Respuesta :
Answer:
He did not strictly enforce laws governing commerce and wages.
Explanation:
Süleyman I was Sultan of the Ottoman Empire between 1520 and 1566. Known as Suleiman the Magnificent, he was the son of Sultan Selim I Yavuz and Ayşe Hafsa Sultan, a Crimean princess.
He personally led the Ottoman army in the conquest of Belgrade, Rhodes and most of Hungary, as well as in the siege of Vienna and the annexed territories of North Africa, such as Algeria and Tunisia, and most of the Middle East. During his rule, the Ottomans had a brief preponderance in the Mediterranean and Red Seas, as well as in the Persian Gulf. The empire continued to expand for almost a century after his death. At the end of his reign, he had about 40 million inhabitants
He protected and sought the development of science and the arts, and welcomed many philosophers. He was mentioned as one of the most notable Muslim poets. In the Western world it is known by the appellation "Magnificent" and in the Islamic world as the "Encoder" or the "Legislator", due to the profound reform it introduced into the Ottoman legal system.