Kadi (Ottoman Empire)

A kadi (Ottoman Turkish: قاضی, kadı) was an official in the Ottoman Empire. In Arabic, the term qāḍī (قاضي) typically refers to judges who preside over matters in accordance with sharia Islamic law; under Ottoman rule, however, the kadi also became a crucial part of the imperial administration. After Mehmed II codified his Kanun, kadis relied on this dynastic secular law, local customs, and sharia to guide their rulings.[1] Along with adjudicating over criminal and civil matters, the kadi oversaw the administration of religious endowments and was the legal guardian of orphans and others without a guardian.[2] Although Muslims, in particular Muslim men, possessed a higher status in the kadi's court, non-Muslims and foreigners also had access to the judicial system.[2] Under the Ottomans' initial system of feudal land grants, the timar system, the kadi served as an important check on the power of the local and regional military lords.[3] Despite the unquestioned authority of the sultan, kadis possessed a certain degree of autonomy in their rulings.[4]

Some kadis worked at various positions within the imperial administration but typically a kadi oversaw a jurisdiction called a kadiluk, usually consisting of a city and its surrounding villages. These territories were initially identical with kazas, the subdivisions of the empire's sanjuks, and the kadi oversaw a great deal of administrative work. Over time and particularly after the Tanzimat reforms of the 19th century, the administrative tasks of the kaza were given to a separate kaymakam and the kadi became solely occupied with legal matters.

  1. ^ Kafadar, Cemal (1994). The Ottomans and Europe. EJ Brill. p. 606.
  2. ^ a b van den Boogert, Maurits (2005). Capitulations and the Ottoman legal system: Qadis, Consuls and Beraths in the 18th Century. Brill academic publishers. p. 43.
  3. ^ van den Boogert, Maurits (205). Capitulations and the Ottoman Legal System : Qadis, Consuls and Beraths in the 18th Century. Brill Academic Publishers. p. 604.
  4. ^ Jennings, Ronald (1979). "Limitations of the Judicial Powers of the Kadi in 17th C. Kayseri". Studia Islamica.

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