The Anatolian Turkish Beylik of Candaroglu has,…
1402 CE
The Anatolian Turkish Beylik of Candaroglu has, since its founding in 1290, ruled principally in the regions corresponding to the present-day Kastamonu and Sinop provinces of Turkey, also covering parts of Zonguldak, Samsun and Çankırı provinces, in the Black Sea region of modern day Turkey.
The region is also known in western Literature as Paphlagonia, a name used for the same geographic area during the Roman period.
Fearing conflict with the powerful Ottomans, Isfendiyar of Candaroglu had requested immunity from Sultan Beyazid in return for being subject to Ottoman reign.
Beyazid had granted Isfendiyar an autonomy, but in 1400, the Central Asian warlord Timur Lenk (or Tamerlane) had succeeded in rousing the local Turkic beyliks that had been vassals of the Ottomans to join him in his attack on Bayezid.
Following the sultan's defeat by the Mongols in 1402, Isfendiyar recognizes the authority of Timur, who confirms him in the traditional lands of Kastamonu, Kalecik, Tosya, and Çankırı.