This does not negate the utility of Ökten’s data for
our purposes, as cases of such mobility (from Anatolia to Ottoman lands) are too few to
undermine the applicability of the general trend (which Ökten identified for the inward
mobility of scholars to Ottoman lands) to the inward mobility of scholars to the lands of
Rūm.
4 Ökten, “Scholars and Mobility,” 60.
MOBILITY OF SCHOLARS 317
5 For a perceptive discussion on conceptualizing the history of the lands of Rūm, see Cemal
Kafadar, “A Rome of One’s Own: Reflections on Cultural Geography and Identity in the
Lands of Rum,” Muqarnas 24 (2007): 7–25, esp. 8–9.
6 Dimitris J. Kastritsis, The Sons of Bayezid: Empire Building and Representation in the Ottoman
Civil War of 1402–1413 (Leiden: Brill, 2007).
7 Colin Imber, The Ottoman Empire, 1300–1650 (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2002), 17–
35; Rudi Paul Lindner, “Anatolia, 1300–1451,” in The Cambridge History of Turkey, vol. 1,
ed. Kate Fleet, Byzantium to Turkey, 1071–1453 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
2009), 102–137.
8 For example, Shāhrukh’s political consolidation in Khurasan and Transoxiana had the op-
posite effect, causing many important scholars and intellectuals to leave. For this, see İlker
Evrim Binbaş, “The Anatomy of a Regicide Attempt: Shāhrukh, the Ḥurūfīs, and the
Timurid Intellectuals in 830/1426–27,” JRAS series 3, 23, no 3 (2013): 1–38.
318 ABDURRAHMAN ATÇIL
Fig. 10.1: Madrasas built in the lands of Rūm from the thirteenth to the fifteenth century*
Source. Data for this table are mainly drawn from Gül, Osmanlı Medreselerinde, 14–88. The
other sources consulted are Ahmet Vefa Çobanoğlu, “İsmail Bey Külliyesi,” TDVİA; Aptullah
Kuran, “Karamanlı Medreseleri,” Vakıflar Dergisi 8 (1969), 209–23.
Whereas the number of new madrasas built in the thirteenth and fourteenth cen-
turies seems to have been the same (fifty-six each), the number built in the fif-
teenth century was nearly double (108). A thorough explanation of this acceler-
ated madrasa construction in the whole of Rūm merits study in its own right.
However, it is worth considering the relationship among the increasing political
unity and concentration of economic power in a centre and the acceleration of
9 For this, see Ahmet Gül, Osmanlı Medreselerinde Eğitim-Öğretim ve Bunlar Arasında Daru’l-
Hadislerin Yeri (Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu, 1997), 14–33.
10 Ibid., 36–44.
11 Ibid., 14–33.
12 Ibid., 44–88.
13 Ibid., 14–88. It is worth mentioning that the data for other principalities in the fifteenth
century is of course not directly comparable with that of the fourteenth century, as they
were increasingly absorbed into the Ottoman lands as the Ottomans took over Anatolia.
MOBILITY OF SCHOLARS 319
construction activity. That most of the madrasas, built during the fifteenth cen-
tury, took place in the Ottoman lands supports this suggestion. In addition, con-
sidering that forty-three of 108 new fifteenth-century madrasas were built in Is-
tanbul, Thrace, and the Balkans, the conquest of new lands and the desire to en-
dow them with Muslim institutions can be seen as driving this proliferation of
madrasas in the fifteenth century.14
Finally, Ottoman state formation, which accelerated after the capture of Con-
stantinople in 1453, increased the demand for the services of scholars. A hierarchi-
cal bureaucracy in which professorial and judicial positions were connected with
scribal and financial positions developed, providing scholars with the opportunity
to pursue professional careers in government service. From the mid-fifteenth cen-
tury onward, scholars were increasingly incorporated into this bureaucracy.15
As far as the incoming scholars were concerned, the upsurge in madrasa
construction generated the need for more professors – that is, for more scholars. In
addition, the decision to employ scholars systematically, not only in academic
positions (educational and judicial) but also in purely bureaucratic ones (scribal
and financial), further increased the need for their services. Thus, it became easier
for scholars find appropriate professional placement in the lands of Rūm.
The favourable conditions for scholars in the lands of Rūm does not in itself,
however, entirely explain the relocation of mobile scholars there; outside factors
likewise played an important role in their movement. Here, a brief survey of the
scholars and the political conditions of the regions they left, including western
Iran, Khurasan, Transoxiana, Azerbaijan, Khwarazm, the Qipchaq steppes and
the Arab lands will help better understand the outside causes motivating then to
settle in Rūm during the fifteenth century.
14 Oruç Paşa Madrasa in Dimetoka, which was built in 803-804/1401, was probably the first
madrasa built in Thrace and the Balkans under the Ottomans. For basic information about
this madrasa, see Mustafa Bilge, İlk Osmanlı Medreseleri (Istanbul: Edebiyat Fakültesi
Basımevi, 1984), 168–69; Gül, Osmanlı Medreselerinde, 44–45. For Gazi Evrenos Madrasa in
Yenice-i Vardar, constructed in the late thirteenth or early fourteenth century, see Machiel
Kiel, “The Incorporation of the Balkans into the Ottoman Empire, 1353–1453,” in The
Cambridge History of Turkey, vol. 1, ed. Kate Fleet, Byzantium to Turkey, 1071–1453 (Cam-
bridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009), 166.
15 For the legal regulations that formed the basis of the hierarchical bureaucracy, see Kanun-
name-i Ali Osman, ed. Abdülkadir Özcan (Istanbul: Kitabevi, 2003), esp. 5–18. See also
Cornell H. Fleischer, Bureaucrat and Intellectual in the Ottoman Empire: The Historian Mustafa
Âlî, 1541–1600 (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1986), 191–231; Richard C.
Repp, “Some Observations on the Development of the Ottoman Learned Hierarchy,” in
Nikki R. Keddie (ed.), Scholars, Saints, and Sufis: Muslim Religious Institutions in the Middle
East since 1500 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1972), 17–32.
320 ABDURRAHMAN ATÇIL
Timur acquired great fame with his military and political successes over a vast
territory, from the borders of China to Eastern Europe, and from India to Anato-
lia.16 In addition to becoming an invincible conqueror, he wanted to be known
as a great patron of scholars. To this end, he invited, sometimes forcibly, some of
the most prestigious scholars of his time to take up residence in his capital of
Samarqand: most notable are the theologians Saʿd al-Dīn Taftāzānī (d. 792/1390)
and Sayyid ʿAlī Jurjānī (d. 816/1413), as well as Ibn al- Jazarī (d. 833/1429), the
renowned expert in variant Qur’an readings.17 When Timur died in 807/1405
and his descendants became embroiled in succession struggles, some of these
scholars left Samarqand to relocate elsewhere. For example, Jurjānī resettled in
Shiraz, while Jazarī wandered in Herat, Yazd, and Isfahan before also taking up
residency in Shiraz.18
During the reigns of the Timurid rulers, who were famous for their patronage
of scholars, Transoxiana and Khurasan experienced a cultural florescence. For ex-
ample, Shāhrukh (d. 850/1447), the main power in Khurasan and Transoxiana af-
ter 811/1409, completed the conspicuous madrasa and khanqah complex in
Herat in 812/1410 and appointed four of the most prestigious scholars of the
time as professors there.19 His son Ulugh Beg (d. 853/1449) likewise built a ma-
drasa and observatory in Samarqand, employing and training the best scholars
and astronomers of his day.20 Under the Timurid rulers, Sultan Abū Saʿīd (d.
873/1469) and Sultan Ḥusayn Bayqara (d. 911/1506), Herat became one of the
most advanced cultural centres of the Islamic world.21
Despite this cultural richness, scholars and their patrons had reason for con-
cern. The Turco-Mongol political understanding of collective sovereignty nur-
16 Beatrice Forbes Manz, The Rise and Rule of Tamerlane (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1989), 67–78.
17 For information about the lives of these scholars, see Şükrü Özen, “Teftâzânî,” TDVİA,
vol. 40, 299-308; Josef van Ess, Die Träume der Schulweisheit: Leben und Werk des ʿAli b. Mu-
hammad al-Ǧurǧani (gest. 816/1413) (Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 2013); Tayyar Altıku-
laç, “İbnü’l-Cezerî,” TDVİA, vol. 20, 551-57. For Muḥammad Jazarī, see also İlker Evrim
Binbaş, “A Damascene Eyewitness to the Battle of Nicopolis: Shams al-Dīn Ibn al-Jazarī
(d. 833/1429),” in Nikolaos G. Chrissis and Mike Carr (eds), Contact and Conflict in Frankish
Greece and the Aegean, 1204–1453 (Farnham, UK: Ashgate, 2014), 153–75.
18 Beatrice Forbes Manz, Power, Politics, and Religion in Timurid Iran (New York: Cambridge
University Press, 2007), 215–16.
19 Maria Eva Subtelny and Anas B. Khalidov, “The Curriculum of Islamic Higher Learning
in Timurid Iran in the Light of the Sunni Revival under Shāh-Rukh,” JAOS 115 (1995):
210–14; Manz, Power, Politics, and Religion, 214–17. See also Khwandamir, Ḥabīb al-Siyar,
trans. and ed. W. M. Thackston (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Department of Near
Eastern Languages and Civilizations, 1994), 354–55.
20 Yavuz Unat, “Uluğ Bey,” TDVİA, vol. 42, 127-29. See also Taşköprüzade, al-Shaqāʾiq al-
Nuʿmāniyya, 14–17.
21 Maria E. Subtelny, Timurids in Transition, Turko-Persian Politics and Acculturation in Medieval
Iran (Leiden: Brill, 2007), 39–42; Maria E. Subtelny, “A Timurid Educational and Charita-
ble Foundation: The Ikhlāṣiyya Complex of ʿAlī Shīr Navāʾī in 15th-Century Herat and Its
Endowment,” JAOS 111 (1991): 38–61.
MOBILITY OF SCHOLARS 321
tured the aspirations of all male members of the ruling family for supreme or re-
gional rule, frequently engendering dynastic struggles, and resulting in a continu-
ous political tension.22 Princes descended from Timur along different genealogical
lines competed with one another through various means, each trying to carve a
space for himself. Continuous tension and frequent warfare among the Timurid
princes contributed to political destabilisation in the region during Shāhrukh’s
reign and afterwards.23 The Turkmen polities, the Aqquyunlus and the Qaraqu-
yunlus, added to this regional political destabilization by competing for control
over the same territories which the Timurid princes were fighting for.24
This rapid turnover of rulers in the region, Timurid and Turkmen, seems to
have been a catalyst in scholars’ movement. Scholars who had cast their lot with
particular princes or rulers as high-profile supporters, were forced to flee upon
the defeat of their patron to another political contender. Moreover, the constant
military strife undermined security in the cities and the countryside alike. This
probably encouraged some scholars, even if they were not associated with a los-
ing party, to move away in search of a new residence.
In addition, throughout the fifteenth century, the lands put under Timur’s rule
were not religiously stable: several individuals and groups experimented with reli-
gious ideas and, in some cases, associated them with political goals. Examples of
such experiments are the messianic movement of Isḥāq Khuttalānī (d. 827/1424)
and Muḥammad Nūrbakhsh (d. 869/1464) in 1424,25 the assassination attempt of
the Ḥurūfīs against Shāhrukh in 1427,26 and the successful messianic movement of
the Safavids in the last decades of the century.27 The rulers as well as the successful
rebels in different parts of the region recognised the strong political appeal of reli-
gious movements and took action to suppress them. In many of these cases, schol-
ars were among those persecuted and forced to leave their homes.
As scholars from Iran, Azerbaijan, Khurasan, and Transoxiana—collectively
dubbed the “ʿAcem lands” by Ottoman authors28—decided to change their place of
22 Subtelny, Timurids in Transition, 36–38; Halil İnalcık, “Osmanlılarda Saltanat Veraseti Usulü
ve Türk Hakimiyet Telakkisiyle İlgisi,” Ankara Üniversitesi Siyasal Bilgiler Fakültesi Dergisi 14
(1959): 69–94.
23 Manz, Power, Politics, and Religion, 245–75.
24 John E. Woods, The Aqquyunlu: Clan, Confederation, Empire, rev. and expanded ed. (Salt
Lake City: University of Utah Press, 1998), 144–67.
25 Shahzad Bashir, Messianic Hopes and Mystical Visions: The Nūrbakhsīya Between Medieval and
Modern Islam (Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina, 2003), 45–54.
26 Shahzad Bashir, Fazlallah Astarabadi and the Hurufis (Oxford: Oneword, 2005), 101–5. For a
different interpretation of this assassination attempt, see Binbaş, “The Anatomy of a Regi-
cide Attempt,” 1–38.
27 Said Amir Arjomand, “The Rise of Shah Esmā’il as a Mahdist Revolution,” Studies on Persi-
anate Societies 3 (2005): 44–65.
28 Ali Arslan, “Osmanlılar’da Coğrafi Terim Olarak ‘Acem’ Kelimesinin Manası ve Osmanlı-
Türkistan Bağlantısındaki Önemi (XV.–XVII. Yüzyıllar),” Ankara Üniversitesi Osmanlı Tarihi
Araştırma ve Uygulama Merkezi Dergisi 8 (1999): 83–87.
322 ABDURRAHMAN ATÇIL
residence, many chose the lands of Rūm as their destination. In some cases, spe-
cific reasons for their movement are evident. For example, Kutbuddin Acemi (al-
ternatively, Quṭb al-Dīn al-ʿAjamī; d. 903/1497) was the Timurid ruler Abū Saʿīd’s
close associate and personal physician. When the latter was defeated and killed by
the Aqquyunlu Uzun Ḥasan in 873/1469, Acemi left Herat for Mehmed II’s
court.29 Sirac Hatib, who was famous for his eloquent sermons and musical
knowledge, served one of the Qaraquyunlu commanders. When the Qaraquyunlus
were defeated by the Aqquyunlus in 871/1467, he escaped in secrecy for the lands
of Rūm. There he approached Alaeddin Fenari, then the judge of Bursa and Sirac
Hatib’s friend from their student years. With Fenari’s mediation, Sirac Hatib was
appointed as the preacher in Mehmed II’s newly completed mosque in Istanbul.30
Muḥammad ibn Aḥmad, also known as Hafız-ı Acem (d. 958/1551) received his
education in Tabriz, but when the Safavids captured that city, he, together with his
brother Abdülfettah (alternatively, ʿAbd al-Fattāh; d. 924/1518) made for Rūm.
With the help of Kadıasker Müeyyedzade Abdurrahman (d. 922/1516), Hafız-ı
Acem received appointments to several madrasas in Ankara, Merzifon, and Istan-
bul.31 In many other cases, the evidence does not attest the immediate reason
scholars left the Timurid and Turkmen territories for Rūm;32 one can surmise,
however, that the aforementioned political and politico-religious crises were be-
hind a significant number of scholars’ leaving the ʿAcem lands to take up residence
in Rūm.
The Mongols under the leadership of Batu (d. 653/1256), Chinggis Khan’s
grandson, conquered Khwarazm and the Qipchaq territories north of the Black
Sea and established the polity known as the Khanate of the Golden Horde. Be-
ginning in the fourteenth century, the Mongols of this khanate began to convert
in large numbers to Islam.33 It seems that some regions of the khanate, such as
Khwarazm, Saray, and the Crimea, became distinguished as significant centres of
Islamic scholarship.34 But after the destruction of Toktamış Khan (d. 807/1405)
by Timur in the last decade of the fourteenth century, the khanate gradually dis-
integrated. It was succeeded by various small polities which continuously fought
one another. This political instability, like that in the Timurid and Turkmen
lands, sent Golden Horde scholars in search of more politically stable areas. Al-
Shaqāʾiq contains references to the movement of three such scholars to the lands
of Rūm during the fifteenth century. The famous Hanafi jurist educated in Saray,
Ḥāfiẓ al-Dīn al-Kardarī, known as Ibn al-Bazzāzī (Hafizüddin Kerderi Bezzazi; d.
827/1424), reportedly went to Anatolia where he became engaged in debates
with Şemseddin Fenari (d. 834/1431).35 The Crimean scholars, Sharaf al-Dīn
Kamāl (Şerefüddin Kemal) and Sayyid Aḥmad (Seyyid Ahmed), also moved to
the lands of Rūm in a much later period and received the patronage of the Ot-
toman sultans.36 Much further research is need on the Islamic scholarly tradition
of the Khanate of the Golden Horde, a greatly neglected topic. However, it
seems safe to presume that, since we know that such important scholars as Kard-
arī, Şerefüddin Kemal, and Seyyid Ahmed relocated to the lands of Rūm, others
about whom we currently have no knowledge joined or followed them.
The realm of the Mamluk sultanate—namely, Syria, Egypt, and Arabia—evaded
the destructive advance of both the Mongols and Timur. Thus, in the later mid-
dle period, these lands (especially Egypt and Syria) became safe havens and at-
tractive destinations for people—scholars in particular—who had left their country
of residence. So, in contrast to the eastern lands, no exodus of scholars from
Mamluk lands to Rūm took place during the fifteenth century. However, some
individual scholars, who probably had personal problems with the rulers or the
society around them, chose to migrate from Syria and Egypt to the lands of
Rūm. For example, the aforementioned Ibn al-Jazarī went to Bursa in 1396 and
served in Bayezid I’s court after encountering several judicial problems with the
waqf officials in Damascus and the Mamluk commanders in Cairo.37 Similarly,
Shams al-Dīn Aḥmad ibn Ismāʿīl, who became famous as Molla Gürani (d.
893/1488), moved to Ottoman lands in the early 1440s, after he had been pun-
ished in and banished from Cairo by Sultan Malik Ẓāhir Jaqmaq (d. 857/1453).38
34 Ibid., 106–142.
35 Taşköprüzade, al-Shaqāʾiq al-Nuʿmāniyya, 29; Ahmet Özel, “Bezzâzî,” TDVİA, vol. 6, 113-
114.
36 For biographies of Şerefüddin Kemal and Seyyid Ahmed, see Taşköprüzade, al-Shaqāʾiq al-
Nuʿmāniyya, 81–83.
37 Altıkulaç, “İbnü’l-Cezerî.”
38 Ibid., 83–90. See also Richard C. Repp, The Müfti of Istanbul: A Study in the Development of
the Ottoman Learned Hierarchy (London: Ithaca, 1986), 166–74. There are other examples of
scholars who moved from the Mamluk territories to the lands of Rūm in the fifteenth cen-
tury; for example, see the biographies of Alaeddin Ali Arabi and İbrahim Halebi in
Taşköprüzade, al-Shaqāʾiq al-Nuʿmāniyya, 150–55, 499–500.
324 ABDURRAHMAN ATÇIL
The foregoing review indicates that the unstable political conditions that en-
couraged scholars to relocate persisted throughout the fifteenth century. A great
number of scholars from western Iran, Khurasan, Transoxiana, Azerbaijan, and
the Qipchaq lands left (or had to leave) their country. A significant segment of
these chose to relocate to—and found suitable positions for themselves in—the
lands of Rūm.
39 In fact, there were madrasas established in the twelfth century. For some examples, see Aptul-
lah Kuran, “Tokat ve Niksar’da Yağı-basan Medreseleri,” Vakıflar Dergisi 7 (1968): 39-43; Os-
man Turan, “Selçuklu Devri Vakfiyeleri I: Şemseddin Altun-aba Vakfiyesi ve Hayatı,” Belleten
11 (1947): 197–236; Refet Yinanç, “Selçuklu Medreselerinden Amasya Hilafet Gazi Medresesi
ve Vakıfları,” Vakıflar Dergisi 15 (1982): 5–22. See also Gül, Osmanlı Medreselerinde, 14–19.
40 Taşköprüzade, al-Shaqāʾiq al-Nuʿmāniyya, 4–5, 10–11, 19–20.
41 Ibid., 7, 22–29, 48–49, 52–53, 71–73.
42 Ibid., 9, 47, 105–6.
43 One possible exceptional case is İbn Melek (d. after 821/1418), who was the son of the
famous scholar Kadı İzzeddin Ferişte. For information about him, see Mustafa Baktır, “İbn
Melek,” TDVİA. vol. 20, 175-176.
MOBILITY OF SCHOLARS 325
During the fifteenth century, however, madrasas in the lands of Rūm inde-
pendently trained successive generations of high-level scholars capably of pro-
ducing significant scholarship and of training other scholars of equal calibre. To
illustrate this point, I offer the following examples.
M o l l a Ye g a n (d. ca. 865/1461) received his early education in Aydın and
completed his advanced education in Bursa under Şemseddin Fenari. He taught
in some of the madrasas in Bursa. He also served as the judge of Bursa and the
chief jurist (şeyhülislam). It is not known whether he produced any scholarly
work, but it was reported that he proved his high competence in Islamic juris-
prudence when he was challenged by other prestigious scholars of his time.44 He
supervised the advanced education of Hızır Beg (d. 863/1459), Ayasoluk Çelebisi
Mehmed, Hayreddin Halil (d. 879/1474), Efdalzade Hamidüddin (d. 908/1503),
Hacıhasanzade (d. 911/1505), and others.45
H ı z ı r B e g initially studied under his father, Celaleddin, in Sivrihisar and then
received advanced education under Molla Yegan in Bursa. He first taught in
Sivrihisar and later became the professor of the Sultaniye Madrasa in the same
city. Eventually, he became the first judge of Istanbul under Ottoman rule. He
proved his ability in debates with a scholar from the Arab lands and with Molla
Gürani. He wrote the famous Arabic theological summation in verse, al-Qaṣīda
al-Nūniyya, in addition to other scholarly works.46 Among the scholars whose
advanced work Hızır Bey supervised in Bursa are Hocazade Mustafa (d.
893/1487), Hayali Ahmed (d. 875/1470 [?]), and Molla Kestelli (d. 901/1495).47
H o c a z a d e M u s t a f a received his early education in Ağras from Ayasoluk
Çelebisi Mehmed and completed his studies under Hızır Beg. He taught in the
Sultaniye Madrasa in Bursa, in one of the Sahn Madrasas in Istanbul, and in a
madrasa in İznik. He also served as the kadıasker and the judge of İznik. Proof of
his incisive mind and vast knowledge can be seen in his success in debates with
other scholars before Mehmed II and in his reputable scholarly works in Arabic,
such as Tahāfut al-Falāsifa, Ḥāshiya ʿalā Sharḥ al-Mawāqif, and Ḥāshiya ʿalā Hidāyat
al-Ḥikma.48 He trained the famous scholars Molla Sireceddin, Molla Kirmasti
(d. 900/1494), Mustafa Yarhisari (d. 911/1505), and Tacizade Cafer Çelebi (d. 921/
1515), as well as others.49
All these men – professors and students, with the exception of Şemseddin
Fenari- – were educated entirely in the lands of Rūm. Four generations of schol-
ars (the students of Molla Yegan, Hızır Beg, Hocazade, as well as those of Hoca-
zade’s students) did not need leave Rūm in order to receive the high-level educa-
tion that would enable them to produce elite scholarship and train others who
could do the same. This shows that during the fifteenth century, the scholarly
system in Rūm had acquired the ability to train new members, and its complete
reliance for advanced scholarship on the contributions of incoming scholars,
characteristic of the fourteenth century, had ended. What happened in the fif-
teenth century? How did the madrasas Rūm begin to train advanced scholars?
It seems that multiple interconnected factors lay behind the availability of cut-
ting-edge education offered in the madrasas of the lands of Rūm and the conse-
quent reluctance of scholars to go abroad for education. As we have discussed
above, first of all, political conditions appear to have been a critical element. The
extension of Ottoman power brought relative stability and uniformity to the lands
of Rūm and may have encouraged prestigious scholars to move there. The growing
monopolisation of economic power in the hands of the Ottomans made possible
policy undertakings and expensive investments aimed at elevating the standards of
madrasa education in the lands of Rūm. Second, during first half of the fifteenth
century, a critical number of high-level scholars educated outside the lands of
Rūm, such as Şemseddin Fenari, Burhān al-Dīn Harawī, Fatḥallāh Shirwānī, and
Sirāj al-Dīn Ḥalabī, were able to train enough students in the lands of Rūm to
man an indigenous self-sustaining scholarly system which continued to attract and
train new members.50
Finally, the prevalence of madrasas by fifteenth-century in which advanced
studies could be undertaken needs to be stressed. Madrasas, as it is well known,
were not uniform in their curriculum or aims. Each were designed according to
its founder’s preferences and desires and, varied in size and in the particular re-
sources available to it. By extension, the quality and status of the personnel and
the level of education each school provided differed from madrasa to madrasa.
Without attempting to offer a thorough categorisation of madrasas in the period
under study, here I will highlight importance of the madrasas of royal founda-
tion and prestige. Built by members of the ruling dynasties, usually in their capi-
tal cities, madrasas sponsored by members of the ruling family, were particularly
important in the development and continuation of advanced learning in the
lands of Rūm. Reflecting the prestige of the ruling dynasty, these institutions
were generously endowed and usually became the professorial posts of the most-
respected scholars of the time. As such, they became the most likely venues for
high-level research and teaching.
The list of madrasas in Fig. 10.2 is probably not exhaustive but clearly shows the
rapid increase in the number of madrasas of royal-prestige in the fifteenth century.
The table shows that twenty-four madrasas were founded in the fifteenth century,
as opposed to seven in the fourteenth. This proliferation of madrasas of royal-
prestige, well-funded and closely attended by the ruling houses, probably encour-
aged well-respected scholars of the Islamic world to move to and remain in the
lands of Rūm. It also played a role in convincing students in the area with high as-
pirations to stay and pursue advanced studies in their homeland.
To summarise, in sharp contrast to the situation during the preceding century,
in the fifteenth century madrasas in the lands of Rūm developed the capacity to
train scholars at the highest level. The region’s rising political stability, its concen-
tration of high-level scholars, and the establishment of well-funded madrasas of
royal-prestige combined to bring about this change in the educational system’s
ability to sustain itself. As a consequence, it was no longer necessary to relocate to
other cultural centres of the Islamic world in order to pursue an advanced educa-
tion, and a group of home-educated scholars emerged in the lands of Rūm.
Conclusion
During the fifteenth century, scholars from various parts of the Islamic world
moved to the lands of Rūm more or less at the same pace they had during the
fourteenth century. Conditions and opportunities attractive to scholars, such as
political stability and the availability of patronage and employment, persisted and
improved in the lands of Rūm during the fifteenth century. In addition, circum-
stances that could drive scholars out, such as political instability, a rapid turnover
of rulers, and internal political, social, and religious strife, abundantly existed in
other parts of the Islamic world during the same period. As a consequence, many
scholars left their homelands and many of these chose the lands of Rūm.
Meanwhile, during the fifteenth century, scholars who had been educated exclu-
sively in the lands of Rūm began to gain prominence there. Ottoman territorial
expansion and the resulting political stability and power concentration, the con-
vergence of a critical number of high-level scholars, and a growing number of well-
funded royal-prestige madrasas produced an educational system that could sustain
itself by training new professors of the same calibre as the existing ones. Thus,
scholars rarely left Rūm for educational pursuits, as their predecessors had done,
instead completing their studies in their homeland. Very little friction arose be-
tween incoming scholars and Rūm-educated scholars at that time because the op-
portunities for men with scholastic training were continuously expanding, thanks
to the establishment of new madrasas and thanks to the formation and expansion
of the Ottoman state.
Fig. 10.2: Madrasas of royal prestige built in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries in the lands of Rūm
328
Source. The information for this table is drawn from the following sources: Metin Sözen, Anadolu Medreseleri, Selçuklu ve Beylikler Devri, 2 vols.
(Istanbul: İstanbul Teknik Üniversitesi, Mimarlık Tarihi ve Rölöve Kürsüsü, 1970); Cahid Baltacı, XV–XVI. Asırlarda Osmanlı Medreseleri (Istanbul:
İrfan Matbaası, 1976); Bilge, İlk Osmanlı Medreseleri; Gül, Osmanlı Medreselerinde; Çobanoğlu, “İsmail Bey Külliyesi;” Kuran, “Karamanlı Medreseleri.”
329
330 ABDURRAHMAN ATÇIL
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