Furious,
The capture of Constantinople by Mehmed II, sultan of the Ottoman Turks, gave the Muslim world almost exclusive control of the fabulous wealth that flowed down the trade routes from India and China. The Middle East reached the height of its civilization during the time of Suleiman the Magnificent, sultan of Turkey. His reign marked the culmination of hundreds of years of progress in all areas of academic endeavour, architecture, and medicine.
His death marked the start of a slow decline not only of Ottoman power but that of the entire Middle East. The Renaissance was in full bloom in Europe and nations such as France, Spain, and Poland were growing stronger. The Turks suffered defeat at the Battle of Lepanto, which turned the Mediterranean into a European lake. By the 1600s the Ottoman empire had lost control of the highly profitably silk and spice trades between Europe and Asia. European naval powers opened new sea routes to Asia that bypassed the Turks and the Middle East entirely, destroying their trade monopoly. This decline in trade wealth laid waste the economies of the Ottoman and Safavid Empires. The breakup of the Turkish Empire in 1923, after the end of World War I, marked the end of the last great Muslim Empire. During this period of long decline, Muslim civilizations lacked the capital necessary to industrialize and take advantage of newly developing technologies.
Regards, Shuckins