The Ottoman Empire: The End Of The Ottoman Empire

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All civilizations come to an end. However, throughout history a few have stood out. Civilizations that withstood the test of time. Revolutionary societies that changed the whole world. Some of these changes are still around today, and that is a testament if nothing else. With all great societies, however will come weaknesses. No civilization has lasted forever. It may take one thousand years, or even longer, but if a society cannot admit its weaknesses and fix them, it will crumble. Such is the story with the Ottoman Empire. Their Empire began in the year 1300 and would last all the way to the first World War. The Ottomans were no exception to the rule though. Their society, for all its might and intellect, could not see their way was also …show more content…

The Industrial Revolution forever changed the Western World. It went from being an agrarian society to a technicality and industriously oriented one. It no longer was dependent on mother nature, and enjoyed much larger harvests year around. They produced new high end goods and technologies. In comparison, the Ottoman Empire by the 19th century had become a mere shell of its former self, three centuries earlier it dictated European policies, and at this point it had become depended on Europeans for its survival (Panzac 206). These events occurred because of the Ottomans inability to industrialize. It along the rest of the world remained an agrarian based society and therefore it was not able to match up to the Western Europeans and the emerging Russian state any longer. While the climate change ushered in longer growing seasons in Western Europe, the middle east became drier. The amount of rainfall decreased and the already arid region’s harvests declined. In addition, Mongol invasions had a tremendous negative impact on farming as the conquering nomadic Mongolian tribes had no knowledge of an agrarian society and urban life. They senselessly destroyed irrigation systems and depopulated many cities with their violent tactics. When these factors were brought together, the population and production receded further as the already more arid region lacked the now much more needed irrigation systems to support a steady harvest. This resulted in a fall in harvest and a subsequent fall slow decline in

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