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Koca Davud Pasha

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Koca Davud Pasha
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{{Short description|Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire from 1482 to 1497}}{{Other people|Davud Pasha}}{{family name hatnote|Davud|Pasha||lang=Ottoman Turkish}}







factoids
1446| birth_place = Albania149820df=yes}}| death_place = Didymoteicho, Ottoman EmpireOttoman Empire>Ottoman| blank1 = EthnicityAlbanian people>Albanian| party = | spouse = Fülane Sultan| relations = | children = Sultanzade Mehmed Bey| residence = | alma_mater = | occupation = | profession = | religion = | signature = | website = | footnotes = }}Koca Davud Pasha (; 1446–1498) was an Ottoman Albanian general and grand vizier of the Ottoman Empire from 1482 to 1497 during the reign of Bayezid II. He became a damat ("bridegroom") to the Ottoman dynasty by marrying an Ottoman princess, a daughter of Bayezid II whose name is unknown. They had a son, Sultanzade Mehmed Bey, who married his cousin Fatma Sultan, daughter of Şehzade Ahmed.

Early life

Davud Pasha was probably a converted Muslim and formerly Christian Albanian, who during his childhood lived in Istanbul and was conscripted in the system in the ranks of the Ottoman army ( in which he was sent by his own family to make career), where he was converted to Islam.BOOK, Shaw, Stanford J., History of the Ottoman Empire and modern Turkey,weblink 6 October 2010, 1976-10-29, Cambridge University Press, 978-0-521-29163-7, 72,

Military campaigns

In 1473 as Beylerbey of the Anatolian Eyalet he was one of the commanders of the Ottoman army in the decisive victory against Ak Koyunlu in the Battle of Otlukbeli.BOOK, Har-El, Shai, Struggle for domination in the Middle East: the Ottoman-Mamluk War, 1485-91,weblink 6 October 2010, 1995, BRILL, 978-90-04-10180-7, 149, In 1478 he was given control of the troops marching against Shkodër, Albania by Sultan Mehmed II, who marched against Krujë. Davud Pasha managed to capture the city, which was the last stronghold of the League of Lezhë, thus ending the Ottoman-Albanian Wars.BOOK, Babinger, Franz, Manheim, Ralph, Hickman, William C., Mehmed the Conqueror and His Time,weblink 6 October 2010, 1992, Princeton University Press, 978-0-691-01078-6, 362, In 1479 he became governor (sanjakbey) of the sanjak of Bosnia and as the commander of large force of akıncı cavalry carried out extensive attacks and raids against the Kingdom of Hungary.{{Setton-A History of the Crusades|volume=6|page=329}}As grand vizier, he led the Ottoman army in the 1487 campaign of the Ottoman-Mamluk War. Initially Davud Pasha planned an all-out offensive expedition against the Mamluks, but his plan was cancelled by Bayezid II, who assigned him to attack the Turgutlu and Varsak tribes. When Davud Pasha reached the Turgut and Varsak territories, the Varsak leaders, including the chief of the tribe, submitted to him and swore allegiance to the Ottoman Empire.He died in Didymoteicho on October 20, 1498, leaving behind a large estate, with which several public works were constructed.

Public works

Davud Pasha's public works are mainly found in the Forum Arcadii area of modern Istanbul. In that area he built a mosque with 108 shops around it, a madrasa, a school, a hospice, a soup kitchen for the poor population and a public fountain dating to 1485.BOOK, Behar, Cem, A neighborhood in Ottoman Istanbul: fruit vendors and civil servants in the Kasap İlyas Mahalle,weblink 7 October 2010, 2003, SUNY Press, 978-0-7914-5682-8, 32, The whole neighborhood was consequently named after him as the Davutpaşa neighborhood, part of the Fatih district in modern times. In the Yenikapı neighborhood he built a palace, a landing stage, eleven shops and public baths. His other public works include a bedestan in Bitola and shops in Skopje and Bursa.BOOK, Singh, Nagendra Kr, International encyclopaedia of Islamic dynasties,weblink 6 October 2010, 2002-09-01, Anmol Publications PVT. LTD., 978-81-261-0403-1, 366, Davud Pasha's baths in modern Skopje are the largest baths in the Balkans; in modern times they are used as an art gallery.BOOK, Evans, Thammy, Macedonia,weblink 6 October 2010, 2010-01-01, Bradt Travel Guides, 978-1-84162-297-2, 117,

See also

References

{{Reflist}}{{Grand Viziers of Ottoman Empire}}{{Authority control}}

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