Devshirmeh (Turkish devşirme, Greek, παιδομάζεμα, paedomazema, "collection of children"; Romanian: tribut de sânge; Serbian danak u krvi or Bulgarian кръвен данък, kraven danak, "blood tax") was the system of collection of young boys from conquered Christian lands by the Ottoman sultans as a form or regular taxation in order to build a loyal slave army (formerly largely composed of war captives) and class of (military) administrators: the Janissaries, or other servants such as tellak in hamams. The word devşirme means "collecting, gathering" in Ottoman Turkish. Boys delivered to Ottomans in this way were called ghilmán or acemi oglanlar ("novice boys").
The descendants of these slaves would form the Mamluk dynasties. Despite the intentions of the Abbasid rulers, the Mamluks would eventually grow in power, reducing the Caliph to a virtual puppet.
The devshirmeh was an outgrowth of this system, but it also proved to be more efficient and effective at achieving its goals. Under the Ottomans, the system was first instituted by Murad I who needed a large pool of manpower from which the Sultan could build armies to fight in seemingly never-ending wars on many fronts and put down insurrections.
Under the Ottomans, newly conquered lands were "taxed" of their youth, with each province ordered to present a certain number of peasant sons aged 12 to 16 to the Sultan. Initially, these boys came from Christian families. The boys would not be forced to convert to Islam (however, since the vast majority of them were very young and permanently cut off from their original families, they did in the end convert), but their children would be Muslims, and thus their children would not be allowed to enter the devshirmeh. This was intended to keep the system from generating a hereditary class, such as the Mamluks.
Boys were collected every year, from Christian lands, first mainly in the Balkans (mainly Greeks, Croats, Bulgarians, Serbians and Albanians), in the 17th century more from Ukraine and southern Russia. They were initially billetted with Turkish farming families to learn the language and toughen up physically before being transferred to the capital or another specialised garrison for training. Training of these acemi ocaci involved physical preparation in the arts of war, as well as the study of culture, such as calligraphy, theology, literature, law and languages. Despite the rigors of training, while students, the recruits were not allowed to leave. Of the Janissary corps' 196 orta (companies), no less then 14 in Rumelia (Europe) and 17 in Anadolu (Asia) were specifically devoted to their training; after the abolition of devshirme, only four such cadet companies remained.
Upon reaching adulthood, the brightest were set aside for a career within the palace itself where the very ablest could aspire to attaining the very highest office of state, that of Grand Vizier, the Sultan's immensely powerful chief minister and military deputy. The rest were assigned to the various units of the Janissaries and other elite palace troops.
The devshirmeh declined in the 16th and 17th century due to a number of factors, including the inclusion of free Muslims in the system. Since 1568 they 'boy harvest' was only occasionally made and in 1648 it was officially abolished; attempts to reintroduce it failed due to the resistance of the new Turkish members of the Janissary corps in 1703, who wanted the coveted posts exclusively for their own families. Although the devshirmeh made boys into the Sultans' state slaves, most considered it an honor as it conversely lead to a highly privileged position in Ottoman society, and allowed many to leave lives of poverty and assist their families. The families of those taken held varying views. Some people in Christian countries reviled it as forced servitude and loss of ancestral identity, fearing that some boys were fated to become sexual servants to Turkish high officials (see pederasty in the Islamic world), and did their best to hide their eligible sons, and colloquially this practice was often called "the blood tax" in many Balkan languages, but the eagerness of the later Janissaries to send their sons instead of reintroducing devshirmeh shows how attractive the career was, and many families welcomed the advantages selection would bring. Tellingly there are accounts of Muslim families attempting to smuggle their offspring into the levy, which was strictly forbidden. The system also had specific limits on who and how many could be taken. The seizure of sons whose absence would cause hardship and difficulties was not permitted.
Another aspect is that recruiting Christians for the military and administration counterbalanced the grip of the old Turkish noblity, which was largely chanelled to education, law, Muslim religion and the provincial cavalry, in the spirit of division of tasks and rights of the millet system which benefitted the cohesion of the multi-ethnic and multi-cultural empire.
Knabenlese | デヴシルメ | Devşirme | Devschirme
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"Devshirmeh".
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