Nonetheless, the most advanced one is the most familiar to understand and define the many geopolitical structures that have existed since the Tim era. It is not an exaggeration to say that the Ottoman Empire is one of the longest, richest and most successful empires in the world history. The continuing power of 623 years that this empire was able to exercise, beginning in 1299 and establishing the Republic of Turkey in 1922, is incomparable, whether in Europe or the world did.
In modern times, the Ottoman Empire enjoyed the expansion and integration of power, leading to Pax Ottomana. This may be the Golden Age of the Ottoman Empire. The Ottoman Empire spread from the Southwest to North Africa and fought with the emerging Persian Shiva Vid emerging in the eastern part. In the highlands of Ethiopia, the Solomon Dynasty was established in the 13th century. Solominique descended directly from the ancient Axum royal family and ruled the area to modern history. In the 16th century, wrinkles and other Abyssinians were conquered by the power of Ahmed Gray of Adal Sultan in the northwest. The conquest of this region by Oromo ended with the contraction of Adal and Abyssinia, and the dynamics of the area changed after several centuries thereafter
Ottoman business is fluid. Early modern trade and Mercantilism in the Sultan era were very different from highly institutionalized economic practices in the era of globalization. In the absence of an institutional framework considered a necessary condition for international business, companies are achieved through a number of informal cultural institutions, mainly Ottoman families. Merchants and craftsmen work on a larger trade network, entering distant areas across cities. These trade routes are actually social networks. It works through interactions between various business households, creating what is considered a "chain of exchanges" in communications and transactions.