In this context,
Rûm means “Romans” and
ėli means “land”, hence
Rumelia (,
Rūm-ėli; Turkish:
Rumeli) literally “Land of the Romans” in
Ottoman Turkish. The term referred to territories of the
Ottoman Empire in Europe that had formerly belonged to the
Byzantine Empire (the empire known to its own rulers and subjects as the
Roman Empire), whose citizens styled themselves
Rhomaioi (“Romans”). Although Greek became the predominant administrative and liturgical language, the empire was multiethnic and its Roman identity was civic and imperial rather than purely linguistic or ethnic. In medieval Islamic and Ottoman usage,
Rûm denoted the lands and peoples of the Roman Empire centred on
Constantinople, not the medieval Latin West. The
Seljuks called
Anatolia “the land of
Rûm” after its gradual conquest from Byzantium following the
Battle of Manzikert (1071). Their Anatolian polity was known to contemporaries as the
Sultanate of Rum, meaning a sultanate established in the lands of the Romans; it was centred in central Anatolia until the defeat at the
Battle of Köse Dağ (1243), after which it fragmented into the
Anatolian beyliks. With the
Ottoman expansion across Anatolia and into the Balkans, and especially after the
fall of Constantinople in 1453,
Rumeli came to apply primarily to the empire’s European provinces in the Balkans. The region remained largely Christian for centuries, while processes of Islamisation affected some populations, including
Albanians,
Bosniaks and certain communities among
Greeks,
Serbs,
Bulgarians and
Vlachs. The term “Roman” for the Byzantine polity also appears in Western sources. Latin documents, including those from
Genoa, frequently used
Romania as a name for the Byzantine Empire during the
Middle Ages. The name survives in several Balkan languages: ; ,
Rumeliya; ,
Romylía, and ,
Roúmeli; ,
Rumelija; , ; and . Many
grand viziers,
viziers,
pashas and
beylerbeyis were of Rumelian origin. ==Geography==