The Ottoman sultan Selim I (1512-20), known …

Years: 1396 - 1539

The Ottoman sultan Selim I (1512-20), known as Selim the Grim, conquers Egypt in 1517, defeating the Mamluk forces at Ar Raydaniyah, immediately outside Cairo.

The origins of the Ottoman Empire go back to the Turkish- speaking tribes who had crossed the frontier into Arab lands beginning in the tenth century.

These Turkish tribes had established themselves in Baghdad and Anatolia, but they had been destroyed by the Mongols in the thirteenth century.

Petty Turkish dynasties called emirates were formed in Anatolia in the wake of the Mongol invasion.

The leader of one of those dynasties was Osman (1280-1324), the founder of the Ottoman Empire.

His emirate, one of many in the thirteenth century, had by the sixteenth century become an empire, destined to be one of the largest and longest lived in world history.

The Ottomans already had a substantial empire in Eastern Europe by the fourteenth century.

In 1453 they conquer Constantinople, the imperial capital, which becomes the Ottoman capital and is renamed Istanbul.

The Ottomans add the Arab provinces, including Egypt, to their empire between 1512 and 1520.

The victorious Selim I leaves behind in Egypt one of his most trusted collaborators, Hayır Bey, as the ruler of Egypt.

Hayır Bey rules as the sultan's vassal, not as a provincial governor.

He keeps his court in the citadel, the ancient residence of the rulers of Egypt.

Selim I does away with the Mamluk sultanate, but neither he nor his successors succeed in extinguishing Mamluk power and influence in Egypt.

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