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Turkey: Paintings from an illustrated manuscript depicting the military campaign in Hungary of Ottoman Sultan Mehmed III in 1596. The double miniatures depict the reception of Mehmet III in Davudpasha

Turkey: Paintings from an illustrated manuscript depicting the military campaign in Hungary of Ottoman Sultan Mehmed III in 1596. The double miniatures depict the reception of Mehmet III in Davudpasha

Mehmed III Adli (May 26, 1566 – December 21/22, 1603) was sultan of the Ottoman Empire from 1595-1603. He remains notorious for having nineteen of his brothers and half brothers murdered to secure power. He also killed over twenty of his sisters. They were all strangled by deaf-mutes. Mehmed III was an idle ruler, leaving government to his mother Safiye Sultan, the valide sultan. The major event of his reign was the Austro-Ottoman War in Hungary (1593–1606). Ottoman defeats in the war caused Mehmed III to take personal command of the army, the first sultan to do so since Suleyman I. Mehmed III's armies conquered Eger in 1596 and defeated the Habsburg and Transylvanian forces at the Battle of Keresztes (Turkish for Battle of Hacova).

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