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Abdul Hamid II

Abdulhamid or Abdul Hamid II (Ottoman Turkish: عبد الحميد ثانی, romanizedAbd ul-Hamid-i s̱ānī; Turkish: II. Abdülhamid; 21 September 1842 – 10 February 1918) was the 34th sultan of the Ottoman Empire, from 1876 to 1909, and the last sultan to exert effective control over the fracturing state.[3] He oversaw a period of decline with rebellions (particularly in the Balkans), and presided over an unsuccessful war with the Russian Empire (1877–78), the loss of Egypt and Cyprus from Ottoman control, followed by a successful war against the Kingdom of Greece in 1897, though Ottoman gains were tempered by subsequent Western European intervention.

Abdul Hamid II
Ottoman Caliph
Amir al-Mu'minin
Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques
Portrait of Sultan Abdul Hamid II in 1899
Sultan of the Ottoman Empire (Padishah)
Reign31 August 1876 – 27 April 1909
Sword girding7 September 1876
PredecessorMurad V
SuccessorMehmed V
Grand viziers
Born(1842-09-21)21 September 1842[1][2]
Topkapı Palace, Istanbul, Ottoman Empire
Died10 February 1918(1918-02-10) (aged 75)
Beylerbeyi Palace, Istanbul, Ottoman Empire
Burial1918
Tomb of Sultan Mahmud II, Fatih, Istanbul, Turkey
Consorts
Issue
Among others
Names
Abdul Hamid bin Abdulmejid
DynastyOttoman
FatherAbdulmejid I
MotherBiological mother:
Tirimüjgan Kadın
Adoptive mother:
Rahime Perestu Sultan
ReligionSunni Islam
Tughra

Elevated to power in the wake of Young Ottoman coups, he promulgated the Ottoman Empire's first constitution,[4] a sign of the progressive thinking that marked his early rule. But his enthronement came in the context of the Great Eastern Crisis, which began with the Empire's default on its loans, uprisings by Christian Balkan minorities, and a war with the Russian Empire. At the end of the crisis, Ottoman rule in the Balkans and its international prestige were severely diminished, and the Empire lost its economic sovereignty as its finances came under the control of the Great Powers through the Ottoman Public Debt Administration.

In 1878, Abdul Hamid consolidated his rule by suspending both the constitution and the parliament,[4] [[Yıldız Trial|purging the Young Ottomans]] [tr], and curtailing the power of the Sublime Porte. He ruled as an absolute monarch for three decades. Ideologically an Islamist, the sultan asserted his title of Caliph to Muslims around the world. His paranoia about being overthrown, like his uncle and brother, led to the creation of secret police organizations and a censorship regime. The Ottoman Empire's modernization and centralization continued during his reign, including reform of the bureaucracy, extension of the Rumelia Railway and the Anatolia Railway, and construction of the Baghdad Railway and the Hejaz Railway. Systems for population registration, sedentarization of tribal groups, and control over the press were part of a unique imperialist system in fringe provinces known as borrowed colonialism.[5] The farthest-reaching reforms were in education, with many professional schools established in fields such as law, arts, trades, civil engineering, veterinary medicine, customs, farming, and linguistics, along with the first local modern law school in 1898. A network of primary, secondary, and military schools extended throughout the Empire. German firms played a major role in developing the Empire's railway and telegraph systems.[4]

Ironically, the same education institutions that the Sultan sponsored proved to be his downfall. Large sections of the pro-constitutionalist Ottoman intelligentsia sharply criticized and opposed him for his repressive policies, which coalesced into the Young Turks movement.[6] Under similar conditions, minorities started organizing their own national liberation movements. Armenians especially suffered from massacres and pogroms at the hands of the Hamidiye regiments. Of the many assassination attempts during Abdul Hamid's reign, one of the most famous is the Armenian Revolutionary Federation's Yıldız assassination attempt of 1905.[7] In 1908, the Committee of Union and Progress forced him to recall parliament and reinstate the constitution in the Young Turk Revolution. Abdul Hamid II attempted to reassert his absolutism a year later, resulting in his deposition by pro-constitutionalist forces in the 31 March incident, though the role he played in events is disputed.

Early life edit

 
Prince Abdul Hamid at Balmoral Castle in 1867, accompanying his uncle Sultan Abdulaziz during his visit to Western Europe between 21 June 1867 – 7 August 1867.

Hamid Efendi was born on 21 September 1842 either in Çırağan Palace, Ortaköy, or at Topkapı Palace, both in Istanbul. He was the son of Sultan Abdulmejid I[1] and Tirimüjgan Kadın (Circassia, 20 August 1819 – Constantinople, Feriye Palace, 2 November 1853),[8][9] originally named Virjinia.[10] Following his mother's death, he became the adoptive son of his father's legal wife, Perestu Kadın. Perestu was also the adoptive mother of Abdul Hamid's half-sister Cemile Sultan, whose mother Düzdidil Kadın had died in 1845, leaving her motherless at the age of two. The two were brought up in the same household, where they spent their childhood together.[11]

Unlike many other Ottoman sultans, Abdul Hamid II visited distant countries. In the summer of 1867, nine years before he ascended the throne, he accompanied his uncle Sultan Abdul Aziz on a visit to Paris (30 June – 10 July 1867), London (12–23 July 1867), Vienna (28–30 July 1867), and capitals or cities of a number of other European countries.[12]

Accession to the Ottoman throne edit

Abdul Hamid ascended the throne after his brother Murad was deposed on 31 August 1876.[1][13] At his accession, some commentators were impressed that he rode practically unattended to the Eyüp Sultan Mosque, where he was presented with the Sword of Osman. Most people expected Abdul Hamid II to support liberal movements, but he acceded to the throne at a critical time. Economic and political turmoil, local wars in the Balkans, and the Russo-Turkish War threatened the Empire's very existence.

First Constitutional Era, 1876–1878 edit

Abdul Hamid worked with the Young Ottomans to realize some form of constitutional arrangement.[14] This new form could help bring about a liberal transition with an Islamic provenance. The Young Ottomans believed that the modern parliamentary system was a restatement of the practice of consultation, or shura, that had existed in early Islam.[15]

In December 1876, due to the 1875 insurrection in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the ongoing war with Serbia and Montenegro, and the feeling aroused throughout Europe by the cruelty used in stamping out the 1876 Bulgarian rebellion, Abdul Hamid promulgated a constitution and a parliament.[1] Midhat Pasha headed the commission to establish a new constitution, and the cabinet passed the constitution on 6 December 1876, allowing for a bicameral legislature with senatorial appointments made by the sultan. The first ever election in the Ottoman Empire was held in 1877. Crucially, the constitution gave Abdul Hamid the right to exile anyone he deemed a threat to the state.[16]

The delegates to the Constantinople Conference[17][18] were surprised by the promulgation of a constitution, but European powers at the conference rejected the constitution as a too-radical change; they preferred the 1856 constitution (Islâhat Hatt-ı Hümâyûnu) or the 1839 Gülhane edict (Hatt-ı Şerif), and questioned whether a parliament was necessary to act as an official voice of the people.

In any event, like many other would-be reforms of the Ottoman Empire, it proved nearly impossible. Russia continued to mobilize for war, and early in 1877 the Ottoman Empire went to war with the Russian Empire.

War with Russia edit

 
Ottoman troops under Romanian attack at the Siege of Plevna (1877) in the Russo-Turkish War (1877–78)

Abdul Hamid's biggest fear, near dissolution, was realized with the Russian declaration of war on 24 April 1877. In that conflict, the Ottoman Empire fought without help from European allies. Russian chancellor Prince Gorchakov had by that time effectively purchased Austrian neutrality with the Reichstadt Agreement. The British Empire, though still fearing the Russian threat to the British presence in India, did not involve itself in the conflict because of public opinion against the Ottomans, following reports of Ottoman brutality in putting down the Bulgarian uprising. Russia's victory was quick; the conflict ended in February 1878. The Treaty of San Stefano, signed at the end of the war, imposed harsh terms: the Ottoman Empire gave independence to Romania, Serbia, and Montenegro; it granted autonomy to Bulgaria; instituted reforms in Bosnia and Herzegovina; and ceded parts of Dobrudzha to Romania and parts of Armenia to Russia, which was also paid an enormous indemnity. After the war, Abdul Hamid suspended the constitution in February 1878 and dismissed the parliament, after its only meeting, in March 1877. For the next three decades, Abdul Hamid ruled the Ottoman Empire from Yıldız Palace.[1]

As Russia could dominate the newly independent states, the Treaty of San Stefano greatly increased its influence in Southeastern Europe. At the Great Powers' insistence (especially the United Kingdom's), the treaty was revised at the Congress of Berlin so as to reduce the great advantages Russia gained. In exchange for these favors, Cyprus was ceded to Britain in 1878. There were troubles in Egypt, where a discredited khedive had to be deposed. Abdul Hamid mishandled relations with Urabi Pasha, and as a result, Britain gained de facto control over Egypt and Sudan by sending its troops in 1882 to establish control over the two provinces. Cyprus, Egypt, and Sudan ostensibly remained Ottoman provinces until 1914, when Britain officially annexed them in response to the Ottoman participation in World War I on the side of the Central Powers.[citation needed]

Reign edit

Disintegration edit

 
Şehzade (Prince) Abdul Hamid in 1868.

Abdul Hamid's distrust of the reformist admirals of the Ottoman Navy (whom he suspected of plotting against him and trying to restore the constitution) and his subsequent decision to lock the Ottoman fleet (the world's third-largest fleet during the reign of his predecessor Abdul Aziz) inside the Golden Horn indirectly caused the loss of Ottoman overseas territories and islands in North Africa, the Mediterranean Sea, and the Aegean Sea during and after his reign.[19]

Financial difficulties forced him to consent to foreign control over the Ottoman national debt. In a decree issued in December 1881, a large portion of the empire's revenues were handed over to the Public Debt Administration for the benefit of (mostly foreign) bondholders (see Kararname of 1296).

The 1885 union of Bulgaria with Eastern Rumelia was another blow to the Empire. The creation of an independent and powerful Bulgaria was viewed as a serious threat to the Empire. For many years Abdul Hamid had to deal with Bulgaria in a way that did not antagonize the Russians or the Germans. There were also key problems regarding the Albanian question resulting from the Albanian League of Prizren and with the Greek and Montenegrin frontiers, where the European powers were determined that the Berlin Congress's decisions be carried out.

Crete was granted "extended privileges", but these did not satisfy the population, which sought unification with Greece. In early 1897 a Greek expedition sailed to Crete to overthrow Ottoman rule on the island. This act was followed by the Greco-Turkish War, in which the Ottoman Empire defeated Greece, but as a result of the Treaty of Constantinople, Crete was taken over en depot by the United Kingdom, France, and Russia. Prince George of Greece was appointed ruler and Crete was effectively lost to the Ottoman Empire.[1] The ʿAmmiyya, a revolt in 1889–90 among Druze and other Syrians against excesses of the local sheikhs, similarly led to capitulation to the rebels' demands, as well as concessions to Belgian and French companies to provide a railroad between Beirut and Damascus.

Political decisions and reforms edit

Most people expected Abdul Hamid II to have liberal ideas, and some conservatives were inclined to regard him with suspicion as a dangerous reformer.[20] Despite working with the reformist Young Ottomans while still crown prince and appearing to be a liberal leader, he became increasingly conservative after taking the throne. In a process known as İstibdad, Abdul Hamid reduced his ministers to acting as secretaries and concentrated much of the Empire's administration into his own hands. Default in the public funds, an empty treasury, the 1875 insurrection in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the war with Serbia and Montenegro, the result of Russo-Turkish war, and the feeling aroused throughout Europe by Abdul Hamid's government in stamping out the Bulgarian rebellion all contributed to his apprehension regarding enacting significant changes.[20]

His push for education resulted in the establishment of 18 professional schools; and in 1900, Darülfünûn-u Şahâne, now known as Istanbul University, was established.[1] He also created a large system of primary, secondary, and military schools throughout the empire.[1] 51 secondary schools were constructed in a 12-year period (1882–1894). As the goal of the educational reforms in the Hamidian era were to counter foreign influence, these secondary schools used European teaching techniques while instilling in students a strong sense of Ottoman identity and Islamic morality.[21]

Abdul Hamid also reorganized the Ministry of Justice and developed rail and telegraph systems.[1] The telegraph system was expanded to incorporate the furthest parts of the Empire. Railways connected Constantinople and Vienna by 1883, and shortly afterward the Orient Express connected Paris to Constantinople. During his rule, railways within the Ottoman Empire expanded to connect Ottoman-controlled Europe and Anatolia with Constantinople as well. The increased ability to travel and communicate within the Ottoman Empire served to strengthen Constantinople's influence over the rest of the Empire.[21]

Abdul Hamid took stringent measures regarding his security. The memory of the deposition of Abdul Aziz was on his mind and convinced him that a constitutional government was not a good idea. Because of this, information was tightly controlled and the press rigidly censored. A secret police (Umur-u Hafiye) and a network of informants was present throughout the empire, and many leading figures of the Second Constitutional Era and Ottoman successor states were arrested or exiled. School curricula were closely inspected to prevent dissidence. Ironically, the schools that Abdul Hamid founded and tried to control became "breeding grounds of discontent" as students and teachers alike chafed at the censors' clumsy restrictions.[22]

Armenian question edit

 
20 kuruş during the reign of Abdul Hamid II, dating 1878

Starting around 1890, Armenians began demanding implementation of the reforms promised to them at the Berlin Conference.[23] To prevent such measures, in 1890–91 Abdul Hamid gave semi-official status to the bandits who were already actively mistreating the Armenians in the provinces. Made up of Kurds and other ethnic groups such as Turcomans, and armed by the state, they came to be called the Hamidiye Alayları ("Hamidian Regiments").[24] The Hamidiye and Kurdish brigands were given free rein to attack Armenians – confiscating stores of grain, foodstuffs, and driving off livestock – confident of escaping punishment as they were subject only to court-martial.[25] In the face of such violence, the Armenians established revolutionary organizations: the Social Democrat Hunchakian Party (Hunchak; founded in Switzerland in 1887) and the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (the ARF or Dashnaktsutiun, founded in 1890 in Tiflis).[26] Unrest ensued and clashes occurred in 1892 at Merzifon and in 1893 at Tokat. Abdul Hamid put these revolts down with harsh methods.[27] As a result, 300,000 Armenians were killed in what became known as the Hamidian massacres. News of the massacres was widely reported in Europe and the United States and drew strong responses from foreign governments and humanitarian organizations.[28] Abdul Hamid was called the "Bloody Sultan" or "Red Sultan" in the West. On 21 July 1905, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation attempted to assassinate him with a car bomb during a public appearance, but he was delayed for a minute, and the bomb went off too early, killing 26, wounding 58 (four of whom died during their treatment in hospital), and destroying 17 cars. This continued aggression, along with the handling of the Armenian desire for reform, led western European powers to take a more hands-on approach with the Turks.[1] Abdul Hamid survived an attempted stabbing in 1904 as well.

Foreign policy edit

Pan-Islamism edit

 
An example of what once hung on the Door of Repentance of the Ka'ba in 1897 until 1898. It was made in Egypt under Abdul Hamid II's ruling of the Ottoman Empire. His name is stitched into the fifth line following a verse from the Qur'an.[29]

Abdul Hamid did not believe that the Tanzimat movement could succeed in helping the disparate peoples of the empire achieve a common identity, such as Ottomanism. He adopted a new ideological principle, Pan-Islamism; since, beginning in 1517, Ottoman sultans were also nominally Caliphs, he wanted to promote that fact and emphasized the Ottoman Caliphate. Given the great diversity of ethnicities in the Ottoman Empire, he believed that Islam was the only way to unite his people.

Pan-Islamism encouraged Muslims living under European powers to unite under one polity. This threatened several European countries: Austria through Bosnian Muslims; Russia through Tatars and Kurds; France and Spain through Moroccan Muslims; and Britain through Indian Muslims.[30] Foreigners' privileges in the Ottoman Empire, which were an obstacle to effective government, were curtailed. At the very end of his reign, Abdul Hamid finally provided funds to start construction of the strategically important Constantinople-Baghdad Railway and the Constantinople-Medina Railway, which would ease the trip to Mecca for the Hajj; after he was deposed, the CUP accelerated and completed construction of both railways. Missionaries were sent to distant countries preaching Islam and the Caliph's supremacy.[31] During his rule, Abdul Hamid refused Theodor Herzl's offers to pay down a substantial portion of the Ottoman debt (150 million pounds sterling in gold) in exchange for a charter allowing the Zionists to settle in Palestine. He is famously quoted as telling Herzl's Emissary, "as long as I am alive, I will not have our body divided; only our corpse they can divide."[32]

Pan-Islamism was a considerable success. After the Greco-Ottoman war, many Muslims celebrated the Ottoman victory as their victory. Uprisings, lockouts, and objections to European colonization in newspapers were reported in Muslim regions after the war.[30][33] But Abdul Hamid's appeals to Muslim sentiment were not always very effective, due to widespread disaffection within the Empire. In Mesopotamia and Yemen, disturbance was endemic; nearer home, a semblance of loyalty was maintained in the army and among the Muslim population only by a system of deflation and espionage[citation needed].

America and the Philippines edit

 
Map of the Ottoman Empire during the reign of Abdul Hamid II

In 1898, U.S. Secretary of State John Hay asked United States Minister to the Ottoman Empire Oscar Straus to request that Abdul Hamid, in his capacity as caliph, write a letter to the Sulu Muslims, a Moro subgroup, of the Sulu Sultanate in the Philippines, ordering them not to join the Moro Rebellion and submit to American suzerainty and American military rule. The Sultan obliged the Americans and wrote the letter, which was sent to Mecca, whence two Sulu chiefs brought it to Sulu. It was successful, since the "Sulu Mohammedans ... refused to join the insurrectionists and had placed themselves under the control of our army, thereby recognizing American sovereignty."[34][35][36][37][38][39]

Despite Abdul Hamid's "pan-Islamic" ideology, he had readily acceded to Straus's request for help in telling the Sulu Muslims to not resist America, since he felt no need to cause hostilities between the West and Muslims.[40] Collaboration between the American military and Sulu Sultanate was due to the Ottoman Sultan persuading the Sulu Sultan.[41] John P. Finley wrote:

After due consideration of these facts, the Sultan, as Caliph caused a message to be sent to the Mohammedans of the Philippine Islands forbidding them to enter into any hostilities against the Americans, inasmuch as no interference with their religion would be allowed under American rule. As the Moros have never asked more than that, it is not surprising, that they refused all overtures made, by Aguinaldo's agents, at the time of the Filipino insurrection. President McKinley sent a personal letter of thanks to Mr. Straus for the excellent work he had done, and said, its accomplishment had saved the United States at least twenty thousand troops in the field.[42][43]

President McKinley did not mention the Ottoman role in the pacification of the Sulu Moros in his address to the first session of the Fifty-sixth Congress in December 1899, since the agreement with the Sultan of Sulu was not submitted to the Senate until 18 December.[44] The Bates Treaty, which the Americans signed with the Moro Sulu Sultanate, and which guaranteed the Sultanate's autonomy in its internal affairs and governance, was then violated by the Americans, who then invaded Moroland,[45] causing the Moro Rebellion to break out in 1904, with war raging between the Americans and Moro Muslims and atrocities committed against Moro Muslim women and children, such as the Moro Crater Massacre.

Germany's support edit

 
Abdul Hamid II attempted to correspond with the Chinese Muslim troops in service of the Qing imperial army serving under General Dong Fuxiang; they were also known as the Kansu Braves

The Triple Entente – the United Kingdom, France and Russia – had strained relations with the Ottoman Empire. Abdul Hamid and his close advisors believed the Empire should be treated as an equal player by these great powers. In the Sultan's view, the Ottoman Empire was a European empire that was distinguished by having more Muslims than Christians.

Over time, the hostile diplomatic attitudes of France (the occupation of Tunisia in 1881) and Great Britain (the 1882 establishment of de facto control in Egypt) caused Abdul Hamid to gravitate towards Germany.[1] Abdul Hamid twice hosted Kaiser Wilhelm II in Istanbul, on 21 October 1889 and on 5 October 1898. (Wilhelm II later visited Constantinople a third time, on 15 October 1917, as a guest of Mehmed V.) German officers such as Baron von der Goltz and Bodo-Borries von Ditfurth were employed to oversee the organization of the Ottoman Army.

German government officials were brought in to reorganize the Ottoman government's finances. The German emperor was also rumored to have counseled Abdul Hamid in his controversial decision to appoint his third son as his successor.[46] Germany's friendship was not altruistic; it had to be fostered by railway and loan concessions. In 1899, a significant German wish, the construction of a Berlin-Baghdad railway, was granted.[1]

Kaiser Wilhelm II also requested the Sultan's help when he had trouble with Chinese Muslim troops. During the Boxer Rebellion, the Chinese Muslim Kansu Braves fought the German Army, routing them and the other Eight Nation Alliance forces. The Muslim Kansu Braves and Boxers defeated the Alliance forces led by the German Captain Guido von Usedom at the Battle of Langfang during the Seymour Expedition, in 1900, and besieged the trapped Alliance forces during the Siege of the International Legations. It was only on the second attempt, in the Gasalee Expedition, that the Alliance forces managed to get through to battle the Chinese Muslim troops at the Battle of Peking. Wilhelm was so alarmed by the Chinese Muslim troops that he requested that Abdul Hamid find a way to stop the Muslim troops from fighting. Abdul Hamid agreed to Wilhelm's demands and sent Enver Pasha (no relation to the Young Turk leader) to China in 1901, but the rebellion was over by that time.[47] Because the Ottomans did not want conflict with the European nations and because the Ottoman Empire was ingratiating itself to gain German assistance, an order imploring Chinese Muslims to avoid assisting the Boxers was issued by the Ottoman Khalifa and reprinted in Egyptian and Muslim Indian newspapers.[48]

Opposition edit

Abdul Hamid II made many enemies in the Ottoman Empire. His reign featured several coup d'état plans and many rebellions. The Sultan triumphed in a challenge by Kâmil Pasha of absolute rule in 1895. A large conspiracy by the Committee of Union and Progress was also foiled in 1896. His ascendancy finally ended in a revolution in 1908, and his reign for good ended with the 31 March Incident. These conspiracies were primarily driven by members of inside the Ottoman government, due to dissatisfaction with autocracy. Journalists had to contend with a strict censorship regime, while the intelligentsia chafed under the surveillance of intelligence agencies. It was in this context that a broad opposition movement to the sultan emerged, known as the Young Turks to European observers. Most Young Turks were ambitious military officers, constitutionalists, and bureaucrats of the Sublime Porte.

With state policy fostering an Islamist Ottomanism, Christian minority groups also began to turn against the government, going so far as to advocate for separatism. By the 1890s, Greek, Bulgarian, Serbian, and Aromanian militant groups started fighting Ottoman authorities, and each other, in the Macedonian conflict. Using the İdare-i Örfiyye, a clause in the defunct Ottoman constitution comparable to declaring a state of siege, the government suspended civil rights in the Ottoman Balkans. İdare-i Örfiyye was also soon declared in Eastern Anatolia to more effectively prosecute fedayi. The statute persisted under the Ottoman Empire and the Republic of Turkey until the 1940s.[49]

Educated Muslim women resented the Salafist Hatts that mandated veils be worn outside the home and to be accompanied by men, though these decrees were mostly ignored.[50]

Young Turk Revolution edit

 
Opening of the first Ottoman Parliament (Meclis-i Umumî), at the Dolmabahçe Palace in 1877.
 
Greek lithograph celebrating the Young Turk Revolution in 1908 and the restoration of the 1876 constitution in the Ottoman Empire

The national humiliation of the Macedonian conflict, together with the resentment in the army against the palace spies and informers, at last brought matters to a crisis.[31] The Committee of Union and Progress (CUP), a Young Turks organization that was especially influential in the Rumelian army units, undertook the Young Turk Revolution in the summer of 1908. Upon learning that the troops in Salonica were marching on Istanbul (23 July), Abdul Hamid capitulated. On 24 July an irade announced the restoration of the suspended constitution of 1876; the next day, further irades abolished espionage and censorship, and ordered the release of political prisoners.[31]

On 17 December, Abdul Hamid reopened the General Assembly with a speech from the throne in which he said that the first parliament had been "temporarily dissolved until the education of the people had been brought to a sufficiently high level by the extension of instruction throughout the empire."[31]

Deposition edit

 
Abdul Hamid II's last ride through the streets of Istanbul after the 31 March Incident

Abdul Hamid's new attitude did not save him from the suspicion of intriguing with the state's powerful reactionary elements, a suspicion confirmed by his attitude toward the counter-revolution of 13 April 1909 known as the 31 March Incident, when an insurrection of the soldiers backed by a conservative upheaval in some parts of the military in the capital overthrew Hüseyin Hilmi Pasha's government. With the Young Turks driven out of the capital, Abdul Hamid appointed Ahmet Tevfik Pasha in his place, and once again suspended the constitution and shuttered the parliament. But the Sultan controlled only Constantinople, while the Unionists were still influential in the rest of the army and provinces. The CUP appealed to Mahmud Shevket Pasha to restore the status quo. Shevket Pasha organized an ad hoc formation known as the Action Army, which marched on Constantinople. Şevket Pasha's chief of staff was captain Mustafa Kemal. The Action Army stopped first in Aya Stefanos, and negotiated with the rival government established by deputies who escaped from the capital, which was led by Mehmed Talat. It was secretly decided there that Abdul Hamid must be deposed. When the Action Army entered Istanbul, a fatwa was issued condemning Abdul Hamid, and the parliament voted to dethrone him. On 27 April, Abdul Hamid's half-brother Reshad Efendi was proclaimed as Sultan Mehmed V.[20]

The Sultan's countercoup, which had appealed to conservative Islamists against the Young Turks' liberal reforms, resulted in the massacre of tens of thousands of Christian Armenians in the Adana province, known as the Adana massacre.[51]

After deposition edit

 
The mausoleum (türbe) of Sultans Mahmud II, Abdulaziz, and Abdul Hamid II, located at Divanyolu street, Istanbul

Abdul Hamid was conveyed into captivity at Salonica (now Thessaloniki),[31] mostly at the Villa Allatini in the city's southern outskirts. In 1912, when Salonica fell to Greece, he was returned to captivity in Constantinople. He spent his last days studying, practicing carpentry, and writing his memoirs in custody at Beylerbeyi Palace in the Bosphorus, in the company of his wives and children. He died there on 10 February 1918, a few months before his brother Mehmed V, the reigning sultan. He was buried in Istanbul.

In 1930, his nine widows and thirteen children were granted $50 million from his estate after a lawsuit that lasted five years. His estate was worth $1.5 billion.[52]

Abdul Hamid was the last sultan of the Ottoman Empire to hold absolute power. He presided over 33 years of decline, during which other European countries regarded the empire as the "sick man of Europe".[53]

Personal life edit

 
The tomb of the Libyan Sufi Sheikh Muhammad Zafir al-Madani in Istanbul who initiated the Sultan into the Shadhili Sufi Order

Abdul Hamid II was a skilled carpenter and personally crafted some high-quality furniture, which can be seen at the Yıldız Palace, Şale Köşkü, and Beylerbeyi Palace in Istanbul. He was also interested in opera and personally wrote the first-ever Turkish translations of many classic operas. He also composed several opera pieces for the Mızıka-yı Hümâyun (Ottoman Imperial Band/Orchestra, established by his grandfather Mahmud II who had appointed Donizetti Pasha as its Instructor General in 1828), and hosted the famous performers of Europe at the Opera House of Yıldız Palace, which was restored in the 1990s and featured in the 1999 film Harem Suare (it begins with a scene of Abdul Hamid watching a performance). One of his guests was the French stage actress Sarah Bernhardt, who performed for audiences.[54]

Abdul Hamid was also a good wrestler at Yağlı güreş and a "patron saint" of the wrestlers. He organized wrestling tournaments in the empire, and selected wrestlers were invited to the palace. Abdul Hamid personally tried the sportsmen, and good ones remained in the palace. He was also a skilled drawer, having drawn the sole known portrait of his fourth wife, Bidar Kadın. He was extremely fond of Sherlock Holmes novels,[55] and awarded their author, Arthur Conan Doyle, the Order of the Medjidie, 2nd-Class, in 1907.[56]

Paranoia edit

It was rumored that Abdul Hamid always carried a pistol on his person at all times. In addition to locking the Ottoman Navy in the Golden Horn, he also did not allow the army to train with live ammunition.[57]

Religion edit

Abdul Hamid practiced traditional Islamic Sufism. He was influenced by the Libyan Shadhili Madani Sheikh, Muhammad Zafir al-Madani, whose lessons he attended in disguise in Unkapani before he became sultan. After he ascended the throne, Abdul Hamid asked al-Madani to return to Istanbul. Al-Madani initiated Shadhili gatherings of remembrance (dhikr) in the newly commissioned Yıldız Hamidiye Mosque; on Thursday evenings he accompanied Sufi masters in reciting dhikr.[54] He also became a close religious and political confidant of the sultan. In 1879, the sultan forgave the taxes of all of the Caliphate's Madani Sufi lodges (also known as zawiyas and tekkes). In 1888, he even established a Sufi lodge for the Madani order of Shadhili Sufism in Istanbul, which he commissioned as part of the Ertuğrul Tekke mosque. The relationship of the sultan and the sheik lasted for 30 years, until the latter's death in 1903.[58]

Poetry edit

 
A sample of his handwritten poetry in Persian language and scripts, which was taken from the book My Father Abdul Hameed, written by his daughter Ayşe Sultan

Abdul Hamid wrote poetry, following in the footsteps of many other Ottoman sultans. One of his poems translates thus:

My Lord I know you are the Dear One (Al-Aziz)
... And no one but you are the Dear One
You are the One, and nothing else
My God take my hand in these hard times
My God be my helper in this critical hour

Impressions edit

In the opinion of F. A. K. Yasamee:[59]

He was a striking amalgam of determination and timidity, of insight and fantasy, held together by immense practical caution and an instinct for the fundamentals of power. He was frequently underestimated. Judged on his record, he was a formidable domestic politician and an effective diplomat.[60]

Family edit

Abdul Hamid had numerous consorts, but allowed none of them to have political influence; in the same way he did not allow his adoptive mother, Rahime Perestu Sultan, or other female members of his family to have such influence, though some of them still had some degree of power in private or in the daily life of the harem. The only, partial exception was Cemile Sultan, his half-sister and adoptive sister. He was convinced that his predecessors' reigns, especially those of his uncle Abdülaziz and his father Abdülmecid I, had been ruined by the excessive meddling of the women of the imperial family in affairs of state.

Consorts edit

Abdul Hamid had at least 23 consorts:[61][62][63][64][65][66][67]

  • Nazikeda Kadın (1848 – 11 April 1895). BaşKadin (First Consort). She was an Abkhazian princess, born Mediha Hanim, lady-in-waiting to Cemile Sultan. She died prematurely after years of deep depression, due to the tragic death of her only daughter.
  • Safinaz Nurefsun Kadın (1850–1915). Her real name was Ayşe and she was the younger sister of the last consort of Abdülmecid I, Yıldız Hanım. When Yıldız Hanım married Abdülmecid, Ayşe was sent into the service of Şehzade Abdülaziz, where she was renamed Safinaz. According to Harun Açba, Abdülaziz was fascinated by her beauty and wanted to marry her, but she refused because she was in love with Şehzade Abdul Hamid. The feeling was mutual and the young prince asked for the help of his stepmother Rahime Perestu Kadin. She told Abdülaziz that Safinaz was ill and that she needed a change of air; later, Abdülaziz was informed of her death. Abdul Hamid then secretly married Safinaz, who was renamed Nurefsun, in October 1868. However, she could not get used to life in the harem and wanted to be Abdul Hamid's only consort. She then asked for a divorce, which he was granted to her in 1879. She had no children.
  • Bedrifelek Kadın (1851–1930). Circassian Princess who took refuge in Istanbul when Russia invaded the Caucasus. She ruled Abdul Hamid's harem when Rahime Perestu Sultan died. She left Abdul Hamid when he was deposed, perhaps disappointed that their son had not been chosen as successor. She had two sons and a daughter.
  • Bidar Kadın (5 May 1855 – 13 January 1918). Kabartian princess, she was considered the most beautiful and charming of Abdul Hamid's consorts. She had a son and a daughter.
  • Dilpesend Kadın (16 January 1865 – 17 June 1901). Georgian. She was educated by Tiryal Hanim, the last consort of Mahmud II, who was Abdul Hamid's grandfather. She had two daughters.
  • Mezidemestan Kadın (3 March 1869 – 21 January 1909). She was born Kadriye Kamile Merve Hanim, she was the aunt of Emine Nazikeda Kadın, future consort of Mehmed VI. She was loved by everyone, including his other consorts and her stepchildren. She was the most influential of his consorts, but she never abused her power. She had a son, who was Abdul Hamid's favorite.
  • Emsalinur Kadın (1866–1952). She entered the Palace with her sister Tesrid Hanım, who became a consort of Şehzade Ibrahim Tevfik. She was very beautiful. She did not follow Abdul Hamid into exile and died in poverty. She had a daughter.
  • Destizer Müşfika Kadın (1872 – 18 July 1961). She was Abkhazian, born Ayşe Hanim. She grew up with her sister under the tutelage of Pertevniyal Sultan, the mother of Sultan Abdülaziz, uncle of Abdul Hamid. She followed Abdul Hamid into exile and was with him until his death, so much so that it is said that the sultan died in her arms. She had a daughter.
  • Sazkar Hanım (8 May 1873 – 1945). She was a noble Abkhazian, born Fatma Zekiye Hanım. She was among the consorts who followed Abdul Hamid into exile, and later left Turkey with her one daughter.
  • Peyveste Hanım (1873 – 1943). Abkhazian princess, born Hatice Rabia Hanim and aunt of Leyla Açba. She served Nazikeda Kadın, with her sisters, and then became the treasurer of the harem. She was highly respected. She followed her husband into exile and then her one son.
  • Pesend Hanım (13 February 1876 – 5 November 1924). Born princess Fatma Kadriye Achba, she was one of Abdul Hamid's favorite consorts, and was known for her kindness, charity, and tolerance. She was one of the consorts who stayed with Abdul Hamid until his death; and, on his death, she cut her hair and threw it into the sea as a sign of mourning. She had a daughter.
  • Behice Hanım (10 October 1882 – 22 October 1969). She was Sazkar Hanım's cousin and her real name was Behiye Hanim. She was arrogant and proud, initially she had to marry Şehzade Mehmed Burhaneddin, son of Abdul Hamid, but in the end the sultan decided to marry her himself, against Behice's will. She had two twin sons.
  • Saliha Naciye Kadın (1887–1923). She was born Zeliha Ankuap and was also called Atike Naciye Kadın. Known for her kindness and modesty, she was Abdul Hamid's favorite among the consorts who stayed with him until his death. She had a son and a daughter.
  • Dürdane Hanım (1869 - January 1957).
  • Calibös Hanım (1890 - 1955).
  • Simperver Nazlıyar Hanım.
  • Bergüzar Hanım.
  • Levandit Hanım.
  • Ebru Hanım.
  • Sermelek Hanım.
  • Gevherriz Hanım.
  • Mihrimend Zelide Hanım (? - 1946).
  • Nevcedid Hanım.

Sons edit

Abdul Hamid had at least eight sons:[68][63]

  • Şehzade Mehmed Selim (11 January 1870 – 5 May 1937) – with Bedrifelek Kadın. He did not get along with his father. He had eight consorts, two sons and a daughter.
  • Şehzade Mehmed Abdülkadir (16 January 1878 – 16 March 1944) – with Bidar Kadın. He had seven consorts, five sons and two daughters.
  • Şehzade Ahmed Nuri (12 February 1878 – 7 August 1944) – with Bedrifelek Kadın. He had a consort but no children.
  • Şehzade Mehmed Burhaneddin (19 December 1885 – 15 June 1949) – with Mezidemestan Kadın. He had four consorts and two sons.
  • Şehzade Abdürrahim Hayri (15 August 1894 – 1 January 1952) – with Peyveste Hanım. He had two consorts, a son, and a daughter.
  • Şehzade Ahmed Nureddin (June 22, 1901 – December 1944) – with Behice Hanım. Twin of Şehzade Mehmed Bedreddin. He had a consort and a son.
  • Şehzade Mehmed Bedreddin (22 June 1901 – 13 October 1903) – with Behice Hanım. Twin of Şehzade Ahmed Nureddin. Born in Yıldız Palace. He died of meningitis and was buried in the Yahya Efendi cemetery.
  • Şehzade Mehmed Abid (May 17, 1905 – December 8, 1973) – with Saliha Naciye Kadın. He had two consorts but no children.

Daughters edit

Abdul Hamid had at least 13 daughters:[68][63]

  • Ulviye Sultan (1868 – 5 October 1875) – with Nazikeda Kadın. Born in Dolmabahçe Palace, she tragically died at the age of seven: while her mother played the piano and the servants were dismissed for their meal, Ulviye Sultan began to play with some matches. Her dress caught fire and her gold belt trapped her inside it, even though her mother burned her hands trying to unhook it. In panic, Nazikeda picked up her daughter and ran down the stairs, screaming for help, but the movement fueled the flames and Ulviye Sultan died burnt alive, leaving her mother in despair from which she never recovered. Nazikeda was buried in the Yeni Cami.
  • Zekiye Sultan (12 January 1872 – 13 July 1950) – with Bedrifelek Kadın. She married once and had two daughters. She was one of Abdul Hamid's favorite daughters.
  • Fatma Naime Sultan (5 September 1876 – 1945) – with Bidar Kadın. She is the favorite daughter of Abdul Hamid, who called her "my accession daughter", because she was born close to the date of his accession to the throne. She married twice and had a son and a daughter. In 1904 she was embroiled in a scandal when she discovered that her first husband was cheating on her with her cousin Hatice Sultan, daughter of Murad V.
  • Naile Sultan (9 February 1884 – 25 October 1957) – with Dilpesend Kadın. She married once, with no children.
  • Seniye Sultan (1884 – 1884) – unknown motherhood.
  • Seniha Sultan (1885 – 1885) – with Dilpesend Kadın. She died at five months.
  • Şadiye Sultan (30 November 1886 – 20 November 1977) – with Emsalinur Kadın. She married twice and had a daughter.
  • Hamide Ayşe Sultan (15 November 1887 – 10 August 1960) – with Müşfika Kadın. She was married twice and had three sons and a daughter.
  • Refia Sultan (15 June 1891 – 1938) – with Sazkar Hanım. She married once and had two daughters.
  • Hatice Sultan (10 July 1897 – 14 February 1898) – with Pesend Hanım. She died of smallpox and was buried in the Yahya Efendi cemetery.
  • Aliye Sultan (1900 – 1900) – unknown motherhood. She died a few days after her birth.
  • Cemile Sultan (1900 – 1900) – unknown maternity. She died a few days after her birth.
  • Samiye Sultan (16 January 1908 – 24 January 1909) – with Saliha Naciye Kadın. She died of pneumonia and was buried in the mausoleum Şehzade Ahmed Kemaleddin in the Yahya Efendi cemetery.

In popular culture edit

  • Abdul the Damned (1935) portrays a time near the end of the sultan's life.
  • Barry Unsworth's historical novel The Rage of the Vulture (1982) portrays the paranoia of Abdul Hamid's at the twilight of his sultanate (May 1908 onwards)
  • In Don Rosa's comic book story "The Treasury of Croesus", Scrooge McDuck pulls out a permit which Abdul Hamid II signed in 1905, allowing McDuck carte blanche to excavate the ancient ruins of Ephesus.
  • Payitaht Abdulhamid, named 'The Last Emperor' in English, is a Turkish popular historical television drama series depicting the last 13 years of the reign of Abdul Hamid II.[69]
  • In Orhan Pamuk's satirical novel Nights of Plague (2021), Abdul Hamid dispatches the Ottoman Empire's chief inspector of public health, along with a Muslim epidemiologist and his wife, the sultan's niece, to the fictitious island of Mingheria to combat the bubonic plague.

Awards and honors edit

Ottoman orders
Foreign orders and decorations

Gallery edit

Threatened by several assassination attempts, Abdul Hamid II did not travel often (though still more than many previous rulers). Photographs provided visual evidence of what took place in his realm. He commissioned thousands of photographs of his empire, including from the Constantinople studio of Jean Pascal Sébah. The sultan presented large gift albums of photographs to various governments and heads of state, including the U.S.[84] and Great Britain.[85] The American collection is housed in the Library of Congress and has been digitized.[86]

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

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Sources edit

  • Abdul Hamid II Biography
  • All Documents about Abdul Hamid in English from a Turkish Web Site 23 June 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  • McMeekin, Sean (2016), The Ottoman Endgame: war, revolution, and the making of the modern Middle East, 1908–1923, New York, New York: Penguin Random House, ISBN 9781594205323
  • Overy, Richard. The Times Complete History of the World, HarperCollins ISBN 978-0-00-731569-7 (2010)

Further reading edit

  • Akarli, Engin D. (2001). "The Tangled Ends of an Empire and Its Sultan". In Leila Tarazi Fawaz; C.A. Bayly (eds.). Modernity and Culture: From the Mediterranean to the Indian Ocean. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 261–284. ISBN 978-0-231-11426-4.
  • Georgeon, François (2003). Abdülhamid II. Le sultan calife. Paris: Fayard.
  • Shaw, Stanford J.; Shaw, Ezel K. (1977). History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey. Vol. 2: Reform, Revolution, and Republic: The Rise of Modern Turkey, 1808–1975. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-29166-8.
  • Yasamee, F.A.K. (1996). Ottoman Diplomacy: Abdülhamid II and the Great Powers, 1878–1888. Istanbul: ISIS. ISBN 978-975-428-088-3.
  • Pears, Edwin Sir (1917). The Life of Abdul Hamid (1 ed.). London: Constable and Company Ltd. Retrieved 17 March 2019 – via Internet Archive.
  • Haslip, Joan (1973). The Sultan: The life of Abdul Hamid (2nd ed.). Cassell. ISBN 978-0-297-76519-6.
  • Küçük, Cevdet (1988). Abdülhamid II – An article published in the first volume of Turkish Encyclopedia of Islam (in Turkish). Vol. 1 (Ab-i Hayat /el-Ahkamu's – Ser'iyye). Istanbul: TDV İslâm Ansiklopedisi. pp. 216–224. ISBN 978-97-53-89428-9.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Abdül Hamid II at Wikimedia Commons
  • II. Abdul Hamid Forum in English 2 February 2010 at the Wayback Machine II. Abdul Hamid Forum in English
  • Ödev Sitesi
  • US Library of Congress Abdul Hamid II Photo Collection – about 1,800 photographs mounted in albums, ca. 1880–1893
  • "Abdul-Hamid II." . Collier's New Encyclopedia. 1921.
  • Newspaper clippings about Abdul Hamid II in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
Abdul Hamid II
Born: 21 September 1842 Died: 10 February 1918
Regnal titles
Preceded by Sultan of the Ottoman Empire
31 August 1876 – 27 April 1909
Succeeded by
Sunni Islam titles
Preceded by Caliph of the Ottoman Caliphate
31 August 1876 – 27 April 1909
Succeeded by

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You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Turkish November 2023 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 492 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Turkish Wikipedia article at tr II Abdulhamid see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated tr II Abdulhamid to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation For other people with similar names see Abd al Hamid Abdulhamid or Abdul Hamid II Ottoman Turkish عبد الحميد ثانی romanized Abd ul Hamid i s ani Turkish II Abdulhamid 21 September 1842 10 February 1918 was the 34th sultan of the Ottoman Empire from 1876 to 1909 and the last sultan to exert effective control over the fracturing state 3 He oversaw a period of decline with rebellions particularly in the Balkans and presided over an unsuccessful war with the Russian Empire 1877 78 the loss of Egypt and Cyprus from Ottoman control followed by a successful war against the Kingdom of Greece in 1897 though Ottoman gains were tempered by subsequent Western European intervention Abdul Hamid IIOttoman CaliphAmir al Mu mininCustodian of the Two Holy MosquesPortrait of Sultan Abdul Hamid II in 1899Sultan of the Ottoman Empire Padishah Reign31 August 1876 27 April 1909Sword girding7 September 1876PredecessorMurad VSuccessorMehmed VGrand viziersSee list Mehmed Rushdi PashaMidhat PashaIbrahim Edhem PashaAhmed Hamdi PashaAhmed Vefik PashaMehmed Sadik PashaSaffet PashaTunuslu Hayreddin PashaAhmed Arifi PashaMehmed Said PashaKadri PashaAbdurrahman Nurettin PashaKamil PashaAhmed Cevad PashaHalil Rifat PashaMehmed Ferid PashaHuseyin Hilmi PashaAhmet Tevfik PashaBorn 1842 09 21 21 September 1842 1 2 Topkapi Palace Istanbul Ottoman EmpireDied10 February 1918 1918 02 10 aged 75 Beylerbeyi Palace Istanbul Ottoman EmpireBurial1918Tomb of Sultan Mahmud II Fatih Istanbul TurkeyConsortsList Nazikeda KadinSafinaz Nurefsun KadinBedrifelek KadinBidar KadinDilpesend KadinMezidemestan KadinEmsalinur KadinDestizer Musfika KadinSazkar HanimRabia Peyveste HanimFatma Pesend HanimBehice HanimSaliha Naciye KadinIssueAmong othersList Sehzade Mehmed Selim Zekiye Sultan Naime Sultan Sehzade Mehmed Abdulkadir Sehzade Ahmed Nuri Naile Sultan Sehzade Mehmed Burhaneddin Sadiye Sultan Ayse Sultan Refia Sultan Sehzade Abdurrahim Hayri Sehzade Ahmed Nureddin Sehzade Mehmed AbidNamesAbdul Hamid bin AbdulmejidDynastyOttomanFatherAbdulmejid IMotherBiological mother Tirimujgan KadinAdoptive mother Rahime Perestu SultanReligionSunni IslamTughraElevated to power in the wake of Young Ottoman coups he promulgated the Ottoman Empire s first constitution 4 a sign of the progressive thinking that marked his early rule But his enthronement came in the context of the Great Eastern Crisis which began with the Empire s default on its loans uprisings by Christian Balkan minorities and a war with the Russian Empire At the end of the crisis Ottoman rule in the Balkans and its international prestige were severely diminished and the Empire lost its economic sovereignty as its finances came under the control of the Great Powers through the Ottoman Public Debt Administration In 1878 Abdul Hamid consolidated his rule by suspending both the constitution and the parliament 4 Yildiz Trial purging the Young Ottomans tr and curtailing the power of the Sublime Porte He ruled as an absolute monarch for three decades Ideologically an Islamist the sultan asserted his title of Caliph to Muslims around the world His paranoia about being overthrown like his uncle and brother led to the creation of secret police organizations and a censorship regime The Ottoman Empire s modernization and centralization continued during his reign including reform of the bureaucracy extension of the Rumelia Railway and the Anatolia Railway and construction of the Baghdad Railway and the Hejaz Railway Systems for population registration sedentarization of tribal groups and control over the press were part of a unique imperialist system in fringe provinces known as borrowed colonialism 5 The farthest reaching reforms were in education with many professional schools established in fields such as law arts trades civil engineering veterinary medicine customs farming and linguistics along with the first local modern law school in 1898 A network of primary secondary and military schools extended throughout the Empire German firms played a major role in developing the Empire s railway and telegraph systems 4 Ironically the same education institutions that the Sultan sponsored proved to be his downfall Large sections of the pro constitutionalist Ottoman intelligentsia sharply criticized and opposed him for his repressive policies which coalesced into the Young Turks movement 6 Under similar conditions minorities started organizing their own national liberation movements Armenians especially suffered from massacres and pogroms at the hands of the Hamidiye regiments Of the many assassination attempts during Abdul Hamid s reign one of the most famous is the Armenian Revolutionary Federation s Yildiz assassination attempt of 1905 7 In 1908 the Committee of Union and Progress forced him to recall parliament and reinstate the constitution in the Young Turk Revolution Abdul Hamid II attempted to reassert his absolutism a year later resulting in his deposition by pro constitutionalist forces in the 31 March incident though the role he played in events is disputed Contents 1 Early life 2 Accession to the Ottoman throne 2 1 First Constitutional Era 1876 1878 2 2 War with Russia 3 Reign 3 1 Disintegration 3 2 Political decisions and reforms 3 3 Armenian question 3 4 Foreign policy 3 4 1 Pan Islamism 3 4 2 America and the Philippines 3 4 3 Germany s support 3 5 Opposition 3 6 Young Turk Revolution 3 7 Deposition 4 After deposition 5 Personal life 5 1 Paranoia 5 2 Religion 5 3 Poetry 5 4 Impressions 6 Family 6 1 Consorts 6 2 Sons 6 3 Daughters 7 In popular culture 8 Awards and honors 9 Gallery 10 See also 11 References 11 1 Citations 11 2 Sources 12 Further reading 13 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Prince Abdul Hamid at Balmoral Castle in 1867 accompanying his uncle Sultan Abdulaziz during his visit to Western Europe between 21 June 1867 7 August 1867 Hamid Efendi was born on 21 September 1842 either in Ciragan Palace Ortakoy or at Topkapi Palace both in Istanbul He was the son of Sultan Abdulmejid I 1 and Tirimujgan Kadin Circassia 20 August 1819 Constantinople Feriye Palace 2 November 1853 8 9 originally named Virjinia 10 Following his mother s death he became the adoptive son of his father s legal wife Perestu Kadin Perestu was also the adoptive mother of Abdul Hamid s half sister Cemile Sultan whose mother Duzdidil Kadin had died in 1845 leaving her motherless at the age of two The two were brought up in the same household where they spent their childhood together 11 Unlike many other Ottoman sultans Abdul Hamid II visited distant countries In the summer of 1867 nine years before he ascended the throne he accompanied his uncle Sultan Abdul Aziz on a visit to Paris 30 June 10 July 1867 London 12 23 July 1867 Vienna 28 30 July 1867 and capitals or cities of a number of other European countries 12 Accession to the Ottoman throne editAbdul Hamid ascended the throne after his brother Murad was deposed on 31 August 1876 1 13 At his accession some commentators were impressed that he rode practically unattended to the Eyup Sultan Mosque where he was presented with the Sword of Osman Most people expected Abdul Hamid II to support liberal movements but he acceded to the throne at a critical time Economic and political turmoil local wars in the Balkans and the Russo Turkish War threatened the Empire s very existence First Constitutional Era 1876 1878 edit See also First Constitutional Era Ottoman Empire and Young OttomansAbdul Hamid worked with the Young Ottomans to realize some form of constitutional arrangement 14 This new form could help bring about a liberal transition with an Islamic provenance The Young Ottomans believed that the modern parliamentary system was a restatement of the practice of consultation or shura that had existed in early Islam 15 In December 1876 due to the 1875 insurrection in Bosnia and Herzegovina the ongoing war with Serbia and Montenegro and the feeling aroused throughout Europe by the cruelty used in stamping out the 1876 Bulgarian rebellion Abdul Hamid promulgated a constitution and a parliament 1 Midhat Pasha headed the commission to establish a new constitution and the cabinet passed the constitution on 6 December 1876 allowing for a bicameral legislature with senatorial appointments made by the sultan The first ever election in the Ottoman Empire was held in 1877 Crucially the constitution gave Abdul Hamid the right to exile anyone he deemed a threat to the state 16 The delegates to the Constantinople Conference 17 18 were surprised by the promulgation of a constitution but European powers at the conference rejected the constitution as a too radical change they preferred the 1856 constitution Islahat Hatt i Humayunu or the 1839 Gulhane edict Hatt i Serif and questioned whether a parliament was necessary to act as an official voice of the people In any event like many other would be reforms of the Ottoman Empire it proved nearly impossible Russia continued to mobilize for war and early in 1877 the Ottoman Empire went to war with the Russian Empire War with Russia edit Main article Russo Turkish War 1877 1878 nbsp Ottoman troops under Romanian attack at the Siege of Plevna 1877 in the Russo Turkish War 1877 78 Abdul Hamid s biggest fear near dissolution was realized with the Russian declaration of war on 24 April 1877 In that conflict the Ottoman Empire fought without help from European allies Russian chancellor Prince Gorchakov had by that time effectively purchased Austrian neutrality with the Reichstadt Agreement The British Empire though still fearing the Russian threat to the British presence in India did not involve itself in the conflict because of public opinion against the Ottomans following reports of Ottoman brutality in putting down the Bulgarian uprising Russia s victory was quick the conflict ended in February 1878 The Treaty of San Stefano signed at the end of the war imposed harsh terms the Ottoman Empire gave independence to Romania Serbia and Montenegro it granted autonomy to Bulgaria instituted reforms in Bosnia and Herzegovina and ceded parts of Dobrudzha to Romania and parts of Armenia to Russia which was also paid an enormous indemnity After the war Abdul Hamid suspended the constitution in February 1878 and dismissed the parliament after its only meeting in March 1877 For the next three decades Abdul Hamid ruled the Ottoman Empire from Yildiz Palace 1 As Russia could dominate the newly independent states the Treaty of San Stefano greatly increased its influence in Southeastern Europe At the Great Powers insistence especially the United Kingdom s the treaty was revised at the Congress of Berlin so as to reduce the great advantages Russia gained In exchange for these favors Cyprus was ceded to Britain in 1878 There were troubles in Egypt where a discredited khedive had to be deposed Abdul Hamid mishandled relations with Urabi Pasha and as a result Britain gained de facto control over Egypt and Sudan by sending its troops in 1882 to establish control over the two provinces Cyprus Egypt and Sudan ostensibly remained Ottoman provinces until 1914 when Britain officially annexed them in response to the Ottoman participation in World War I on the side of the Central Powers citation needed Reign editDisintegration edit nbsp Sehzade Prince Abdul Hamid in 1868 Abdul Hamid s distrust of the reformist admirals of the Ottoman Navy whom he suspected of plotting against him and trying to restore the constitution and his subsequent decision to lock the Ottoman fleet the world s third largest fleet during the reign of his predecessor Abdul Aziz inside the Golden Horn indirectly caused the loss of Ottoman overseas territories and islands in North Africa the Mediterranean Sea and the Aegean Sea during and after his reign 19 Financial difficulties forced him to consent to foreign control over the Ottoman national debt In a decree issued in December 1881 a large portion of the empire s revenues were handed over to the Public Debt Administration for the benefit of mostly foreign bondholders see Kararname of 1296 The 1885 union of Bulgaria with Eastern Rumelia was another blow to the Empire The creation of an independent and powerful Bulgaria was viewed as a serious threat to the Empire For many years Abdul Hamid had to deal with Bulgaria in a way that did not antagonize the Russians or the Germans There were also key problems regarding the Albanian question resulting from the Albanian League of Prizren and with the Greek and Montenegrin frontiers where the European powers were determined that the Berlin Congress s decisions be carried out Crete was granted extended privileges but these did not satisfy the population which sought unification with Greece In early 1897 a Greek expedition sailed to Crete to overthrow Ottoman rule on the island This act was followed by the Greco Turkish War in which the Ottoman Empire defeated Greece but as a result of the Treaty of Constantinople Crete was taken over en depot by the United Kingdom France and Russia Prince George of Greece was appointed ruler and Crete was effectively lost to the Ottoman Empire 1 The ʿAmmiyya a revolt in 1889 90 among Druze and other Syrians against excesses of the local sheikhs similarly led to capitulation to the rebels demands as well as concessions to Belgian and French companies to provide a railroad between Beirut and Damascus Political decisions and reforms edit Most people expected Abdul Hamid II to have liberal ideas and some conservatives were inclined to regard him with suspicion as a dangerous reformer 20 Despite working with the reformist Young Ottomans while still crown prince and appearing to be a liberal leader he became increasingly conservative after taking the throne In a process known as Istibdad Abdul Hamid reduced his ministers to acting as secretaries and concentrated much of the Empire s administration into his own hands Default in the public funds an empty treasury the 1875 insurrection in Bosnia and Herzegovina the war with Serbia and Montenegro the result of Russo Turkish war and the feeling aroused throughout Europe by Abdul Hamid s government in stamping out the Bulgarian rebellion all contributed to his apprehension regarding enacting significant changes 20 His push for education resulted in the establishment of 18 professional schools and in 1900 Darulfunun u Sahane now known as Istanbul University was established 1 He also created a large system of primary secondary and military schools throughout the empire 1 51 secondary schools were constructed in a 12 year period 1882 1894 As the goal of the educational reforms in the Hamidian era were to counter foreign influence these secondary schools used European teaching techniques while instilling in students a strong sense of Ottoman identity and Islamic morality 21 Abdul Hamid also reorganized the Ministry of Justice and developed rail and telegraph systems 1 The telegraph system was expanded to incorporate the furthest parts of the Empire Railways connected Constantinople and Vienna by 1883 and shortly afterward the Orient Express connected Paris to Constantinople During his rule railways within the Ottoman Empire expanded to connect Ottoman controlled Europe and Anatolia with Constantinople as well The increased ability to travel and communicate within the Ottoman Empire served to strengthen Constantinople s influence over the rest of the Empire 21 Abdul Hamid took stringent measures regarding his security The memory of the deposition of Abdul Aziz was on his mind and convinced him that a constitutional government was not a good idea Because of this information was tightly controlled and the press rigidly censored A secret police Umur u Hafiye and a network of informants was present throughout the empire and many leading figures of the Second Constitutional Era and Ottoman successor states were arrested or exiled School curricula were closely inspected to prevent dissidence Ironically the schools that Abdul Hamid founded and tried to control became breeding grounds of discontent as students and teachers alike chafed at the censors clumsy restrictions 22 Armenian question edit Main articles Hamidian massacres Yildiz assassination attempt and Armenian question nbsp 20 kurus during the reign of Abdul Hamid II dating 1878Starting around 1890 Armenians began demanding implementation of the reforms promised to them at the Berlin Conference 23 To prevent such measures in 1890 91 Abdul Hamid gave semi official status to the bandits who were already actively mistreating the Armenians in the provinces Made up of Kurds and other ethnic groups such as Turcomans and armed by the state they came to be called the Hamidiye Alaylari Hamidian Regiments 24 The Hamidiye and Kurdish brigands were given free rein to attack Armenians confiscating stores of grain foodstuffs and driving off livestock confident of escaping punishment as they were subject only to court martial 25 In the face of such violence the Armenians established revolutionary organizations the Social Democrat Hunchakian Party Hunchak founded in Switzerland in 1887 and the Armenian Revolutionary Federation the ARF or Dashnaktsutiun founded in 1890 in Tiflis 26 Unrest ensued and clashes occurred in 1892 at Merzifon and in 1893 at Tokat Abdul Hamid put these revolts down with harsh methods 27 As a result 300 000 Armenians were killed in what became known as the Hamidian massacres News of the massacres was widely reported in Europe and the United States and drew strong responses from foreign governments and humanitarian organizations 28 Abdul Hamid was called the Bloody Sultan or Red Sultan in the West On 21 July 1905 the Armenian Revolutionary Federation attempted to assassinate him with a car bomb during a public appearance but he was delayed for a minute and the bomb went off too early killing 26 wounding 58 four of whom died during their treatment in hospital and destroying 17 cars This continued aggression along with the handling of the Armenian desire for reform led western European powers to take a more hands on approach with the Turks 1 Abdul Hamid survived an attempted stabbing in 1904 as well Foreign policy edit Pan Islamism edit See also Ottoman Caliphate nbsp An example of what once hung on the Door of Repentance of the Ka ba in 1897 until 1898 It was made in Egypt under Abdul Hamid II s ruling of the Ottoman Empire His name is stitched into the fifth line following a verse from the Qur an 29 Abdul Hamid did not believe that the Tanzimat movement could succeed in helping the disparate peoples of the empire achieve a common identity such as Ottomanism He adopted a new ideological principle Pan Islamism since beginning in 1517 Ottoman sultans were also nominally Caliphs he wanted to promote that fact and emphasized the Ottoman Caliphate Given the great diversity of ethnicities in the Ottoman Empire he believed that Islam was the only way to unite his people Pan Islamism encouraged Muslims living under European powers to unite under one polity This threatened several European countries Austria through Bosnian Muslims Russia through Tatars and Kurds France and Spain through Moroccan Muslims and Britain through Indian Muslims 30 Foreigners privileges in the Ottoman Empire which were an obstacle to effective government were curtailed At the very end of his reign Abdul Hamid finally provided funds to start construction of the strategically important Constantinople Baghdad Railway and the Constantinople Medina Railway which would ease the trip to Mecca for the Hajj after he was deposed the CUP accelerated and completed construction of both railways Missionaries were sent to distant countries preaching Islam and the Caliph s supremacy 31 During his rule Abdul Hamid refused Theodor Herzl s offers to pay down a substantial portion of the Ottoman debt 150 million pounds sterling in gold in exchange for a charter allowing the Zionists to settle in Palestine He is famously quoted as telling Herzl s Emissary as long as I am alive I will not have our body divided only our corpse they can divide 32 Pan Islamism was a considerable success After the Greco Ottoman war many Muslims celebrated the Ottoman victory as their victory Uprisings lockouts and objections to European colonization in newspapers were reported in Muslim regions after the war 30 33 But Abdul Hamid s appeals to Muslim sentiment were not always very effective due to widespread disaffection within the Empire In Mesopotamia and Yemen disturbance was endemic nearer home a semblance of loyalty was maintained in the army and among the Muslim population only by a system of deflation and espionage citation needed America and the Philippines edit nbsp Map of the Ottoman Empire during the reign of Abdul Hamid IIIn 1898 U S Secretary of State John Hay asked United States Minister to the Ottoman Empire Oscar Straus to request that Abdul Hamid in his capacity as caliph write a letter to the Sulu Muslims a Moro subgroup of the Sulu Sultanate in the Philippines ordering them not to join the Moro Rebellion and submit to American suzerainty and American military rule The Sultan obliged the Americans and wrote the letter which was sent to Mecca whence two Sulu chiefs brought it to Sulu It was successful since the Sulu Mohammedans refused to join the insurrectionists and had placed themselves under the control of our army thereby recognizing American sovereignty 34 35 36 37 38 39 Despite Abdul Hamid s pan Islamic ideology he had readily acceded to Straus s request for help in telling the Sulu Muslims to not resist America since he felt no need to cause hostilities between the West and Muslims 40 Collaboration between the American military and Sulu Sultanate was due to the Ottoman Sultan persuading the Sulu Sultan 41 John P Finley wrote After due consideration of these facts the Sultan as Caliph caused a message to be sent to the Mohammedans of the Philippine Islands forbidding them to enter into any hostilities against the Americans inasmuch as no interference with their religion would be allowed under American rule As the Moros have never asked more than that it is not surprising that they refused all overtures made by Aguinaldo s agents at the time of the Filipino insurrection President McKinley sent a personal letter of thanks to Mr Straus for the excellent work he had done and said its accomplishment had saved the United States at least twenty thousand troops in the field 42 43 President McKinley did not mention the Ottoman role in the pacification of the Sulu Moros in his address to the first session of the Fifty sixth Congress in December 1899 since the agreement with the Sultan of Sulu was not submitted to the Senate until 18 December 44 The Bates Treaty which the Americans signed with the Moro Sulu Sultanate and which guaranteed the Sultanate s autonomy in its internal affairs and governance was then violated by the Americans who then invaded Moroland 45 causing the Moro Rebellion to break out in 1904 with war raging between the Americans and Moro Muslims and atrocities committed against Moro Muslim women and children such as the Moro Crater Massacre Germany s support edit nbsp Abdul Hamid II attempted to correspond with the Chinese Muslim troops in service of the Qing imperial army serving under General Dong Fuxiang they were also known as the Kansu BravesThe Triple Entente the United Kingdom France and Russia had strained relations with the Ottoman Empire Abdul Hamid and his close advisors believed the Empire should be treated as an equal player by these great powers In the Sultan s view the Ottoman Empire was a European empire that was distinguished by having more Muslims than Christians Over time the hostile diplomatic attitudes of France the occupation of Tunisia in 1881 and Great Britain the 1882 establishment of de facto control in Egypt caused Abdul Hamid to gravitate towards Germany 1 Abdul Hamid twice hosted Kaiser Wilhelm II in Istanbul on 21 October 1889 and on 5 October 1898 Wilhelm II later visited Constantinople a third time on 15 October 1917 as a guest of Mehmed V German officers such as Baron von der Goltz and Bodo Borries von Ditfurth were employed to oversee the organization of the Ottoman Army German government officials were brought in to reorganize the Ottoman government s finances The German emperor was also rumored to have counseled Abdul Hamid in his controversial decision to appoint his third son as his successor 46 Germany s friendship was not altruistic it had to be fostered by railway and loan concessions In 1899 a significant German wish the construction of a Berlin Baghdad railway was granted 1 Kaiser Wilhelm II also requested the Sultan s help when he had trouble with Chinese Muslim troops During the Boxer Rebellion the Chinese Muslim Kansu Braves fought the German Army routing them and the other Eight Nation Alliance forces The Muslim Kansu Braves and Boxers defeated the Alliance forces led by the German Captain Guido von Usedom at the Battle of Langfang during the Seymour Expedition in 1900 and besieged the trapped Alliance forces during the Siege of the International Legations It was only on the second attempt in the Gasalee Expedition that the Alliance forces managed to get through to battle the Chinese Muslim troops at the Battle of Peking Wilhelm was so alarmed by the Chinese Muslim troops that he requested that Abdul Hamid find a way to stop the Muslim troops from fighting Abdul Hamid agreed to Wilhelm s demands and sent Enver Pasha no relation to the Young Turk leader to China in 1901 but the rebellion was over by that time 47 Because the Ottomans did not want conflict with the European nations and because the Ottoman Empire was ingratiating itself to gain German assistance an order imploring Chinese Muslims to avoid assisting the Boxers was issued by the Ottoman Khalifa and reprinted in Egyptian and Muslim Indian newspapers 48 Opposition edit Abdul Hamid II made many enemies in the Ottoman Empire His reign featured several coup d etat plans and many rebellions The Sultan triumphed in a challenge by Kamil Pasha of absolute rule in 1895 A large conspiracy by the Committee of Union and Progress was also foiled in 1896 His ascendancy finally ended in a revolution in 1908 and his reign for good ended with the 31 March Incident These conspiracies were primarily driven by members of inside the Ottoman government due to dissatisfaction with autocracy Journalists had to contend with a strict censorship regime while the intelligentsia chafed under the surveillance of intelligence agencies It was in this context that a broad opposition movement to the sultan emerged known as the Young Turks to European observers Most Young Turks were ambitious military officers constitutionalists and bureaucrats of the Sublime Porte With state policy fostering an Islamist Ottomanism Christian minority groups also began to turn against the government going so far as to advocate for separatism By the 1890s Greek Bulgarian Serbian and Aromanian militant groups started fighting Ottoman authorities and each other in the Macedonian conflict Using the Idare i Orfiyye a clause in the defunct Ottoman constitution comparable to declaring a state of siege the government suspended civil rights in the Ottoman Balkans Idare i Orfiyye was also soon declared in Eastern Anatolia to more effectively prosecute fedayi The statute persisted under the Ottoman Empire and the Republic of Turkey until the 1940s 49 Educated Muslim women resented the Salafist Hatts that mandated veils be worn outside the home and to be accompanied by men though these decrees were mostly ignored 50 Young Turk Revolution edit See also Young Turk Revolution Second Constitutional Era Ottoman Empire and Young Turks nbsp Opening of the first Ottoman Parliament Meclis i Umumi at the Dolmabahce Palace in 1877 nbsp Greek lithograph celebrating the Young Turk Revolution in 1908 and the restoration of the 1876 constitution in the Ottoman EmpireThe national humiliation of the Macedonian conflict together with the resentment in the army against the palace spies and informers at last brought matters to a crisis 31 The Committee of Union and Progress CUP a Young Turks organization that was especially influential in the Rumelian army units undertook the Young Turk Revolution in the summer of 1908 Upon learning that the troops in Salonica were marching on Istanbul 23 July Abdul Hamid capitulated On 24 July an irade announced the restoration of the suspended constitution of 1876 the next day further irades abolished espionage and censorship and ordered the release of political prisoners 31 On 17 December Abdul Hamid reopened the General Assembly with a speech from the throne in which he said that the first parliament had been temporarily dissolved until the education of the people had been brought to a sufficiently high level by the extension of instruction throughout the empire 31 Deposition edit See also 31 March Incident and Adana massacre nbsp Abdul Hamid II s last ride through the streets of Istanbul after the 31 March IncidentAbdul Hamid s new attitude did not save him from the suspicion of intriguing with the state s powerful reactionary elements a suspicion confirmed by his attitude toward the counter revolution of 13 April 1909 known as the 31 March Incident when an insurrection of the soldiers backed by a conservative upheaval in some parts of the military in the capital overthrew Huseyin Hilmi Pasha s government With the Young Turks driven out of the capital Abdul Hamid appointed Ahmet Tevfik Pasha in his place and once again suspended the constitution and shuttered the parliament But the Sultan controlled only Constantinople while the Unionists were still influential in the rest of the army and provinces The CUP appealed to Mahmud Shevket Pasha to restore the status quo Shevket Pasha organized an ad hoc formation known as the Action Army which marched on Constantinople Sevket Pasha s chief of staff was captain Mustafa Kemal The Action Army stopped first in Aya Stefanos and negotiated with the rival government established by deputies who escaped from the capital which was led by Mehmed Talat It was secretly decided there that Abdul Hamid must be deposed When the Action Army entered Istanbul a fatwa was issued condemning Abdul Hamid and the parliament voted to dethrone him On 27 April Abdul Hamid s half brother Reshad Efendi was proclaimed as Sultan Mehmed V 20 The Sultan s countercoup which had appealed to conservative Islamists against the Young Turks liberal reforms resulted in the massacre of tens of thousands of Christian Armenians in the Adana province known as the Adana massacre 51 After deposition edit nbsp The mausoleum turbe of Sultans Mahmud II Abdulaziz and Abdul Hamid II located at Divanyolu street IstanbulAbdul Hamid was conveyed into captivity at Salonica now Thessaloniki 31 mostly at the Villa Allatini in the city s southern outskirts In 1912 when Salonica fell to Greece he was returned to captivity in Constantinople He spent his last days studying practicing carpentry and writing his memoirs in custody at Beylerbeyi Palace in the Bosphorus in the company of his wives and children He died there on 10 February 1918 a few months before his brother Mehmed V the reigning sultan He was buried in Istanbul In 1930 his nine widows and thirteen children were granted 50 million from his estate after a lawsuit that lasted five years His estate was worth 1 5 billion 52 Abdul Hamid was the last sultan of the Ottoman Empire to hold absolute power He presided over 33 years of decline during which other European countries regarded the empire as the sick man of Europe 53 Personal life edit nbsp The tomb of the Libyan Sufi Sheikh Muhammad Zafir al Madani in Istanbul who initiated the Sultan into the Shadhili Sufi OrderAbdul Hamid II was a skilled carpenter and personally crafted some high quality furniture which can be seen at the Yildiz Palace Sale Kosku and Beylerbeyi Palace in Istanbul He was also interested in opera and personally wrote the first ever Turkish translations of many classic operas He also composed several opera pieces for the Mizika yi Humayun Ottoman Imperial Band Orchestra established by his grandfather Mahmud II who had appointed Donizetti Pasha as its Instructor General in 1828 and hosted the famous performers of Europe at the Opera House of Yildiz Palace which was restored in the 1990s and featured in the 1999 film Harem Suare it begins with a scene of Abdul Hamid watching a performance One of his guests was the French stage actress Sarah Bernhardt who performed for audiences 54 Abdul Hamid was also a good wrestler at Yagli gures and a patron saint of the wrestlers He organized wrestling tournaments in the empire and selected wrestlers were invited to the palace Abdul Hamid personally tried the sportsmen and good ones remained in the palace He was also a skilled drawer having drawn the sole known portrait of his fourth wife Bidar Kadin He was extremely fond of Sherlock Holmes novels 55 and awarded their author Arthur Conan Doyle the Order of the Medjidie 2nd Class in 1907 56 Paranoia edit It was rumored that Abdul Hamid always carried a pistol on his person at all times In addition to locking the Ottoman Navy in the Golden Horn he also did not allow the army to train with live ammunition 57 Religion edit Abdul Hamid practiced traditional Islamic Sufism He was influenced by the Libyan Shadhili Madani Sheikh Muhammad Zafir al Madani whose lessons he attended in disguise in Unkapani before he became sultan After he ascended the throne Abdul Hamid asked al Madani to return to Istanbul Al Madani initiated Shadhili gatherings of remembrance dhikr in the newly commissioned Yildiz Hamidiye Mosque on Thursday evenings he accompanied Sufi masters in reciting dhikr 54 He also became a close religious and political confidant of the sultan In 1879 the sultan forgave the taxes of all of the Caliphate s Madani Sufi lodges also known as zawiyas and tekkes In 1888 he even established a Sufi lodge for the Madani order of Shadhili Sufism in Istanbul which he commissioned as part of the Ertugrul Tekke mosque The relationship of the sultan and the sheik lasted for 30 years until the latter s death in 1903 58 Poetry edit nbsp A sample of his handwritten poetry in Persian language and scripts which was taken from the book My Father Abdul Hameed written by his daughter Ayse SultanAbdul Hamid wrote poetry following in the footsteps of many other Ottoman sultans One of his poems translates thus My Lord I know you are the Dear One Al Aziz And no one but you are the Dear One You are the One and nothing else My God take my hand in these hard times My God be my helper in this critical hour Impressions edit In the opinion of F A K Yasamee 59 He was a striking amalgam of determination and timidity of insight and fantasy held together by immense practical caution and an instinct for the fundamentals of power He was frequently underestimated Judged on his record he was a formidable domestic politician and an effective diplomat 60 Family editAbdul Hamid had numerous consorts but allowed none of them to have political influence in the same way he did not allow his adoptive mother Rahime Perestu Sultan or other female members of his family to have such influence though some of them still had some degree of power in private or in the daily life of the harem The only partial exception was Cemile Sultan his half sister and adoptive sister He was convinced that his predecessors reigns especially those of his uncle Abdulaziz and his father Abdulmecid I had been ruined by the excessive meddling of the women of the imperial family in affairs of state Consorts edit Abdul Hamid had at least 23 consorts 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 Nazikeda Kadin 1848 11 April 1895 BasKadin First Consort She was an Abkhazian princess born Mediha Hanim lady in waiting to Cemile Sultan She died prematurely after years of deep depression due to the tragic death of her only daughter Safinaz Nurefsun Kadin 1850 1915 Her real name was Ayse and she was the younger sister of the last consort of Abdulmecid I Yildiz Hanim When Yildiz Hanim married Abdulmecid Ayse was sent into the service of Sehzade Abdulaziz where she was renamed Safinaz According to Harun Acba Abdulaziz was fascinated by her beauty and wanted to marry her but she refused because she was in love with Sehzade Abdul Hamid The feeling was mutual and the young prince asked for the help of his stepmother Rahime Perestu Kadin She told Abdulaziz that Safinaz was ill and that she needed a change of air later Abdulaziz was informed of her death Abdul Hamid then secretly married Safinaz who was renamed Nurefsun in October 1868 However she could not get used to life in the harem and wanted to be Abdul Hamid s only consort She then asked for a divorce which he was granted to her in 1879 She had no children Bedrifelek Kadin 1851 1930 Circassian Princess who took refuge in Istanbul when Russia invaded the Caucasus She ruled Abdul Hamid s harem when Rahime Perestu Sultan died She left Abdul Hamid when he was deposed perhaps disappointed that their son had not been chosen as successor She had two sons and a daughter Bidar Kadin 5 May 1855 13 January 1918 Kabartian princess she was considered the most beautiful and charming of Abdul Hamid s consorts She had a son and a daughter Dilpesend Kadin 16 January 1865 17 June 1901 Georgian She was educated by Tiryal Hanim the last consort of Mahmud II who was Abdul Hamid s grandfather She had two daughters Mezidemestan Kadin 3 March 1869 21 January 1909 She was born Kadriye Kamile Merve Hanim she was the aunt of Emine Nazikeda Kadin future consort of Mehmed VI She was loved by everyone including his other consorts and her stepchildren She was the most influential of his consorts but she never abused her power She had a son who was Abdul Hamid s favorite Emsalinur Kadin 1866 1952 She entered the Palace with her sister Tesrid Hanim who became a consort of Sehzade Ibrahim Tevfik She was very beautiful She did not follow Abdul Hamid into exile and died in poverty She had a daughter Destizer Musfika Kadin 1872 18 July 1961 She was Abkhazian born Ayse Hanim She grew up with her sister under the tutelage of Pertevniyal Sultan the mother of Sultan Abdulaziz uncle of Abdul Hamid She followed Abdul Hamid into exile and was with him until his death so much so that it is said that the sultan died in her arms She had a daughter Sazkar Hanim 8 May 1873 1945 She was a noble Abkhazian born Fatma Zekiye Hanim She was among the consorts who followed Abdul Hamid into exile and later left Turkey with her one daughter Peyveste Hanim 1873 1943 Abkhazian princess born Hatice Rabia Hanim and aunt of Leyla Acba She served Nazikeda Kadin with her sisters and then became the treasurer of the harem She was highly respected She followed her husband into exile and then her one son Pesend Hanim 13 February 1876 5 November 1924 Born princess Fatma Kadriye Achba she was one of Abdul Hamid s favorite consorts and was known for her kindness charity and tolerance She was one of the consorts who stayed with Abdul Hamid until his death and on his death she cut her hair and threw it into the sea as a sign of mourning She had a daughter Behice Hanim 10 October 1882 22 October 1969 She was Sazkar Hanim s cousin and her real name was Behiye Hanim She was arrogant and proud initially she had to marry Sehzade Mehmed Burhaneddin son of Abdul Hamid but in the end the sultan decided to marry her himself against Behice s will She had two twin sons Saliha Naciye Kadin 1887 1923 She was born Zeliha Ankuap and was also called Atike Naciye Kadin Known for her kindness and modesty she was Abdul Hamid s favorite among the consorts who stayed with him until his death She had a son and a daughter Durdane Hanim 1869 January 1957 Calibos Hanim 1890 1955 Simperver Nazliyar Hanim Berguzar Hanim Levandit Hanim Ebru Hanim Sermelek Hanim Gevherriz Hanim Mihrimend Zelide Hanim 1946 Nevcedid Hanim Sons edit Abdul Hamid had at least eight sons 68 63 Sehzade Mehmed Selim 11 January 1870 5 May 1937 with Bedrifelek Kadin He did not get along with his father He had eight consorts two sons and a daughter Sehzade Mehmed Abdulkadir 16 January 1878 16 March 1944 with Bidar Kadin He had seven consorts five sons and two daughters Sehzade Ahmed Nuri 12 February 1878 7 August 1944 with Bedrifelek Kadin He had a consort but no children Sehzade Mehmed Burhaneddin 19 December 1885 15 June 1949 with Mezidemestan Kadin He had four consorts and two sons Sehzade Abdurrahim Hayri 15 August 1894 1 January 1952 with Peyveste Hanim He had two consorts a son and a daughter Sehzade Ahmed Nureddin June 22 1901 December 1944 with Behice Hanim Twin of Sehzade Mehmed Bedreddin He had a consort and a son Sehzade Mehmed Bedreddin 22 June 1901 13 October 1903 with Behice Hanim Twin of Sehzade Ahmed Nureddin Born in Yildiz Palace He died of meningitis and was buried in the Yahya Efendi cemetery Sehzade Mehmed Abid May 17 1905 December 8 1973 with Saliha Naciye Kadin He had two consorts but no children Daughters edit Abdul Hamid had at least 13 daughters 68 63 Ulviye Sultan 1868 5 October 1875 with Nazikeda Kadin Born in Dolmabahce Palace she tragically died at the age of seven while her mother played the piano and the servants were dismissed for their meal Ulviye Sultan began to play with some matches Her dress caught fire and her gold belt trapped her inside it even though her mother burned her hands trying to unhook it In panic Nazikeda picked up her daughter and ran down the stairs screaming for help but the movement fueled the flames and Ulviye Sultan died burnt alive leaving her mother in despair from which she never recovered Nazikeda was buried in the Yeni Cami Zekiye Sultan 12 January 1872 13 July 1950 with Bedrifelek Kadin She married once and had two daughters She was one of Abdul Hamid s favorite daughters Fatma Naime Sultan 5 September 1876 1945 with Bidar Kadin She is the favorite daughter of Abdul Hamid who called her my accession daughter because she was born close to the date of his accession to the throne She married twice and had a son and a daughter In 1904 she was embroiled in a scandal when she discovered that her first husband was cheating on her with her cousin Hatice Sultan daughter of Murad V Naile Sultan 9 February 1884 25 October 1957 with Dilpesend Kadin She married once with no children Seniye Sultan 1884 1884 unknown motherhood Seniha Sultan 1885 1885 with Dilpesend Kadin She died at five months Sadiye Sultan 30 November 1886 20 November 1977 with Emsalinur Kadin She married twice and had a daughter Hamide Ayse Sultan 15 November 1887 10 August 1960 with Musfika Kadin She was married twice and had three sons and a daughter Refia Sultan 15 June 1891 1938 with Sazkar Hanim She married once and had two daughters Hatice Sultan 10 July 1897 14 February 1898 with Pesend Hanim She died of smallpox and was buried in the Yahya Efendi cemetery Aliye Sultan 1900 1900 unknown motherhood She died a few days after her birth Cemile Sultan 1900 1900 unknown maternity She died a few days after her birth Samiye Sultan 16 January 1908 24 January 1909 with Saliha Naciye Kadin She died of pneumonia and was buried in the mausoleum Sehzade Ahmed Kemaleddin in the Yahya Efendi cemetery In popular culture editAbdul the Damned 1935 portrays a time near the end of the sultan s life Barry Unsworth s historical novel The Rage of the Vulture 1982 portrays the paranoia of Abdul Hamid s at the twilight of his sultanate May 1908 onwards In Don Rosa s comic book story The Treasury of Croesus Scrooge McDuck pulls out a permit which Abdul Hamid II signed in 1905 allowing McDuck carte blanche to excavate the ancient ruins of Ephesus Payitaht Abdulhamid named The Last Emperor in English is a Turkish popular historical television drama series depicting the last 13 years of the reign of Abdul Hamid II 69 In Orhan Pamuk s satirical novel Nights of Plague 2021 Abdul Hamid dispatches the Ottoman Empire s chief inspector of public health along with a Muslim epidemiologist and his wife the sultan s niece to the fictitious island of Mingheria to combat the bubonic plague Awards and honors editOttoman orders nbsp Grand Master of the Order of the Crescent nbsp Grand Master of the Order of Glory nbsp Grand Master of the Order of the Medjidie nbsp Grand Master of the Order of OsmaniehForeign orders and decorations nbsp Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Saint Stephen in Diamonds 1881 Austria Hungary 70 nbsp Knight of the Order of the Elephant 13 December 1884 Kingdom of Denmark 71 nbsp Knight of the Order of the Seraphim in Diamonds 24 July 1879 Kingdom of Sweden 72 nbsp Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Kamehameha I July 1881 Kingdom of Hawaii 73 nbsp Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Saint Olav 11 February 1885 Kingdom of Norway 74 nbsp Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Tower and Sword Kingdom of Portugal nbsp Knight of the Order of the Golden Fleece 19 December 1880 Kingdom of Spain 75 nbsp Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the White Falcon 1891 Grand Duchy of Saxe Weimar Eisenach 76 nbsp Knight Grand Cross with Collar of the Order of Saint Alexander 1897 Principality of Bulgaria 77 nbsp Knight Grand Cross with Collar of the Order of Carol I 1907 Kingdom of Romania 78 nbsp Knight of the Order of the Annunciation 29 November 1881 Kingdom of Italy 79 nbsp Knight of the Order of the Black Eagle in Diamonds 3 February 1882 German Empire 80 nbsp Knight of the Order of the Royal House of Chakri 18 December 1892 Kingdom of Siam 81 nbsp Knight Grand Cordon of the Order of the Chrysanthemum 26 June 1888 Empire of Japan 82 nbsp Knight of the Order of Saint Hubert 1908 Kingdom of Bavaria 83 Gallery editThreatened by several assassination attempts Abdul Hamid II did not travel often though still more than many previous rulers Photographs provided visual evidence of what took place in his realm He commissioned thousands of photographs of his empire including from the Constantinople studio of Jean Pascal Sebah The sultan presented large gift albums of photographs to various governments and heads of state including the U S 84 and Great Britain 85 The American collection is housed in the Library of Congress and has been digitized 86 nbsp Eunuch near the door of the sultan s harem from East and War by Vlas Doroshevich nbsp Abdul Hamid II 1908 L Illustration nbsp Enver Bey Sultan Abdul Hamid II and Niyazi Bey nbsp Abdul Hamid II arrives in Thessaloniki nbsp Istanbul Military Museum Abdulhamid II deskSee also editThe Ottomans Europe s Muslim Emperors Yildiz Hamidiye Mosque List of sultans of the Ottoman Empire List of nicknames of European royalty and nobility A Payitaht Abdulhamid 2017 TV drama Abdul the DamnedReferences editCitations edit a b c d e f g h i j k l Hoiberg Dale H ed 2010 Abdulhamid II Encyclopedia Britannica Vol I A ak Bayes 15th ed Chicago IL Encyclopedia Britannica Inc pp 22 ISBN 978 1 59339 837 8 Some sources state that his birth date was on 22 September Overy Richard pp 252 253 2010 a b c Abdulhamid II biography Ottoman sultan Archived from the original on 26 January 2021 Retrieved 29 September 2015 Deringil Selim April 2003 They Live in a State of Nomadism and Savagery The Late Ottoman Empire and the Post Colonial Debate Comparative Studies in Society and History 45 311 342 via JSTOR Sultan beaten capital falls 6 000 are slain The New York Times 25 April 1909 Archived from the original on 16 August 2019 Retrieved 16 August 2019 Vahan Hamamdjian 2004 Vahan s Triumph Autobiography of an Adolescent Survivor of the Armenian Genocide iUniverse p 11 ISBN 978 0 595 29381 0 Sharkey Heather J 2017 The Pivotal Era of Abdulhamid II 1876 1909 A History of Muslims Christians and Jews in the Modern Middle East Cambridge University Press pp 179 242 doi 10 1017 9781139028455 006 ISBN 978 1 139 02845 5 Archived from the original on 10 June 2018 Retrieved 24 October 2020 Schmidt Jan 2018 Introduction The Orientalist Karl Sussheim Meets the Young Turk Officer Isma il Hakki Bey Two Unexplored Sources from the Last Decade in the Reign of the Ottoman Sultan Abdulhamid II Brill p 2 ISBN 978 90 04 36617 6 Archived from the original on 9 May 2021 Retrieved 24 October 2020 Ihrig Stefan 2014 Prologue Leaving Enverland Ataturk in the Nazi Imagination Harvard University Press pp 1 9 doi 10 2307 j ctt9qdt54 ISBN 978 0 674 36837 8 JSTOR j ctt9qdt54 Devrim Cemil February 1964 The Oldest Turkish Newspaper Yeni Asir Gazette Leiden Netherlands 10 1 11 15 doi 10 1177 001654926401000103 S2CID 144092475 Archived from the original on 29 October 2020 Retrieved 24 October 2020 Razmik Panossian 2013 The Armenians From Kings and Priests to Merchants and Commissars Columbia University Press p 165 ISBN 978 0 231 13926 7 Turkish Royalty Ancestry Archived from the original on 6 April 2012 Retrieved 29 November 2012 Osmanli Imparatorlugu Turk Sultanlari Osmanli Arastirmalari Vakfi Archived from the original on 11 July 2012 Retrieved 29 November 2012 Freely John Inside the Seraglio published 1999 Chapter 15 On the Shores of the Bosphorus Brookes Douglas Scott 2010 The Concubine the Princess and the Teacher Voices from the Ottoman Harem University of Texas Press p 134 ISBN 978 0 292 78335 5 Sultan Abdulaziz Avrupa Seyahati blog milliyet com tr Archived from the original on 11 November 2014 Retrieved 15 November 2014 Chambers Biographical Dictionary ISBN 0 550 18022 2 p 3 Davison Roderique H Reform in the Ottoman Empire Princeton University Press 1963 Hourani Albert Arabic Thought in the Liberal Age 1798 1939 Cambridge University Press 1962 p 68 Freely John 1998 Istanbul The 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2004 A Modern History of the Kurds 3rd rev and updated ed London I B Tauris pp 60 62 Nalbandian Louise 1963 The Armenian Revolutionary Movement The Development of Armenian Political Parties through the Nineteenth Century Berkeley University of California Press Constitutional Rights Foundation Cfr usa org Archived from the original on 9 October 2006 Retrieved 22 September 2006 Rodogno Davide Against Massacre Humanitarian Interventions in the Ottoman Empire 1815 1914 Princeton University Press 2012 pp 185 211 Gary J Bass Freedom s Battle The Origins of Humanitarian Intervention New York Alfred A Knopf 2008 Balakian The Burning Tigris Sitara Interior Door Curtain of the Ka ba Sultan Abdulhamid II r 1876 1909 www metmuseum org Archived from the original on 16 October 2022 Retrieved 28 December 2018 a b Takkush Mohammed Suhail The Ottoman s History pp 489 490 a b c d e nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 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original on 6 May 2021 Retrieved 17 October 2019 Italia Ministero dell interno 1898 Calendario generale del Regno d Italia Unione tipografico editrice p 54 Schwarzer Adler orden Koniglich Preussische Ordensliste in German Vol 1 Berlin General Ordenskommission 1886 p 9 Archived from the original on 18 August 2021 Retrieved 22 January 2024 Royal Thai Government Gazette 18 December 1892 phrarachthanekhruxngrachxisriyaphrn PDF in Thai Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 8 May 2019 刑部芳則 2017 明治時代の勲章外交儀礼 PDF in Japanese 明治聖徳記念学会紀要 p 144 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 17 August 2020 Hof und Staatshandbuch des Konigreichs Bayern 1910 Konigliche Orden p 8 William Allen The Abdul Hamid II Collection History of Photography eight 1984 119 145 M I Waley and British Library Sultan Abdulhamid II Early Turkish Photographs in 51 Albums from the British Library on Microfiche Zug Switzerland IDC 1987 Ottoman Empire photographs Library of Congress Archived from the original on 6 March 2010 Retrieved 24 February 2005 Sources edit Abdul Hamid II Biography All Documents about Abdul Hamid in English from a Turkish Web Site Archived 23 June 2020 at the Wayback Machine McMeekin Sean 2016 The Ottoman Endgame war revolution and the making of the modern Middle East 1908 1923 New York New York Penguin Random House ISBN 9781594205323 Overy Richard The Times Complete History of the World HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 00 731569 7 2010 Further reading editAkarli Engin D 2001 The Tangled Ends of an Empire and Its Sultan In Leila Tarazi Fawaz C A Bayly eds Modernity and Culture From the Mediterranean to the Indian Ocean New York Columbia University Press pp 261 284 ISBN 978 0 231 11426 4 Georgeon Francois 2003 Abdulhamid II Le sultan calife Paris Fayard Shaw Stanford J Shaw Ezel K 1977 History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey Vol 2 Reform Revolution and Republic The Rise of Modern Turkey 1808 1975 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 29166 8 Yasamee F A K 1996 Ottoman Diplomacy Abdulhamid II and the Great Powers 1878 1888 Istanbul ISIS ISBN 978 975 428 088 3 Pears Edwin Sir 1917 The Life of Abdul Hamid 1 ed London Constable and Company Ltd Retrieved 17 March 2019 via Internet Archive Haslip Joan 1973 The Sultan The life of Abdul Hamid 2nd ed Cassell ISBN 978 0 297 76519 6 Kucuk Cevdet 1988 Abdulhamid II An article published in the first volume of Turkish Encyclopedia of Islam in Turkish Vol 1 Ab i Hayat el Ahkamu s Ser iyye Istanbul TDV Islam Ansiklopedisi pp 216 224 ISBN 978 97 53 89428 9 External links edit nbsp Media related to Abdul Hamid II at Wikimedia Commons II Abdul Hamid Forum in English Archived 2 February 2010 at the Wayback Machine II Abdul Hamid Forum in English II Abdulhamit Donemi Olaylari ittihat Ve Terakki Odev Sitesi US Library of Congress Abdul Hamid II Photo Collection about 1 800 photographs mounted in albums ca 1880 1893 Abdul Hamid II Collier s New Encyclopedia 1921 Newspaper clippings about Abdul Hamid II in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBWAbdul Hamid IIHouse of OsmanBorn 21 September 1842 Died 10 February 1918Regnal titlesPreceded byMurad V Sultan of the Ottoman Empire31 August 1876 27 April 1909 Succeeded byMehmed VSunni Islam titlesPreceded byMurad V Caliph of the Ottoman Caliphate31 August 1876 27 April 1909 Succeeded byMehmed V Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Abdul Hamid II amp oldid 1218135590, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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