The new territory of the Ottoman Empire was essentially just the country of Turkey. The Ottoman Empire fell after the end of World War I.
They wanted control of the Ottoman Territories.
Greece
The Safavids, Persians and Iranians
No, Afghanistan was not part of the Ottoman Empire. The Ottomans primarily controlled territories in Southeast Europe, Western Asia, and North Africa. Afghanistan was historically influenced by various empires, including the Persian Empire and the British Empire, but it remained largely independent and was never integrated into the Ottoman territories.
in the early 1300s, a Turk named Osman 1 started the Ottoman dynasty in northern Anatolia.
They wanted control of the Ottoman Territories.
Greece
The Safavids, Persians and Iranians
No, Afghanistan was not part of the Ottoman Empire. The Ottomans primarily controlled territories in Southeast Europe, Western Asia, and North Africa. Afghanistan was historically influenced by various empires, including the Persian Empire and the British Empire, but it remained largely independent and was never integrated into the Ottoman territories.
in the early 1300s, a Turk named Osman 1 started the Ottoman dynasty in northern Anatolia.
Most of them were all surrendered to Greece.
Yes and No. The Crusaders saw Gothic architecture in territories that would eventually become Ottoman, but the Ottoman Empire did not exist during most of the Crusades and when it did, it was small and out of the way.
Its use of gunpowder weapons allowed it to easily destroy city walls and fortifications.
The Ottoman Empire was not "renamed". The Ottoman Empire became Turkey after Mustafa Kemal led the Ottoman military to overthrow the government and declare a new country in 1923.
The League of Nations called for the breakup of the territories of the Ottoman Empire mainly in the Middle East. This region saw the emergence of new nation-states following World War I, as territories were redefined and mandates were established. The dissolution of the Ottoman Empire significantly altered the political landscape in the Middle East, leading to the creation of countries like Iraq, Syria, and Lebanon.
The Byzantine Empire fell when the capital city of Constantinople, now Istanbul, was captured by the Turks in 1453. The Turks took Constantinople as their new capital, and the territories of the Byzantine Empire then became part of the Ottoman Empire.
The Ottoman Empire