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Sultan Abdulhamid II

His Father's Name: Abdulmedjid
His Mother's Name: Tirimujgan Kadin Effendi
Date of Birth: September 21st, 1842
Date of Death: February 10th, 1918
His Sultanate: 1876-1909 (33 years)
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(b. Sept. 21, 1842, Constantinople--d.
Feb. 10, 1918, Constantinople), Ottoman sultan from 1876 to
1909, under whose autocratic rule the reform movement of Tanzimat
(Reorganization) reached its climax and who adopted a policy
of pan-Islamism in opposition to Western intervention in Ottoman
affairs.
Sultan Abdulhamid the Second was tall, olive-skinned
with a jutting forehead, black eyes and a thick black beard.
He was educated by the leading scholars of the day and had
a good memory and judgment. He was a genius at politics but
was also athletic and good at sports. He was brave, pious
and had a vast knowledge of Moslem mysticism.
When he became Sultan, the Ottoman Empire
was about to collapse, but Abdulhamid revived the kingdom
and managed to defer the destruction for another 33 years.
Everybody appreciated his efforts apart from intellectuals
living under the protection of the European countries. By
these people he was ceaselessly slandered. Nevertheless, he
ruled the Empire with great energy. He believed that there
would be a world war and that the only way to save the Ottoman
Empire would be to take part in the war as an ally to one
of the major countries who has great marine power [England].
Tragically, he was deposed by the YOUNG TURKS who allied themselves
to the wrong side the great Ottoman Empire was finally
ruined.
The first thing Abdulhamid did when he became
Sultan was to convene a court to determine whether or not
his uncle Abdulaziz was murdered or committed suicide. The
court clearly decided that it was a case of murder. The Sultan
then amazed everyone by ending capital punishment and making
life imprisonment the major sentence.
He promulgated the first Ottoman constitution
on Dec. 23, 1876, primarily to ward off foreign intervention
of Western powers and Russia. After a disastrous war with
Russia (1877), Abdulhamid was convinced that little help could
be expected from the Western powers without their intrusion
into Ottoman affairs. As a last resort to fend off the Western
intrusion, he dismissed the Parliament, which had met in March
1877, and suspended the constitution in February 1878. Thenceforth
for 40 years he ruled from his seclusion at Yildiz Palace
(in Istanbul), assisted by a system of secret police, an expanded
telegraph network, and severe censorship.
There was an attempt on the life of the
Sultan but the bomb failed to explode and Abdulhamid survived.
Despite what many people, including the poet Tevfik Fikret,
wrote and said about this, it was clearly an attempt by Christian
factions to end the life of the Sultan of the last independent
Islamic Empire in the world.
After the French occupation of Tunisia (1881)
and assumption of power by the British in Egypt (1882), Abdülhamid
turned for support to the Germans. In return, concessions
were made to Germany, culminating in permission (1899) to
build the Baghdad Railway. Eventually, the suppression of
the Armenian revolt (1894) and the turmoil in Crete, which
led to the Greco-Turkish War of 1897, once more resulted in
European intervention.
Abdülhamid used pan-Islamism to solidify
his internal absolutist rule and to rally Muslim opinion outside
the empire, thus creating difficulties for European imperial
powers in their Muslim colonies. The Hejaz Railway, financed
by Muslim contributions from all over the world, was a concrete
expression of his policy.
Internally, the most far-reaching of his
reforms were in education; 18 professional schools were established;
Darülfünun, later known as the University of Istanbul,
was founded (1900); and a network of secondary, primary, and
military schools was extended throughout the empire. Also,
the Ministry of Justice was reorganized, and railway and telegraph
systems were developed. Under his rule new industries were
created (dockyards, fez manufacture, clothes factories, etc.)
and the debt to foreign countries was reduced from 52,000,000
to 30,000,000 gold pieces. Model farms were created as well
as numerous new schools and colleges in areas such as agriculture,
forestry, economy, fine arts, the law, commerce, medicine,
teacher education and so on. Virtually all the schools Abdulhamid
created are still open today. Apart from Primary Schools in
the villages, 300 Middle-High Schools were opened at which
many new subjects, such as foreign languages, were taught.
During this time the Museums of Archaeology and War were opened,
also several libraries. The Hospital for the Poor, the Hydrophobia
Institute and many Alms Houses were also opened. Sultan Abdulhamid
was unjustly depicted by many Historians as cruel and responsible
for the Armenian Massacres.
His resentment against European intervention
in the Balkans and to give Palestine to the English (he told
them Palestine is a trust - amana - from God, and it is not
mine to give away), led to the military revolution of the
Young Turks in 1908. Sultan Abdulhamid was deposed and exiled
to Salonica. When the possibility arose that Salonica might
be invaded he was moved to the Palace of Beylerbeyi in Istanbul.
He died on February 10th, 1918, his corpse being buried next
to his uncle, Sultan Abdulaziz and his grandfather, Mahmoud
the Second. He was 74 years old at the time of his death and
even his greatest adversaries wept at his funeral.
Bismark thought very highly of Sultan Abdulhamid
when he said:" 90% of intelligence is in the head of
Sultan Abdulhamid and 5% in my head, and the remaining five
in all the heads of the politicians."
He was very religious and honest and even
after his dethronement his enemies felt remorse or regret
at their actions. He never signed any Imperial declaration
without accompanying it by ritual ablution and was never very
fond of comfort or an easy life.
When faced by the revolt which ended his
sultanate Abdulhamid abandoned his throne without argument,
even though he had superior forces under his command, saying
"This is the will of Allah." The Jews played an
important part in his dethronement because it was during this
time that they began to campaign for Palestine to become a
Jewish homeland. Abdulhamid was opposed to this.
He had nine sons and seven daughters.
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