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The Ethiopian Eunuchs Who Shaped Ottoman Egypt
Description
We often think of the Ottoman Empire as a Turkish story, but its harem and court were run by African eunuchs — specifically, from Ethiopia. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the Ethiopian slave trade that supplied the Ottoman palace with its most trusted officials: the 'Aghas of the Gate' and the 'Kizlar Agha' (Chief Black Eunuch). They trace the journey from the Lake Tana region and the Horn of Africa to Cairo and Istanbul, where boys were castrated — often fatally — and rose to become kingmakers, mosque builders, and the only people allowed inside the imperial harem. Lucas explains why Ethiopian Christians were preferred over other African sources, how eunuch dynasties formed in Cairo, and how figures like Beshir Agha (d. 1746) amassed enormous political power. The conversation also touches on the economic side: the link between the Ethiopian slave trade and the Red Sea port of Massawa, and the lasting legacy of these men in Ottoman architecture and Sufi patronage. This episode offers a fresh lens on Ethiopian-Ottoman connections that most history podcasts overlook.