Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 December 2009
Commercial relations between India and the Ottoman Empire go back to before the establishment of the Mughal Empire and the Ottoman seizure of the Middle East and its borders with India: the states of Sultan Mehmed II emerged as an outlet for Indian textiles at least from the end of the fifteenth century, according to documents from Bursa that are among the oldest Ottoman economic sources. Not only did the Bahmani sovereign of north Deccan, Shah Mohammed III Lashkari (1463–82), exchange ambassadors with Mehmed the Conqueror, but his vizir, Ḫoğa Maḥmūd Gawan (1405-81), sent representatives to trade with the Turks: two of them, Ḫoğa 'Ali and 'Abd ül-'Azīz, were mentioned in 1476. When the latter arrived at Bursa, the former went off to the Sultan's European possessions, leaving him with 877 pieces of fabric given to him by the vizir to sell. From 1479 we have a second reference: in that year the Bahmani vizir entrusted to four persons ‘all kinds of fabrics and other merchandise’ to sell in the ‘country of Rūm’, the name for the Ottoman territories. These merchants had gone through Arabia: one had died on the way, while another died at Bursa. Finally, from 1481 we have a third reference: to a trade mission sent by the vizir to Bursa. Its members appear as his employees and one of them seems to be the leader, with the title of re'īs.
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