Şahkulu was killed in 1511, and the pro-Safavid movement was "halted temporarily". The Ottomans beheaded and then burned Sahkulu's body. But the anxiety of the Ottomans, in relation to "losing much of their Asian possessions was not eased". Nor did the hatred of the Ottomans for Ismail I cease to exist, even though Ismail apologized for the atrocities caused by the Turkmens and "disowned" Şahkulu. As the possibility existed of a "mass Turkmen exodus into the Safavid realm",
Bayezid II sought to establish good relations with Ismail, "at least on the surface, and welcomed Ismail's gestures to establish good neighborly relations". In letters sent to Ismail, Bayezid II addressed Ismail as "heir to the kingdom of
Kaykhosrow – the legendary great king of the
Shahnameh – and to Dara (
Darius) of the
ancient Persian Empire".
Abbas Amanat adds: "He further advised Ismail to behave royally, preserve his precious and strategically vital kingdom with justice and equanimity, end forced conversions, and live in peace with his neighbors". After Şahkulu's followers fled to Iran, Ismail I punished the commanders of Şahkulu, who had killed 500 merchants going from
Tabriz to Ottoman territory and pillaged their goods, and divided the followers among his emirs. Bayezid II had faced a revolt from his own son Selim (who succeeded as
Selim I), in the final years of his rule. Unlike his father, Selim, then still a prince, disliked his father's appeasement policies towards the Safavids. When Selim I thus ascended the throne in 1512, things changed drastically. Tensions rose, which eventually led to the
Battle of Chaldiran in 1514. ==In popular culture==