:''For the military of France, see "
Spahi"''
'Sipahi' (
Ottoman Turkish: سپاهی; also
transliterated as ''Spahia or Spahiu in Albanian'', ''Spahi'', ''Sepahi'', and ''Spakh'') was the name of an Ottoman cavalry corps. In the form of "Spahi" it was the title given to several cavalry units serving in the French and Italian colonial armies during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
The name ultimately derives from the
Persian سپاه (''sepâh'', meaning "army") and has the same root as the English term "
sepoy".
Description

A Sipahi, from a 16th-century Western engraving

Ottoman Horse Archer
The Sipahis were an élite mounted force within the
Six Divisions of Cavalry of the
Ottoman Empire. The Sipahis' status resembled that of the
knights of
medieval Europe. The Sipahi was the holder of a
fief of land (تيمار ''tîmâr''; hence the alternative name ''Tîmârlı Sipahi'') granted directly by the Ottoman
sultan, and was entitled to all of the income from that land, in return for military service. The peasants on the land were subsequently attached thereto.
The Sipahis were originally founded during the reign of
Murad I. Although the Sipahis were originally recruited, like the
Janissaries, using the
devshirmeh system
[1], by the time of Sultan
Mehmed II, their ranks were only chosen from among the ethnic Turks who owned land within imperial borders. The Sipahi eventually became the largest of the six divisions of the Ottoman cavalry. The duties of the Sipahis included riding with the sultan on parades and as a mounted bodyguard. In times of peace, they were also responsible for the collection of taxes. The Sipahis, however, should not be confused with the
Timariots, who were
irregular cavalry organised along
feudal lines and known as "sipahi"s colloquially. In fact, the two formations had very little in common.

Sipahis at the Battle of Vienna, 1683
A ''tîmâr'' was the smallest unit of land owned by a Sipahi, providing a yearly revenue of no more than 10,000
akçe, which was between two and four times what a teacher earned. A ''ziamet'' (زعامت) was a larger unit of land, yielding up to 100,000 akçe, and was owned by Sipahis of officer rank. A ''has'' (غاص) was the largest unit of land, giving revenues of more than 100,000 akçe, and was only held by the highest-ranking members of the military. A ''tîmâr'' Sipahi was obliged to provide the army with up to five soldiers, a ''ziamet'' Sipahi with up to twenty, and a ''has'' Sipahi with far more than twenty.
Rivalry with the Janissary Corps
Since they were a cavalry regiment it was well known within the Ottoman military circles that they considered themselves a superior stock of soldiers than
janissaries, who were a mixture of both Turkic and devshirmeh non-Turks, whereas the sipahis were almost exclusively chosen amongst ethnic Turkic landowners. Minor quarrels that erupted within two units is made evident with a Turkmen adage, still used today within Turkey, ''"Atlı er başkaldırmaz"''. Which, referring to the unruly janissaries, translates into, ''"Horsemen don't mutiny"''.
Towards the middle of the 16th century, the Janissaries had started to be the most important part of the army, though the Sipahis remained an important factor in the empire's economy and politics, and a crucial aspect of disciplined leadership within the army. As late as the 17th century, the Sipahis were, together with their rivals the Janissaries, the ''
de facto'' rulers in the early years of sultan
Murad IV's reign. In 1826, the Sipahis played an important part in the
disbandment of the Janissary corps. The Sultan received critical assistance from the loyalist Sipahi cavalry in order to forcefully dismiss the infuriated janissaries.
Two years later, however, they shared a similar fate when Sultan
Mahmud II revoked their privileges and dismissed them in favour of a more modern military structure. Unlike the janissaries before them they retired honorably, peacefully, and without bloodshed into new Ottoman cavalry divisions who followed modern
military tradition doctrines.
References
★ Shaw, Stanford J. ''History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey, Vol. 1.
★ "Empire of the Gazis: The Rise and Decline of the Ottoman Empire 1280–1808''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1976. ISBN 0-521-29163-1.
Notes
1. Shaw 26