janissary

janissary
/jan"euh ser'ee/, n., pl. janissaries.
1. (often cap.) a member of an elite military unit of the Turkish army organized in the 14th century and abolished in 1826 after it revolted against the Sultan.
2. (often cap.) any soldier in the Turkish army.
3. a member of any group of loyal guards, soldiers, or supporters.
Also, janizary /jan"euh zer'ee/.
[1520-30; < F janissaire < It gian(n)izzero < Turk yeniçeri, equiv. to yeni new + çeri soldiery, militia]

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also spelled Janizary Turkish Yeniçeri ("New Troop")

Elite corps of the Ottoman Empire's army from the late 14th to the early 19th century.

Its original soldiers were prisoners of war, but a system soon was developed (the devirme) wherein Christian youths were levied from Balkan vassals, converted to Islam, and
though paid a regular salary
inducted into the ranks of the sultan's slaves. They were, for the most part, infantry troops conscripted to replace the often-unreliable Turkish tribal cavalry (spahi). Strict early rules of behaviour, including celibacy, were later abandoned, and the Janissaries became active in court politics. In 1826 they rebelled rather than accept the reform of the army along European lines. The revolt was violently put down, and most of the Janissaries were killed.

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▪ Turkish military
also spelled  Janizary,  Turkish  Yeniçeri 
 (New Soldier, or Troop), member of an elite corps in the standing army of the Ottoman Empire from the late 14th century to 1826. Highly respected for their military prowess in the 15th and 16th centuries, the Janissaries became a powerful political force within the Ottoman state. The Janissary corps was originally staffed by Christian youths from the Balkan provinces who were converted to Islām on being drafted into the Ottoman service. Subject to strict rules, including celibacy, they were organized into three unequal divisions (cemaat, bölükhalkı, segban) and commanded by an ağā. In the late 16th century the celibacy rule and other restrictions were relaxed, and by the early 18th century the original method of recruitment was abandoned. The Janissaries frequently engineered palace coups in the 17th and 18th centuries, and in the early 19th century they resisted the adoption of European reforms by the army. Their end came in June 1826 in the so-called Auspicious Incident. On learning of the formation of new, westernized troops, the Janissaries revolted. Sultan Mahmud II declared war on the rebels and, on their refusal to surrender, had cannon fire directed on their barracks. Most of the Janissaries were killed, and those who were taken prisoner were executed.

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Universalium. 2010.

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