Category
page 1Ottoman Greece

Rumelia
thumb|right|Map of Rumelia in 1801
Treaty of Küçük Kaynarca
1774 peace treaty ending the Russo-Turkish War of 1768–74
Eighth Russo-Turkish War
1806-12 conflict between the Russian and Ottoman Empires

Ali Pasha
Albanian ruler (1740–1822)
Ottoman Greece
period of Ottoman rule of Greece
Morean War
war (1684–1699) between Ottoman Empire and Venice
partition of the Ottoman Empire
division of the Ottoman Empire after World War I
Orlov Revolt
Greek anti-Ottoman uprising in 1770
Rumelia eyalet
1365–1867 Ottoman province in the Balkans
Kemal Reis
Turkish privateer and admiral of the Ottoman Empire

armatole
thumb|Watercolor painting by Carl Haag (1861) conceivably representing an armatole.|alt=
The armatoles (; ; ; ), or armatole in singular, were irregular soldiers, or militia, commissioned by the Ottomans to enforce the sultan's authority within an administrative district called an armatoliki ( in singular, , in plural). In Greek regions of the Ottoman Empire, they were composed of Greeks who were either former klephts or village stalwarts who had taken up arms against the klephts in the defense of their district.
Ioannina vilayet
Ottoman province
Germanos of Patras
Greek bishop (1771-1826)
Rum
exonym of the indigenous pre-Islamic inhabitants of Anatolia
Agia Lavra
historic monastery in Kalavryta Municipality, Achaia, Greece
Principality of Samos
former semi-independent state (1834-1912) in Samos, Greece
Archipelago eyalet
Ottoman province
Adrianople eyalet
Ottoman province
Murat Reis the Elder
Ottoman Navy officer
Rhodes blood libel
1840 event of blood libel against Jews
Kingdom of the Morea
Venetian rule over the Peloponnese (1685-1715)
Pashalik of Yanina
Subdivision of the Ottoman Empire
Ioannis Varvakis
Greek revolutionary, Greek pirate
kocabaşı
thumb|150px|right|Ioannis Logothetis, proestos of Livadeia, by Louis Dupré
The kodjabashis (; singular κοτζάμπασης, kotzabasis; ; from from and ) were local Christian notables in parts of the Ottoman Balkans, most often referring to Ottoman Greece and especially the Peloponnese. They were also known in Greek as proestoi or prokritoi (προεστοί/πρόκριτοι, "primates") or demogerontes (δημογέροντες, "elders of the people"). In some places they were elected (such in the islands for example), but, especially in the Peloponnese, they soon became a hereditary oligarchy, who exercised considerable infl

Gallipoli sanjak
second-level Ottoman province

Karli-ili sanjak
Karli-Eli (, ), also Karli-Ili or Karlo-Ili, was an Ottoman province () in the region of Aetolia-Acarnania in Western Greece from the late 15th century until the Greek War of Independence.
Sanjak of Kavala
Turahanoğlu Ömer Bey
Ottoman military commander and governor
Battle of Andros
1790 between the Greek privateer Lambros Katsonis and the Ottoman Empire
Drama sanjak
former Ottoman province
Sanjak of Dedeağaç
Serres sanjak
administrative division of the Ottoman Empire

Rhodes sanjak
Ottoman province encompassing the Dodecanese
Euboea sanjak
former Ottoman province in Greece
Inebahti sanjak
Sanjak of Ottoman Empire
Sanjak of Görice
Dragoman of the Fleet
senior office in the Ottoman Empire
Vizier Mosque
mosque ruins in Nafpaktos, Greece
Treaty of Constantinople (1800)
The creation of Septinsular Republic : the first autonomous Greek State