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Social structure of the Ottoman Empire : ウィキペディア英語版 | Social structure of the Ottoman Empire
There is considerable controversy regarding social status in the Ottoman Empire. Social scientists have developed class models on the socio-economic stratification of Ottoman society which feature more or less congruent theories. We see the Ottoman Empire being described as a bureaucratic state, holding different regions within a single administrative and fiscal system . The Ottoman Empire lasted for over six hundred years (1299–1923) and encompassed what is modern-day Turkey, the Balkans and all of the Arab-speaking nation states. Thus the Ottoman Empire would be home to an extremely diverse population ranging from the Muslim majority to the minority population, specifically Christians and Jews who were referred to as the People of the Book. ==Aristocracy== The Ottoman state was founded by the first Osman and was one of the Turkish principalities generated by the expansion of the Seljuks and of the Turkish immigrants westwards into Anatolia . These immigrants appeared as a new band of conquering people, the Ottoman Turks, who after a quick march through Asia Minor, were ready to project their power onto the European continent . Ultimately the Empire would be ruled by the Sultan and his family.
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