janissary$513009$ - translation to greek
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janissary$513009$ - translation to greek

OTTOMAN EMPIRE MILITARY BAND
Janissary Music; Mehter; Ceddin deden; Mehteran; Ceddin Deden; Janissary Military Band; Mehterhâne
  • ''Davul'' and davul player
  • The Ottoman military band performing with the massed bands of the [[Military Band Service of the Armed Forces of Azerbaijan]] during a parade in honor of the 100th anniversary of [[Battle of Baku]].
  • ''Mehterhâne'', miniature from 1720
  • 246x246px
  • ''Mehterhâne'', Ottoman miniature circa 1568. The musicians play two [[zurna]], two spiral trumpets (''boru''), a cylinder drum ''[[davul]]'' and a pair of kettle drums (''nakkare''). In 1529, the “Turkish field clamor” reached Vienna for the first time.
  • A modern ''mehter'' troop
  • Mehteran band playing at [[International Defence Industry Exhibition]] in Kielce as a part of Turkish national exposition
  • An Ottoman ''mehterân''
  • Western European style Ottoman military band

janissary      
n. γενιτσάρος

Definition

janissary
['d?an?s(?)ri]
(also janizary -z(?)ri)
¦ noun (plural janissaries) historical a Turkish infantryman in the Sultan's guard.
Origin
C16: from Fr. janissaire, based on Turk. yeniceri, from yeni 'new' + ceri 'troops'.

Wikipedia

Ottoman military band

Ottoman military bands are the oldest recorded military marching bands in the world. Though they are often known by the word Mehter (Ottoman Turkish: مهتر, plural: مهتران mehterân; from "senior" in Persian) in West Europe, that word, properly speaking, refers only to a single musician in the band. In Ottoman, the band was generally known as mehterân (مهتران seniors), though those bands used in the retinue of a vizier or prince were generally known as mehterhane (Persian: مهترخانه, meaning "house of seniors"), the band as a whole is often termed mehter bölüğü ("mehter company [troop]"), mehter takımı ("mehter platoon"). In West Europe, the band's music is also often called Janissary music because the janissaries formed the core of the bands.