Devshirme is a Contested Practice

Abstract

The interpretation of devshirme by modern historians has compromised the historiography of this Ottoman institution because of the imposition of modern values on medieval people. Devshirme is a Turkish term translated the ‘levy of boys’ describing a draft of Christian boys who were enslaved for service to the sultan in his palace and to field his “new corps”, the janissaries. For centuries, government agents would come to Christian villages, and with the help of the priest and church birth records, they would select the best and brightest of the teenage boys. Some of the boys taken did rise through the ranks to become the rulers of Ottoman society replacing the Turkish elite. Christian shepherd boys became head eunuchs, vezirs, and military generals. The problem comes when modern scholars look at the incredible access to social mobility and political power provided to these minority boys and conclude that the draft was received passively, if not positively, by the Christian community. An examination of the Greek Christian sources, however, shows that Christian leaders had disagreements with devshirme. Desperate to save their sons, some resorted to violence, subterfuge, marriage of young children, fleeing to become refugees, and bribery. Christian resistance to devshirme existed across the Ottoman Empire for centuries. Examining Christian sources provides a much more accurate analysis of devshirme from the viewpoint of medieval Christians than having historians base their conclusions on modern secular values.
Published
2012-06-21
How to Cite
. Devshirme is a Contested Practice. Utah Historical Review, [S.l.], v. 2, p. 165, june 2012. ISSN 2374-1570. Available at: <https://epubs.utah.edu/index.php/historia/article/view/629>. Date accessed: 08 nov. 2024.

Keywords

Ottoman Historiography, Devshirme, Slavery, Greeks,