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  1. Osman I, Osman Ghazi hay Othman I El Gazi (1258-1326) tiếng Thổ Nhĩ Kỳ: Osman Gazi hay Osman Bey, I. Osman hoặc Osman Sayed II) là thủ lĩnh người Thổ Ottoman, và là vị vua sáng lập ra nhà Ottoman. Đế quốc Ottoman, được đặt theo tên ông, là một cường quốc trên thế giới trong suốt sáu ...

  2. Establishment: Osman: Created by Mehmet Bozdag. With Burak Özçivit, Özge Törer, Yigit Ucan, Cagri Sensoy. The series will focus on the life of Osman Bey, the son of Ertugrul Gazi and the founder of the Ottoman Empire.

  3. Osman and Orhan. Orhan, the second ruler of the Ottoman dynasty (reigned 1324–60). Following the final Mongol defeat of the Seljuqs in 1293, Osman emerged as prince ( bey) of the border principality that took over Byzantine Bithynia in northwestern Anatolia around Bursa, commanding the ghazis against the Byzantines in that area.

  4. Apr 8, 2020 · Osmán I, también conocido como Osmán Gazi (en torno a 1258 - en torno a 1323), fue el fundador y primer sultán del Beilicato otomano, el cuál con el paso del tiempo llegaría a convertirse en el Imperio otomano. Osmán fue el gobernante de uno de los muchos y pequeños principados turcos de la región de Bitinia, en la península de Anatolia.

  5. Osman I. nebo Osman Gazi (osmanskou turečtinou: عثمان غازى; * okolo roku 1258–1324/6), často archaicky nazýván Ottoman, byl vůdce osmanských Turků a zakladatel Osmanské dynastie. Dynastie po něm nesla jméno a později, když ovládl velkou část kmenů a území, byla po něm pojmenovaná i Osmanská říše (tehdy známá ...

  6. Osman I or Osman Ghazi was the first caliph and founder of the Ottoman Empire. who spent his whole life building the Ottoman Empire to fulfill the wish of his father Ertugrul Ghazi. In 656 AH, about 1258 AD, under the command of Halagu Khan, Mongolians attacked Baghdad, the capital of Abbasid’s Caliphate. Muslims faced too many hardships.

  7. Ottoman Empire. The Ottoman Empire, [j] historically and colloquially known as the Turkish Empire, [22] [23] was an imperial realm [k] that spanned much of Southeast Europe, West Asia, and North Africa from the 14th to early 20th centuries; it also controlled parts of southeastern Central Europe between the early 16th and early 18th centuries.

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