Reis (Ottoman Turkish: رئيس raʾīs; sometimes spelled rais) was a military rank in the Ottoman Empire, akin to that of a naval captain or (in the Levant) a commodore, that was commonly added to the officer's name as an epithet during the Ottoman Empire.[1][2] Examples include:
The rank Reis Pasha referred to an Admiral,[citation needed] while the Kapudan Pasha (akin to Grand Admiral; literally "Captain Pasha") title referred to the commander-in-chief of the Ottoman Navy fleet.
The title is also a low ranking aristocratic title in Lebanon and Syria's coastlines denoting a landed or formerly landed family that swore fealty to Fakhr al-Din II during their alliance with the Medici in the 17th century. It is roughly equivalent to a Baron, however titles of the Ottoman and subordinate nobility seldom translates to Western peerages. The only extant "Ru'assa" in Lebanon are the "House of El Azzi" in Tabarja whom escaped persecution in the 19th century and abandoned their ancestral homes in the Chouf.
References
edit- ^ Studies in Eighteenth Century Islamic History. Southern Illinois University Press. July 12, 1977. ISBN 9780809308194 – via Google Books.
- ^ McIntosh, Gregory C. (15 March 2012). Piri Reis Map of 1513. ISBN 9780820343594.