Kâmil Pasha

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Mehmed Kâmil Pasha (Ottoman Turkish: محمد كامل پاشا; Turkish: Kıbrıslı Mehmet Kâmil Paşa, "Mehmed Kamil Pasha the Cypriot"), also spelled as Kamil Pasha (1833 – 14 November 1913), was an Ottoman statesman and liberal politician[1] of Turkish Cypriot origin in the late-19th-century and early-20th-century. He was the Grand Vizier of the Empire during four different periods.[2]

Mehmed Kâmil
Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire
In office
25 September 1885 – 4 September 1891
MonarchAbdul Hamid II
Preceded byMehmed Said Pasha
Succeeded byAhmed Cevad Pasha
In office
2 October 1895 – 7 November 1895
MonarchAbdul Hamid II
Preceded byMehmed Said Pasha
Succeeded byHalil Rifat Pasha
In office
5 August 1908 – 14 February 1909
MonarchAbdul Hamid II
Preceded byMehmed Said Pasha
Succeeded byHüseyin Hilmi Pasha
In office
29 October 1912 – 23 January 1913
MonarchMehmed V
Preceded byAhmed Muhtar Pasha
Succeeded byMahmud Shevket Pasha
Personal details
Born1833
Nicosia, Cyprus Sanjak, Ottoman Empire
Died14 November 1913 (aged 80)
Nicosia, British Cyprus
NationalityOttoman
Political partyFreedom and Accord Party

Early life edit

 
Kâmil Pasha, 1860s

Mehmed Kâmil Pasha was born in Nicosia, Ottoman Cyprus in 1833. He was the son of an artillery captain, Salih Agha, from the village of Pyrogi. His paternal grandfather is from Karakese village of Anamur. Kâmil's mother is Pembe Hanım, who also hailed from Cyprus.[3]

He was educated in on the island until the age of thirteen; He learned Arabic, Persian, French and Greek. In 1845, he was taken to Egypt with his younger brother and studied at Elsine Madrasa. Shortly after, when the madrasah was converted into a military academy, he took courses on military sciences. He graduated as a cavalry lieutenant.

His first post was in the household of the Khedive of Egypt, Abbas I, at that time was only nominally dependent to the central Ottoman power in Constantinople. In the course of this appointment he visited London for the Great Exhibition of 1851 in charge of one of the Khedive's sons. Kamil's sojourn in London left in him a lifelong admiration for Britain and during his career within the Ottoman state, he was always known to be an Anglophile.

Having full command of English, thenceforth to the close of his career he zealously sought a close friendship between the United Kingdom and the Ottoman Empire.

High politics in the Ottoman Empire edit

After remaining in Egypt for ten years, Mehmed Kâmil exchanged the service of Abbas I for that of the Ottoman Government as of 1860 and for the ensuing nineteen years – that is to say until he first entered the Cabinet – he filled very numerous administrative appointments in every part of the Empire. He governed, or helped to govern vilayets such as Eastern Rumelia, Hercegovina, Kosovo, and his native Cyprus.

 
Kâmil Pasha wearing the diplomatic uniform.
 
Kamil Pasha with British, Egyptian and Turkish royalty in 1911
 
Enver Bey asking Kâmil Pasha to resign during the raid on the Sublime Porte.

Kamil Pasha was appointed Grand Vizier from 25 September 1885 to 4 September 1891, under Abdul Hamid II's reign. During this time he developed a rivalry with Mehmed Said Pasha.

His second premiership came about during the height of the Armenian Crisis during the Hamidian massacres. On 2 October 1895 he was appointed Grand Vizier in a tense atmosphere. As a neo-Tanzimatist, Kamil Pasha petitioned the sultan to put responsible governance back in the hands of the Sublime Porte. He received support from the Great Powers and Young Turk media. Several CUP organs supported Kâmil Pasha in his showdown with the Sultan, but by 7 November, Kâmil Pasha was out of high office, his "coup" ending in status quo. For the next decade, he was exiled as governor of Aydın.

When Said Pasha resigned from office soon after the Young Turk Revolution, Abdul Hamid II and the CUP compromised with Kâmil Pasha to run the government. Kâmil soon had an antagonistic relationship with the committee, and associated himself with Prince Sabahaddin's Liberty Party. His premiership lasted just over five months, before the CUP censured him with a vote of no confidence, and replaced him with someone more pliant to the committee's wishes.

For three years he stayed out of politics. In 1911 he contracted pneumonia and went to Egypt for a change of atmosphere. There he met with King George V of England and the queen, who were on a trip to India, for lunch on the ship. This incident caused him to be heavily criticized in the pro-CUP press.[4] After a while he returned to Istanbul.

After the shuttering of parliament in summer 1912 by the Savior Officers, he became head of the Council of State in Muhtar Pasha's Great Cabinet. With his resignation Kâmil returned to the premiership leading a Freedom and Accord government. He was appointed Grand Vizier for his friendly relations with the British (he was often known as İngiliz Kamil, or "English Kamil", for his Anglophilia[5]), in the hopes that he would be able to get favorable terms for the end of the ongoing, disastrous First Balkan War (since the victorious Bulgaria's foreign interests were represented by the British). In January 1913, Kamil's government decided to accept severe peace conditions including massive territorial losses.

The CUP used this pretext for their coup d'état on 23 January 1913. That day, Enver Bey, one of the CUP's military leaders, burst with some of his associates into the Sublime Porte while the cabinet was in session. By most accounts, one of Enver's officers, Yakup Cemil, shot the Minister of War Nazım Pasha and the group pressed Kamil Pasha to resign immediately at gunpoint.

Kamil was put under house arrest and surveillance. The ex-Grand Vizier (who probably was in danger of life) was invited by his British friend Lord Kitchener to stay with him in Cairo. After three months in Egypt, Mehmed Kamil Pasha decided to wait for favourable turn of events in his native Cyprus, now under British occupation. Five weeks after his return to Cyprus, the assassination of his successor to the premiership, Mahmud Shevket Pasha, occurred in June 1913, by a relative of Nazım Pasha to avenge his death. The CUP regime reacted with persecution of well-known opposition politicians. Djemal Pasha, then the CUP prefect of the capital Constantinople, indicated to Kamil's family that they had to leave the Ottoman Empire or he too would be arrested. His family joined his exile in Cyprus.

On 14 November 1913, while full of plans for revisiting England in 1914, Kamil Pasha suddenly died of syncope and was buried in the court of the Arab Ahmet Mosque.

Family edit

Kamil married Layika (Bayur) and had several children. His grandson is Hikmet Bayur and his grand nephew is film maker Zeki Alasya. His son-in-law is general Naci Eldeniz. Tekin Arıburun, president of the Turkish Senate from 1970–1977, is his grandson-in-law.

Legacy edit

Sir Ronald Storrs, British Governor of Cyprus from 1926 to 1932, erected a memorial to be raised over Kamil Pasha's grave. He also composed the English inscription, carved on the headstone below a Turkish one. It runs as follows:

His Highness Kiamil Pasha
Son of Captain Salih Agha of Pyroi
Born in Nicosia in 1833
Treasury Clerk
Commissioner of Larnaca
Director of Evqaf
Four times Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire
A Great Turk and
A Great Man.

See also edit

Sources edit

  1. ^ "Arabs and Young Turks".
  2. ^ İsmail Hâmi Danişmend, Osmanlı Devlet Erkânı, Türkiye Yayınevi, İstanbul, 1971 (Turkish)
  3. ^ Şen, İsmail (1995). "Sadrazam Kıbrıslı Mehmed Kamil Paşa: 1832-1913". Ankara Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü doktora tezi. Archived from the original on 1 January 2023.
  4. ^ Çetin, Atilla. KIBRISLI KÂMİL PAŞA maddesi. Archived from the original on 28 September 2020. Retrieved 24 August 2020.
  5. ^ Finkel, Caroline (1 August 2007). Osman's Dream: The History of the Ottoman Empire. Basic Books. p. 523. ISBN 978-0-465-00850-6.

External links edit

Government offices
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1877–1879
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1895–1907
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Political offices
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1880
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1880–1881
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1882–1885
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1885–1891
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1895
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1908–1909
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1912
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Notes and references
1. Kuneralp, Sinan (1999). Son dönem Osmanlı erkân ve ricali, 1839–1922 (in Turkish). Beylerbeyi, Istanbul: İsis.