During Bayezid II (1481–1512) During the sultan
Bayezid II the relationship between the state and heterodox groups further worsened. Already by the assassination of the
Safavid spiritual leader
Shaykh Haydar in 1488, in a letter the
Ottoman Sultan Bayezid II had expressed that
the news has multiplied my joy and about Haydar's supporters, the
Qizilbāshes, he said: ''may God curse Haydar's heretical followers.
Only four years later, in 1492, there was an attempt of murdering the sultan by a dervish'' and a document from 1501 also reveals that Bayezid II had ordered the execution of all Qizilbāshes who were captured from traveling to
Iran. The rest of his reign was also marked by numerous Qizilbāsh rebellions, which Bayezid II tried to overcome by deporting thousands of Qizilbāsh from Anatolia to some of the new conquered coastal areas of
Greece: Morea, Modon, Coron and Lepanto. The official reason for the deportations was that Qizilbāshes according to religious scholars were "infidels". The oldest preserved religious statement (
fatwa) on the Qizilbāshes was also issued under Bayezid II by the then Ottoman
Mufti Hamza Saru Görez (d. 1512).
During Selim I (1512–1520) Bayezid II's son,
Selim I, however did not think his father had taken sufficiently hard measures against the Qizilbāshes. As governor of
Trabzon, he had been closely acquainted with the
Safavids and the Qizilbāsh success in
Iran and eastern Anatolia. Against his father's desire he had also repeatedly mobilized military forces and made attacks on Safavid land. It is also known that Selim I had a great hatred towards
Shia Muslims in general, especially the heterodox Qizilbāsh. Therefore, liquidated three of his brothers and forced deposed his father to abdicate to himself to seize power. He then sent his father Bayezid II off on a supposed vacation after which he too was killed. Upon ascending to the throne, Selim I got the Ottoman
Shaykh ul-Islam ibni Kemal (d. 1533) to issue a new
fatwa against the Qizilbāshes to finally legitimize their killing. He then gathered a great army consisting of 200,000 men to lead a gratuitous war against the Safavids. On his march to face Ismā'il at Chāldirān, Selim had many Alevis massacred, seeing them as enemies of the Ottoman Empire. In an Ottoman source, the , this event is described as such:
After Selim I After Selim I's reign, subsequent sultans continued harsh treatment towards Qizilbāshes in
Anatolia. Qizilbāshes responded to the oppression by revolting against the Ottoman rule. These frequent rebellions continued periodically up to the early 17th century. The extremely violent period from 16th to the 17th century, however, was eventually relatively subdued, but the oppression of Qizilbāshes continued to a lesser extent.
Typical persecution methods From the early 16th century the Ottoman administration specialized in chasing Qizilbāshes. This century was perhaps the harshest century for the
Alevis (Qizilbāshes). They were persecuted for both sympathizing with the Safavid struggle, but also because of their beliefs, which were considered heretical. In order to capture Qizilbāshes, the Ottoman state used several methods. Being Qizilbāsh was a crime on its own and Qizilbāshes were kept under constant surveillance. Some of the most frequently used surveillance and persecution methods in the Ottoman Empire were: • Persecution based on others' reports/notifications. • Open or secret persecution. • By asking people who were regarded as more credible or objective, for example officials or
Sunnis.
Typical punishment methods The Ottomans also had different methods of punishment used on Qizilbāshes. Most of the punishments took place by fabricating a reason to kill them. These false accusations were often led into the formal procedures to make them seem more realistic. In cases where the accused Qizilbāshes had many sympathizers or relatives, the Ottoman regime tried to avoid riots by not killing too many at a time. Some of the most common punishments were: •
Expulsion: Many
Qizilbāshs were expelled to
Cyprus and cut off from their villages and families, but the Qizilbāshes who were were executed immediately. The most typical displacement locations were Cyprus, Modon, Coroni, Budun(?) and
Plovdiv. •
Imprisonment: Some were also jailed and then usually expelled to Cyprus to cut them off from their families. •
Forced labor: Another method of punishment was to send
Qizilbāshs for forced labor on galleys () where they should work as oarsmen. •
Drowning: Some Qizilbāshes were executed by being drowned in the Halys River (), others were executed on the spot. Other times
Qizilbāshes were executed with the sole purpose of deterring other Qizilbāshes and teaching them a lesson. == Religious rulings (fatwa) ==