Pasha YiÃÂit Bey or Saruhanli Pasha YiÃÂit Bey (, also Pasaythus or Basaitus; died 1413) was an Ottoman Turkish civil and military officer at the end of the 14th and beginning of the 15th century.
He was born in Manisa and was of Yörük origin. YiÃÂit was the tutor of Ishak Bey, the second ruler of Sanjak of ÃÂsküp, and the father of Turahan Bey an Ottoman general, conqueror of Thessaly and warden of its marches. The Ottoman Sultan granted large land estates to Pasha YiÃÂit Bey and to Ishak Bey for their merits.
He died in Skopje, and was buried in the yard of the notable Meddah Mosque. The mosque and türbe were destroyed during World War II.
Pasha YiÃÂit Bey was one of the Ottoman commanders in the Battle of Kosovo in 1389. In 1390, the Ottoman Turks populated parts of Macedonia (in modern-day northern Greece) with nomadic Yürüks from Saruhan. Since Pasha YiÃÂit Bey was also of Yürük nomadic tribal origin (from Saruhan) he also settled in the same borderland () and was appointed as a leader of his fellow tribesmen. In 1392, Pasha YiÃÂit Bey led the army that captured Skopje (), thus he was named the conqueror of Skopje by the Ottoman Sultan Bayezid I.
Pasha YiÃÂit Bey became the first lord () of the Skopsko Krajià ¡te, the borderland province of the Ottoman Empire, and served for 21 years, from 1392 to 1413. In spring of 1390, after the Battle of Kosovo, YiÃÂit was sent by Sultan Bayazid to invade Bosnia which he did, undertaking two campaigns. Pasha YiÃÂit Bey managed to capture ÃÂuraàII Balà ¡iàin a battle and released him after the ransom was paid.
After Franz Babinger in the Encyclopedia of Islam: