Mahmud I

Ottoman sultan
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Quick Facts
Born:
Aug. 2, 1696, Edirne, Ottoman Empire
Died:
Dec. 13, 1754, Constantinople
Title / Office:
sultan (1730-1754), Ottoman Empire

Mahmud I (born Aug. 2, 1696, Edirne, Ottoman Empire—died Dec. 13, 1754, Constantinople) was an Ottoman sultan who, on succeeding to the throne in 1730, restored order after the Patrona Halil uprising in Constantinople. During his reign, the Ottomans fought a successful war against Austria and Russia, culminating in the Treaty of Belgrade (1739).

Mahmud spent the first months of his rule eliminating the rebels, and in 1731 he suppressed a Janissary uprising. A war with Iran that lasted, with intervals, until 1746 was inconclusive. Mahmud, advised by Comte de Bonneval (Humbaraci Ahmed Paşa, a French convert to Islām), participated in political and military affairs and attempted a partial reform of the army. A patron of music and literature, he wrote poetry in Arabic.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.