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Chapter 26: Birth of Turkey

Pages 616-623. Chapter 26: Birth of Turkey. Reason for Crisis: Succession of weak rulers Inept Sultans opened way for power struggles Janissary, rival ministers, religious experts, elite factions Provincial officials collude with the ayan (land owning class) to take revenue and taxes

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Chapter 26: Birth of Turkey

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  1. Pages 616-623 Chapter 26: Birth of Turkey

  2. Reason for Crisis: • Succession of weak rulers • Inept Sultans opened way for power struggles • Janissary, rival ministers, religious experts, elite factions • Provincial officials collude with the ayan (land owning class) to take revenue and taxes • Deterioration of the artisan workers • Competition from Europe (manufactured goods) • Urban riots led by artisan guilds and young men’s associations • Minority merchants (Jews and Christians) become more dependant on dealings with Europe • Wide spread possessions • Out dated weaponry • Austrian Habsburg dynasty benefits, removes Ottoman threat to Vienna • Ottomans pushed out of Hungary and Balkans • Russia moves toward the Black Sea, take the Caucasus and Crimea regions • Threaten Istanbul • Christians in the Balkans begin to resist Ottoman rule • 1804: Rebellion in Serbia (1867 gains independence) • 1820’s: Rebellion in Greece (Independent by 1830) • Ottomans driven from Balkans by 1870s Ottoman Crisis

  3. Source: The cover of the book by Elli Skopetea [ES92] and the comments about the calendar on page 99 (footnote No. 13). The title of the book is a clever pun of the double meaning of the words East and West in Greek. The closest rendering is the "Sunset of the East". Additional annotations from [BL02a, p. 270]. Nothing describes the Ottoman dissonance better than the pages of an Ottoman calendar, one of them shown on the right. The calendar contains six languages: Turkish, Greek, French, Bulgarian, Armenian, and Ladino (Spanish in Hebrew characters).

  4. The reforms help the Ottomans fight off foreign aggressors, but causes threats within • Western educated bureaucrats, military officers, professionals view the sultanate as barrier to more major reforms • New elites clash with Ulama and Ayan who want to preserve the old order • Abdul Hamid (1878-1908) • Attempts to return to despotic absolutism during his rule to get rid of western threat. • Nullified Constitution, restricts civil liberties (freedom of press) • Dissidents or trouble makers could be imprisoned, tortured, killed • Continues some westernization • European arms and techniques, railroads (Berlin to Baghdad), telegraph lines, educational institutions, judicial reforms • Rule ends in 1908 with coup Repression and Revolt

  5. The futility and cruelty of Ottoman actions is illustrated by what came to be called the "Bulgarian atrocity". The Bulgarians had rebelled in April 1876 but the rebellion was crushed ruthlessly with over 15,000 civilians killed. The cruel suppression created a big outcry in Europe with a lot of negative publicity for the "terrible Turks" The Bulgarian Atrocity (1876)

  6. Ottoman Society for Union and Progress • Founded by exiled Turkish intellectuals and political agitators in Paris in 1889 • Members known as Young Turks • Profess loyalty to the Ottoman Regime, want to restore the 1876 Constitution, want to resume far reaching reforms in the empire • Print tracts in secret denouncing the regime and give steps for further modernization to save the empire • Plan assassinations and coups but fail until 1908 coup is successful because of sympathy within the military, and few of the sultan’s supporters were willing to die defending the regime • Small group comes to power • Keep sultan as figure head, restore constitution, freedom of the press • Get caught up in factional fights • Powers is shaken with war in the Balkans, conflict with Italy over Libya • Their rule leads up to WWI • Problems: • Wouldn’t give up land controlled by Ottomans for 600 years Ottoman Society for Union and Progress

  7. What is Germany up to? Berlin-Baghdad Railway

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