Inflation also weakened traditional industries and trades. Functioning under strict price regulations, the guilds were unable to provide quality goods at prices low enough to compete with the cheap European manufactured goods that entered the empire without restriction because of the Capitulations agreements. In consequence, the traditional Ottoman industry fell into rapid decline.

This would be an event which Ottoman has to pick between protective policy or free trade policy.

Many landless and jobless populations remained in the countryside and joined rebel bands, known as levends and Jelalīs (Celâlis)—the latter fomenting what became known as the Jelalī Revolts—which took what they could from those who remained to cultivate and trade. Major revolts later occurred in 1526–28 and 1595–1610.

That could be a rebellion event.

Respuesta :

I believe you're asking the question true or false

Answer:

True, true

Explanation:

The ottoman empire fell as a result of invasion, economic destitution, and growing European power. The ottoman empire found it hard to protect local businesses and industries as a result of the capitulation agreement allowing traders entering the Ottoman Empire to be exempt from local prosecution, local taxation, local conscription, and the searching of their domicile. The capitulation were done to encourage commercial exchange with Western merchants during the dominant military period of the Ottoman empire. However Europe later became the dominant military and gained far reaching economic and political advantage with the Ottoman empire.

The second is a case of revolt and rebellion such as major uprisings involving the sekbans and sipahis but were not attempts to usurp the Ottoman government. They were rather radical reactions to a social and economic crisis stemming from a number of factors: a depreciation of the currency, heavy taxation, a decline in the devşirme system (levy of Christian boys), admission of Muslims into the army, and an increase in the number and dominance of the Janissaries (elite troops) both in Istanbul and in the provinces.