Yamaks (Turkish: yamaklar) were auxiliary troops of the army of the Ottoman Empire raised from the local Muslim population. Initially they were non-military members of Ottoman forces who in later periods of the empire evolved into newly recruited janissary troops and eventually became ill-trained and ill-paid garrison guards.
The Turkish word yamak means "assistant" or "friend". This word is also used to denote a paid assistant of the craftsman. The Bosniak surname Jamaković is derived from the Ottoman term for "janissary recruit".
Initially, Yamaks were civilians who were mobilized for different tasks during wars or as volunteers who wanted to be recruited as janissaries. The Ottoman Empire had the practice to assign janissary forces to garrisons in borderland fortresses. Local craftsmen who associated with the janissaries were referred to as yamaks because they assisted janissaries. Eventually they became poorly paid and trained Muslim garrison guards, in particular at the garrisons at Bosphorus, Black Sea and Danube. That is why in some sources they are referred to as janissary border guards. In 1768, during mobilisation of troops for struggle against Russia, 1,000 yamaks were recruited in Sarajevo and dispatched against Montenegro, a Russian ally.
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To the white lie
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An I for an I
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To the motherland smile
Apocalypse and rapture signing in
An Eye for an Eye
If youre not with us you're against
An Eye for an Eye
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To the black fire
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An Eye for an Eye
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Humility an touch is in decline
An Eye for an Eye
If you're not with us you're against.
An Eye for an Eye.
If you're not with us you're against.
Eye for an Eye.
Eye for an Eye.
We owe it to the TV,
To disaster,
To the motherland smile,
To the willing souls,
To the willing souls,