Osman I

Osman I
Ghazi
An Ottoman miniature depicting Osman I, c.1580
Sultan of the Ottoman Empire
Reignc.1299 – 1323/4
SuccessorOrhan
Uch Bey of the Sultanate of Rum
Reignc.1280c.1299
PredecessorErtuğrul
BornUnknown,
possibly c. 1254/5
Died1323/4 (age 68–70)
Bursa, Ottoman Beylik
Burial
Tomb of Osman Gazi, Osmangazi, Bursa Province, Turkey
SpouseRabia Bala Hatun
Malhun Hatun
Issue
Among others
Orhan Ghazi
Alaeddin Ali Pasha
Names
عثمان بن ارطغرل
Osman bin Ertuğrul
DynastyOttoman dynasty
FatherErtuğrul
MotherUnknown
ReligionSunni Islam

Osman I or Osman Ghazi (Ottoman Turkish: عثمان غازى, romanized: ʿOsmān Ġāzī; Turkish: I. Osman or Osman Gazi; died 1323/4) was the eponymous founder of the Ottoman Empire (first known as a beylik or emirate). While initially a small Turkoman principality during Osman's lifetime, his beylik transformed into a vast empire in the centuries after his death. It existed until 1922 shortly after the end of World War I, when the sultanate was abolished.

Owing to the scarcity of historical sources dating from his lifetime, very little factual information about Osman has survived. Not a single written source survives from Osman's reign, and the Ottomans did not record the history of his life until the fifteenth century, more than a hundred years after his death. Because of this, historians find it very challenging to differentiate between fact and myth in the many stories told about him. One historian has even gone so far as to declare it impossible, describing the period of Osman's life as a "black hole".

According to later Ottoman tradition, Osman's ancestors were descendants of the Kayı tribe of Oghuz Turks. However, many scholars of the early Ottomans regard it as a later fabrication meant to reinforce dynastic legitimacy.

The Ottoman principality was one of many Anatolian beyliks that emerged in the second half of the thirteenth century. Situated in the region of Bithynia in the north of Asia Minor, Osman's principality found itself particularly well placed to launch attacks on the vulnerable Byzantine Empire, which his descendants would eventually go on to conquer.