From Anatolian frontiers to Vienna's gates, the Ottoman Empire spanned six centuries through military innovation, millet tolerance, and imperial bureaucracy. This book traces its arc from Osman's beylik through Mehmed II's conquest of Constantinople to Suleiman's golden age and gradual contraction. Drawing from court chronicles, Venetian dispatches, and recent excavations at Topkapi and Edirne, Ottoman Power: 600 Years of Islamic Empire reveals administrative genius that governed diverse faiths and frontiers. It examines how janissary corps, devshirme recruitment, and maritime dominance sustained Mediterranean supremacy before nationalism eroded the multiethnic order.