Answer 1
It is logic as the Ottoman Empire was covering Muslims; followers of Islam religion; who worship Allah (or God in English and same God worshiped in Christianity and Judaism).
Answer 2
The Ottoman Empire, like most states that existed in the Medieval Period, had an official state religion whose clergy made up part of the government apparatus. In the Ottoman Empire, the official religion was Sunni Islam on account of the fact that the Ottoman Turks were Sunni Muslims and a large percentage of those under their rule were Sunni Muslims. With Islam as a state religion, the Caliph became an important figure in creating law and policy. Additionally, conversion to Islam made a subject of the Ottoman Empire from Anatolia into an ethnic Turk, regardless of what his genetics may have been before. This effectively made him a more prominent person in society.
No religion "inspired" the Ottoman Empire. The Ottoman Empire had Sunni Islam as its State Religion, but it was not a view or tenet of Islam to create an Ottoman Empire.
Islam
Nothin Islam is still around
The Caliph of the Ottoman Empire represented the religious leadership of the Sunni Muslims and granted legitimacy to the Ottoman Empire as the vanguard of Islam.
The Ottoman Empire.
Islam only became an important religion in the Balkans in the 16th century when the Ottoman Empire conquered all of the Balkans.
The Ottoman Empire was officially a SUNNI ISLAMIC STATE, and the place where the Caliph, the head of the Sunni Islamic World, resided. Shiite Islam suffered repression, sometimes quite severe, under Ottoman rule.
Turkey was the center of the Ottoman Empire, and its values were based in Islam.
Certain political and economic benefits were reserved for Muslim in the ottoman empire
Islam. Peace.
SUNNI ISLAM expanded with the Ottoman Empire since the country was ruled by Sunni Muslims.
Through conquest of the Ottoman empire