- Azap Infantry
- Azap skirmishers
- Akincilar
Akıncı were irregular light cavalry, scout divisions and advance troops. They were one of the first divisions to face the opposing military and were known for their prowess in battle. Unpaid they lived and operated as raiders on the frontiers of the Ottoman Empire, subsisting totally on plunder.
- Deli
- Janissary
Yaya Infantry
Established by Sultan Orhan during Alaeddin Pasha's reorganization the military in the mid 1320s. Yaya means "pedestrian" in Turkish. An alternative name, Piyade, is derived from a Persian word with the same meaning.
The commander of the Yaya unit was referred to as Yayabashi. Members of this units were both Christian and Muslim citizens of the Ottoman Empire who were sometimes granted land estates in the Balkans in exchange for military service.
before Janissary units were established and expanded in 1363 and afterwards, yaya peasant infantry had important military function. By giving regular salary to yaya Ottomans acquired a standing army.
da Tsardoms:
Timarli Sipahi
The word is derived from Persian sepâhi, meaning "soldier".
The term refers to all freeborn Ottoman Turkish mounted troops other than akıncı and tribal horsemen in the Ottoman army. The word was used almost synonymously with cavalry. The sipahis formed two distinct types of cavalry: feudal-like, provincial timarlı sipahi (timariots) which consisted most of the Ottoman army, and salaried, regular kapıkulu sipahi (sipahi of the Porte), which constituted the cavalry part of the Ottoman household troops.
The Ottoman people had rights to the land but the sipahi, a unique kind of military aristocracy and cavalry portion of the military, also lived on the land with the farmers (90% of the population) and collected tax revenues, usually in-kind, to subsidize the costs of training and equipping the small army, dedicated to serving the sultan. The sipahi did not inherit anything, preventing power centres from growing and threatening the supreme power structure. The sipahi were traditionally recruited among Turkic landowners, and thus, the non-Turkic provinces such as Arabia and Maghreb did not have sipahi.
Timariot armour dating to 1480
[IMG]http://i49.tinypic.com/35jlatj.jpg[/IMG]
modelli di warband in OSP :)
Kapıkulu Sipahi
Kapikulu Sipahis (Sipahis of the Porte) were household cavalry troops of the Ottoman Palace. They were the cavalry equivalent of the Janissary household infantry force.
Servants of the Porte (Kapikullari) were legally servants of the Ottoman throne. They weren't literally slaves, though their legal status was different from other Ottoman people. The Sultan had the power to directly command execution of his servants without any court verdict. Theoretically, the Sultan didn't have this kind of power over other people, even simple peasants. If a freeman was promoted to one of Kapikulu Sipahi divisions, he considered automatically switched to kul (servant) status.
In the classical period Ottoman battle formation, Kapikulu Sipahis were positioned back of the army as rearguards. They acted as reserve cavalry and bodyguards of Ottoman sultan and vezirs. Their job included to join and reinforce Ottoman army's flanks which otherwise consisted entirely provincial timariot sipahis.
modelli di warband :)
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www.warfare.altervista.org/WRG/Middle_Ages_2-5-6-Janissaries...
www.warfare.altervista.org/Ottoman/byEuropeans/Ottoman_Janissary-By_Gentile_Bel...
www.warfare.altervista.org/Ottoman/Janissary.htm
www.warfare.altervista.org/Ottoman/Ottoman.htm
[Modificato da Mylae 13/09/2016 12:09]
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È pericoloso porre in modo sbagliato questioni sostanzialmente giuste.
Indro Montanelli