The demographics of the Ottoman Empire include population density, ethnicity, education level, religious affiliations and other aspects of the population.
Lucy Mary Jane Garnett stated in the 1904 book Turkish Life in Town and Country, published in 1904, that "No country in the world, perhaps, contains a population so heterogeneous as that of Turkey."[1]
^Garnett, Lucy Mary Jane. Turkish Life in Town and Country. G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1904. p. 1.
and 27 Related for: Demographics of the Ottoman Empire information
by using the figures from the 1905–06 census oftheOttomanEmpire and reflecting births and deaths registered in six years from last. The register states...
TheOttoman Armenian population varied throughout history. The number of Armenians within theempire between 1914 and 1915 is a controversial topic. Most...
A confessional community is a group of people with similar religious beliefs. In theOttomanEmpire, this allowed people to be grouped by religious confession...
Thrace, then part oftheOttomanEmpire. After the persecutions during the Preobrazhenie Uprising and the ethnic cleansing, caused to the Bulgarian population...
important positions in theOttomanEmpire: Voivode of Moldavia, Voivode of Wallachia, Grand Dragoman ofthe Porte and Grand Dragoman ofthe Fleet. Despite their...
Ottoman casualties of World War I were the civilian and military casualties sustained by theOttomanEmpire during the First World War. Almost 1.5% of...
constituted the majority ofthe population in the whole region of Macedonia, then part oftheOttomanEmpire. The functioning ofthe Bulgarian Exarchate then...
the late 18th century, theOttomanEmpire faced threats on numerous frontiers from multiple industrialised European powers. In response, theempire initiated...
millet until the Tanzimat reforms in the nineteenth century equalized all Ottoman citizens before the law. Armenians were a minority in theEmpire. They played...
TheOttomanEmpire was founded c. 1299 by Osman I as a small beylik in northwestern Asia Minor just south ofthe Byzantine capital Constantinople. In 1326...
maloazianci) were members ofthe Bulgarian Orthodox Church who settled in Ottoman-ruled northwestern Anatolia (today in Turkey), possibly in the 18th century, and...
theOttomanEmpire. It was established by theOttoman authorities for the Aromanians (also known as "Vlachs"; Turkish: Ulahlar) in 1905, during the rise...
at the end ofthe 18th and the beginning ofthe 19th century on account ofthe incessant wars led by theOttomanEmpire, the low birth rate and the higher...
community within theOttomanEmpire from the mid-19th to early 20th century. The semi-official term Bulgarian Millet, was used by the Sultan for the first time...
Greece ofthe Hellenes (1914) Ottoman Wonder Tales (1915) Balkan Home Life (1917) Bey Effendi Pasha Robert College DemographicsoftheOttomanEmpire Education...
descendants of Asian settlers who came across the narrows ofthe Dardanelles and the Bosporus following theOttoman conquest ofthe Balkans in the late 14th...
conscripted into theOttoman army and scattered throughout theempire. The Druze campaign of 1910 became a starting point to cancel a "policy of exceptions"...