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Sultan Muhammad al-Fatih - The big eagle is dead

"The big eagle is dead ..."
 (The big dead is dead.)
Sultan Muhammad al-Fatih - The big eagle is dead

 Message from the Venezuelan Doge Giovanni Moseniogic from Constantinople on May 3, 1481. The doge, who presented gifts to the messenger, called out to the world the ringleader of the church. The news is spreading like wildfire in European durbar. That message changed hands for the emperors and the pope in Istanbul

 "Huge dead ..."

  Whenever news arrives in each country, they are celebrating. Pallbearers are ringing. The informant Pope called on them to engage in cheerful activities.

 What's this big? What made Europe so happy with this death? Why are they so afraid of the giant? The opening of a series of questions opens a major milestone in the history of the Middle Ages. The history of their failures, which were so deliberately concealed, was sufficient to undermine the very existence of Europe and the sense of pride they had historically produced.

  The sultan's name was called "Sultan Muhammad al-Fatih".

 Sultan Muhammad al-Fatih was the seventh sultan of the Osmanian Empire, which Europeans call the Ottomans, founded at the end of the 13th century.
 Constantine, who conquered the Sultan in 1452, can understand the importance of Europe's history, because the Europeans feared a Turkish, or later they began to fear the Turks. Asked what the capital of medieval Europe was, Constantinople was as influential as ever.

 We are the medieval part of the campaign strategy of the ruling revolutionaries that they are willing to put hidden tatas'samayatentum caritranirmitikk parrannat.ninnal to learn how to relate the history Winner of the Fatihah, we are studying the syllabus of the Victorian sense of apakarsata of Europe, they have a dark period of Muhammad tearravaran Rttanitt hidden. The heroes we lost as part of it were the emperors including Fatih Muhammad. There is no suggestion that the medieval emperors were too rich to be overly white. Yet they can be seen as holding on to more democratic values ​​than many of today's populists. The example of the sultan who conquered Constantinople was the noble and honorable treatment of the Byzantines.

 Mohammed was born on March 30, 1432 in the town of Edirne, the Ottoman capital, of the sixth Ottoman son of Sultan Murad II and Huma Hatu. At a very young age, at the age of five, Muhammad was governor of the province of Amazia and regent of Sultan Murad at the age of 12. That is why he came to be known as Sultan Muhammad Fatih.

 He was, however, a ruler who respected the existence of any country and culture that was contrary to the colonial system. Examples include the Orthodox Church's sanction in Constantinople after the conquest of the Byzantine Empire; The declaration of the sultan, who visited the ancient city of Troy after the conquest of Constantinople, made clear to him his imagination:

 "I have asked the Greeks for you" (The story is that the Greeks defeated Troy in the Trojan War)

 Sultan was the beginning of Constantinople. After that, the whole of Europe, including Serbia, Moria, Trebissend, Wallachia, Bosnia and Albania, began to lay siege to one another.

 The Sultan's army also defeated Vlad III.

 The Sultan was an avid traveler and demonstrated his ability in administrative matters. It was during the Sultanate that the Ottoman province, which was a sultanate, developed into an empire and established a centralized government based on the Millet system. The Sultan's administrative achievements are the beginning of the new construction of the city of Istanbul and the planning and implementation of new irrigation projects. The Bosnian Orthodox Christians' declaration that the Sultan of Turkey is more than we believe in the emperor of Hungary is a clear indication of the tolerant ruler of the Sultanate. The Sultan was honored by the Renaissance European scholars and artists at Durbar in Istanbul. The portrait of the sultan was painted by the famous Italian painter of the time, Gentile Bellini.

 In any case, Europe was displeased with the fighting and domination of an Asian and a Turkish man. This is clear from the West's approach to the news of the death of the Sultan who died at Anatolia on May 3, 1481. Yes, those words sounded cheerfully in the medieval hearts of the streets of the West

 Muhammed Ismail Ibrahim
 "Huge death has died ...."

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