-
reforms of the 19th century.
Sanjaks were
typically headed by a bey or sanjakbey. The
Tanzimat reforms initially placed some
sanjaks under kaymakams and others...
-
Sanjak-bey, sanjaq-bey or -beg (Ottoman Turkish: سنجاق بك, lit. 'lord of the standard') was the
title given in the
Ottoman Empire to a bey (a high-ranking...
- Diyarbekir:
sanjaks of Diyarbakır, Mamuret-ul-Aziz, Mardin, Siirt, Malatya.
Vilayet of Adana:
sanjaks of Adana, Kozan, İçel, Paias.
Vilayet of Syria:
sanjaks of...
- first,
subdivided into the sovereign's
sanjak and
other sanjaks entrusted to the
Ottoman sultan's sons.
Sanjaks were
governed by sanjakbeys,
military governors...
-
Sanjak of
Prizren (Turkish:
Prizren Sancağı, Albanian:
Sanxhaku i Prizrenit, Serbian: Призренски санџак /
Prizrenski sandžak) was one of the
sanjaks in...
-
Retrieved 22
September 2011.
large districts and
sanjaks in Rumeli:
Jannina Naupaktos Egripoz (Euboea)
Sanjak of
Jannina ... The
biographical Dictionary of...
-
administrative reforms, in 1864, the
sanjak of Acre was
annexed to the
newly created Syria Vilayet. In 1888, the
sanjaks of Acre, Latakia, Tripoli, Beirut...
-
Mutasarrifate of
Karak (Turkish:
Kerek Mutasarrıflığı), also
known as the
Sanjak of Karak, was an
Ottoman district with
special administrative status established...
- The
Sanjak of
Alexandretta (Arabic: لواء الإسكندرونة, romanized: Liwa' Al-Iskandarūna; Turkish: İskenderun Sancağı; French:
Sandjak d'Alexandrette) was...
- 1600 into
Kanije Eyalet. The
Sanjak of Požega was one of six
Ottoman sanjaks with most
developed shipbuilding (besides
sanjaks of Smederevo, Nicopolis, Vidin...