DELIMITATION OF THE OTTOMAN-IRANIAN FRONTIER: TAHIR PASHA
AND THE OTTOMAN FRONTIER COMMISSION, 1905-1908
A THESIS SUBMITTED TO
THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF SOCIAL SCIENCES
OF
The Ottoman-Iranian frontier in the early twentieth century consists of two separate
categories: (1) the disputed lands, where a status quo was declared between the two
states, and (2) the undisputed lands, where the Ottoman-Iranian boundary had been
already shaped. This study concentrates on one of the last Ottoman frontier
commissions, led by Tahir Pasha between 1907 and 1908, and illustrates the
historical trajectory that shows how Tahir Pasha, as an experienced Ottoman
statesman, who lived more than thirty-three years in various eastern frontier
provinces, was involved in the boundary making process. The study introduces not
only Tahir Pasha to historical studies, but also it exposes the anatomy of the
commission that he led, so the study presents insightful data regarding the salaries,
previous tasks, and tenures of its officials, and conditions under which Ottoman
commissioners served in a limited financial situation that restricted the activities of
the Ottoman bureaucratic and military elites. Paradoxically, the expenditures of the
commission and the cost of keeping alert the additional Ottoman troops in the
frontier zone deteriorated the situation. Providing this data, this study shows how the
commission interacted with British, Russian, and Iranian officials diplomatically in a
period where the Ottoman military began to occupy parts of the contested lands
between 1905 and 1908, and explains the possible reasons of the invasion by
cinsidering the international power relations that was strained with the Ottoman
intervention. Considering the impacts of the international conjecture, the study
discusses how Ottoman and Iranian governments and commissioners held
negotiations, what kind of procedures were applied, how negotiations were
conducted, what the results were, and how all developments led both commissions to
reach a deadlock regarding the fate of the boundary in 1908. During this process,
v
Tahir Pasha's individual initiatives, research methods, and concluding remarks are
analyzed by evaluating official reports he sent to Istanbul.
Keywords: Tahir Pasha, disputed lands, frontier commission, frontier delimitation,
frontier negotiations, military fortifications.
vi
ÖZ
OSMANLI-İRAN SINIRININ BELIRLENMESI: TAHIR PAŞA VE OSMANLI
SINIR KOMİSYONU, 1905-1908
Karlıoğlu, Fatih
MA, Tarih Bölümü
Tez Danışmanı: Prof. Dr. Engin Akarlı
Haziran 2015, 154 sayfa
Osmanlı-İran sınırındaki tartışmalı arazilerin genel olarak iki kısımda şekillendiği
görülür. İlk kısım Osmanlı ve İran arasında statüko ilan edilen ihtilaflı arazileri
kapsar. Bu arazilerin hangi ülkeye ait olduğu yirminci yüzyılın ilk on yılında iki ülke
arasında temel anlaşmazlık unsuru olmuştur. İkincisi ise Osmanlı ve İran arasında
sorunsuz çözüme kavuşturulma potansiyeline sahip toprakları içerir. Tüm sınırı
belirlemek ve Beyazıt’tan Süleymaniye’ye kadar olan ilk kısım arazilerin
oluşturduğu sorunları engellemek için 1907 yılında Tahir Paşa yönetiminde yeni bir
sınır komisyonu oluşturulur. İhtilaflı bölge içinden geçen sınırı belirlemek
çalışmaların ağırlık noktasını oluşturması gerekirken, İran’ın toptancı tutumu ve
buna karşılık Osmanlı’nın Savuçbulak’a kadar olan tüm bölgeyi kendisine ilhak
etmek istmesi süreci tekrar tıkamıştır. Bu tez tüm bu süreci tekrar ele alırken, aynı
zamanda Van, Bitlis, Musul, Erzurum ve Trabzon gibi doğu sınır eyaletlerinde
toplamda 33 yıl görev yapmış bir Osmanlı devlet adamı olan Tahir Paşa’nın sınır
belirleme işlerine hangi şartlarda katıldığı ve süreci nasıl yönettiği tartışılmaktadır.
Çalışma hem Tahir Paşa’yı tarih çalışmalarına tanıtırken hem de yine onun
tarafından yönetilen bir sınır komisyonu anatomisi çıkarmaktadır. Tahir Paşa ve
komisyon görevlilerinin maaş miktarları, görev süreleri, komisyondan önceki görev
yerleri, sınır komisyonunda hangi şartlarda ne kadar hizmet ettikleri ile ilgili
niteliksel ve niceliksel bilgiler verilmiştir. Bunun yanında komisyonun çalışmasını
engelleyen unsurlara da dikkat çekilmiştir. İklim ve coğrafi zorlukların yanında,
Osmanlı maliyesinin kötü durumu, komisyonun rahat çalışmasını olumsuz etkileyen
önemli faktörlerden biridir. Bu sınırlı mali durum bir yandan Osmanlı sınır
politikalarını ve askeri faalyietlerini kısıtlarken, diğer yandan askeri tahkimatla
oluşan yeni harcamalar finansal durumu paradoksal olarak daha da kötüleştirmiştir.
vii
Sonuç olarak, bu tez, 1905’ten 1908’e kadar oluşan iç ve dış dinamikler
çerçevesinde, Osmanlı sınır komisyonunun İngiliz, Rus ve İranlı bürokratlar ile nasıl
bir diplomatik etkileşim içerisinde bulunduğunu anlamaya çalışmaktadır. Birinci
Dünya Savaşı öncesi Ermeni ve Kürt rekabeti hakkında fikir veren bu çalışma,
rekabette Osmanlı’nın dengeleyici bir rol üstlenmeye çalıştığını göstermektedir.
Mevcut çalışma, Osmanlı işgallerinin arkasında yatan nedenleri dönemin bölgesel
güç ilişkileri çerçevesinde ele alarak, Osmanlı, Rusya ve İngiltere’nin bölge ile ilgili
pozisyonlarını birincil kaynaklar üzerinden analiz etmektedir. Tüm bu bilgiler
ışığında, sınır müzakerelerinin hangi şartlarda başladığı, ne çeşit bir yöntem ya da
müzakere teknikleri uygulandığı, bu müzakerelerin nasıl yönetildiği, ne çeşit
sonuçlar üretildiği, ve sınır müzakerelerini çıkmaza sokan iddialar ve görüşler ortaya
konmuştur. Bu aşamada, Tahir Paşa’nın sınırla ilgili bireysel girişimleri, araştırma
teknikleri ve ulaştığı sonuçlar merkeze gönderdiği kendi raporları üzerinden
değerlendirilmiştir.
Anahtar Kelimeler: Tahir Paşa, ihtilaflı araziler, sınır komisyonu, sınır kesimi, sınır
müzakereleri, askeri tahkimatlar.
viii
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
First, I would like to express my deepest gratitude to my supervisor Prof. Dr. Engin
Akarlı for his patience, guidance, and most importantly, for taking me under his wing
despite his many other academic and professional commitments. I would like to
thank him for helping me understand the Ottoman documents I used in this study,
and for directing me in the right direction. It was because of him I was able to
understand better the mentality behind the inter-institutional correspondences of the
Ottoman State. His knowledge and his important academic works inspired me in
many ways.
I would like to thank Assoc. Prof. Dr. Abdulhamit Kırmızı for assisting me in
my research, every time I needed help. He informed me about rarely known sources.
I would not have been able to finish this study without his invaluable and insightful
comments. I would like to thank Assist. Prof. Dr. Kahraman Şakul for his
participation in my thesis committee.
I would like to express my most sincere gratitude to Prof. Dr. Kemal Karpat,
Prof. Dr. Coşkun Çakır, and Mehmet Genç, for conveying lifelong experiences in the
profession to us, their students, via their courses offered at Istanbul Şehir University
and for being such great academic role models to us.
Many thanks to the Academic Writing Center staff Rana Marcella Özenç and
David Reed Albachten, and Yakoob Ahmed, for proofreading my thesis and
providing insightful criticisms and recommendations as I wrote my thesis, and for
pointing out to me how to write an academic thesis according to established rules and
standards. I am grateful and indebted to Graduate School Secretary Talha Üstündağ
for his valuable comments and instructions as well.
I would like to thank the library staff of Istanbul Şehir University,
particularly Yelda Kahvecioğlu and Mesut Yılmaz for helping me locate the books
and articles I required, but could not find anywhere else, and Tugba Örün for being
very helpful. I would like to thank to the Ottoman Prime Ministry Archive and the
library of the Centre for Islamic Studies (ISAM) for letting me use available sources
they have.
I would like to express my profound gratitude to TUBITAK (The Scientific
and Technological Research Council of Turkey), particularly to the subdepartment
BIDEB for financially supporting me since my undergraduate years. Individually, I
ix
would like to thank Seda Barıtlı, the coordinator, for providing all the technical
information I needed along the way.
Finally, I must express my deepest thanks to my family and my friends,
especially to Arzu Karlıoğlu for her unlimited support throughout the process of
researching and writing this thesis.
This thesis could not have been completed without the help and support of
any of the aforementioned people. Once more, to everyone, I would like to say, thank
you.
x
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Abstract ....................................................................................................................... iv
Öz ................................................................................................................................ vi
Acknowledgements ................................................................................................... viii
Table of Contents ......................................................................................................... x
List of Maps ............................................................................................................... xii
List of Tables............................................................................................................. xiii
List of Abbreviations................................................................................................. xiv
CHAPTER
Introduction .................................................................................................................. 1
1. 1. Literature Review and Research Methodology ................................................ 6
1. 2. Review of Works on Ottoman Frontiers .......................................................... 6
1. 3. Research Methodology................................................................................... 12
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND ............................................................................... 14
2. 1. Ottoman-Safavid Relations and Frontiers (1502-1736) ................................. 14
2. 2. Ottoman-Qajar Relations and Frontiers (1796-1925) .................................... 18
2. 3. A Convention: For Peace or For War ............................................................ 24
2. 3. 1. The Anglo-Russian Treaty (1907-1914) ................................................ 25
2. 3. 2. Comments on the Anglo-Russian Convention: ...................................... 26
2. 3. 3. Disputed Border Zone ............................................................................ 31
FORMATION OF THE FRONTIER COMMISSION .............................................. 33
3. 1. Commission Members, Commission-Related Expenses, and Increasing
Budgetary Problems ............................................................................................... 33
3. 2. Salaries and Travel Payments of the Commission Members ......................... 36
3. 3. Members of the Commission and Their Salaries ........................................... 37
3. 4. Occasional Expenditures, Military Fortifications, and the Claims for the
Termination of the Boundary Commission ............................................................ 43
3. 5. Tahir Pasha’s Involvement in Boundary Delimitation................................... 46
3. 5. 1. Praying for Rain and Rioting against the Governor: The Case of Ferid
Pasha .................................................................................................................. 47
xi
3. 5. 2. Anti-Governor Riot in Van: The Case of Ali Bey Efendi ...................... 50
THE COMMISSION IN ACTION ............................................................................ 52
4. 1. The Phase of Inquiry ...................................................................................... 52
4. 1. 1. A Local Dispute: Pro-Iranian Muslims and Nestorians vs. Pro-Ottoman
Kurdish Villagers ............................................................................................... 55
4. 1. 2. Charges against the Ottoman troops and Clarifications ......................... 57
4. 2. The Phase of New Occupations and Boundary Negotiations ........................ 62
4. 2. 1. Imperial Edicts, The Porte’s Reports, Ancient Treaties and Maps ........ 63
4. 2. 2. The Boundary Negotiations ................................................................... 71
4. 2. 3. Where was Ushni and where was the Status Quo Line? ........................ 82
4. 2. 4. Two Tribes and Their Search for Protection .......................................... 90
4. 2. 5. Ottoman Discourses and Savuçbulak ..................................................... 93
4. 2. 5. 1. Fundamentals of Ottoman Discourse for Military Fortification and
Intervention ........................................................................................................ 95
4. 2. 6. The States and Inter-Tribal Conflicts ................................................... 100
Conclusion ............................................................................................................... 104
Bibiliography ........................................................................................................... 111
Appendices ............................................................................................................... 120
A. TAHIR PASHA’S CAREER LINE ................................................................ 120
The First Phase: (1868-1880) ........................................................................... 120
The Second Phase: (1880-1912) ...................................................................... 123
B. BIOGRAPHICAL REGISTER OF TAHIR PASHA ...................................... 129
C. SOME EXAMPLES FROM TAHIR PASHA’S REPORTS .......................... 131
D. MEMORANDUMS EXCHAGED BETWEEN THE COMMISSION OF
TAHIR PASHA AND THE DELEGATES OF OTHER STATES ..................... 136
E. BRITISH TRANLSATION OF SECOND TREATY OF ERZURUM .......... 149
F. THE JOINT MAP OF RUSSIA AND BRITAIN ............................................ 152
G. THE MAP OF OTTOMAN-IRANIAN FRONTIER IN 1910 ....................... 153
H. REPRODUCTION OF THE MAP OF OTTOMAN-IRANIAN FRONTIER IN
1910 ...................................................................................................................... 154
I. THE PICTURES OF TAHIR PASHA AND WRATISLAW .......................... 155
xii
LIST OF MAPS
Map 4.1: Military Fortifications…….………………………………………………88
Map 4.2: Northern Parts of the Ottoman-Iranain Frontier…………………………101
xiii
LIST OF TABLES
Table 3.1: A Summary of the Financial Estimates for 1325………………..………34
Table 3.2: Travel Allowance, Salaries, and Extra Salaries of the Boundary
Commissioners………………………………………………………………………39
xiv
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
A. AMD. Amedi Kalemi
A. MKT. Sadâret Mektubî Kalemi Belgeleri
BEO. Bâb-ı Âlî Evrak Odası
BOA. Başbakanlık Osmanlı Arşivi
DH. MKT. Dahiliye Nezâreti Mektubî Kalemi
DH. SAİD. Dahiliye Nezareti Sicill-i Ahvâl Kayıtları
DH. SYS. Dahiliye Nezâreti Siyasî Kısım Belgeleri
FO. Foreign Office
HRT. h. Haritalar
İE. ML . İbnülemin Maliye
İ. DH. İrâde - Dahiliye
İ. HUS. İrâde-i Hususiyye
Y. A. HUS. Sadâret Hususi Maruzât Evrakı
Y. MTV. Yıldız Mütenevvî Maruzât Evrakı
Y. PRK. ASK. Yıldız Perakende Evrakı Askerî Maruzât
Y. PRK. BŞK. Yıldız Perakende Evrakı Mâbeyn Başkitâbeti
KE. Kânun-u Evvel
KS. Kânun-u Sani
TE. Teşrin-i Evvel
TS. Teşrin-i Sâni
M. Muharrem
S. Safer
Ra. Rebîülevvel
R. Rebîülâhir
Ca. Cemâziyelevvel
C. Cemâziyelâhir
B. Receb
Ş. Şaban
N. Ramazan
L. Şevval
Za. Zilkade
Z. Zilhicce
1
CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION
“The history of the world
is best observed from the
frontiers.”1
Pierre Vilar
Differing from most of today’s modern nation states, the empires of the past
had more flexible, penetrable, and porous frontiers. Today, nobody uses the concept
of frontier to describe the outer limits of a state. Instead, it seems that the concept of
border / boundary is universally accepted by the states in order to define their limits
precisely. However, the wide usage of the notion of the border / boundary in the
present day obstructs the reality that the concept of the frontier is still alive. All the
modern states experienced distinctively such a complex transitional period from the
pre-modern frontiers to the modern border / boundary.
Extending to Eurasia and across Africa for centuries, the Ottoman Empire
created a cultural space where many languages were spoken, many religious rituals
were practiced, and many ethnic groups lived. The frontiers of the Ottoman Empire
reflected this cosmopolite nature highly. A. C. S. Peacock states that scholars rarely
examined the Ottoman frontiers compared to that of Rome and China. According to
Peacock, the Ottoman frontiers were ‘places both of interaction with the outside
world through trade and [places] of war and conflict, places where the empire’s
prestige and authority were both displayed and challenged’.2 The actors who became
the agents of the state on the frontiers, exercised the imperial rules, but the
difficulties on the frontier boundaries challenged the full-implementation of this
authority. These difficulties on the frontiers intensified in the modern era when the
Ottoman Empire began to suffer under international and internal pressures.
1 Peter Sahlins, Boundaries: The Making of France and Spain in the Pyrenees (California: University
of California Press, 1989), 1.
2 A. C. S Peacock, “Introduction: The Ottoman Empire and Its Frontiers,” in The Frontiers of the
Ottoman World, by A. C. S Peacock, Proceedings of the British Academy (New York: Oxford
University Press, 2009), 1.
2
One the most striking examples of these difficulties occurred on the frontier
with Iran in the early years of the twentieth century. This border front remained
stable in terms of its conflicts. Peacock states, “the border with the Safavids [of Iran]
was ambiguous with numerous tribes of fluctuating loyalties inhabiting the no-man’s
land between the two empires. However, for the merchants and pilgrims there were
clearly defined stations which nonetheless marked the transition from one political
jurisdiction to another in sixteenth- to seventeenth century Iraq.”3 The frontier
became the stage for Sunni-Shi’i conflicts beginning from the sixteenth century. As
Kemal H. Karpat explains, the same trend on the frontiers was that religion [Islam]
affected the relations of Iran and the Ottoman Empire by the late eighteenth and
throughout the nineteenth century.4 In order to settle the conflicts by demarcating the
boundary, both Iran and the Ottoman Empire formed many boundary commissions
and produced a significant amount of frontier knowledge.
Therefore, the aim of this study is to examine to what extent one of these
boundary commissions, which was formed under Tahir Pasha5, shaped the Ottoman-
Iranian relations between 1907 and 1908 in its international context. Many scholars
studied the struggle over the delimitation of the eastern frontiers of the Ottoman
Empire. Nevertheless, these studies are not enough to explain how the imperial
frontiers turned into imperial borders. Although there are well-written grand stories
of the boundary, they tend to examine the frontier as a whole over a broad period on
a macroscopic level. This method brings advantages and disadvantages. This kind of
study helps the reader understand the general framework of the boundary
delimitation, and the issues of conflict, but neglects the inner elements of the
boundary affairs such as the role of frontier actors. To examine the complex set of
conflicts rooted in the past requires such a broad perspective, but these subjects can
be studied by choosing a specific theme such as the imperial eastern boundary. Some
scholars address this gap. Metin Atmaca6 and Janet Klein7’s works are just two
examples of this new trend. I also suggest a microscopic level of analysis in my
3 Peacock, “Introduction”, 2.
4 Kemal H. Karpat and Robert W. Zens, Ottoman Borderlands: Issues, Personalities and Political
Changes (Madison: The University of Wisconsin Press, 2003), 1.
5 See Appendix A. Tahir Pasha’s Career Line in Two Phases.
6 Metin Atmaca, “Politics of Alliance and Rivalry on the Ottoman-Iranian Frontier: The Babans
(1500-1851)” (Ph.D. dissertation, Albert Ludwigs University of Freiburg, 2013).
7 Janet Klein, The Margins of Empire: Kurdish Militias in the Ottoman Tribal Zone (California:
Stanford University Press, 2011).
3
study that focuses on the boundary delimitation and conflicts through the eyes of the
boundary commissioners themselves and some other frontier actors. I think the
boundary commissions and their commissioners have their own history. As the key
political entity, the boundary commission was being formed with hopes to make a
change in the present state of the boundary. Thus, the period of each commission is a
period of reactivation, interactions, and reactions, aimed to settle violent disputes,
and conflicts of the frontiers by delimiting the eastern boundary in a modern sense.
The present study identifies the subject matter mentioned above by using a
mixed method of both the macro and micro modes of research, making use of both
quantitative and qualitative research methods. In order to show the struggle behind
the formation of the boundary commission, it adopts financial figures that were
required for the sake of the boundary delimitation. To be able to understand the
stance of the Ottoman government regarding its eastern boundary, it relies on the
qualitative method of analysis interpreting data within their context. Moreover, I give
particular importance to the chronological order of the events by comparing the
reports which were written by the British and Ottoman officers. The study makes
Tahir Pasha, the chief commissioner of the boundary commission, the center of
analysis because the commission was dominated by his view of the boundary. Thus,
the present study can also be considered a contribution to biographical works of the
Ottoman elite because it partly constructs the life of Tahir Pasha through his political
activities intermixed with thirty-three years of his life on the imperial eastern frontier
provinces. As a result, it aims to introduce an example of a governor whose long
tenure8 in state affairs enabled him to witness many local disputes, some of which
are still matters of contestation in today’s Turkey.
The study seeks answers to various research questions, such as the following.
To what extent could a frontier actor act independently from the center? Was it
possible for a frontier actor to act independently? How was the Ottoman
administration in the eastern peripheries in the late period? How did the Ottomans
control a marginal area, which was disputed? Why did the Ottomans occupy certain
disputed lands between 1905 and 1908? How did these occupations affect Ottoman-
Iranian relations? How did Britain and Russia react to these occupations? What was
the response of the Ottoman Empire to their counter-arguments during the boundary
8 See Appendix A. Tahir Pasha’s Career Line in Two Phases.
4
negotiations? To what extent did the natural conditions have an impact on the
boundary delimitation process? Most importantly, how was the relation of the Palace
and the Porte regarding the Kurdish subjects of the State? How did they co-operate
and disagree? How were the state-tribe relations? What was the role of religion in
Abdulhamid’s relations with the Sunni-Kurdish tribes that remained loyal to him?
What were the arguments of the chief boundary negotiator, Tahir Pasha? What kind
of approach did he adopt? Did the idea of Islamic unity play a significant role in
Tahir Pasha’s approach? Thus, can we say that pro-Caliphate polices influenced the
delimitation of the imperial eastern boundaries in the orient? Did the Ottoman
government have an effective authority over these groups? Did the tribes have an
ability to shape the state’s policies? How were the relations of the Kurds with the
Armenians who were backed by Russia? How did the Kurds view Russia? How did
the frontier society view and react to the reforms? How was the relation between the
rulers and the ruled?
In chapter 1, the recent studies on the imperial eastern boundaries are
discussed according to the time they cover and the methodology they use. The
chapter discusses the research methodology of the thesis as well.
Chapter 2 presents the historical context of Ottoman-Iranian relations relying
on a periodization according to the reign of Iranian dynasties. The historical
development of Ottoman-Iranian relations during the Safavids (1502-1736) is
examined in 3. 1. By leaving out some dynasties such as the Avşars (1736-1747) and
the Zends (1747-1796), the chapter then focuses on the developments on the frontier
during the time of the Qajars (1796-1925). Within this period, the years starting from
1840s emphasized because the states took most of the serious decisions regarding the
boundary delimitation in those years. Thus, the chapter establishes that the Ottoman
Empire and Iran covered disputed and undisputed territories.
Chapter 2 examines the Anglo-Russian Convention of 1907 based on articles
included in The Times. These articles reflect the public opinions of Britain, Germany,
and Russia over the imperial rivalries. Thus, the chapter discusses how the
convention was the product of Britain’s isolationist policies towards Russia in the
Iranian Gulf. The convention indicated that both countries, whose interests
intersected on the peaceful colonization of Iran, respected the integrity of Iran. Thus,
it aimed to stop the Ottoman occupations and fortifications in / around the disputed
zone, and the convention consolidated the ideas to form a new boundary commission
5
in 1907 in order to delimitate the disputed zone where the Russians had impediments
due to the frontier difficulties.
Chapter 3 examines the effort to form a boundary commission when the
Ottoman budget had suffered from cash shortages that show how essential cash is to
political advancement. This chapter introduces the boundary commissioners and
examines two political unrests in Bitlis and Van in 1907, which became a reason to
bring Tahir Pasha back to Bitlis and Van from Trabzon. In detail, salaries and travel
payments of the commissioners, occasional expenditures, and the cost of military
fortifications are presented as commission-related expenses, which increased the
budgetary problems of the Ottoman Empire.
Chapter 4 investigates the actions of the boundary commission in two phases
based on the reports of Tahir Pasha and other Ottoman frontier actors as well as on
the reports of the British, Russian and Iranian representatives. The first phase in
section 4. 1 evaluates the first duty of the commission, which was inquiring the
charges against the Ottoman troops following a local dispute between the Pro-Iranian
Nestorians, Muslims and Pro-Ottoman Kurds. The second part in section 4. 2
illustrates how Tahir Pasha developed a conceptual framework benefiting from the
imperial edicts, the Porte’s reports, ancient treaties and maps. Section 4. 2. 2. shows
that Tahir Pasha used a ‘Civilizational Approach’ during the boundary negotiations
by taking strength from the framework he cultivated and the secret instructions of the
Palace. The rest of the sections deal with new territories such as Ushni and
Savuçbulak (Suj Bulak) during Tahir Pasha’s period, and the Ottoman legitimization
efforts of the occupations through the protectionist policies that can be seen vividly
in their inter-institutional correspondences.
A broad range of the terms is introduced in the thesis, such as the frontier
actors, the frontier difficulties, the status quo, and the status quo line. Some of these
terms may call for clarification. The frontier actors include all the commissioners, the
high-ranking military commanders who are responsible to observe the status quo,
and the governors who served in the frontier provinces. It seems these three groups
were the main actors in the frontier zone and they shaped the frontier policies. They
were also the implementers of the civilizational approach in the field. The third term
is the frontier difficulties. This term is used to define the conflicting nature of the
disputed lands, and it refers to the inter-tribal conflicts, raids, attacks, plunders,
lawlessness, feuds, rumors, and the geographical limitations of the lands in the
6
general sense. The Times reporter described these lands as ‘Wild Districts’ due to
these difficulties. The status quo as a term coincides with the frontier zone that
included the controversial districts between the Ottoman Empire and Iran. However,
each state had a different understanding of the status quo. While the Ottoman State
designated a district to fall in the status quo area, Iran disputed that position. The
status quo line (istatüsko hattı) corresponds to the last limit of the status quo.
1. 1. Literature Review and Research Methodology
First, this chapter presents my eveluation of the available literature on the
Ottoman frontiers in three groups. The first group introduces the scholars who
studied the frontiers of the empire during its construction on the peripheries of the
Byzantium Empire. Then, it opens a subcategory to evaluate the works of Alfred J.
Rieber and Cem Emrence, who studied the Ottoman frontiers in a broader
perspective relying on the Annales School. The chapter continues with the second
group, which is made up of the works that indicate the formation of the frontiers
during the Safavid period. The third group includes works that show the interactions
between the spirit of the time (Zeitgeist) and the frontiers in the late Ottoman period.
The present study as well shares this approach and discusses the works of Sabri Ateş
and Melike Sarıkçıoğlu in particular. The chapter ends with a discussion of the
research method of the current study, explaining how existing data are selected and
discussed.
1. 2. Review of Works on Ottoman Frontiers
The last ten years we have witnessed a dramatic increase in the number of
academic works studying Ottoman history from its frontiers. Many scholars in
Turkey and abroad have studied topics related to Ottoman frontiers. Although their
research scope intersected in examining the frontiers and their effects on the interior,
they mostly approached these issues from different views. These scholars can be
categorized according to their scope of deviation in examining different Ottoman
times, themes and spaces until the emergence of different modern nation-states at the
frontiers.
Such studies reveal that works on frontiers have three main pillars that have
roughly gone parallel with the periodization of Ottoman history. These three
7
frameworks, within which scholars study frontier-related topics mainly focus on the
role of frontiers in the construction of the Ottoman State, the Safavid-Ottoman
struggle that reverberated on their frontiers, and the agitations of the late Ottoman
period and their impact on “moving frontiers”9. Many other scholars have produced
similar works concerning other parts of the empire as well. The late period, however,
is different in nature. Ottoman history in this period is discussed in terms of
modernity and traditional continuity. Thus, the eastern frontiers are seen as a stage to
examine a stage to examine the dissolution of the empire in comparison to other
parts.
Many scholars, such as Herbert Adams Gibbons, Mehmet Fuad Köprülü,
Paul Wittek, Colin Imber, Halil İnalcık, Mehmet Öz, Colin Heywood have put
forward hypotheses regarding the emergence of the Ottomans. More recently, these
studies on the “true origins” of the proto-Ottomans10 have been re-evaluated by
Cemal Kafadar.11 One of the common themes among these debates is the existence
of a fluid frontier zone in southeastern Anatolia where the newcomers (the Turkishspeaking
settlers and conquerors) enjoyed the existing borderland institutions and
local knowledge. 12 These early frontier-interior relations, which many authors
debate, show that frontier zones had their own distinct features. Kafadar discovered
this through sources from the Turco-Muslim frontier milieu of Anatolia, which
involved legendary accounts of the lives of warriors and dervishes. He discussed
how frontier people invented their own state-like structures and traditions by basing
them on a complex set of values and attitudes embodied in the concept of Gaza.13
Departing from all identifications of the early Ottomans, they were partly the last
product of long and ongoing interactions among the neighboring settlers in the
frontiers.
Before discussing the second category, it should be stated that there are a few
authors who focus on the whole frontier history of the Ottoman Empire making use
of the approach of the Annales School of history. This approach entails a holistic
9 Reşat Kasaba, A Moveable Empire: Ottoman Nomads, Migrants, and Refugees (Seattle: Washington
University Press, 2009), 59.
10 Cemal Kafadar, Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State (California:
University of California Press, 1996), 9: Kafadar uses this term in his explanations of the earlier
influences that shaped a collective Ottoman identity.
11 Kafadar, Between Two Worlds, 9.
12 Ibid., 3.
13 Ibid., 13.
8
study of a historical problem in interaction with geography and sociology. For
instance, Alfred J. Rieber and Cem Emrence have used this methodology in their
works. Emrence’s work explains imperial experiences by referring to his own
conceptualization of pathways such as “the coast, the interior and the frontier”14
interacting with one another. Rieber adopts a more distinctive methodology and
historiography. As he was obviously inspired by the Annales School, he attempts to
write the global history of Eurasian empires by adopting a broad comparative and
transnational approach towards the imperial space, ideologies, cultural practices,
institutions (armies, bureaucracies and elite), frontier encounters, crises, and legacies.
He examines these issues at two distinct levels: from above, and from below.15 By
doing so, he seeks to answer some important questions within a long time span (La
longue durée). One of the questions to which he sought an answer in his study is,
how the continental empires survived competition in the same regions for such a
long time. 16 According to him, geo-cultural, geopolitical, and civilizational
approaches dominate studies on this issue, but his preference is a geo-cultural
approach. He looks, at three spatial concepts: Eurasia, borderlands, and frontiers as
shaped by intricate historical processes over many years.17 In other words, Rieber
stresses that his study interprets Eurasia, its frontiers, and the borderlands as spaces
shaped by complex historical processes forming a geo-cultural context in which the
great conflicts of the twentieth century came to be situated.18
The second category can be designated under two significant edited books
containing various articles. The first one is Kemal Karpat and R. W. Zens’ The
Ottoman Borderlands, where some issues such as identities and political alterations
on the borderlands are examined for the first time. The second is The Frontier of the
Ottoman World, which was edited by A. C. S. Peacock six years later than The
Ottoman Borderlands. A comparative study embraces many essays the authors of
which have benefitted from historical and archeological approaches. Although, it
does not compare the subjects discussed, it gives a chance to its audience to compare
them based on the diverse articles in the book. It sets out important aspects of
14 Cem Emrence, Remapping the Ottoman Middle East: Modernity, Imperial Bureaucracy, and the
Islamic State (New York: I. B. Tauris, 2012), 2.
15 Alfred J. Rieber, The Struggle for the Eurasian Borderlands: From the Rise of Early Modern
Empires to the End of the First World War (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2014), 1.
16 Ibid.
17 Ibid., 2.
18 Ibid., 5.
9
Ottoman frontier fortifications, administration, society and economy in terms of how
Ottomans cope with the challenge of controlling its frontiers.
Neither of these works is designed to cover a specific region nor a specific
theme. They do not present a stable period either. Distinct articles evaluate a variety
of subjects regarding the Ottoman frontiers from the fifteenth to the twentieth
century. They cover many articles written specifically for the sake of Ottoman
frontiers and borderlands from north to south, from east to west in a composition of
various contents and theoretical claims. In the case of the Ottoman frontiers and
borderlands, these works represent a limited literature, since they are scattered and
bring more complexity to the issues due to the fact that the interrelations of the
borderlands changed according to local knowledge and practices, and it would be
more relevant if studies could be gathered under different titles. In particular,
imperial eastern borders, as never completely settled borders until the first quarter of
twentieth century, present a unique historical experience in terms of Ottoman border
studies due to its consequences on todays’ Turkey. Apart from the articles in which
the Black Sea, Balkan and North African frontiers of the empire were examined by
various authors, most of the articles that fall under the second category evaluate the
borders, by especially focusing on the Safavid period. This is very important in that
these studies have constituted a background for a better understanding of the
Ottoman-Iranian conflicts of the late period and helped the analysis of the impacts of
frontier interactions in early twentieth century Ottoman-Iranian relations.
The third category of border studies emerged to gather together studies
eastern borders of the empire but in a different period. This category tends to bring
together studies related to the late Ottoman period, and particularly the Hamidian era.
Albert Hourani, Melike Sarıkcıoğlu, Sabri Ateş, Janet Klein, and Metin Atmaca are
prominent researchers who focus on the circumstances of the eastern borders in the
late period or the imperial eastern frontiers overall. Their works intersects roughly
between the nineteenth century and the first quarter of the twentieth century.
Sarıkçıoğlu’s Osmanlı-İran Hudut Sorunları (1847-1913) covers a period that
she frames as a deadlock. It starts with the Erzurum Treaty in 1847 and ends with the
Istanbul Protocol in 1913. In this period, the parties failed to settle their border
conflicts, and this situation prevented the development of Ottoman-Iranian relations
10
for a long time.19 Ateş extends this period to the beginning of the First World War
(WWI) because he believes that the two states finally recognized their shared
boundaries a few days after the outbreak of the war. 20 These two works were
originally PhD dissertations. Other works based on PhD dissertations are Klein’s The
Margins of Empire: Kurdish Militia in the Ottoman Tribal Zone, and Atmaca’s
Politics of Alliance and Rivalry on the Ottoman-Iranian Frontier: The Babans
(1500-1851). In their studies, Klein and Atmaca focus on one theme rather than
directly examining border conflicts and border delimitation. Klein examines the
changing dynamics of frontier conflicts and shifting alliances, center-periphery
relations, and many other issues regarding the border control of the empire in light of
evaluating the role of Kurdish militias in the imperial tribal zone. Her research
determines there was a strong correlation between being a militia loyal to Ottoman
Sultan and gaining material superiority in the tribal frontier zone.
Depending on this relationship, the Kurdish tribal chiefs abused the system
by using the titles and honorary ranks given them to acquire more power and local
hegemony and obtaining more lands and privileges from the state in the process.21
Klein argues that Ottoman policies of incorporating Kurds in the state by way of
recruiting them to the Hamidiye Light Cavalry System (1890-1908 and beyond)
brought the incorporation and the dissolution at the same time ‘in a sort of non-state
space’.22
Atmaca deals with the history of the Kurdish Baban emirate and its
surroundings from 1500 to 1900. He claims that Ottoman authorities did not
administer the region directly. Although regional governance belonged to the
Ottoman authorities, local notables directed and mobilized local opinions. He
underlines that Ottoman authorities and local notables were mutually dependent
because the rising power of the notables came from their connections with the elites
in Istanbul.23 It can be said that constructive and deconstructive manners of the
Ottoman governors and commanders accompanied the creation of such a network.
19 Melike Sarıkçıoğlu, Osmanlı-Iran Hudud Sorunları (1847-1913) (Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu,
2013), XI.
20 Sabri Ateş, The Ottoman-Iranian Borderlands: Making a Boundary 1843-1914 (New York:
Cambridge University Press, 2013), 2.
21 Klein, The Margins of Empire: Kurdish Militias in the Ottoman Tribal Zone, 180.
22 Ibid.
23 Atmaca, “Politics of Alliance and Rivalry on the Ottoman-Iranian Frontier: The Babans (1500-
1851),” VIII.
11
It is useful to compare two important studies of this category. One is Ateş’s
work. The other is Sarıkçıoğlu’s study. These two studies are important in terms of
providing valuable knowledge on Ottoman-Iranian relations in the late period by
analyzing these relations using different methods. They also use different sources.
While Sarıkçıoğlu uses Iranian and Ottoman archives predominately24, Ateş mainly
uses the British archival sources (such as envoy reports), and newspapers as his
primary sources. Sarıkçıoğlu focuses on the political economic strategies of the states
intersecting at the frontiers. She examines the interrelations of the Ottoman Empire
and Iran, which changed conjecturally over time. She investigates the activities of the
Ottoman-Iranian frontier commissions in a chronological order and marks the steps
of boundary negotiations from a macro perspective. Thus, she attempts to show how
political unrests and imperial rivalries had a major impact on the policies of both
states, and how these disturbances changed the direction of their respective polices. 25
Ateş investigates the same period by including the story of the efforts of the
Ottomans for modernization and its impact on the borderlands, the dilemmas of
borderlanders in terms of identity and loyalty, and the local power struggles in the
greater history of Ottoman-Iranian relations.
The boundary delimitation is a key point issue in in both of these studies.
Both of them mirror the activities of all the boundary commissions who were
charged to delimitate the Ottoman-Iranian boundary starting from the 1840s. They
had reached a deadlock regarding the validity of the treaties.26 Arthur Conolly, a
British officer in the 1840s, described the same period that Sarıkçıoğlu and Ateş
cover with a pithy expression. This period had become a stage to the contest of
24 She explains that she extensively used the papers of “Güzide-i Esnad-ı Siyasi-i İran ve Osmani”
published in seven volume, which contains all the documents regarding the Ottoman-Iranian relations
till 1920, and she also used the papers existing in Iranian National Library and in various libraries in
Tehran: Sarıkçıoğlu, Osmanlı-Iran Hudud Sorunları (1847-1913), XI–XII.
25 Ibid., 16.
26 Ibid., 17. Sarıkçıoğlu addresses the ambiguity regarding what was the inception of Ottoman-Iranian
frontier conflict. She states that Ottoman and Iranian statesmen had accepted the creation of a border
commission to regulate border conflicts in the arbitration of Russia and Britain in 1843. The
commission had finalized its work by concluding a treaty based on nine articles. However, the
Ottoman Empire had not recognized this treaty. Ali Pasha, the foreign minister of the Ottoman
Empire, had stated that the Ottomans had not confirmed that treaty by declaring the treat included
some articles, which were unclear. Then, the Russian and British ambassadors had accepted to clarify
the fourth article. Following this, all parties had signed the treaty of Erzurum in 1847. Iranian
Government in Tehran had learnt the results of the negotiations after Muhammed Ali Han, the Iranian
chief negotiator, arrived to Tehran. Then, they had refused the treaty by announcing that Iran did not
recognize it.
12
Russia and Britain for hegemony over Eurasian borderlands, so he called this period
an era of “the Great Game” (1818-1907). 27 This expression became a historical
concept later indicated the framework of the pressure diverging until 1907, turned
into a collective pressure on the Ottoman and Iranian territories in 1907. Their
compromise necessitated the speedy solution of the boundary conflicts and the
boundary delimitation between two states not to brink them to the edge of war.
Although Russia and Britain reached a compromise, the Ottoman and Qajar
governments did not reach a similar compromise.
1. 3. Research Methodology
This study relies on quantitative and qualitative research methods employs an
explanatory framework of analysis. The research gives special importance to
establishing the chronological order of events, and examines the archival data in a
comparative perspective. I found nearly three hundred files, which include hundreds
of official documents, in the Başbakanlık Osmanlı Arşivi in Istanbul. This group of
documents embodied directly the activities of Tahir Pasha and the other frontier
actors. To investigate their activities accurately, I adopted a critical and comparative
approach to the documents to prepare the ground for an examination of Tahir Pasha
and the Boundary Commission. The existence of several Tahir Pashas of Albanian
origins complicated the confirmation of the documents attributed to our Tahir Pasha
who headed the Ottoman delegation in boundary negotiations with Iran. I separated
first Tahir Pasha by comparing all the reports written by all Tahir Pashas with his
biographical register. This examination enabled me to discard documents related to
other Tahir Pashas.
My research relies largely on qualitative research methods. This qualitative
approach enables us to understand human behavior and the reasons for such behavior
within a framework of the meanings, attributes, and symbols of a particular period.
In the fifth chapter, a quantitative analysis is employed in order to
demonstrate a correlation between the Ottoman budget and border related
expenditures, and the evident and eventual impact of this correlation on the policy
and decision making.
27 Elena Andreeva, Russia and Iran in the Great Game: Travelogues and Orientalism (New York:
Routledge, 2007), 19.
13
I analyze the discourse of the frontier actors in the sixth chapter to understand
Ottoman statesmen’s approach to local people and borderlands in the disputed
territory by an analysis of the semiotic meanings of the Ottoman discourse in official
documents.
The research relies heavily on primary sources such as annual reports,
recollections, newspapers, and maps, and secondary sources like various books and
selected articles.
A map has ben used to illustrate whole range of the boundary. Practically, I
preferred taking snapshots in order to demonstrate a local area, Ottoman military
fortifications, and lodging of the Ottoman commissioners.
I have widely used two significant terms, namely, frontier actors and frontier
difficulties. The first term suggests those actors who implemented or challenged
Abdulhamid’s policies in the frontier zone. These actors had multiple roles, as they
were mostly the governors of border provinces, border commanders, commission
members, foreign consuls, and tribal leaders. The second term, frontier difficulties,
conceptualizes the conditions surrounding frontier actors. Briefly, the prevalent
conditions around the disputed territory which were strained by inter-tribal conflicts,
raids, attacks, plunders, lawlessness, feuds, rumors that were based on false and
biased information, and geographic handicaps for wheels complicated the work of
frontier actors in advance. The Times reporters used to describe this territory by using
the term ‘Wild Districts’ to draw attention to the prevalent roughness of the disputed
terrain.
14
CHAPTER 2
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
This chapter begins with an analysis of the Ottoman-Safavid (1502-1736)
relations and the conditions of the eastern frontier of the Ottoman Empire in that
period. Second, it moves on to a historical period when the Ottoman state had the
Qajar state (1796-1925) as its eastern neighbor. I emphasize the era from the 1840s
to the 1870s, as this era produced high volume of local knowledge on the Ottoman
Iranian frontiers. These efforts resulted with the narrowing of a long boundary to the
status of partly defined boundary by creating a border zone that would be demarcated
later. Thus, this chapter provides a better understanding of the historical context of
the boundary conflicts and the efforts to delimitate the boundary until the emergency
of the border zone.
2. 1. Ottoman-Safavid Relations and Frontiers (1502-1736)
The Safavid dynasty (1502-1736) was an influential entity in Eastern
Anatolia and Northwestern Iran, where it emerged as a combination of political
traditions and religious actors. It formed a state several decades after the Ottomans
had conquered Constantinople in 1453.28 As Dale states, these actors were the Aq
Qoyunlus, as (the White Sheep Turks), and the Safavid Sufi pirs. These groups had
limited political and religious influence in the region in 1453. Together, these groups
competed with other hegemonic dynasties in the region, such as the Qara Qoyunlu
(Black Sheep Turks), located in Tabriz. Under the leadership of Uzun Hasan, the Aq
Quyunlus began to establish its hegemony over the other dynasties in the region by
forming a challenging power in Eastern Anatolia, Iraq, and Northwestern Iran.29
As Dale asserts, Uzan Hasan, a Sunni Turkish Muslim, aimed to constitute a
legitimate confederation that could be transformed into a “major Perso-Islamic
principality”. For this purpose, he began to patronize Muslim institutions and Sufi
orders. Moreover, he tended to consolidate his legitimacy by promoting
28 Stephen F. Dale, The Muslim Empires of the Ottomans, Safavids, and Mughals (New York:
Cambridge University Press, 2010), 63.
29 Ibid.
15
intermarriages with the pirs from the Safavid order after the Ottomans defeated them
in 1471.30
Shah Ismail (b. 1847- d. 1524), whose mother was the daughter of Uzun
Hasan, turned the Safavid order into a state. The audience on which he based his
legitimacy was quite fragmented. He embraced the Shi’i concepts as doctrine and
demanded the obedience of Sunni Muslims, Sufi pirs, and Shi’i Imams. He used
intermarriage as a way of policy making, and he wanted to solidify his relations with
members of tribal military coalitions.31
Shah Ismail defeated his Aq Quyunlu relatives in 1501 and occupied most of
the Iranian plateau within the following decade. He continued to enforce Shi’ism as
the dominant belief system in the region and tried to institutionalize Shi’ism in a
territory where the number Sunnis exceeded that of the Shi’a. 32
Ismail began to proclaim himself as the Padishah of Iran, the king of kings
and the sultan of sultans. In political terminology, the Ottomans used similar titles
and the Ottomans perceived his actions as a threat to their sovereignty in Eastern
Anatolia. They were two different Islamic entities competing in the same field and
region. When Ismail turned his face to the west, and began winning over most of the
Oghuz tribes, Selim I (r. 1512-20) decided to put an end to the propaganda of Ismail.
An incident not prompted this decision was the revolt of Shah Kulu in
Southeastern Anatolia, which became very influential. Ideologically, the revolt
carried anti-Ottoman features and supported Shah Ismail’s ideology.33 As Selim had
the opportunity to observe this revolt closely, he proclaimed that Is’mail created a
heretical belief system. In 1514, he destroyed the army of Ismail in Chaldıran in
Azerbaijan. Ismail was forced abandon his claims of sovereignty in Eastern
Anatolia, and withdrew to the Iranian plateau,34 while the Ottoman borders moved
eastwards to the current western borders of Iran.
After the war, the Safavids began to deal with internal conflict, inter-tribal
rivalries, and external threats. Frictions, incursions, and occupations continued
throughout the century between the Safavids and the Ottomans. Shah Tahmasb
(1524-76), who was Ismail’s successor, had an aggressive attitude towards the
30 Ibid., 65-66.
31 Ibid., 69.
32 Ibid.
33 Ibid., 86.
34 Ibid., 70.
16
Ottomans, and he did not hesitate to confront the Ottomans once again. The territory
of the Ottoman Empire was religiously divided, so the Ottomans did not abstain from
interfering in western parts of Iran.35 However, as Faroqhi states, the major Ottoman
conquest of Safavid controlled lands was achieved during the reign of Suleiman the
Magnificent (b. 1494- d. 1566). Iraq and Basra became Ottoman provinces as a result
of the campaigns of 1534 and 1546.36
After Selim I ended the influence of Ismail, he started a diplomatic campaign
to win over the tribes located on the eastern frontiers of the Ottoman Empire. For
example, the principalities in the Van region accepted Ottoman sovereignty in 1515
due to the diplomatic enterprise of Molla Idris Bidlisi.37 Many local princes, notables
and families chose to shift to the Ottoman side. Bitlis, Hakkari, Mahmudi, and many
other districts on the border gradually became integrated into the Ottoman Empire
during the sixteenth century.
Matthee describes the frontiers where merchants crossed from one border
point to another as political borders. He states that tribes, “whose loyalty might be
bought but could never be taken for granted”38, resided in the vast proportion of the
border area. According to him, the Kurds inhabited the northern parts of the
borderlands and the Arabs inhabited the southern parts. These tribal people were
unwilling to submit to central control. The states’ strategies to bring security to the
borders and benefit from the area could not be implemented because the states could
not control the tribes that lived on both sides.
In this context, centrally controlled Ottoman lands, where the government
could implement a proper tax system were limited in the region. Many ideas, from
pragmatism to ideological commitment, were put forward regarding how the
government would take over the region.39 As Sinclair stresses, it was important to
maintain a balance depending on mutual interests between the central Ottoman
government and regional principalities, which could slip out of the government’s
hand as wet soap. He states, “the whole existence of the principalities depended on
35 Rudi Matthee, “The Safavid-Ottoman Frontier Iraq-I Arab as Seen by the Safavids,” ed. Kemal H.
Karpat (Madison: University of Wisconsin, 2003), 164.
36 Suraiya Faroqhi, The Ottoman Empire and the World Around It (New York: I. B. Tauris, 2004), 34.
37 Tom Sinclair, “The Ottoman Arrangements for the Tribal Principalities of the Lake Van Region of
the Sixteenth Century,” in Ottoman Borderlands: Issues, Personalites and Political Changes, ed.
Kemal H. Karpat (Madison: University of Wisconsin, 2003), 121.
38 Matthee, “The Safavid-Ottoman Frontier Iraq-i Arab as Seen by the Safavids.”
39 Ibid., 173.
17
an equilibrium of tribal transhumance patterns and allegiance.”40 Öz asserts that the
Ottomans considered regional differences and applied a variety of pragmatic and
flexible land-tenure systems throughout the empire in this century. He presents a
case study on the lands of Bitlis where he points out that the Timar system, which
was applied throughout the empire, was not applied in most districts in the
borderlands. Instead, the Ottomans implemented the hükümet41 and ocaklık42 systems
in the sub-province of Bitlis. In return, they received the tribes’ consent and
obedience to the sultan.43 Sinclair states that the application of the sancak system in
these frontier regions, which were largely populated by tribes, could push the local
population to seek government protection on the other side of the borderlands. Öz
justifies this view by explaining that “the number of hükümets and “yurtlukocaklık”
44 districts used to increase when the Ottoman-Safavid rivalry increased
towards the middle of the seventeenth century.”45 Sinclair states that having borders
with the Safavid Empire accelerated the escape of some tribal population, and the
Ottomans needed further and firmer arrangements in districts nearby the Safavid
Empire.46 It is clear that having similar and mutual benefits connecting one tribe to
another, which is the strong essence of tribal kinship, not only defines their internal
relations but also their external relations with other states. This enables the
40 Sinclair, “The Ottoman Arrangements for the Tribal Principalties of the Lake Van Region of the
Sixteent Century,” 142.
41 Hükümets were “given to the administration and property of their holders in return for their service
and obedience. These lands were conferred upon local ruling families in return for their help and
services at the time of conquest. All the revunees of these lands belonged to their holders.”Mehmet
Öz, “Ottoman Provincial Administration in Eastern and Southeastern Anatolia: The Case of Bitlis in
the Sixteenth Century,” in Ottoman Borderlands: Issues, Personalities and Political Changes
(University of Wisconsin: Madison, 2003), 146–147. By modifications, this system survived, and the
ocaklık-hükümet (hereditary and semi-autonomous) system lasted until the mid-nineteenth century.
Ibid., 153. The approach of the Ottoman State regarding its eastern frontiers in pre-modern era based
on pragmatism, practicality, and flexiblity. “They did not hasitate to turn hükümet or yurtluk-ocaklık
districts into ordinary sancaks or to do just the opposite if it seemed necessary and fruitful.”Ibid., 155.
42 This system was giving partial independence to local government, “where the central government
allowed pre-Ottoman local rulers (hakims) to hold their hereditary districs under certain conditions
dating from sixteenth century, but later on it was changed.”Öz, “Ottoman Provincial Administration in
Eastern and Southeastern Anatolia: The Case of Bitlis in the Sixteenth Century,” 145.
43 Ibid.
44 These districs were under the control of provincial governors, and th timar system could have been
applied to these districts.
45 Öz, “Ottoman Provincial Administration in Eastern and Southeastern Anatolia: The Case of Bitlis in
the Sixteenth Century,” 153.
46 Sinclair, “The Ottoman Arrangements for the Tribal Principalities of the Lake Van Region of the
Sixteenth Century,” 142–43.
18
identification of the allegiance patterns of eastern border landers of the empire in the
pre-modern era. It can be seen that state-tribe relations in the frontier zones
embodied pragmatism, ideological commitment, and flexibility.
2. 2. Ottoman-Qajar Relations and Frontiers (1796-1925)
The central administration of the Ottoman Empire, governed by one dynasty,
was more stable compared to Iran’s. At the end of prolonged political turmoil in Iran,
the Qajar dynasty took charge of Iran and governed it from 1785 to 1925. In this era,
complex interrelations in the frontier zones among statesmen and tribes continued by
small configurations, in the context explained previously. Since the time of Ismail,
the legitimacy of the governors was based on winning the consent of the tribes
among other factors. One dimension of this policy was to control the tribes and tribal
lands by promoting intermarriages. Sine the Ottoman dynasty had its political center
far from the state’s eastern peripheries, it did not have such a policy. Instead, it
shared its authority with local rulers without having any systematic application of
dynastical intermarriage to tribal lords.
During the Qajar period, Iran seemed to be a country of tribal confederations
with influential spiritual figures (pirs). Keddie describes the consequences of the
former Iranian policy by these words:
These indigenous factors at the turn of the twentieth century weakened the
modernization efforts in Iran, so industry, infrastructure, or agriculture
remained primitive thanks to decentralizing powers of tribes, ulema, some
cities and regions.47
The attempts of the Qajar governors were thus far in favor of Iran on its
western border zone where it competed with the Ottomans over the domination of
borderlands. In the 1890s, the Ottomans systematically developed few institutions to
solidify the tribes and state relations in the context of the implementation of pro-
Caliphate policies. Abdulhamid II established schools for the tribes and formed new
troops recruiting the Kurds, but throughout the centuries, the conflicts, wars and
agreements created porous borders with many fugitives.
47 Nikki R. Keddie, Modern Iran: Roots and Results of Revolution (United States of America: Yale
University Press, 2006), 35–6.
19
It is clear that the earlier efforts for the modernization of the Ottoman
Empire, which pre-dated those in Iran, may have damaged the loyalty of some
Ottoman tribes living in borderlands adjacent to Iran due to the fact that these
modernization efforts restricted the movements of the tribes, which were prompted
by pragmatic concerns. If the empire became more pragmatic, the tribes could have
flexibly changed their sides.
The flexible and pragmatic policies of the tribes did not overlap with the
nature of the modern state, and tended to create a greater problem for a state whose
modernization process was on the verge of crumbling. Moving and shifting tribes
from one side to another began to cause major conflicts. For centuries, Iran spent
much energy to make the tribes its loyal subjects, but as it strove to do so, it slowed
down its own modernization process. However, this created an advantage over the
Ottomans, who had started to modernize earlier. This factor showed where the
legitimacy of the Qajar dynasty came from in Western Iran. Another factor was the
protection Iran had from Britain and Russia throughout the nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries. To shed light on this point further, the modernization efforts,
which can be open to debate as to whether or not they ever existed in western Iran,
should be investigated in terms of the application of land and tax systems enforced
on the tribes, in order to discover whether there were any points weakening the
loyalty of the tribes and pushing them to seek refuge in Ottoman territories in the
early twentieth century.
In order to map out in detail the relationship of the Ottomans and the Qajars
intersecting on the frontier, the period between 1843 and 1876 need be investigated
carefully, given its importance. During this period, the Ottoman and Qajar frontier
relations reached their peak in defining the borders due to some changes in world
politics. Both Britain and Russia desired to achieve stability in the area (in especially
Mesopotamia in the case of Britain, and the Caucasian provinces in the case of
Russia). They did not want to lose the economic advantages they had gained earlier.
The crisis in Egypt, multilateral conventions based on economic interests to pacify
the Levant, and the establishment of a reliable regime over the Ottoman straits during
this time created conditions that were a priority for these nations rather than the
20
frontiers in the 1840s.48 This international conjecture resulted in an arrangement of a
quadripartite boundary commission in 1843 aiming to create a borderline, which was
more definitive and binding and could end territorial disputes.49
The next four years were to determine the owner of the Muhammerah port on
the Shatt al-Arab. Russia and Britain in agreement asserted that the port had greater
links to Iran than the Ottomans.50 However, specifying the ownership of Shatt Al-
Arab River embodied vagueness. The Ottoman proposals were rejected by Britain
and Russia on grounds that they were the entire owners of the river, so the river
dispute could not have been resolved until 1975.51
Shofield compares the status quo mentioned in the articles of the treaty of
1843 to the ones in the treaty of 1847. As he explains, article 2 of the 1843 treaty had
many ambiguities, but it envisioned some territorial definition associated with
Suleymaniye and Zohab. For instance, article 2 envisioned the allocation of Zohab
between Ottoman lands and Iran. The western parts of Zohab would be given to the
Ottoman State, but the eastern parts including the mountains and valleys, specifically
Kerrind, would be given to the State of Iran. Article 2 also shows that Iran gave up
all claims regarding the situation of Suleymaniye. Lastly, article 2 gives insight
regarding the situation of Muhammerah. The article recognized the town and the
seaport of Muhammerah and the eastern side of the Shatt-el Arab to be under full
“Iranian” sovereignty.52 The parties could not agree, but they signed an agreement in
1847. According to this treaty, the parties would establish a commission consisting
of four parties to survey the mentioned lands. If this effort would not be successful,
the treaty, which was signed in 1843, would be considered as grounds for further
negotiations.
The commission gathered in 1850 and worked until 1852, but could not find
common grounds regarding the status quo by making contradictory comments about
the articles of 1847, the Erzurum Treaty.53 In this commission, Dervish Pasha was
the Ottoman representative. After he ended Iranian occupation of Khotour, he
48 Richard Schofield, “Narrowing the Frontier: Mid-Nineteenth Century Efforts to Delimit and Map
the Perso-Ottoman Boundary,” in War & Peace in Qajar Iran: Implications Past and Present, ed.
Roxane Farmanfarmaian (New York: Routledge, 2008), 152.
49 Ibid.
50 Ibid.
51 Ibid., 154.
52 Ibid., 154–55.
53 Ibid., 155.
21
recognized the port of Muhammerah and the Island of Khizr as being Iranian. In
return, Iran would “abandon illegally-held territorial positions further north in the
borderlands, including Khotour”.54 Then, Iran demanded sovereignty over all eastern
parts of the Shatt al-Arab. Obviously, the parties found themselves dealing with the
articles of 1843. At least, in 1851, the Ottoman and Qajar commissioners (Mirza
Jaafar Khan) adopted a “status quo line”55 at Muhammerah. The next phase of ran
into a deadlock when the nonnative powers imposed the determination of the
sovereignty over Zohab according to the stipulations of the treaty of 1847, which put
the Ottomans in a disadvantageous position. Dervish Pasha insisted on the restoration
of the 1843 status quo line in Muhammerah and Zohab, but nonnative powers
continued to work and announced in 1852 that the “mediating commissioners were in
possession of sufficient topographical data to map the southern Perso-Ottoman
borderlands from the Gulf northwards to Zohab.”56
Although the Ottomans were clearly unsatisfied with the terms of the
Erzurum Treaty, the Qajar commissioner showed Khotour as a condition to agree
with the prescriptions of the Erzurum Treaty. This restricted the border delimitation
further, and, the creation of a border map was suspended, but a long borderline had
become limited to a border zone57, a debatable and conflict prone space.58
After a while, Dervish Pasha reconvened the commission to finish the survey
that would eventually define the rest of the borders from Zohab to Mount Ararat, but
Shofield asserts that Dervish Pasha was behaving “unilateral”59, meaning he was
acting independently from the other commissioners, trying to cultivate his
relationship with the people who inhabited the mentioned border zone60.
Nevertheless, it is important to stress that demographic elements of the border zone
seem entirely vague in terms of determining its ethnic and religious components at
this point. This border zone belonged to none of the local states, so it was open to
54 Ibid., 156.
55 “This line, was previosuly designed by Colonel Williams, ran southwards from Hawizeh to the
junction of the Jideyeh canal with the Shatt al-Arab and from there along the east (Iranian) bank of the
river to the Iranian Gulf.” Ibid., 158–9.
56 Ibid., 159.
57 The zone ranged in width between 20 and 50 miles. Ibid., 160.
58 Ibid.
59 Ibid.
60 Schofield asserts people who lived in some districts (Serdesht, Banna, Larijab and Ushni) had
“well-established” allegiance to the Shah. Ibid. Nevertheless, he does not show any evidence or give
any reference to show where he got this idea.
22
conflict and negotiations in the 1850s. This is why, the argument that Dervish Pasha
seduced people residing at the border zone seems neither valid nor impartial, because
if the border zone people were of Iranian origin, why would there be a need for
further negotiations regarding the border zone? His argument seems to be
teleological, and aiming to legitimize the leaving of the border zone to Iran, ignoring
the seductive activities of Iranians in these districts.
It seems Britain began to advocate Iran after the border was specified from
the Gulf to Zohab, and aimed to delimitate the rest of the border in favor of Iran.
Somehow, the British officials lost all the accounts, including surveys regarding the
border delimitation. They encouraged Iranians privately to sign contracts regarding
the forts on the line. By losing the accounts, it seems the British forced the Ottomans
to accept the articles of 1847. British representative Williams, after having lost the
documents, stated:
Mediating commissioners’ original instruction had been to confine territorial
restitution to Muhammerah, Suleymaniye, and Zohab, in conformity with the
1847 treaty, but elsewhere to respect the status quo as originally estimated in
1843.61
Under these circumstances, the Porte rejected the suggestion to partition
Zohab. The occupation of Khotour by Dervish Pasha became one obstacle in front of
the resolution. Russia and Britain were trying to restore Khotour to Iran. In 1861,
Istanbul refused to evacuate Khotour as well.62 Russia and Britain did not have even
an identical draft map in 1867. Their maps were different from one another,
indicating different place names and the ignorance of the British and Russian
representatives of the local languages. According to Schofield, this explained why
the Ottomans did not trust nonnative commissioners, since these mediating
commissioners simply did not consider “the human geography of the borderlands”.63
Dervish Pasha’s unilateral action can be perceived as a reaction to their ignorance. In
1869, Britain and Russia completed the Identical Map or Carte Identique, but it still
included “errors with upwards of 4,000 discrepancies.”64 However, the Qajar
government was sufficiently satisfied with the Anglo-Russian map in contrast to the
61 Ibid.
62 Ibid., 161.
63 Ibid., 162.
64 Ibid., 163.
23
Porte. In 1869, they recognized the status quo in the border zone by signing an
agreement minimizing the border disputes and ending the construction of buildings
in disputed lands. However, manipulation and conflict continued.
Local commissioners played a border game by switching between the
treaties, which were signed until the 1870s. Form the 1840s to the 1870s, the border
saw minor changes, but the local knowledge regarding the border increased.
However, the local parties frequently manipulated the articles of the treaties. When a
new agreement designated a new status quo, they would determine to what extent
these new parameters were useful to them, and shift the status quo depending on
points that were more beneficial to them. The problem was that all treaties
approached the border as a single issue, but, especially by basing it on the 1847 and
1843 treaties, the local parties would try to apply their own will by getting strength
from one or another article of a mentioned treaty that they saw useful for their aims
regarding a section of the borderland. In other words, they had a whole text in theory,
but in practice, they wanted to apply one article to one part of the border while they
applied another article from another treaty to another part. This way, they
manipulated the treaties and the articles, and this created major problems in border
delimitation between the 1840s and the 1870s, especially for the disputed lands.65
Although all parties tried to find common grounds for compromise, the
outbreak of the Serbian War of 1876 and Turco-Russian War of 1877-1878 delayed
the process. The Treaty of Berlin, which was signed in 1878, caused extensive losses
of territory, and included some articles regarding the eastern peripheries of the
empire.66 One of these articles was about Khotour. With this article, the Ottoman
Empire had to hand Khotour over to Iran.67 Khotour held an important place in
Ottoman border diplomacy because this point was an exit for the forces located in
Van.68 With the ceding of Khotour, the Ottoman Empire lost one of its most
significant pathways to the inner parts of Iran.
65 Please check for the examples. Ibid., 165–6.
66 Mustafa Tanrıverdi, “The Treaty of Berlin and the Tragedy of the Settlers from the Three Cities,” in
War and Diplomacy: The Russo-Turkish War of 1877-1878 and the Treaty of Berlin, ed. M. Hakan
Yavuz and Peter Sluglett (Utah: University of Utah Press, 2011), 449.
67 FO 881/3831, “Iran and Turkey: Papers. Cession of Khotour to Iran under Art. 59 of Treaty of
Berlin. 4 Maps,” 1878, http://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/C3658305.
68 Schofield, “Narrowing the Frontier: Mid-Nineteenth Century Efforts to Delimit and Map the Perso-
Ottoman Boundary,” 170.
24
In conclusion, new parameters or paradigms of border definitions became
unclear and foreign interventions put the Ottomans in a disadvantageous position
causing them to lose geographical superiority vis-à-vis Iran. Local knowledge
defining the borders increased with surveys in the region, but reliability of these
surveys, and the articles of the treaty were open to debate. The Ottoman government
did not trust the surveys, which were prepared by outsiders, so Dervish Pasha
shuttled between unilateralism and multilateralism in a pragmatic state of nature.
However, as mentioned above, at least, the parties agreed upon the southern parts of
the border and a border zone was drawn in the north. The rest of the study analyzes
how the states dealt with the demarcation of this border zone, which evolved little
through history.
2. 3. A Convention: For Peace or For War
From the last quarter of the nineteenth century to the early twentieth century,
the demarcation of the border zone continued to be the prime concern of the
competing states. Russian and British policies regarding the region had to change
due to major conjectural changes in the world. Britain began to follow inclusive
policies for the developments occurring in the frontier of the Ottoman and Qajar
States against Russia by shifting away from its isolationist policies to cultivate the
ground for a rapprochement in the first decade of the twentieth century. Russia and
Britain knew that Iran would not be able to take the possession of the disputed lands,
when they saw a strong resistance against Majd es Sultanah’s fortifications and
actions in the frontier zone. In 1907, Russia and Britain put pressure on both the
Ottoman and the Qajar governments to agree another to another frontier commission.
Wratislaw expressed the reasons behind the common ground that would lead to the
formation of the commission:
Russia and G. Britain now began to show increased interest in the doings on
the Turco-Persian frontier—Russia because she did not at all approve of the
Turks establishing themselves in a position which would lay the Caucasus
open to a flank attack in the event of a war, and G. Britain in the cause of
peace and order, and to some extent because the Anglo-Russian agreement
being now an actual fact, she felt bound to support Russia and Persia.69
69 A. C. Wratislaw, A Consul in the East (Edinburgh and London: William Blackwood and Sons,
1924), 231.
25
This section evaluates the Anglo-Russian Entente of 1907 as a crucial
development that prepared the ground for the formation of a new boundary
commission to demarcate the rest of the border zone and to sustain the Anglo-
Russian rapprochement in Iran. This chapter also examines the public opinion in
Britain, Russia, and Germany, based on the Times and on local newspaper articles
quoted in the Times. Thus, it discusses the convention that was signed before the
completion of the designation of the boundaries. The convention brought neither
peace nor total war to the region but pushed the formation of the boundary
commission to the field amid inter-tribal fighting.
2. 3. 1. The Anglo-Russian Treaty (1907-1914)
When the treaty70 was signed between Britain and Russia in St. Petersburg on
August 31, 1907, it incited a discussion that fluctuated between optimistic and
pessimistic views of the Anglo-Russian Entente. As Hughes stresses, a significant
portion of the British public opinion remained skeptical about the treaty, although the
Tsarist government assured that it had given up its traditional ambition of moving
forward [to the south] policy in Iran, Afghanistan, and Tibet.71 Ira Klein argues,
Britain was dissatisfied with the convention because it failed to “fulfill the British
aim of halting Russian expansion in areas strategically crucial to the defense of India,
and that in Central Asia, after 1912, the Anglo-Russian Convention hindered rather
70 The treaty was signed by Russia and Britain on August 31, 1907, in St. Petersburg, and it was
introduced as it would bring a ‘fixing solution’ to the rivalry of Russia and Britain clashing on the
three main locals: Iran, Afghanistan, and Tibet. The convention consisted of three parts. The first part
was about Iran, and it divided Iran into three parts. The first sub part was designated the British sphere
of influence, and can be called the southern zone, lying “south and east of a line drawn from the
Afghan boundary near Gazik, through Gazik, Birjand, and Kerman to Bunder Abbas on the Strait of
Ormuz”. The second one was specified as the Russian sphere of influence in the northern zone. This
zone lied “within and north of an angle that has its vertex in the south at the town of Yezd, and that
runs thence northeast and northwest - northeast through Kakhk to the intersection of the Iranian,
Russian, and Afghan frontiers, and northwest through Isfahan to Kasr-i- Shirin”. The last part, which
became neutral or buffer zone in the middle of these two zones, was left to Iran. By this treaty, they
agreed upon “not to seek for themselves and not to support in favor of the subjects of third powers any
concessions of a political or commercial nature-such as concessions for railways, banks, telegraphs,
roads, transport, insurance, etc., outside their respective zones.” Editorial Comment, “The Recent
Anglo-Russian Convention,” The American Journal of International Law 1, no. 4 (October 1907):
979.
71 Michael Hughes, “Bernard Pares, Russian Studies and the Promotion of Anglo-Russian Friendship,
1907-14,” The Slavonic and East European Review 78, no. 3 (July 2000): 511.
26
than furthered the British quest for security.”72 The year of 1905 was a long year for
Russia. It was defeated by the Japanese armies and had to deal with revolutionary
tumults at home. Furthermore, the German push for economic concessions and
privileges in Iran and other places where the Russians had vested interests pushed
Russia to agree with Britain in 1907. The failure of the Russians in front of the
Japanese armies prepared the ground for reconciliation. Before the Anglo-Russian
treaty was signed, Iran began to take advantage of the conditions. Majd es Sultanah
attempted to penetrate the disputed lands, which belonged to no one, and attacked the
area in order to conquer it in 1905.73 The Ottomans responded to this unilateral
attempt the same way, and gave the option to Iran to fight for or to withdraw from
their military fortifications.
2. 3. 2. Comments on the Anglo-Russian Convention:
Correspondence regarding the responsible countries shows that the Russian
and German press closely followed the Anglo-Russian agreement and debated as to
the consequences of the agreement by putting forward comments in their
newspapers. For instance, different newspapers belonging to different social milieus
in Russia criticized the agreement with different views, some being against the
agreement and others favoring it. The Russ, The Novoe Vremya, The Radical Journal
Tovarishch, The Bourse Gazette portrayed the different sides of the agreement. For
instance,
The Russ states:
The convention is not so much a treaty embodying bargains as a courteous
exchange of presents, preluding a further development of cordial relations
and promising in the near future a new combination of the political forces of
the world and a settlement of many complicated questions hitherto believed
to be insoluble. Russia has definitely abandoned old idea of an outlet towards
the Indian Ocean. Is there not serious reason to believe that compensation for
this painful renunciation may be given in a future Convention with Great
Britain concerning the Near East, where the question of the Straits still awaits
a settlement?74
72 Ira Klein, “The Anglo-Russian Convention and the Problem of Central Asia, 1907-1914,” Journal
of British Studies 11, no. 1 (November 1971): 126.
73 “The Recent Anglo-Russian Convention,” 981.
74 “Russian Press Comments,” The Times, September 27, 1907.
27
The Novoe Vremya states:
The Convention can serve as an instrument either for peace or for war. Which
it is to be depends on the attitude of the other Powers and ourselves, for in a
rapprochement with Great Britain we attract the antipathy of Powers which
have hitherto been hostile to her and confirm our sympathy with those powers
which have been friendly to her.75
Tovarishch remarks:
Russia may be satisfied in loosing so little. She would not have signed such a
treaty five years ago, when she was dreaming of an expedition into India, or
was at least ready to threaten Great Britain on the first favorable occasion.76
The Bourse Gazette states:
Inasmuch as the form of the Convention is unprecedented, it will not be
surprising if Iran, behind whose back the experiment is being conducted,
expresses discontent. The danger of the situation is increased by the fact that
there exists in Europe a tertius gaudens how in certain given circumstances
may be desirous of increasing the suspicions of the new ‘Sick Man’ in the
East. Russian and British diplomacy should make heroic efforts thoroughly to
convince Russia nor Great Britain is pursuing secret aims in Iran or
contemplating any intrigues against the independence or integrity of that
country.77
Apart from the Russian and British views regarding the Anglo-Russian treaty,
one Times reporter gives an insight as to the German press. According to him,
Germany attempted to discover “which of the two parties to the Anglo-Russian
Agreement had secured the greater advantage by the Convention”78. He reports to
have seen the German attempt as a “futile” attempt. Perhaps, it was the way of tactics
used by the Times not to awake Russia further, but it seems the German press aimed
to reveal the disadvantageous position of Russia. Thus, an idea, which was
represented by the Bismarckian political doctrine, shows that German interests
demand that “points of friction between England and the other Powers should be
carefully maintained”.79 Therefore, he explains, this agreement should be “prevented
from extending to spheres in which vital German interests are concerned”.80 The
opinions mentioned above more likely concentrated on the penetration of the
75 Ibid.
76 Ibid.
77 Ibid.
78 “The Anglo-Russian Convention: German Opinion,” The Times, September 27, 1907.
79 Ibid.
80 Ibid.
28
Germans in the commercial sphere. The Germans asserted that the “Anglo-Russian
Convention, with respect to Iran, as a possible menace to legitimate expansion into
the sphere”81.
The Cologne Gazette read, “two Powers cannot be prevented from settling
their differences and safeguarding their interests as they think fit.” The Rhenish
journal evaluated the role of the third party in the commercial sphere as follows:
Third parties also have their inalienable rights, and that in the economic
struggle in Iran, for example, Germany, who has never cherished any but
commercial ambitions in that region, will have to show that she is an efficient
competitor.82
The newspaper concluded, “British and Russian trade in Iran will trespass
upon each other’s spheres of influence, and that new points of frictions will be
created to the advantage of third parties.”83 The Frankfurter Zeitung evaluated the
Anglo-Russian Convention in an article attempting to show the agreement is a
posthumous product of the British policy of Germany. They linked the inception of
negotiations between Russia and Britain regarding the convention to the time that
Anglo-Germen relations were under great pressure. It was stated:
With the improvement in Anglo-German relations Germany can contemplate
the Agreement with greater equanimity than would have been the case last
year, provided that German trade in Iran is allowed full scope for expansion.
Although Germany would at first be able to offer but little opposition, a
partition of Iran as a result of the Convention between Great Britain and
Russia would not ultimately be conducive to the maintenance of the world’s
peace, which the two Powers have professedly desired to promote.84
The Times stated the official German quarters did not have any useful
proposition. It read, “Modern German policy is essentially opportunist” and
continued, “Parliamentary interpellations or more remote contingencies could be a
sufficient reason for tolerating the survival of a view of British policy which has long
been discredited”85.
81 Ibid.
82 Ibid.
83 Ibid.
84 Ibid.
85 Ibid.
29
Although the Anglo-Russian Agreement was signed in August, it was
announced in the Iranian parliament on October 5, 1907. One of the parliament
members, Musteshar Dauleh, elucidated the importance of the agreement regarding
the independence of Iran. As the Iranian correspondent of the Times stated, on
October 6, 1907, “Iranians were equally friendly to England and to Russia, but they
did not recognize that foreign treaties had power to deal with the affairs of Iran.”86
The conflict continued among the empires to establish commercial and
territorial superiority over places connected to the Indian trade route dominated by
Britain. The Ottomans had extended their authority in the disputed lands. The Times
reporter in Tabriz reported the “Turks occupied Askerabad 20 versts from Urumiah.
Salma has also been taken. Then, the British Consul left Urumiah for Mawana in
order to communicate to Tahir Pasha.”87 For the Ottomans, it was the best time to
occupy the disputed lands; otherwise Iran would have done that in 1905.
In addition, the international political conjecture was quite suitable for this as
well as the internal politics of Iran that dealt with two groups, those who supported
the monarchy on the one hand, and those who supported the parliament and
constitutionalism on the other. Both Britain and Russia approached these two groups
differently. Britain supported the revolutionary attempts in the neutral zone and in its
sphere of influence in the south, in contrast to the Russians who supported the Qajar
dynasty.88 However, there were revolutionary attempts also in northern Iran where
Russian interests lay, and Britain guaranteed its existence in the south by limiting
Russia to the northern zone by the provisions of the treaty and by following a secret
agenda to keep Russia preoccupied in the north with the revolutionary groups.
During this time, a member of the Iranian nationalist movement, Atabeg, was
assassinated. This formally made him a national hero of the Iranian reform
movement. The Times asserted that a constitutional movement so largely tempered
by this assassination scarcely seems to deserve the sympathy conferred upon it by
British radicals who would have cheerfully sacrificed the prospect of a peaceful
solution for Asiatic difficulties with Russia to the susceptibilities of the amiable
86 “Iran: Parliament and the Anglo-Russian Agreement,” The Times, October 6, 1907.
87 “The Turkish Incursions,” The Times, October 7, 1907.
88 Klein, “The Anglo-Russian Convention and the Problem of Central Asia, 1907-1914,” 128.
30
“children of Iran.”89 Apart from the methods that the Iranian Parliament advocated
for the salvation of the country, disorder was rampant throughout the country.
In the meantime, an Ottoman force took a considerable slice of Iranian
territory under its control on the northwestern frontier. This frontier region was
described as a “wild district” in Lake Urumiah.
According to the Times, the position of the sultan was stronger than that of
the shah in those wild districts of the border zone. It was stated that many
circumstances favored the designs, which the sultan pursued with his usual
persistency. First, it stated that his adversaries were weak and distracted by internal
commotions. Second, it elaborated the sultan wanted to safely venture upon liberties
with Russia whose sphere of interest in Iran included the disputed territory. Russia
would not have dared to take the area prior to the Japanese War. Third, it explained
that the frontier was never fully and accurately delimited. Fourth, the dispute had
been going on for long and could commend itself to Turkish conservatism. Lastly, it
was a dispute with who were held to be heretical Shias and could be given a fine
orthodox flavor.90
The Times implied that Britain and Russia would welcome the occupation of
the disputed border zone by Iran in 1905. It stated that Turkish troops had been
encroaching steadily and progressively for the last two years in the territory, which
was hitherto being held and occupied by the Iranians, although the status quo of the
border zone did not allow Iran to interfere. Thus, Iranian fortifications around the
zone in 1905 were against the agreement that was signed in 1869 stressing the
importance of non-intervention of the parties. With the interference of their troops in
the zone, the Ottomans increased their unilateral actions in the border zone. The
Times read:
They (the Ottoman troops and tribal forces) have been in Lahijan for two
years, they hold Mergawan and Tergawan, which, like Baradost, possess easy
descents into the rich plain of Urumiah, and they are trying to levy taxes
within a few miles of that city itself.”91 The rout of the Iranians under Majdes-
Sultanah in July has made the Ottomans more aggressive than ever, and
the four regiments of Iranian infantry with guns, which are to accompany the
89 “The children of Iran” was the movement, which was impressed by Iranian Nationalist leaders,
defended removing all obstacles in the path of national liberty and progress.
90 “The Situation in Iran,” The Times, November 2, 1907.
91 Ibid.
31
Shah’s new Commissioner, are not likely to overawe the Turkish
commander.92
The Anglo-Russian treaty did not create common grounds to fix the border
conflicts on the border zone, but tended to guarantee the supremacy of Russia and
Britain in their respective spheres of influence. Moreover, it can be said that the
treaty prevented a possible coalition like the Anglo-German or Russian-German
Ententes. Thus, it can be said that the treaty also prevented third party intervention.
The Anglo-Russia convention encouraged them to reevaluate the historical process
of the delimitation of the Ottoman-Iranian boundary under Russian and British
observation because the Ottoman-Iranian boundary that remained undefined was
threatening the regional security and stability of Iran, thus, their interests as well.
2. 3. 3. Disputed Border Zone
The Times mentioned the general tendency of the two mediating powers
regarding the border issue in 1907, as it was believed that the “two Muslim
Governments” could actually fix the precise frontier line within the zone.93 The
Times mentions retrospectively the current situation of the boundary as follows:
Between 1843 and 1865, a mixed commission where British, Russian,
Ottoman and Iranian representatives existed, investigated whole frontier from
Mount Ararat to the Iranian Gulf, and finally a map was prepared on which
the undisputed territories were laid down between two states, together with a
zone twenty or thirty miles broad, which included all the disputed
territories.94
The Times described both governments as “Oriental Governments” so that
they did nothing further to solve their problems. In contrast, both governments had
repeated to maintain a provisional status quo within the zone, but the disorder in the
zone continued even though the Russian and British concerns turned into pressure
that necessitated the resolution of the border delimitation as soon as possible.
To respond to the Porte militarily, the Qajar government constituted a force
thanks to the significant sum given by the Iranians to expel the Ottoman troops from
the zone. People from various national and political societies collected £400,000 and
92 Ibid.
93 Ibid.
94 Ibid.
32
asked the government to take prompt measures to ensure the safety of the roads, to
restore the order in the provinces, and to send an able and patriotic person to
represent Iran on the Commission for the settlement of the frontier dispute. This
statement shows that Iran was not capable to provide public order and security on its
frontiers under the prevailing conditions.
The convention had a dual role in the pre-war period. It could not stop the
rivalry between Russia and Britain, but it suspended it for a while. This opened a
space to restart the boundary negotiations. The convention became influential
bringing all parties to the table to solve border conflicts. It increased the hopes of
creating a fixed borderline. However, the provisions of the treaty were far from
bringing peace to the region, because Britain and Russia had different methods and
approaches to fix these regional problems, but at least, they prevented the
deterioration of the Russian position in northern Iran. This suspension of antagonism
between Russia and Britain prevented a third party intervention as well, but the
situation encouraged the Ottoman advancements in the controversial border zone and
explains why the Iranians behaved reluctantly and desired to incorporate disputed
proportion of the border zone without negotiations. Nevertheless, they were forced
by the mediating powers to resume negotiations in order to end the arbitrary behavior
of the tribes and other unknown groups committing crimes against humanity in the
border zone. Chapter 3 and 4 will show that the Ottomans demonstrated a manifest
sensitivity to providing regional security and stability.
33
CHAPTER 3
FORMATION OF THE FRONTIER COMMISSION
This chapter begins with an evaluation of the rationale behind forming a new
boundary commission, despite serious financial problems. Second, it analyzes the
relevant financial information regarding the salaries, travel payments of the
commission members, the costs of border-related military fortifications and the like.
Third, it shows the pathway that Tahir Pasha involved to the frontier delimitation
after having role in the settlement of public outrages that were erupted in Bitlis and
Van. His role in the settlement led him to be the chairperson of just forming frontier
commission in a critical period. In sum, this chapter sets the ground to shed light on
the reasons why Abdulhamid and the Sublime Porte repeatedly forced Tahir Pasha95
to delimit the imperial eastern boundary when the budgetary problems of the
government peaked.
3. 1. Commission Members, Commission-Related Expenses, and Increasing
Budgetary Problems
This section consists of two parts. First, it evaluates the cost of the
commissioners’ salaries and travel allowances. Second, it analyses the financial
ramifications of the Ottoman military fortifications. Then, both are analyzed in a
broader context in terms of what all the variables meant for the Ottoman image on
the border in a transition period between the Abdulhamid and CUP eras.
95 The study of the life span and career trajectory of Tahir Pasha is necessary in order to understand
how the Ottoman government approached the disputed border zone during this period of history.
Evidence shows there is a strong correlation between Tahir Pasha’s personal characteristics and the
political atmosphere he induced. Giving a detailed political biography of him in connection with the
significant interrelated events allows us to understand one of the most prominent actors of the border
making process. Examining his political life spent in the borderlands by giving special references to
the financial difficulties that the Ottoman Treasury encountered provides an insight about why the
sultan struggled to delimitate the frontier to a boundary. Tahir Pasha’s biographical record indicates
why Abdulhamid trusted such a loyal person who was able to establish good relations with the local
people. Thus, it has been seen that the networks Tahir Pasha established and the tasks he achieved
throughout his career increased his visibility in a growing bureaucracy. Tahir Pasha struggled hard to
conclude border investigations in favor of the Ottoman State, although increasing financial problems
put him frequently in a difficult position. For this reason, evaluating the expenditures of the
commission shows the importance that the Ottoman government attributed to the border-making
process, regardless of its limited resources.
34
The basic economic parameters of the period (1907-1908) indicate that the
financial troubles of the earlier years continued. Engin D. Akarlı shows this
continuity by under the three generations of 1839-71/6, 1876-1909, and 1909-18. In
all three cases, economic backwardness and budget deficiencies caused serious
disadvantages. Akarlı argues that healing the budget deficit created by the first
generation preoccupied the second and third generations.96 The second generation
(1876-1909) of this category corresponds to the reign of Abdulhamid, when the
Ottoman government had to deal with grave financial problems. The boundary
commission was formed amid this financial depression. Its formation brought
additional burden on the central treasury. In order to meet the requirement of the
budgets of 1323, 1324, and 1325, and to cover the budget deficits, the treasury
disposed of some of its resources. G. Lowther states regarding this matter:
Table 3.1: A summary of the financial estimates for 1325, which were
forwarded to Istanbul before the end of November.
Income Amount Expenditures Amount
£ T. £ T.
Local Revenues 1, 936, 421 Civil expenditure 969, 122
3 per cent Customs surtax 660, 000 Military expenditure 1, 486,
397
Advance by Public Debt 250, 000 Railway guarantees, &
c.
390, 901
Total 2, 846, 421 Total 2, 846,
421
The figures adopted for the special resources assigned by the Porte to cover
the excess of expenditure over local revenue, namely the 3 per cent. Custom surtax
and the advance made by the Public Debt were the same as for 1324.97
The budget of the Ottoman Empire was annually arranged and allocated
department by department. This enabled the departments to participate in the making
of the annual budget. However, unexpected expenditures created additional problems
in balancing the budget. Some of the expenditures of the boundary commission were
of this nature. Besides the budgetary difficulties of the Ottoman Empire became
96 Engin D. Akarli, “Economic Policy and Budgets in Ottoman Turkey, 1876-1909,” Middle Eastern
Studies 28 (1992): 443.
97 Gerard Lowther, “General Report on Turkey for the Year 1908,” Annual Report (Foreign Office,
June 1909), 44–45.
35
chronic, Akarlı argues that the budget was being mostly prepared in a four-phase
process during the time of Abdulhamid.98 However, inter-departmental discussions
on how they would provide for the sums required by the boundary affairs
demonstrated that the commission’s expenditures were not included in this process to
prepare the regular budget. Finding these sums had a process of its own. Because the
formation of the commission was decided suddenly, the Ottoman government had to
apply a complex procedure to pay for its expenditures.99 It is important to ask from
where the government hoped to find the funds to meet the costs of the boundary
delimitation. How did the Ottomans deal with such unexpected payments? Why did
the payment of even such sums that were relatively minor compared to the regular
budget items prove so difficult? Answering these questions will clearly show the
struggle behind the border delimitation, too. Clearly, the Ottoman officials had to
apply a complex set of payment procedures to meet the expenditures of the border
commission.
The inter-departmental correspondences related to this issue added up to a
significantly high number of documents. The ambiguity regarding how these
expenditures would be paid was obvious. Dealing with this situation preoccupied the
Ottoman officials. For instance, this ambiguity concerned both the Ministry of
Financial Affairs and the Ministry of External Affairs. However, the Ministry of
Internal Affairs was the main institution that had to resolve the budgetary problems
of the commission by producing practical solutions. The officials of all three
ministries became involved in the struggle to create funds. Two main reasons caused
98 Akarlı states ‘first, the government departments reported their cash requirements for the next fiscal
year. At the same time, the revenue departments assessed revenue prospects on the basis of provincial
reports and the records of previous years. Second, a special committee of ministers and administrators
evaluated, compared and adjusted the statements by different departments on projected expenditures
and revenues. Third, the preliminary budget was discussed by the Council of Ministers, which also
had to deal with the task of narrowing or eliminating the deficit. Finally, the budget was submitted for
the Sultan.’ Akarlı, “Economic Policy and Budgets" Middle Eastern Studies 28, no. 3 (July 1992):
444.
99 Akarlı points out that there were two distinct budgets, which were prepared annually. ‘One of the
budgets was the ordinary budget (adi büdce) and the other extraordinary (fevkalade büdce). According
to him, the ordinary budget was based upon the customary and recurrent expenditures and revenues of
the state. The extraordinary budget was created to deal with the unexpected, unusual and temporary
needs of the state. Additionally, he believes that when extra cash was needed during an unexpected
military engangment, these needs were met in one or several of the following ways: (a) additional
taxes (i’ane); (b) transfers from the Privy Purse; (c) diversion of funds from, or savings in, the
ordinary budget; (d) discounting a portion of the next year’s revenues; and (e) short-or long term
loans.’ He found out ‘the last three were the most usual’. Ibid.
36
problems. First, the commission was formed after the annual budget was fixed.
Second, the time that the boundary delimitation would take was not known, so the
officials could not tell how long the commissioners would be paid for. Initially, these
two reasons caused ambiguity. Later, this ambiguity intensified because it began to
become apparent that the central treasury did not have the necessary funds to pay for
either the salaries of the commissioners or their daily needs in the border front. Their
payments were gradually released and always delayed. The treasury paid the
payments by taking loans and issuing payment vouchers that would be paid months
later.
The complex set of the payment procedure turned into a cycle that kept
manifesting the destitution of the Ottoman treasury. Even when the Ottoman treasury
had funds to rely on, the formation of the boundary commission abruptly and the
activities in which it was involved generated a need for ready cash and increased the
budgetary problems. Furthermore, as the commission had been formed in order to
prevent the cross border violence and the proliferation of the conflicts that
undermined the public security and order on the eastern limits of the Ottoman
provinces, it became the basic reason for new expenditures. The frontier policies
produced by the commission supported the consolidation of the Ottoman military
fortifications around the frontier. These additional expenditures as well strained the
Ottoman finances.
3. 2. Salaries and Travel Payments of the Commission Members
The commission was formed initially as a committee of inquiry expected to
investigate the unrest in Van and to settle the boundary disputes and conflicts. Tahir
Pasha was just a member of this committee, which was headed by Emin Bey Efendi,
a Member of the Court of Appeals.100 Later, Tahir was appointed as the head of the
investigation committee, replacing Emin Bey. This committee eventually turned into
a boundary commission. Abdulhamid confirmed its staff on August 10, 1907, by
appointing a chairman, members and officers. 101
The members of the boundary commission met for the first time upon their
appointment to the investigation committee. They served in different posts and
places across the empire previously. One exception to this was Tevfik Bey. He
100 BOA, İ. HUS. 157 / 39. 1325 B 16, 25. 08. 1907.
101 BOA, İ. HUS. 157 / 86. 1325 B 26, 4. 09. 1907.
37
served as the director of the Ministry of Education in Trabzon before he was
appointed as one of the commissioners. Tahir Pasha probably knew him from the
days of his governorship of Trabzon and invited him to join the commission to fill
the gap left by Emin Bey’s departure. He became the last member to join the
commission and his appointment ended the discussion whether there was need for
new members or not.
Although the organization of the commission was completed, how much
money they would receive while they served on it had not been clearly specified yet.
This ambiguous situation regarding the finances of the commission continued almost
until the Porte terminated the commission.
The salaries of each employees of the commission differed according to their
position of significance and rank. It was decided that their salaries would have been
paid monthly, but their salaries were sent cumulatively months later due to financial
problems. All the payment procedure and figures show that the commissioners kept
their previous post in addition to their duties in the commission. Accordingly, they
were paid not only for their service in border affairs but also for their previous post.
Relatively, they received a small rise in their salaries or an extra salary that changed
in accordance with their original salaries. However, these financial supports turned
into their second salaries when the affairs of the commission prolonged for many
reasons because these additional salaries were paid to them as long as they remained
as a member of the commission in addition to their first salary. Furthermore, they
were to be reimbursed for their travel costs in keeping with the set procedures of the
regulation for travel allowance (Harcırah Nizamnamesi) calculated according to the
miles they covered.
3. 3. Members of the Commission and Their Salaries
As it is stated above, the Boundary Commission embodied a group of senior
bureaucrats and military commanders. Some of the commissioners were invisible
throughout in the inter-departmental correspondences, while others were not. The
salaries indicate that there was a hierarchy within the commission. Tahir Pasha was
at the top of this hierarchy, but Ali Nadir Pasha, Brigadier General, Şakir Bey,
Colonel, and Danyal Pasha, Kerkük Commander-Divisional General, were the other
38
commissioners whose say was important.102 In addition to these prominent figures,
there were lower ranked military officers, civil servants, and assistants, who were
included and excluded intermittently according to the need of the commission. For
instance, Kazım Bey and Abdülrezzak Efendi, two junior officers, had been asked to
provide the security of the commission, on March 31, 1908. They became also
temporary staff of the commission for a while wherever the commission went. They
were to be paid double their junior salaries. Thus, each of them received two hundred
and fifty qurushes monthly. In total, they were paid five hundred qurushes extra, but
the condition of the central treasury was inadequate to pay even such a small amount,
so Musul supplied this payment by cash, and sent its vouchers, which showed how
much they paid, to the central treasury to refund it from the allocation of the Ministry
of Interior.103
The seventeenth article of the Regulation for Travel Allowance indicated that
any officer who had been temporarily appointed to an official post would be paid an
additional sum to compensate his travel costs. These travel allowances compromised
the cost of their round trip and multiple destinations. The temporary members of the
commission as they became visible only through the payment of their allowances and
were invisible in the rest of the commission’s records, Brigade Commander
Abdurrahim Pasha, and Colonel Mustafa Bey, are cases in point. Their actual salaries
and supplementary salaries were calculated together, so Abdurrahim Pasha was paid
seven thousand and two hundred qurushes and Mustafa Bey was paid three thousand
and six hundred qurushes.104
102 BOA, DH. MKT. 1173 / 41. 1325 CA 01: DMK. Maliye Nezareti Celilesine, 27. 08. 1325.
103 BOA, DH. MKT. 1173 / 41. 1325 CA 01, 12. 06. 1907 & 648 / 16. 17 Nisan 1324, 30. 04. 1908.
104 BOA, DH. MKT. 1173/ 41, 1325 CA 01, 12. 06. 1907 & 5 Ağustos 1324, 18. 08. 1908.
39
Table 3.2-Travel Allowance, Salaries, and Extra Salaries of the Boundary
Commissioners (In 1907: 650 Liras= 65.000 qurushes, so 1 Lira = 100 qurushes)
Com. Members Travel Allowance Present Salary Extra Salary
Tahir Pasha Not available 23.000 q 1, 500 q
Danyal Pasha 15, 000 q Not available 800 q
A. Nadir Pasha 25, 000 q Not available 720 q
Tevfik Bey Not available Not available 700 q
Şakir Bey 25, 000 q Not available 350 q
+
Zeki Pasha Not available Not available Not available
The amount of Tahir Pasha’s travel allowance was not specified. When Tahir
Pasha was recalled from Trabzon to Bitlis, he received travel allowance for a round
trip. Probably, Tahir Pasha continued using this money for his trips between
provinces. 105 Until his duty was confirmed, the travel allowance he received created
some problems. The finance officers began to ask the Grand Vizierate whether Tahir
Pasha and Tevfik Bey would receive a travel allowance and an extra salary or not.
Furthermore, they asked how much they would be paid, if they would be paid .106
The officers also questioned whether Danyal Pasha would receive an extra salary or
not apart from his travel allowance.107 While the officers continued to inquire about
the payments of Tahir Pasha and Tevfik Bey, they decided to pay one extra salary to
Ali Nadir Pasha and Şakir Bey each commensurate with their actual salaries at the
beginning.
105 Tahir Pasha was paid twenty-seven thousand and seven hundred fifty six qurushes and five paras in
total. His share from that amount of money was eight thousand and three hundred and sixty six
qurushes for his own traveling expenses.105 Another document, written a few months later, indicates
that Tahir Pasha and the officers who went with him took twenty seven thousand and seven hundred
and fifty six qurushes and five paras, as it is stated above. However, it is also stated that Tahir Pasha
received a loan, which was sixteen thousand and five hundred and forty four qurushes for his round
trip although he should have taken nine thousand six hundred and twenty qurushes for his traveling
expenses. He probably assumed he would return to Trabzon. It did not happen. After the settlement of
the incident, Abdulhamid II appointed Tahir Pasha to the governorship of Bitlis. It seems the Ministry
of Finance demanded from Tahir Pasha to return some of his travel allowance (6,923 qurushes) back
to the Treasury. He paid back four thousand and sixty four qurushes, the rest of the money (2,859
qurush) remained unpaid, but the Treasury demanded it again. 105
106 BOA, DH. MKT. 1173 / 41. 1325 CA 01, 12. 06. 1907: (...) 5 Eylül 1323, 18. 09. 1907
107 Ibid.
40
The travel allowances that would be paid to Ali Nadir Pasha, Şakir Bey and
Danyal Pasha had been specified. Ali Nadir Pasha and Şakir Bey, each of them,
would receive two hundred and fifty liras (25, 000 qurushes) and Danyal Pasha
would receive one hundred and fifty liras (15, 000 qurushes). In total, three of them
were paid six hundred and fifty liras (65, 000 qurushes) for their travel allowance.108
The Chief Secretary of the Ministry of the Interior demanded this payment
immediately from the Finance Ministry and expressed that it must be added to the
annual budget of the Ministry of the Interior in 1907.109
The Treasury found the payment of these sums impossible for lack of
adequate funds. When the central treasury declared its inability to pay these sums in
a short time to the Chief Secretary of the Ministry of the Interior, the Province of
Musul was ordered to pay the required sum in cash in return for vouchers. The
officers in Musul would send the vouchers to the Central Treasury requesting the
payment of the indicated sums out of the allocation of the Ministry of the Interior.
Thus, Musul paid 7,500 qurushes to Tahir Pasha as supplement and paid
4,000 qurushes to Danyal Pasha. Ali Nadir Pasha was paid 3,600 qurushes. Şakir
Bey was paid 1,800 qurushes. Tevfik Bey was paid 3,500 qurushes.110 In total, they
received 20,400 qurushes. The financial officers struggled hard to pay Musul its
expenses, but they could not do it due to the condition of the treasury. Instead, they
began to delay the payments. The bills circulated from one office to another. The
finance officials observed, “If those sums could not be paid on time, the payments
should have been conveyed to the Unexpected Expenses Account (Zuhurat Tertibi)
of the Ministry of the Interior in 1907.111
On January 2, 1908, the Financial Ministry notified that the Unexpected
Expenses Office of the Ministry of the Interior could not provide all the money, so
they assumed that the Expenditure Allocations Office (Mesarif Mürettebatı) should
pay the remaining sums. However, this office as well stated that they had limited and
fixed funds and noted that to the General Allocations Office (Mürettebat-ı
Umumiyye), which arranged the Budget of the Ministry of the Interior, should make
108 BOA, DH. MKT. 1173 / 41. 1325 CA 01, 12. 06. 1907: DMK. Maliye Nezareti Celilesine, 27. 08.
1323, 09. 09. 1907.
109 Ibid.
110 BOA, DH. MKT. 1173 / 41. 1325 CA 01, 12. 06. 1907: 3080 / 20. 21 Ekim 1323, 4. 12. 1907.
111 Ibid.
41
the payments. At the end, the Ministry stated that paying such a significant amount
of money was impossible.112
On January 13, 1908, apparently, they still had not supplied the required
funds. They kept debating how they would find the required sums. They suggested
that the unpaid vouchers should be returned to the Unexpected Expenses. Then, the
accountants stated that there was not another choice left apart from adding that sum
as a budget deficit to the current year’s (1907) budget under the Arrangement of
Unexpected Expenses when the vouchers arrived.113 However, these financial
problems did not stop them to seek the funds needed for frontier delimitation.
The issue of paying the extra salaries of Tahir Pasha and Tevfik Bey114 was
finally resolved. It was decided that they would receive extra salaries as long as they
were involved in the border defining process. However, the exact amount of their
payment remained unfixed. Probably, this sum was paid by Van because the
provincial revenue office of Van inquired about the clarification of a few points
regarding the extra salaries of Tahir Pasha and Tevfik Bey. In this respect, Mehmed
Sabri, the Minister of Finance, conveyed the appeal of the revenue office to the
Ministry of the Interior, on January 25, 1908, requesting information about their
tenure as members of the frontier delimitation mission from the beginning to the end.
In addition, the revenue office asked whether their first extra salaries would
be increased or not, and their salaries would be subject to five per cent deduction for
Aid for Civil Officials (Mülkiye Musabin), an insurance fund for civil bureaucrats,
and one per cent for Aid for Debilitated Soldiers (Zu’afa-yı Askeriyye İ’aneleri)115, a
fund to help debilitated soldiers.116
On February 4, 1908, the Financial Affairs informed the revenue office that
Tahir Pasha and other commission members should have been paid as of the
beginning of their boundary investigation duty, and should not be subject to the
112 BOA, DH. MKT. 1173 / 41. 1325 CA 01, 12. 06. 1907: 3614 / 29. 31 Kanun-i Evvel 1323, 13. 01.
1908.
113 Ibid.
114 The name of that member is not mentioned in the documents. However, Tahir Pasha and Tevfik
Bey’s extra salaries were not specified yet becasue Tahir Pasha was shifted from the membership of
the commission to its presidenty. Tevfik Bey was added to the commission following Tahir Pasha
became its president. The member whose name is not mentioned is Tevfik Bey becasue only one
person whose extra salaries remained unspecified apart from Tahir Pasha. Thus, it can be said that
Tevfik Bey was that unknown officer.
115 Cutting 1 % from everyone created a fund in order to help those suffering soldiers.
116 BOA, DH. MKT. 1173 / 41. 1325 CA 01, 12. 06. 1907: 564 / 120.
42
regulations regarding the insurance funds. However, the Chief Secretary of the
Ministry of the Interior noted that their extra salaries needed to be cut by five percent
for the insurance fund for civil bureaucrats and one percent for a similar insurance.
However, their salary should not increase (terakki) and not be subject to cuts for the
Debilitated Soldiers Insurance Fund (Zu’afa-yı Askeriyye İanesi).117 Thus, the
prolonged process to deliver the salaries of these two significant members of the
commission ended.
Tahir Pasha’s actual salary was 23, 000 qurushes when he was appointed to
the Governorship of Bitlis, on July 30, 1907.118 According to his biographical
register, he received, apart from his own salary 1, 500 qurushes extra to recover the
money he spent from his own pocket while he dealt with the border affairs.119 That
means, in total, he received 24, 500 qurushes for each month. If Musul paid 7, 500
qurushes to Tahir Pasha to supplement his actual salary, on January 14, 1907, we can
assume that Tahir Pasha stayed there at least five months since he received 1, 500
qurushes extra for each month.
By this logic, Musul paid 4, 000 qurushes to Danyal Pasha, 3, 600 three
qurushes to Ali Nadir Pasha, 1, 800 qurushes to Şakir Bey, and 3, 500 qurushes to
Tevfik Bey, which means 20, 400 qurushes in total. 120 Thus, if these sums covered a
five-month period, the share of each commissioner can be calculated, as Danyal
Pasha received 800; Ali Nadir Pasha received 720; Şakir Bey received 350; Tevfik
Bey received 700 qurushes for each month as an addition to their actual salaries.121
However, it must be added that these figures do not reflect the entire sum that
was paid to the commissioners until the last day of the commission, but it gives some
insight about the extent of the pressure their payments put on the budget throughout
the border defining process. All these factors show that the Ottoman Treasury
suffered from the shortage of revenue. Thus, extraordinary expenditure further
strained the Ottoman finances.
The formation of the commission put a new burden on the budget. They
solved the problem only by taking domestic loans from Musul and Van. The
117 BOA, DH. MKT. 1173 / 41. 1325 CA 01, 12. 06. 1907: 3879 / 24.
118 BOA, DH. SAİD. 138.
119 Ibid.
120 BOA, DH. MKT. 1173 / 41. 1325 CA 01, 12. 06. 1907: [14. 01.1907].
121 These figures show assumptions regarding how much they receved as an extra for each month.
These assumptions are calculated according to the data which is taken from the biographical register
of Tahir Pasha, as a result of comparing datas taken from his register and some other documents.
43
vouchers were written in the name of the provinces. The Treasury promised to pay
these sums back soon. However, these bills circulated from department to
department as the officials tried to find a budget account from which they could
make the payments.
Despite the problems were encountered to reimburse, the Province of Musul
continued to meet the requirements of the commission against future payments by
the Treasury. 122 On February 11, 1908, the Chief Secretarial Office of the Ministry
of the Interior clarified the procedure for finding the funds. They wrote that several
documents involving requests for payment had been sent to the Ministry of the
Internal Affairs inadvertently instead of the Treasury. 123 These seven pieces dispatch
notes and three promissory notes referred to transactions that involved salary and
travel cost payments to the commissioners. These sums, which were eventually paid
by Musul, amounted to 42, 855, 50 qurushes.124
The expenditures of the commission appear to have been added to the annual
budget temporarily in 1908. On March 19, 1908, the Chief Secretarial Office of the
Ministry of the Interior informed the Ministry of Finance again that the salaries
allocated to Tahir Pasha and the other commissioners should have been stated in the
budget as a temporary item because the work of the commission was about to end. It
would have been permanently removed from the budget if the commission were
finally dismissed. In this case, the travel allowances that would be paid to Tahir
Pasha and the commissioners were set at 122, 400 qurushes for the period from
September 14, 1907, to March 13, 1908. The sum for their extra salaries would be
added to this amount, and all would have been allocated from the annual budget,
eventually.125
3. 4. Occasional Expenditures, Military Fortifications, and the Claims for the
Termination of the Boundary Commission
Beyond the difficulties encountered in meeting the payments of the
commissioners, border-related issues increased the burden on the budget in other
122 BOA, DH. MKT. 1173 / 41. 1325 CA 01, 12. 06. 1907: 3937 / 28. 29 Kanuni Sani 1323, 11. 02.
1908.
123 Ibid.
124 BOA, DH. MKT. 1173 / 41. 1325 CA 01, 12. 06. 1907: DMK. 3937 / 28. 10 Muharrem 326, 13.
02. 1908.
125 BOA, DH. MKT. 1173 / 41. 1325 CA 01, 12. 06. 1907: 61 / 6. 6 Mart 1324, 19. 03. 1908.
44
ways as well once the commission became involved in these issues proactively. The
Porte acted on frontier matters according to the information it received from the
frontier actors. The tendency of the Ottoman and Qajar governments to solve the
problems diplomatically shifted to aggressive military fortifications and unilateral
action of the chief commissioners towards the end of 1908. Each fortification and
expansion effort created a state of panic in the Ottoman Finance Ministry because
they knew the Treasury did not have sufficient funds to afford the expenses of the
military fortifications in the villages around the Lake Urumiah. Most of them
believed that each day the Ottoman troops spent in the frontier zone would bring a
heavy burden on the Treasury.
When these occasional pressures increased and cash shortages began to be
unbearable, the Ottoman officials began to question the number of the military
troops. They thought the number of troops in the frontier zone could be reduced.
They suggested the withdrawal of troops, hoping to reduce the costs. This proposal
divided the Ottoman officialdom into two groups. One group, including Tahir Pasha,
stressed the importance of the troops. They believed the present number of troops
should be maintained. The other group demanded the reduction of the number of
troops to alleviate the burden on the Treasury. Initially, Tahir Pasha opposed them.
On August 18, 1908, he sent a telegram to the Internal Affairs in which he clearly
showed his unwillingness to decrease the number of troops. He stated that all the
battalions that were kept in the border zone were actually very necessary, and the
Ottoman soldiers should not leave the districts where they were stationed. However,
the condition of the government finances forced him to agree to the recalling of some
of the battalions, but he warned Istanbul that this measure would jeopardize the
security in two significant frontier zones, where nineteen battalion companies
situated. As Tahir Pasha indicated, he could only decrease the number of them from
nineteen to twelve or eleven. According to him, seven or eight battalion companies
should continue their duties and this would be sufficient for now to defend the two
critical frontier areas, near the disputed zone.126
126 Asâkir-i Şâhâne’nin şimdi bulunduğu hudûd noktalarından ayrılması kat’iyyen câ’iz değil ise de,
iki mıntaka hudûdunun muhâfazasına yedi, nihâyet sekiz tabur kâfî bulunduğuna göre, iki mıntakada
bulunan on dokuz taburun on iki yâhûd on bir taburun eski yerlerine i’âdesiyle masrafın taklîli
mümkin ve münâsibdir. BOA, DH. MKT. 1173 / 41. 1325 CA 01, 12. 06. 1907: Tahir Pasha, 5
Ağustos 1324, 18. 08. 1908.
45
Two days later, Ali Rıza, the Governor of Van, in a telegram that showed his
opposition to the decision that Tahir Pasha had to take unwillingly. Van was a
province bordering with these conflict prone zones, and these troops in question were
actually stationed around the border of Van. Their reduction would threaten border
security in Van, according to Ali Rıza. His reports provide details about the Ottoman
fortifications (including the number of troops and the range of military equipment)
on the border front. According to him, the troops consisted of two artillery battalions,
two battalions of infantry troops, two regular army squads, one militia unit or
reserve, and one cavalry squad.127 Then, he asked vitally about the cost of these
troops for the Central Treasury. He stated that if the two regular army squads, whose
costs were paid by Musul, were excluded, the total cost 155, 300 odd qurushes. Thus,
Ali Rıza argued that the evacuation of the troops to decrease the expenditures would
create security problems, and creating funds by dissolving the troops on the border
was not more important than keeping the public secure and maintaining order in the
border zone.128 Nevertheless, these regular troops were withdrawn as described in
Tahir Pasha’s letter mentioned above.
The usefulness of the commission began to be questioned. In September of
1908, Ali Nadir Pasha and Tevfik Bey resigned from the commission. The appeals of
these resignations show that they thought that the commission’s expenses were
unnecessary and aggravating the financial crisis. The reasons behind their resignation
are explained in the rest of this study, but the most significant statement was in
Tevfik Bey’s appeal as he referred to current financial situation: “I resigned from the
commission not to contribute any longer to the damage inflicted on the State
Treasury unnecessarily…”129
127 “…nevâhî-i ma’lûmede kuvâ-yı mütehaşşide iki batarya tôpçu ve iki tabur ve iki bölük nizâmiyye
ve bir tabur redîf ve bir bölük nizâmiyye süvârîsinden ibâret olup Musul Vilâyeti’nce tesviye
edilmekde olan iki bölük nizâmiyyeden başka diğer kıta’âtın mu’ayyenât-ı havâleleri yüzelli beş bin
üç yüz küsûr gurûşa bâliğ olduğu gösterilmişdir. BOA, DH. MKT. 1173 / 41. 1325 CA 01, 12. 06.
1907: 14607. Ali Rıza, 7 Ağustos 1324, 20. 08. 1908.
128 BOA, DH. MKT. 1173 / 41. 1325 CA 01, 12. 06. 1907: 14607. Ali Rıza, 7 Ağustos 1324, 20. 08.
1908.
129 BOA, DH. MKT. 1173 / 41. 1325 CA 01, 12. 06. 1907: 16366. 20 Ağustos 1324, 2. 09. 1908 (The
Resign of Tevfik Bey).
46
3. 5. Tahir Pasha’s Involvement in Boundary Delimitation
Tahir Pasha was a key frontier actor. He had become a significant policy
implementer, usually for the Palace. He was often asked to mediate and to
investigate local disputes. Following Tahir Pasha’s footprints throughout his career
and detecting the degree of his influence in other state affairs is a challenge. He was
charged with different duties concerning various problems in different provinces,
including some the affairs of which were not directly related to his official post. He
usually had to move from one province to another to investigate conflicts and
contribute to their settlement. Undoubtedly, his personal experience of governance
that spanned thirty-three years in the eastern provinces became influential to
prescribe him as an official capable of restoring public order and calming down
social unrest caused by governors’ “ignorant” of the conditions in the eastern
provinces.130
First, Ferid Pasha was the Governor of Bitlis whose disrespectful treatment of
a mixed group of villagers and sheikhs spurred mass rallies and public unrest in
1907.131 Second, Ali Bey Efendi, the Governor of Van, caused a similar reaction in
Van the same year.132
Tahir Pasha served previously in these provinces. The Porte formed a
committee of inquiry to discover the reasons behind the unrests. At that time, Tahir
Pasha was the Governor of Trabzon. Following the outbreaks of the events, he was
immediately recalled first to Bitlis and then sent to Van before the unrests in these
two provinces became widespread. O. H. Parry comments in view of these unrests:
I told the Grand Vizier that I had news from Bitlis that there was considerable
political effervescence and discontent there as well as at Van and Erzurum,
that there appeared to be a strong feeling against the Imperial Government
130 I suspect that this ‘ignorance’ stemmed from different outlooks of the governors regarding
Abdulhamid’s policies. It seems the regional rivalry between Armenians and Kurds played a
signficiant role in this matter. It can be said that these governors had divergent views of Ottomanism
and Islamic Unity. It also seems that the most of Kurdish tribes of eastern Anatolia embraced the the
idea of Islamic solidarity and did not like the governors who projected an Ottomanist idelogy. Zeki
Pasha explained this when Ali Bey, the governor of Van, witnessed such a matter. As a result, these
political unrests in Bitlis and Van could be the outcome of this clash of policies.
131 BOA, Y. MTV. 299 / 102. 1325 CA 14, 25. 06. 1907.
132 BOA, DH. MKT. 1173 / 41. 1325 CA 01, 12. 07. 1907. Eighth Division Commander Divisional
General Mahmud Pasha informs Istanbul about the current situation in Van and demands an
experienced bureaucrat. “Emniyyet ü asayişi başka bir renk kesb etmiş olan bu vilayetin tecribe-dîn
[sic! tecribedâr-tecribeli?] ve kâr-âzmud[e] bir zâta ihâlesi esbâbının istikmâli ehemmiyyet-i maslahat
namına müsterhemdir - ol-bâbda."
47
among the Notables, and that there was great danger of a combination
between the Revolutionary party and the Kurds owing to the exactions and
maladministration of the country, and that while the Sultan’s attention was
fixed on a few kilometers of country across the frontier, a dangerous
revolutionary movement would perhaps break out behind and spread
throughout the land owing to the excitement engendered by events on the
frontier.133
On November 20, 1907, concerning the latter view of the events, Sir. N. O’Conor
states that
. . . the state of affairs in Bitlis and Van Vilayets is so disturbed in
consequence of the attitude of the Kurds and the general scarcity and
suffering that Tahir Pasha, who is still Vali of Bitlis, will probably not be able
to prolong the negotiations with the belated Iranian Commission . . . 134
3. 5. 1. Praying for Rain and Rioting against the Governor: The Case of Ferid
Pasha
Ferid Pasha was the governor of Bitlis in 1907. During his time as governor,
he faced a public reaction, which was led by some of the sheikhs. The reasons behind
why the local people and sheikhs came together and opposed the governorship of
Ferid Pasha had an interesting background, and demonstrated fragile interrelations
between the representatives of the central government and the local population. Tahir
Pasha knew the internal dynamics of Bitlis very well, because Bitlis was the first
place with which he became acquainted in his long career in the eastern provinces.
He had served there on various occasions. When the incident occurred in Bitlis,
Tahir Pasha was sent to Bitlis from Trabzon.
Brigadier General Celal Pasha explained in detail what happened in the
province until Tahir Pasha reached Bitlis. Celal Pasha was the leading official who
witnessed the development of the unrest and dealt with its settlement for the first
time. His explanations indicate that the sheikhs had strong influence over the people,
and this point gives us an insight regarding the governmentality of the region at that
time. The sheikhs used the authority they derived from their influence over people
against Ferid Pasha, one of the governors of the Ottoman State. Taking the local
people behind them, the sheikhs underlined that the anger was against the governor
himself and had nothing to do with the sultan.
133 Schofiled. Vol. IV, p. 153.
134 Sir N. O’Conor to Sir Edward Grey, Pera, November 20, 1907, Schofield IV, 236.
48
Celal Pasha’s report regarding this incident helps us understand the reasons
behind the incident, but it seems that the Ottoman officials could not understand at
first what happened when people began to gather in front of the government
building. Celal Pasha’s report indicates that this incident started on June 9, 1907, and
it continued more than three days. Many days before the incident occurred, local
people and sheikhs had appealed to Ferid Pasha to exchange some money. This
exchanging money is not clear, but it gives an idea about Ferid Pasha’s reluctance to
accommodate the demands of the local people.
Local people in Bitlis depended on agriculture for their living and agriculture
depended very much on suitable climate conditions. However, a drought hit them in
the summer of 1907. In order to avoid this arid summer, villagers, sheikhs, and
ulema came together to pray for rain for three days. On the last day, they demanded
Ferid Pasha to participate while they were passing by the government building. Ferid
Pasha did not participate in this praying activity and met them at the door without
covering his head.
Most probably, the sheikhs, who had control over the local people, found
Ferid Pasha’s behavior disrespectful and something that diminished their authority
over ordinary people. This friction and opposition turned into a social protest against
his governorship. Meanwhile, Celal Pasha tended to calm down the crowd. He heard
the voices of people standing in front of the exterior door and yelling and setting fire
to the government building: “Pasha, come meet us! If you do not, we are going to
harm the soldiers and you as well! We obey the Padishah; our target is the
governor.”135
Apart from angry crowd who gathered around the government building,
another group consisting of some ulama, sheikhs, notables, and other respectabile
people of Bitlis, occupied the telegraph station in Bitlis. By doing so, this interesting
composition of people aimed to cut off the communications with Istanbul. They
prevented Celal Pasha as well when he wanted to inform Istanbul about the incident.
Ferid Pasha simply did not understand how he had caused such a public riot,
so he was unaware of his mistake. He asked Celal Pasha to learn the demands of the
crowd that gathered in front of the government building: “… Inform the sheikhs and
135 BOA, Y. MTV. 299 / 134. 1325 CA 18, 29. 06. 1907.
49
call them here. If people do not want me, we should solve this without using
force…”136
Some of the sheikhs left the telegraph house to talk to the crowd and to scold
and restrain those people who had begun to behave violently. These disgruntled
people plundered the government building and killed an Ottoman military officer. On
the third day, the relations with some of the sheikhs began to normalize. These
sheikhs feared further deterioration of the situation, and chose to cooperate with
Celal Pasha by providing intelligence that suggested taking protective measures for
the safety of Mustafa, Vice Governor and Provincial Captain for Security, and
Muhammed Efendi, the Gendarme officer.
To prevent the escalation of the conflict further in Bitlis, Tahir Pasha was
sent to Bitlis in order to listen to the complaints of the people and to investigate the
inappropriate actions of those people who behaved anarchistically against the
authority of the governor.137 Celal Pasha was replaced with another person in Bitlis,
and the place of some of the officers changed. 138 Some troops were shifted from
Mush and Van to Bitlis under the command of the Divisional General Mahmud
Pasha, while the Porte advised all the officials in Bitlis to calm the people down.139
Before Tahir Pasha arrived at Bitlis, Ferid Pasha had already left the province
by imperial order, and was in a village nearby Bitlis, waiting for Tahir Pasha’s
arrival.140 However, later, Ferid Pasha moved to the army headquarters to prevent
any harm towards him and was ordered to wait there until the investigation
concluded.141 Meanwhile, Istanbul was looking for possibilities for a resolution to
calm down the people and to restore public order in Bitlis. Tahir Pasha was urged to
move faster,142 as reports indicated that the agitation of the people increased in Bitlis
and the communications with the province was cut off.143
The urgent arrival of Tahir Pasha at the province was very important under
these circumstances. However, traveling from Trabzon to Bitlis within a short time
was difficult because everyone had to use traditional means of transportation.
136 Ibid.
137 BOA, BEO., 3085 / 231366, 1325 CA 13 / 24. 06. 1907.
138 BOA, Y. Mtv., 299 / 89, 1325 CA 12, 23. 06. 1907.
139 Ibid.
140 BOA, Y. A. HUS., 512 / 68. 1325 CA 13, 24. 6. 1907.
141 BOA, BEO., 3085 / 231369. 1325 CA 14, 25. 6. 1907.
142 BOA, Y. Mtv., 299 / 105. 1325 CA 14, 25. 6. 1907.
143 Ibid.
50
Fortunately, they were in the summer season and Tahir Pasha did not have to deal
with the heavy weather conditions that usually closed roads for months. The means
of transportation, distance, and road conditions still prolonged his travel. A document
conveyed to the deputy governor of Trabzon indicates that travelling from Trabzon
to Bitlis normally took eighty-nine hours, almost full four days, in 1907.144 For that
reason, travelling this route faster than normal would have been an invaluable
contribution to the settlement of the uprising, for, evidently the center saw Tahir
Pasha as the only official who had the capacity to resolve the conflict.
3. 5. 2. Anti-Governor Riot in Van: The Case of Ali Bey Efendi
Ali Bey Efendi succeeded Tahir Pasha as the governor of Van, when Tahir
Pasha’s term (1898-1906) ended due to his medical problems. Van was nearby
province with Bitlis. A conflict erupted in Van as well. Although it did not escalate
as much as it did in Bitlis, it had such a potential impact. Two commanders,
Divisional General Mahmud Pasha and Marshall Zeki Pasha shed light on the
reasons why Ali Bey Efendi encountered resistance in Van.
Their statements revolved around four reasons: a) Ali Beg Efendi was
ignorant of the local conditions. b) He did not comply with the procedures to gather
information in order to maintain public order because of his lack of experience. c) He
offended the Muslim population.145 d) There was an obvious disparity between his
behavior and position.
Marshal Zeki Pasha, as a strong defender of the Hamidian Light Cavalry,
summarized that the Armenians manipulated the present conditions due to Ali Bey
Efendi’s poor administration and inexperience as he had been in Van for almost a
year. He asserted that a group of Armenians abused his lack of local knowledge and
instigated tumult by spreading hatred among the inhabitants of Van.146 Ali Bey
Efendi rejected all these accusations against him. Then, the Porte decided to send an
investigation committee to find out whether Ali Bey Efendi was at fault or not.
144 BOA, DH. MKT., 1173 / 41. 1325 CA 1, 12. 6. 1907: DMK., 188.
145 BOA, DH. MKT., 1173 / 41. 1325 CA 1, 12. 06. 1907: Zeki Pasha’s telegram: Ermeni hazelesini
der-dest fikriyle sürekli ve fekat neticesiz ta’kibat u teharriyatda bulunarak birkaç memurun itlafına
sebebiyet vermesi, Ahali-i Hıristiyaniyye’yi şımartmış ve Ermenilere karşı bir sedd-i kavi vü metin
teşkil eden Aşayir-i İslamiyye hakkında icabsız tazyikat ü şikayatda bulunarak gücenmelerine neba’ir
vermiş ve mu’amele-i hod-binane ile bi’l-cümle ecanib ü memurini dil-gir etmişdir.
146 Zeki Pasha’s telegram, Ibid.
51
Together with some well-known people that would involve later in the
frontier commission, the Porte appointed Emin Bey Efendi, a Member of the Court
of Appeals, as the chief investigator.147 Tahir Pasha was appointed as the governor of
Bitlis after settling the unrest. He was also nominated to participate in the
investigation. Then, he was ordered to join the investigation committee headed by
Emin Bey. The Porte was counting on Tahir Pasha as a conflict resolver in Bitlis.
When a need emerged to investigate the unrest in Van, the Porte understood that his
absence could lead to similar events in Bitlis. Thus, they decided to appoint a deputy
governor by stressing that he should be a suitable person capable of managing the
province properly during Tahir Pasha’s absence.
Proto-boundary commission that was charged to investigate the accusations
directed to the imperial army was the integral part of the investigation committee of
Emin Bey. Tahir Pasha was in this committee as well. The Porte charged the border
commission with full authority to investigate Ali Bey Efendi’s conduct, thereby
dismissing Emin Bey. The Porte’s decision implied that a copy of the report that
showed the findings of the investigation of Emin Bey’s committee would be sent to
Tahir Pasha because he did not have the time to wait for the results. He had to leave
to meet to the British, Russian and Iranian representatives on the border front.148
At the end, the investigation committee found Ali Bey Efendi guilty, and the
Porte decided to dismiss him. Thus, Zeki Pasha, who insisted on Ali Bey’s guiltiness,
reached his aim after the assertions about Ali Bey proved accurate.
147 BOA, DH. MKT., 1173 / 41. 1325 CA 1, 12. 06. 1907: 564 / 151. 13 Recep 1325, 22. 08. 1907.
148 BOA, DH. MKT., 1173 / 41, 1325 CA 1, 12. 06. 1907: Mektubi Kalemi, 564 / 150.
52
CHAPTER 4
THE COMMISSION IN ACTION
The previous chapter discussed the formation of the Ottoman frontier
commission, the impact of the commission’s expenditures on the Central Treasury,
and the circumstances under which Tahir Pasha was involved in the commission that
was shaped to settle the boundary issue. This chapter specifically examines how the
frontier commission led by Tahir Pasha dealt with the frontier difficulties and
attempted to define the imperial eastern boundary. In the first phase of this endeavor,
the commission was charged to inquire about a local frontier dispute, which was not
related to the delimitation of the boundary directly. In the second phase, which
proved quite intense, the commission focused on negotiations to settle the boundary
issues. The section shed light on the difficulties involved and how the occupation of
controversial territories in keeping with the Palace’s response aggravated those
difficulties. The chapter discusses as well the various reasons, multiple factors and
development that led to the dissolution of the boundary commission. One of these
reasons, the impact of the 1908 movement, is analyzed especially closely.
4. 1. The Phase of Inquiry
After Tahir Pasha dealt with the political unrest in Bitlis and Van, he was
ordered to attend a joint meeting with the Russian, British and Iranian delegates in
order to clarify a local dispute and the charges made against the Ottoman troops.
In this phase, the Russian and British Consuls had conversations with the
Ottoman frontier commissioners, and they tried to anticipate the objectives of the
commission. The first job that Tahir Pasha fulfilled was to reprove military officers
for their misconduct and to arrest certain Kurds. Sir. N. O’Conor, a British
ambassador in Istanbul, perceived this action as a hopeful sign that the new
commission could eventually define the boundary.149 The manner in which Tahir
received O’Conor was most cordial. As O’Conor said, Tahir Pasha would see the
Iranian commissioners as soon as they arrived; The Pasha was waiting for the arrival
of the Iranian commissioners with impatience. The objects of his mission were, first,
149 Schofield, IV, p. 171.
53
to examine the charges made against the Ottoman troops, and second, to look into the
question of the frontier in a general manner.150
Before formal conversations started, all the representatives, particularly the
British consuls, held unofficial conversations to understand the intentions of the new
commission. The Ottoman commission arrived at the border front before the Iranian
commission did. Thus, the British and Russian consuls found an opportunity to
figure out first the intention of the Ottoman commissioners. The scope of these
unofficial conversations revolved around whether the Ottoman government would
withdraw its troops or not from the disputed lands. In a similar conversation, Tahir
Pasha informed Sir. N. O’Conor that they considered the occupied districts
Mergaver, Tergaver, Beradost, Somai, and Anzel as Ottoman territory. He assured
O’Conor that his arguments were based on Dervish Pasha’s map, combined with
other evidence. The appeals of the local people were also another point that Tahir
Pasha used to justify his position. He found it impossible to disregard the appeal of
the inhabitants of the district of Ushni for the blessings of the Ottoman government,
so he implied that he could order the occupation of Ushni when required.151
The British Consuls questioned whether these were Tahir Pasha’s own
initiatives or based on the instructions sent form the Palace or the Grand Vizierate.
O’Conor believed that Tahir Pasha would not risk his position in the service of the
Ottoman government, a position which he valued highly. Apparently, the consul
believed that Tahir was acting under the instructions of the Palace. The Grand
Vizierate was providing different assurances to the British and Russian Consuls
about the withdrawal of the Ottoman troops from the occupied lands. At this stage,
the Porte had a negative view of the occupations, unlike the Palace. This
contradiction between the Palace and the Grand Vizierate reverberated on Tahir
Pasha’s relations with the Grand Vizierate as well. The British consuls felt that Tahir
Pasha maintained a cordial working relationship with the Palace and was overriding
the assurances given by the Sublime Porte to Britain, Russia and Iran.
The British Consul-General, A. C. Wratislaw frequently recommended to
Tahir Pasha to retrace the false steps he took on his own initiative. Tahir Pasha
responded to him that he was ‘only a humble functionary, whose duty it was to carry
out his instructions, not to criticize them, and that unasked-for interference in matters
150 O’Conor to Grey, October 6, 1907, Schofield IV, 216.
151 O’Conor to Grey, October 6, 1907, Schofield IV, 216.
54
outside his competence would lead to no other result than his dismissal.’152 The
Ottoman archival sources indicate that the Porte very often questioned the authority
of Tahir Pasha because his action diverged from the orders they sent.
On November 20, 1907, the Ottoman Commission was still waiting on the
frontier the arrival of the Iranian commissioners. The negotiations would start as
soon as the Iranian commissioners arrived. Meanwhile, the British consuls continued
to try to clarify the stance of Tahir Pasha and his commission through the unofficial
conversations they held with him. Their aim was to understand what Tahir Pasha
could propose during the negotiations. Sir N. O’Conor asserted
Tahir Pasha no doubt will argue that the greater part of the disputed districts
belongs to Turkey, that the Iranian Government have never established
effective jurisdiction, that the consequent state of anarchy is unbearable, that
the Ottoman government cannot allow Sunnis to be oppressed by Shiahs, and
that Dervish Pasha’s map, although not official, is strong evidence in their
favour, which must be taken into consideration.153
Moreover, the British and Russian consuls began to understand the Ottoman
troops did not have any intention to evacuate the districts they had occupied, so the
consuls began to criticize the Sublime Porte for adopting an obstinate position. They
found Tahir Pasha’s arguments to justify the Ottoman claim to the annexed territory
flimsy and self-destructive. They thought that it would be difficult to find a basis for
the negotiations unless the Ottoman commissioners produced arguments that are
more satisfactory.154
For the boundary commission, the Ottoman State did not accept the
intervention of third parties as mediators; similar to the role Britain and Russia had
played in the 1840s. Thus, previous mediating powers were excluded from becoming
an official part of the meetings in the early years of the twentieth century.
Nevertheless, Britain and Russia sought solutions that would not undermine their
interests in Iran before the negotiations commenced behind closed doors. Giving
advice to both sides was the best way to observe the negotiations and to influence
their outcome. For instance, Wratislaw stated that Tahir Pasha had not attempted to
question his right to lecture him and pointing out the errors in his line of thinking. In
152 Wratislaw to Marling, Urumiah, October 25, 1907, Schofield IV, 244.
153 O’Conor to Grey, Pera, November 20, 1907, Schofield IV, 236.
154 Marling to Grey, Tehran, November 19, 1907, Schofield IV, 242.
55
fact, Wratislaw appears to have believed that Tahir accepted him as an official
member of the frontier commission.155 The reason why Tahir Pasha behaved in this
manner was that he believed British and Russian consuls would be on the Ottoman
side. On the contrary, as Wratislaw indicated, they were inevitably in opposite
camps, but they had to keep friendly relations with both states.
The Russian Vice-Consul Baron Tcherkassov and Captain Dickson, R. A.,
the British Vice Consul at Van, and the Ottoman commissioners met in Başkale in
order to inquire about the local dispute mentioned above and to evaluate the general
appearance of the boundary. During the meeting, the Russian Vise Consul stressed
the importance of the recent convention that guaranteed the political integrity of Iran.
Tahir Pasha handed a memorandum to the Russian Vise Consul that explained the
general objectives of the Ottoman frontier commission.156
4. 1. 1. A Local Dispute: Pro-Iranian Muslims and Nestorians vs. Pro-Ottoman
Kurdish Villagers
Frontier difficulties as they were mentioned in the methodology chapter
showed that the relations of the frontier actors, whether interstate or intertribal, were
fragile, the scarcity of summer and winter pastures in the region was mainly pushing
the tribes to cross the status quo line. This was the main source of conflicts between
the Ottoman Empire and Iran. In the microscopic level, the prevalent religious,
ethnic, and tribal differences had created rivalry and antagonistic feelings among the
local inhabitants of the region. As Vice-Consul Dickson reported:
The Assyrians are divided up into many religious parties, and change about
from one to the other with a conscience made easy by the inducements,
pecuniary or otherwise, offered by the advocates of various creeds. Thus, in
most villages one finds, Nestorians, Chaldeans, (i.e., Roman Catholics),
Russian Orthodox, and American Presbyterian of some denomination,
besides protégés of the English mission. They may have their petty
jealousies, and differences of opinion among themselves, but they combine
against the Kurds.157
These socio-political differences could easily become sources of conflict
when combined with economic concerns. Tahir Pasha witnessed a similar dispute,
155 Wratislaw to Marling, Urumiah, October 25, 1907, Schofield IV, 244.
156 See Appendex B for the Memorandum of the Commission.
157 Sir N. O’Conor to Grey, Constantinople, February 5, 1908, Schofield IV, 265.
56
among the local people, which involved several ethnic and religious groups.
According to Tahir Pasha, Iranian officers instigated the Nestorians158 and pro-
Iranian Muslims to attack seven Kurdish villages in order to keep them under their
sovereignty. When the Iranian officers could not win the tribes over, they turned to
diplomacy. In Tahir Pasha’s eyes, Iran followed methods that ranged from
diplomacy to coercive policies.
An Iranian officer, Majd es Sultanah, was a modernist and favored a
centralized state. He became the “boss” of the Enjumen in Urumiah in 1907.
Wratislaw portrays him as the enemy of the crown prince.159 It seems he actively
participated in local politics since 1905. As an editorial comment that was published
in 1907 by the American Journal of International Law indicates:
The present violence (1907) dates from disturbance that resulted from an
ineffectual attempt by a Persian armed force, under command of the vigorous
Majd es Sultanah, to capture, in the disputed Turco-Persian frontier in the
indefinite Kurdistan region, the accomplices in the murder of the Rev. B. W.
Labaree, an American missionary killed at Urumiah in March, 1904.160
Tahir Pasha blamed Majd es Sultanah for the actions of the Nestorians and
other Muslim groups. Tahir Pasha depicted that Majd es Sultanah employed two
hundred armed men with rifles from the village of Mavane to coerce the Kurds to
obedience. With two hundred armed men, they seized seven Kurdish villages by
violence and set fire to their houses.161 Wratislaw cited this dispute in his memoirs in
detail.162 Tahir Pasha stated that the Kurds had decided to take revenge and this time
158 BOA, Y. A. HUS., 518/27, 9 M 1326/ 12 February 1908.The number of the Nestorians was about
three thousands during this time according to the British sources. Tahir Pasha believed that they were
increasingly used by Iran to manage the European public opinion. Thus, Iran could use this European
pressure to manage better the boundary affairs.
159 Wratislaw, A Consul in the East, 230.“My old “Basti,” Majd es Sultanah, his enemy the crown
prince (Valiahd) being now at a safe distance, returned voluntarily from Tiflis in February, thus
releasing us from any further responsibility towards him, and threw himself joyously into the political
arena of Urumiah. After some vicissitudes (changes in worse), including summary expulsion from the
town, he finally succeeded in capturing the Enjumen (local council) and making himself boss of the
place.
160 “The Recent Anglo-Russian Convention,” 981.
161 BOA, DH. MKT. 1173 / 41, 1325 CA 1, 12. 06. 1907: 564 / 137, 14. 09. 1907.
162 Wratislaw, A Consul in the East, 230–1. “…If he could have controlled his other ambitions, all
might have gone well with him, but he set his heart on taking vengeance on his old enemies the
Begzadeh Kurds. With this object he imposed heavy fines on his political opponents, and with the
proceeds raised and equipped with a miscellaneous force of Muslims and Christians, he invaded the
district of Dasht. The rashness of this proceeding is obvious, considering that his opponents were now
under Turkish protection. All went well at first, and the Kurds withdrew to the mountains before the
57
they raided Nestorian villages. They noticed that the Nestorians, who burned their
houses, and Majd es Sultanah , were going to Urumiah. In a short time, the Kurds
surrounded Mavane and the neighboring two villages, which did not have any
military equipment, weapons and guards.163 They captured two hundred and eightythree
cows, seven hundred and twenty-six cattle, two thousand nine hundred and
seventy-nine sheep, many goods, and other items.
The Ottoman Army reached the region, and prevented further infighting and
stopped the plundering of Kurdish villagers. Then, the Ottoman officers persuaded
Kurds to return the plundered animals and goods to the Nestorians, which they did.
However, the Nestorians had already applied to the Russian Consulate in Urumiah.
Tahir Pasha found this application unnecessary so that their losses could have been
completely compensated by the Ottoman government if they had asked. In fact, the
Kurds had returned Nestorian’s animals, goods and items.164 Tahir Pasha was afraid
of the possibility of a triple alliance among the Russians, Iranians, and Nestorians,
which could put the Ottoman subjects at a disadvantageous position in Urumiah. He
ordered immediately that a person should have been appointed to represent these
people. In order to prevent any arbitrary action and to gather accurate intelligence, he
suggested the appointment of Memduh Bey, the Consul of Hoy and Selmas to
Urumiah 165 By using Christian Nestorians in his expedition, Majd es Sultanah had
created a ground to complain about the Ottomans to Britain and Russia. These
complaints turned into charges that the British and Russian consuls pursued against
the Ottoman commission of inquiry in the first meeting.
4. 1. 2. Charges against the Ottoman troops and Clarifications
The position of Russia at this meeting was to protect the integrity of Iran. The
delegates of Iran did not come to the meeting. Instead, the Russians had to attend the
meeting with the Ottomans alone. Russia’s representatives consisted of four officers.
invading host, which plundered their empty villages with great gusto. But soon Turkish soldiers
appeared on the scene, and Majd with his army abandoned their tents and equipment and fled in
inglorious rout to Urumiah. Majd himself thereupon retired again to Tiflis, leaving the luckless
Christians of Mavana and other villages, which had joined him to the mercy of the Kurds. Most of
them took refuge in Urumiah, and their villages were occupied by Turkish soldiers after being first
plundered by Kurds…”
163 BOA, DH. MKT., 1173 / 41, 1325 CA 1, 12. 06. 1907: 564 / 137, 14. 09. 1907.
164 BOA, DH. MKT., 1173 / 41, 1325 CA 1, 12. 06. 1907: 1088 /5, 19. 09. 1907.
165 Ibid.
58
One of them was the famous officer: Mösyö Yanavşakof (Russian Vice-Consul
Baron Tcherkassov)166 also known as “Mu’allim,” the teacher, by the Iranians. The
Russian delegate expressed two accusations that were asserted by the Iranians,
namely that the Ottoman Imperial Army had entered the village of Mavane after
bombarding it, and the troops kidnapped girls, and killed many women and children.
Tahir Pasha shared the results of his own investigations and asserted that none of
these arguments had any basis. The Ottoman troops had not violated anyone. In
contrast, they had expelled the joint army of Mecdü’s-Sultanah while he was
attacking the Kurdish villages. Tahir Pasha explained that the Ottoman Army had
neither violated the status quo nor committed crimes against humanity.167
According to Tahir Pasha’s report, Russian and British consul said the final
word on behalf of the Iranian delegates, as Iranians did not participate in the meeting.
In a debate during the meeting, the Russian consul gave a speech confirming the
Ottoman position that Majd es Sultanah was the actual violator of the border, and
that the accusations reflected not the reality, but the opposite. All the officers at the
meeting, including the Russian consul of Urumiah, agreed that the information they
had about the Ottoman soldiers firing guns on the Christian villages and insulting
women did not have any basis.168
On the contrary, the Russians made remarks that corroborated the Ottoman
position and suggested that the Ottoman soldiers had maintained justice there. The
Russian officers stated that public security was at risk in the region and order was
broken in Ushni in particular. They urged officially that everything should be done to
provide security promptly and completely. The Russian officers made
recommendations about how the Ottomans could help maintain security in the border
region.169
Besides, the British consul behaved neutrally. A British consul reflected
retrospectively on the British position regarding the frontier question in general at the
time of the first meetings.
166 The Ottoman archival sources speak of Mösyö Yanavşakof, but his profile was not given in detail.
Thus, I think that the Russian Vice-Consul Baron Tcherkassov, was frequently mentioned in the
British archival sources, is Mösyö Yanavşakof.
167 BOA, DH. MKT., 1173 / 41, 1325 CA 1, 12. 06. 1907: 564 / 133, 1. 11. 1907.
168 BOA, Makam-ı Ser Askeri, Mektubi Kalemi, Serasker: Rıza, 28 November 1907.
169 Ibid.
59
The disturbances on the Turco-Iranian frontier were in a locality in which
Russia was more interested then we were. British interests were not directly
affected, for the places we had Oil Concessions were further south, and were
not at present involved. The locality was also out of our reach. Further, if we
took the initiative in moving our fleet, the impression would be given that
war between us and Turkey generally was impending, which would not be
confined to the Iranian frontier, this might give rise to trouble and excitement
in Egypt and elsewhere … We could not therefore take the initiative … But,
on the other hand, we could cordially support an initiative taken by Russia.170
In the same line with the above statement, the British consul asserted there
was not a borderline that the two sides agreed upon officially, so Majd es Sultanah’s
transgression cannot be considered as a border violation because how could one
transgress a borderline that did not exist. However, Tahir Pasha asserted Mecdü’s-
Sultanah did not have the right to intervene in the affairs of people living in the
disputed zone even if there was not a settled boundary line. At the end of the
meeting, Britain was satisfied with Tahir Pasha’s argument. The Russian and British
consuls refused to pursue the accusations that were brought to the commission.
The British consul clarified his position by stating that he would not pursue
this issue further. Furthermore, he asked whether the Ottoman State would be content
it if the occupied places were left to it.171
Evidently, Tahir Pasha took this question seriously and responded by an
information sheet in which the Urumiah directorate had been blamed due to his
commitment to the crime and violation of the border by provoking the Shikal tribe,
inhabiting in Somay and Çehrin villages. According to Tahir Pasha, these pro-Iranian
tribes transgressed the border and broke the public order by damaging people’s
properties and killing many.
Tahir Pasha was not authorized to annex any piece of territory. He could
resort to action only after the Porte authorized him. Nevertheless, he thought that a
prompt response to the British consul in this case would be good for maintaining
public security in disputed places and could work in favour of the Ottoman State.
Due to internal turmoil, Iran was not able to maintain public security and order even
within its provinces proper. Thus, Tahir Pasha responded to the British consul that
the disputed villages should have been left under Ottoman rule because the Ottoman
State had the ability to end the violence and lawlessness prevailing in the frontier
170 Grey to O’Beirne, Foreign Office, June 22, 1908, Schofield IV, 321.
171 BOA, DH. MKT., 1173 / 41, 1325 CA 1, 12. 06. 1907: 564 / 134.
60
zone. In addition, he demanded the protection of the current Ottoman administration
in the region. He added that the Ottomans would not hesitate to leave those districts,
which were adjacent to the fertile plains of Urumiah, when a superior commission
formed, once the public security was provided.172
Before the meeting was completely dismissed, the participants discussed
where they would meet next. They could not agree on the time and purpose of the
next venue for the continuation of the discussions regarding the disputed districts and
border matters. The Russian consul suggested Urumiah for the next meeting.
However, they had to express that Iranian commissioners would be able to arrive at
Urumieh thirty-four days later. Indeed, the Ottoman commissioners had waited for
Iranian commissioners in different places since some months until the meeting. Tahir
Pasha perceived the delaying of the meeting again as a big challenge and wondered
suspiciously why Russia had chosen Urumiah while there were many other
alternative places such as Selmas and Deyleman. The Russians propounded that
Selmas or Deyleman were not proper places because the Caucasian revolutionaries
(Kafkasiyye İhtilalcileri) were in the middle of the way and would stop them. Passing
through narrow paths where these illegal groups situated could create catastrophic
results for the commissioners. However, Tahir Pasha did not want to meet at
Urumiah due to its security problems and the possibility that Iran could provoke
some Iranian-Kurdish tribes in there. 173
The meeting resulted with a relative victory for the Ottomans as they found
an opportunity to express their opinions and to clarify accusations. In addition, Tahir
Pasha criticized the Iranian Committee of Inquiry and associated their absence with
their wish to decelerate the process of border demarcation and not to confront the
consequences of their violent deeds in the Kurdish villages.
Then, the British consul left the meeting and returned to Van via Beyazid
after they stopped by four villages in Urumiah, Salmas, and Hoy. The Russian consul
returned to Urumiah. Tahir Pasha deployed the Ottoman commissioners to Van and
Bitlis until he received the next order due to the reason mentioned below.174
172 BOA, DH. MKT., 1173 / 41, 1325 CA 1, 12. 06. 1907: 564 / 134.
173 BOA, DH. MKT., 1173/ 41, 1 CA 1325: Tahir Pasha: The attitude of Iranian Commission in
Urumiah, 18 August 1908.
174 BOA, DH. MKT., 1173 / 41, 1325 CA 1, 12. 06. 1907: 564 / 134.
61
If Muhteshem es Sultanah leaves now, he will be able to arrive at the border
front more than a moth later, but our commission has waited them for more
than two months. If we spent one more month on the border front, indeed, we
shall not able to implement our duty due to upcoming winter.
In contrast, he witnessed the Porte’s resistance. Tevfik Pasha, the Minister of
Exterior, suggested the commission should wait there as he had learnt that the Iranian
officers were on their way. His reasons to order Tahir Pasha to wait can be outlined
as follows. According to him, if the Iranian delegates arrived after the Ottoman
commissioners left the region, they could manipulate the situation to create a
perception as if the Ottoman State was actually leaving the boundary delimitation
issue in limbo. Thus, the presence of the Ottoman commissioners at the meeting
place would prevent labeling it as a reluctant state, deferring the resolution of the
border conflicts. He feared further that Iranian complaints and false accusations
could find a ground to be deemed convincing, and help them gain consequently the
support of foreign powers in their future interventions.175 Considering all these
variables, Grand Vizier Ferid Pasha did not admit Tahir Pasha’s request to leave and
ordered him to wait for the arrival of the Iranian commissioners.176 Moreover, as the
Russians proposed, the Iranian commissioners sent an information sheet and invited
the Ottoman commissioners to Urumiah.
Danyal Pasha, an Ottoman commissioner, opposed meeting in Urumiah for
the similar reasons that Tahir Pasha had in his mind and he found the meeting place
risky because Iran had strong influence on some of the Iranian-Kurdish tribes settled
there.177 He added a sentimental comment on the duty of the commission. The
boundary commission had been charged by a great state (the Ottoman State) to fulfill
the responsibilities of the Caliphate, thus, they should not walk behind scattered
government officials. Frontier inhabitants could perceive walking behind Iranian
officers and going to places designated by them as a weakness. If the Ottoman
commissioners acted under the direction of the Iranian commissioners, the allegiance
and compliance of the frontier people might have been shaken gradually.178 In
contrast to Tahir Pasha and Danyal Pasha, the Iranian commissioners insisted on
175 BOA, Babı ali Dairei Sadaret, 2159, Hariciye Nazırı: Tevfik Pasha, 12 November 1907.
176 BOA, A. AMD., 2000, Grand Vizier, Ferid Pasha, 13 November 1907.
177 The term was adopted from Michel Foucault.
178 BOA, Makamı Ser Askeri, Mektubi Kalemi, Hususi, Danyal Pasha, 1 January 1908.
62
meeting in Urumiah.179 Instead, Tahir Pasha decided to meet in Mavane. He went to
Mavane via Selmas to meet with Muhteshem es Sultanah, the Chief Negotiator of the
Iranian Commission. Thirty cavalrymen and their captain accompanied Tahir.180
On January 8, 1908, it was reported that Muhteshem es Sultanah did not
come to Mavane although he was there earlier. Instead, he sent a letter to the
Ottoman commission, suggesting to meet in the center of Urumiah. Despite the risks
Tahir Pasha saw in such a meeting, he accepted to go to Urumiah.181
One of the risks that Tahir Pasha considered was that Muhteshem es Sultanah
tried to lead the Iranian Kurds astray with the support of Iranian soldiers ever since
he came to Mavane. Tahir Pasha thought Muhteshem es Sultanah intended to disturb
the peace in areas where the Ottoman State maintained the security. He criticized the
intrigues of Muhteshem es Sultanah harshly and accused him of behaving
irresponsibly: “an officer who was appointed to a joint investigation should not
follow such a vulgar manner and threaten public security.”182
He invited Muhteshem es Sultanah to a village in Urumiah in order to carry
out the negotiations. All these delaying tactics and wavering showed that Iran was
reluctant to negotiate while the Ottoman military occupied the disputed lands. None
of these two states trusted the other, and confrontation remained always an option in
contrast to the British and Russian who wanted to achieve a peacefull colonization of
Iran. Tahir Pasha kept the military option in his hand. He could deploy at a moment’s
notice the regular troops and some other forces that were carefully assembled in
Savuçbulak for action in case of an emergency.183 The boundary negotiations began
in this belligerent atmosphere.
4. 2. The Phase of New Occupations and Boundary Negotiations
Following the ad hoc meeting, which was the first meeting that Tahir Pasha
attended at Başkale, the method in which the negotiations would be conducted
became apparent. All the parties agreed that the question would be settled by friendly
conversation, mutual concessions, formal negotiations, and the exchange of written
memoranda. The Ottoman commission would lead the process, so they wrote the first
179 BOA, Makamı Ser Askeri, Mektubi Kalemi, Hususi, Ser Asker: Rıza, 2 January 1908.
180 BOA, Makamı Ser Askeri, Mektubi Kalemi, Hususi, 1 January 1908.
181 BOA, DH. MKT., 1173/ 41, 1325 CA 01: 1515/24, 8 January 1908.
182 Ibid.
183 Ibid.
63
memorandum setting down their case. The Iranian commission followed suit and
demanded the recognition of the neutral zone and the Second Erzurum Treaty of
1847 as the basis of the negotiations.184 Tahir Pasha was getting prepared to propose
that the earlier treaties should be the basis of the negotiations.185
4. 2. 1. Imperial Edicts, The Porte’s Reports, Ancient Treaties and Maps
Tahir Pasha did not have a predetermined plan apart from embracing the
steps taken by Dervish Pasha. Within a short time, he learnt which registers from the
Ottoman archives could be utilized to justify his arguments. First, Tahir Pasha
ordered the retrospective examination of the imperial edicts of the last one hundred
and fifty years that would enable him to understand the history of the boundary
delimitation and the background of the present conflicts. Second, Tahir Pasha
demanded the examination of the imperial edicts more specifically. This time, he
ordered the investigation of the edicts, covering a hundred fifty years, particularly
issued to the pashas and Beys of Imadiyye, Vezene and Hakkari. His aim was to
understand the question whether some townships, including Soma-yı Çehrin, were
under Ottoman rule or not. Furthermore, he wanted to formalize those sections of the
boundary186 that the late Dervish Pasha had investigated and depicted in his
explanatory document (layiha) and map.187 He extracted from Dervish Pasha’s
explanatory document that those townships, Ushni188, some villages of Soma-yı
Çeherin, and townships of Deşt-i Bil were part of the Ottoman Empire, but the
Enzel-i Bala Township was under the jurisdiction of Urumiah.
Tahir Pasha believed that the Iranian officers had confirmed the explanatory
document of Dervish Pasha in the past. He asserted that Iran had never established an
administrative unit in these lands, so they did not have the right to claim sovereignty
over these lands. Moreover, he showed Iran as the main instigator of the disorder
184 Marling to Grey, Tehran, April 10, 1908, Schofield IV, 292.
185 G. Barclay to Grey, Constantinople, April 26, 1908, Schofield IV, 306.
186 Hududun resmi-i sübutuna medar olmak...
187 BOA, DH. MKT. 1173 / 41, 1325 CA 1, 12. 06. 1907: 1035 / 27, 10 September 1907.
188 The evidences that I found show Ushni was part of the Ottoman territory. First, Tahir Pasha’s own
statement: “Ûşnî, nâm-ı diğeri Şînô Nâhiyesi Rü’esâsı’ndan yiğirmi kişi kadar, nezd-i çâkerâneme
gelerek a’şârın vakti geçmeksizin içlerine me’mûr gönderilmesi talebinde bulundular…” For Tahir
Pasha’s statement: BOA, DH. MKT. 1173 / 41. 1325 CA 01, 12. 06. 1907: Vali Tahir, 06 Eylül
1323/19. 09. 1907. Second, a table of Imperial head tax (collected from non-Muslims) dating back
1726, the reign of Ahmed III, shows that the Ottoman Empire levied head tax from Şînô. For the
table: BOA, İE. ML. 11473 / 2 Mart 1726.
64
because Iran had incited the tribes in the frontier zone clandestinely and
continuously, although it was prohibited.189 He blamed Iran for breaking the public
order and security in the frontier zone by inducing cross-border violence, injustice,
and lawlessness.190 When the Ottoman state responded by taking the initiative and
fortifying its military forces around the zone, the tribes retreated and Iranians began
to complain about the intervention of Ottoman troops to Russia and Britain by means
of its embassy.
Tahir Pasha referred to the demographic features of the frontier zone as
evidence to justify his arguments. According to him, the inhabitants of these villages,
districts, and townships were practitioners of Sunni Islam, so they would never
accept to live under the sovereignty of Qajars. They could be brought under the
protection of the Caliphate in a short time in order to save them from the frontier
difficulties.191
He also benefited from geostrategic arguments to legitimate his actions
pragmatically. When this was the case, his arguments became very suggestive of the
occupations. For instance, he stated that if Ushni and Deşt-i Bil were taken under the
protection of the Ottoman State, military facilities in that region would be closer to
the Ottoman forces stationed in Vezene. He added that annexing the villages of
Somay and Çehrin would also serve the promotion of regional security.
His arguments necessitated the occupation of these lands, but if these lands
were under the sovereignty of the Ottoman state once, why did it not establish an
administrative unit covering these villages? One of the statements of Tahir Pasha can
be an answer to this question. Tahir Pasha asserted that previous Ottoman frontier
officers created the current complex situation by leaving these lands in a state of
flux, so the gap had been filled by the constant intrigues of Iranian officers.
Wratislaw illustrated the details of Tahir Pasha’s argument regarding how those parts
of Kurdistan and some of the Kurds had remained in the hands of Iran:
189 Hudud boyunda (along the border)
190 BOA, DH. MKT. 1173 / 41, 1325 CA 1, 12. 06. 1907: 1089 / 5, 19. 09. 1907.
191 Ibid.
65
Naib es Sultanah192 profited by the state of confusion into which Turkey was
thrown by her disastrous wars with Russia, the suppression of the Janissaries,
the institution of the Nizam Jedid (New Order), and other reforms, to seduce
the Kurds and annex Turkish territory. But now the Kurds have returned to
their ancient allegiance to the sultan.193
After he made this argument, he implied that the Ottoman State would no
longer stay silent and negligent. He believed that inability of Iran to establish its
jurisdiction in these districts in the past showed that Iran had never established any
authority in these territories. To solidify his argument, Tahir Pasha used Dervish
Pasha’s explanatory document and map, which showed accurately, according to him,
under whose jurisdiction the disputed villages and townships were.194
He thought taking these villages under Ottoman rule was an obligation for
several reasons. First, Iran’s efforts to win over the tribes gradually would continue.
Second, the tribal leaders who appealed for Ottoman subjecthood could perceive the
inaction of the Ottoman State as a weakness, and hence drawn to Iran. Third, the
prevalent violence in the region was a problem and the Ottoman State had the
capacity to prevent it. Because of prevalent anarchy in the disputed lands, Tahir
Pasha proposed that protecting these people was a necessity and a priority of the
Ottoman State.195
As mentioned above, the third group of documents Tahir Pasha ordered for
examination was the Porte’s Reports (Divan tezkireleri). He realized that these
reports could be used to specify the identity of townships thanks to the technical and
taxation information that they included.
A case in point is Tahir Pasha’s attempt to clarify whether the township of
Beradost belonged to the Ottoman Empire or Iran. He concluded that Beradost was
actually an Ottoman township. On December 4, 1907, Tahir Pasha brought out an
information sheet, written by Dervish Pasha earlier. According to this sheet, Beradost
was an integral part of the Ottoman Empire because it showed that the collection of
the taxes of this township along with certain administrative duties was auctioned to
Hatim Bey, an Ottoman subject, previously. He added that ‘during the time of
192 George N. Curzon, Persia and Persian Question, vol. I (New York: Adegi Graphics LLC, 2012).
Third Son of the Shah, Kamran Mirza, but he called more commonly by his title of the Naib es
Sultanah (Lieutenant of the Kingdom).
193 Wratislaw to Marling, Urumiah, July 2, 1908, Schofield IV, 337.
194 BOA, DH. MKT. 1173 / 41, 1325 CA 1, 12. 06. 1907: 1089 / 5, 19. 09. 1907.
195 Ibid.
66
Dervish Pasha, Hatim Bey’s son, Halil Bey, brought up the records of this
commission including a copy of the Porte’s relevant reports. These documents
verified the relationship of the township to the Ottoman Empire.196 This example
illustrates as well the ambivalence of the status of certain borderlands because of the
need to dig deep into records to establish where they stood in between the two
neighboring states. Tahir Pasha was evidently eager to gather as much information as
possible to clarify the Ottoman identity of the their disputed areas. He asked for a
scanning of the Porte’s reports going back hundred and fifty years towards this end.
The fourth group of documents that Tahir Pasha requested included all the
old treaties the Ottoman Empire and Iran had signed since the sixteenth century. He
examined a total number of six treaties. The first treaty that he mentioned was the
Treaty of Zuhab, or the Treaty of Qasr-e Shirin, signed on May 17, 1639 (1049),
which indicated the validity of some of the articles related to his claims. This treaty
fixed the frontier line in view of the conflict of nations, and accordingly, confirmed
that the Iranian government should not interfere in [the affairs of] the Ottoman-
Kurdistan. The second treaty was signed in Hemedan after a series of battles broke
out between 1723 and 1727. Tahir Pasha stressed that this treaty agreed to leave
under the Ottomans not only Kurdistan but also certain cities that were currently
under Iranian administration. The third treaty was signed in 1736. It confirmed
previous agreements between the Ottoman Empire and Iran. The fourth treaty was
the treaty of Kerden, signed on September 4, 1746. This treaty, known as the Second
Treaty of Qasr-e Shirin, confirmed the previous frontier limits and relevant articles.
The fifth treaty was the treaty of Erzurum, which was signed in 1823, after the
Iranian army lost a significant number of its soldiers due to an outbreak of cholera.
By this treaty, Iran returned the lands it occupied in Eastern Anatolia, recognized the
former border and guaranteed that it would not interfere in any district in the
Kurdistan region. The sixth treaty was signed in 1857 and known as the Second
Erzurum Treaty. It approved the outcomes of the previous treaties by revising and
clarifying some parts of the border, such as Zuhab. Considering each treaty, which
repeated each other and revolved around the first treaty, Tahir Pasha claimed that
Iran did not have any right to interfere in any of the villages, sub-districts, districts,
196 BOA, DH. MKT., 1173 / 41, 1325 CA 1, 12. 06. 1907: 1137 / 13, 12. 10. 1907.
67
or sub-provinces of the Kurdistan region, which stretched from Beyazid to
Suleymaniye.197
His examination of the imperial edicts and relevant government reports,
dating back a hundred and fifty years, revealed that Iran had ratified Ottoman
sovereignty in the Kurdistan region.
He reached a conclusion signifying that the current situation of the border did
not reflect the provisions of the treaties in the field. The present status in the border
districts opposed to both the treaties and the rules, although the treaties assigned
many districts in disputed lands to the Ottoman Empire, but previous frontier officers
(serhad memurları) had not completely applied the treaty articles.198 Moreover, these
districts, which were ignored by those frontier officers, became the main problems
day by day between the Ottoman Empire and Iran. Even though these districts in the
border zone were ignorantly neglected, the Kurds in these lands perpetually and
strongly maintained allegiance to the Ottoman State, which was understood at the
end of small survey that was undertaken to learn about people’s opinions in the zone.
In fact, Fazıl Pasha’s ability to mobilize thirty thousand Kurds in the zone against
Firman-Firma supports Tahir Pasha’s view. All these variables show that a
significant number of Kurds in the zone supported pro-Ottoman and pro-Caliphate
policies because the discursive references of the Ottomans to the Sunni-Kurds
resonated and acquired a practical meaning in view of the refugee demands.
However, they were not only a group who wanted to benefit from Ottoman
protection, there were also many people in the zone who opposed Iranian polices and
chose to be an Ottoman subject regardless of ethnic and religious differences.
The fifth group of documents Tahir Pasha considered was Dervish Pasha’s
map and its explanatory notes. Tahir Pasha’s reports make amply clear that he relied
extensively on this map and its explanations that Dervish Pasha provided. Therefore,
one can argue that the boundary line in Tahir Pasha’s mind was the line specified
according to Dervish Pasha’s surveys. In this study, unfortunately, I used not Dervish
Pasha’s map, but a map that was drawn by the Ministry of Ottoman Foreign Affairs
197 BOA, Y. A. HUS., 518/27, 1326 M 09 / 12 February 1908: Tahir Pasha clarifies his stance
regarding Kurdistan to Grand Vizier, Ferid Pasha.
198 BOA, Y. A. HUS., 518/27, 9 M 1326/ 12 February 1908: “…İşte Bâyezîd’den Süleymâniyye
hudûdı nihâyetine kadar olan Kürd-istân Livâ ve Kazâ ve Nevâhî ve Kurâsında Îrân Devleti’nin
ba’zan başgöstermiş olan müdâhalesi bir hakka müstenid olmayub hilâf-ı ‘uhûd ve menâfi’-i kâ’ide-i
hem-civârî olarak, ba’z-ı ser-hadd me’mûrlarınıza ‘â’id fuzûlî bir şeydir…”
68
in 1910 based on the maps drawn during Dervish and Tahir Pasha’s commissions.
The boundaries that were shown in this map199 differed from the projections of the
Anglo-Russian Joint Map200. The map of 1910 shows the geographical and
demographical features of the empire’s eastern frontiers in detail, indicating the
disputed and undisputed parts. Thus, the map illustrates the mountain ranges, rivers,
lakes and their names, including the tribes living in the disputed-frontier strip name
by name. The map shows the tribal neighborhood clearly. Thus, the map facilitates
the understanding of the historical conflicts among the tribes and the states. The
map’s legend that should have showed the symbols and color codes is missing.
However, a version of this used by Melike Sarıkçıoğlu provides this information.201
Tahir Pasha did not accept the Joint Map as a basis of the negotiations. He
wanted to specify the boundary line according to the data set by Dervish Pasha and
attempted to increase its accuracy by referring to earlier treaties. However, the
British and Russian representatives believed that neither the Ottomans nor the
Iranians had the original copy of the first treaty in 1639 on which Tahir Pasha
constructed his arguments. According to them, the Ottomans did not have the treaty
because the original text of the treaty was burned in one of the several fires in
Istanbul. Iranians did not have it either because the treaty was lost during the internal
turmoil in Iran. Iranians agreed, but not Tahir Pasha. He insisted that the copy he had
was correct.
To prove the invalidity of the Joint Map, which ignored the Ottoman rights
over the Sunni population as based on the first treaty, he stated that Düvel-i Erbe’a
(the four states of Britain, Russia, France and Austria) had done a survey in order to
identify the tribes and their will in the past. After the survey, these states had
prepared a map to be communicated to the Ottoman and Iranian States. However,
Tahir Pasha asserted that the map was invalid due to the chronological order of the
agreements because the Joint Map emerged after the Ottoman State and Iran signed a
treaty, regarding Istankob. According to him, this map had to have confirmed the
treaty first, but the map did not ratify it. Tahir Pasha insisted that the treaty remained
valid. He referred to the inhabitants of Istankob to illustrate his point. He said they
would enjoy relative freedom of movement and nobody would interfere in their
199 See Appendix G: The Ottoman-Iranian Frontier Map of 1910.
200 See Appendix E.
201 See Appendix H.
69
affairs if the entire boundary line were delineated clearly as it was stated in the
treaty. On the one hand, he thought that the joint map was invalid because it ignored
this provision of the treaty. On the other hand, the treaty prohibited any construction
in this territory. Contradicting the treaty, the notables of Urumiah, who had close
relationship with Iran, encouraged Iranian officers to establish a customhouse in the
villages of Cirmi Behbik, whose inhabitants always identified themselves as
Ottoman subjects. According to Tahir Pasha, the joint map prepared by Russia and
Britain ignored the realties of the region, and that was why the treaty and the map
contradicted each other. Furthermore, he noted, Article IV of the treaty did not allow
the parties to control any part of the disputed lands until the states formed a new
boundary commission. In order to stress the validity of the treaty, Tahir Pasha stated
that four states had recognized it because their representatives had entered to their
buildings in Urumiah by passing through the disputed lands by relaying on the treaty.
In addition, Tahir Pasha referred to the reign of Nadir Shah (1736-1747)
when Iranians often fought with the Ottomans for regional superiority. In the post
war period, the Ottoman State and Iran signed the Kerden Treaty in 1746 at the end
of negotiations. Even during the later battles, Nadir Shah’s imperial edicts and many
other documents remained valid. During the reconciliation time, Iran had signed new
treaties with the Ottoman State, and these treaties amended previous ones by
preserving the ancient boundary between Iran and the Ottomans.202 Tahir Pasha
highlighted the importance of Dervish Pasha’s map and explanatory documents. He
articulated his confidence in the late Dervish Pasha’s work by these words:
… Here, Dervish Pasha's map and explanatory document do not
contradict the agreements. On the contrary, they are all accurate and
compatible with previous records …203
Overall, he meant that the treaty of 1869, which ratified the old treaties,
remained valid. The intrusions and military fortifications of the Iranian officers
and commanders around the disputed lands in 1905 were wrong and
contradicted the existing agreements. These attempts of Iran to intervene in the
disputed lands became a reason to justify the Ottoman occupations. When the
Ottoman occupations started in 1905, Iran sent a committee of inquiry to
202 BOA, DH. MKT. 1173 / 41, 1325 CA 1, 12. 06. 1907: 564 / 133, 1. 11. 1907.
203 Ibid.
70
Istanbul in 1906. Tahir Pasha stated that the diplomatic conversation held
between Iranian officers and Istanbul showed that Iran had confirmed the
validity of Dervish Pasha’s map. Regarding this issue, he stated that he found
an information sheet indicating the Iranian ambassador to Istanbul in 1906 cited
Dervish’s map as evidence while arguing for the removal of troops from certain
districts which included four villages. So Tahir Pasha argued, “I think there is
nothing else that we can do now apart from considering Dervish Pasha’s map as
a reference point.”204
Dervish Pasha’s map showed that some people from the Ottoman tribes had
been under the influence of the notables of Urumiah for many years. According to
him, this situation produced several consequences: first, it served pro-Iranian
notables in Urumiah to increase their properties, possessions, and wealth. Second, it
caused the obedient people of both sides to move freely. Tribal competition in such a
place that was officially under the authority of neither government accelerated
regional conflicts, and the tribes on both sides shed blood in occasional incidents.
This authority gap resulted in the destruction of many villages in tribal and other
regional conflicts. Tahir Pasha proposed that his aim was to end this humanitarian
crisis.205 He stated that he would welcome the Anglo-Russian Entente of 1907,
because Britain and Russia would both favor stability in the region.206 In this
manner, he hoped that Iran would refrain from such arbitrary actions in the frontier
zone such as supporting some tribal chiefs who willingly interfered in the affairs of
pro-Ottoman tribes living in Urumiah.
The Ottoman occupations until this time served the promotion of regional
security. As Wratislaw stated, the Ottomans had achieved a very fair order in the
territory they occupied, which was about a hundred miles long and fifteen to twenty
miles wide.207 According to Tahir Pasha, the Ottoman troops situated around
Urumiah provided regional security, public order and safety as never seen earlier, so
he demanded that these territories remained under Ottoman sovereignty because they
were part of the well-protected domains of the empire incontrovertibly.
204 BOA, DH. MKT. 1173 / 41, 1325 CA 1, 12. 06. 1907: 564 / 133, 1. 11. 1907.
205 Ibid.
206 Great Britain, Parliamentary Papers, London, 1908, Vol CXXV, Cmd. 3750.
207 Wratislaw, A Consul in the East, 232.
71
4. 2. 2. The Boundary Negotiations
The commissions of both states launched into the negotiations in this strained
atmosphere in Urumiah in February 1908. Nevertheless, the Ottoman commissioners
supplied the first memorandum to the Russian Vice-Consul Baron Techerkassov at
Başkale in November 1907.208 This memorandum underlined importance of the
Convention of 1869 and other old treaties signed between the Ottoman and Iranian
states. Wratislaw found the tone of this memorandum very ‘uncompromising’ and
noted that the pasha received new instructions. These strained relations of the first
meeting reverberated in later sessions, and the debates on earlier international
treaties. Tahir Pasha was a unique chief commissioner in his intensive reliance on old
treaties in boundary negotiations. In its memorandum, of February 8, 1908, the
Ottoman Commission stressed the importance of the old treaties, which are
mentioned above in detail.209 Tahir Pasha believed that these six treaties reflected the
true nature of the frontier and that the Ottomans and Iranians had explicitly defined
the frontier in conformity with two criteria: national distinctions and the nonintervention
of Iran in Ottoman-Kurdistan. This memorandum did not refer to the
Treaty of 1869, as Tahir Pasha had done in detail in the first meeting at Başkale.
The point they reached was to discuss the related articles of the Second
Erzurum Treaty of June 1, 1847. This memorandum showed that the Ottomans
recognized the Second Erzurum Treaty, as the most recent treaty, but not with a
special reference to it as if it were conclusive. However, the memorandum sent by
the Imperial Iranian Commission to the Imperial Ottoman Commission on February
8, 1908, clearly stressed that Iran recognized this treaty as the sole basis of the
negotiations on the demarcation of the frontier, for it was the last of the international
treaties between the two states and explicitly annulled the earlier ones.210
The Iranians pointed to articles II and III to reject the claims of the Ottoman
Commission.211 The Imperial Ottoman and Iranian commissions exchanged the
memorandums in the form of questions and answers. The Ottoman commission
wrote a memorandum on February 15, 1908,212 in response to the Imperial Iranian
208 See Appendix D/1, No: 27, Translation Part.
209 See Appendix D/2, Inclosure 1 in No. 386.
210 See Appendix D/2, Inclosure 2 in No: 386.
211 See (Appendix D/2, Inclosure 2 in No: 386) to check how Iran interpreted on the II, III, and IX
articles of the Erzurum Treaty.
212 See Appendix D/3, Inclosure 2/1 in No. 49.
72
commission’s memorandum of February 8. The Ottoman commission claimed that
the Iranian government should show a treaty that allowed Iranian officials to
interfere with the Kurds living in the sub-provinces of Shehrzur, Kurkuk, Rowanduz,
Amadia, Hakkari, Van, and Bayazid. According to the Ottoman commission, article
III explained article II. The treaty can only refer to the boundary of Muhammerah,
Zohab, and Suleymaniye, and it did not cover the sub-provinces mentioned above. If
the treaty were concerned with those districts, it would explicitly mention their
boundary. Then, the Commission repeated its demand:
Iran should put an end to her wrongful interference with our tribes and
territory in the livas, kazas, nahiehs, and villages of Kurdistan from the
Sanjak of Bayazid to the extremity of the Sanjak of Suleymaniye, except
Kotour.213
The Iranian commission responded to this memorandum by its own on
February 17, 1908.214 They referred to articles II and III of the 1863 treaty again. The
Iranian commissioners believed that the treaty avoided redundant and ineffective
expressions. They stated that article II did not need further explanation because it
shows clearly that the question related to Suleymaniye, Zohab, and Muhammerah
were settled. According to the Iranian commission, article III also did not have any
ambiguity, and it asserted that the two contracting parties abandoned their territorial
claims. Furthermore, the Iranians asked for an explanation of the Ottoman
occupation of Baneh, Serdesht, Lahijan, Ushni, Mergevar, Dasht, Tergaver,
Beradost, and other places, moving beyond the territory they claimed.
The Iranian and Ottoman commissions exchanged a third memorandum
respectively on February 20 and 22, 1908.215 Wratislaw found the character of this
and the previous memorandums very ‘recriminatory’.216 The Ottoman commission
stated the treaty was related to the frontier and the territory covering Zohab,
Muhammerah, and Suleymaniye. Article III was attributed to the territory and
frontiers explained in article II. Thus, ‘the treaty had nothing to do with the territory
and frontiers of Kurdistan between Beyazid and Sulaimaniya.’ Then, the Ottoman
commissioners stated that they needed the interpretation of those articles by a
supreme authority, while insisting on non-interference with the Ottoman Kurds. The
213 Schofield, IV, p. 295.
214 See Appendix D/3, Inclosure 2/2 in No. 49.
215 See Appendix D/4, Inclsoure 2 in No. 57 and Inclosure 3 in No. 57.
216 Wratislaw to Marling, Urumiah, March 2, 1908, Schofield IV, 297.
73
Iranian commission in response insisted that Articles II and III of the treaty were
clear.217
After these assertions, Tahir Pasha thought the commissions were not
‘competent to decide on the right interpretation to be placed on Article III, so the
matter must be left to their respective Governments’. As Wratislaw stated, Tahir
Pasha had perceived this as a notable success and left Urumieh for Serai on February
29, 1908. Tahir Pasha went to Van and he stayed there in a lodge close to the
telegram house to receive further instructions.
However, Istanbul ordered Tahir Pasha to return to Urumiah to resume the
negotiations. Wratislaw used the time when the labor of the commission was
suspended to review the works of the commission up until Tahir Pasha left, including
the evaluation of the personality and qualifications of the two chief commissioners.
He stated that:
The relations between the two Commissions have throughout been far from
cordial. Muhteshem-es-Sultanah is quick-tempered and not endowed with
much tact, while arrogant assumption of Tahir that all the territory at stake
was indisputably Turkish was very aggravating to his opponent. The Suj
Bulak incident was like oil on the flames, and latterly the attitude of the two
Chief Commissioners towards one another resembled that of the proverbial
cat and dog.218
He blamed Tahir Pasha for the consequent deadlock, because Tahir acted
independently from his colleagues, Danyal and Ali Nadir Pasha, who were well
informed, and did not entirely agree with Tahir Pasha’s attitude. Wratislaw believed
Tahir was receiving secret instructions, and he believed that Tahir Pasha should have
been replaced by one of these two Ottoman commissioners, because, according to
him, they would be more conciliatory than Tahir, if the negotiations were
resumed.219
Wratislaw was dissatisfied with Tahir Pasha’s endeavor, but he stated in his
memoirs (A Consul in the East) that Tahir had a remarkably pleasing personality and
gained the hearts of the Kurds very easily. This time, the central government
participated actively in the negotiations with a pro-memorid. The Grand Vizier, who
updated the British consuls with the recent information he received regarding the
217 Iranian commissioners to Ottoman commissioners, 19 M 1326/ 22 February 1908, Schofield IV,
299.
218 Wratislaw to Marling, Urumiah, March 2, 1908, Schofield IV, 299.
219 Ibid.
74
boundary affairs, stated that a pro-memorid that would be communicated by the
Sublime Porte to the Iranian Ambassador at Istanbul formed the basis of the
instructions sent to Tahir Pasha.220
Before I continue, I want to clarify a point. Examining the period of Tahir
Pasha by only relying on the fourth volume of R. Schofield’s work obstructs the
context in which the boundary commission operated. For instance, the reports in the
fourth volume did not exactly provide the reasons why the boundary delimitation
remained unconcluded up until Tahir Pasha left the negotiations to the Porte. The
parts of the fourth volume that coincide with the period of Tahir Pasha Commission
do not mention that the Ottoman government had conditionally recognized the
Second Treaty of Erzurum. In contrast, M. Sarıkçıoğlu in her work, which benefits
from the Iranian and Ottoman sources as well, demonstrates that the Ottoman
government recognized the Second Erzurum Treaty with its additional documents.
However, Iran did not recognize these additional documents although its
commissioner (Muhammed Ali Han) signed them.221 Iran recognized the treaty as the
last treaty in contrast to the Ottoman Empire. Thus, this disagreement between the
states, which was maintained by Britain,222 became the main reason why numerous
boundary commissions produced no result as neither of the two states abandoned its
arguments. This problem stalled the entire boundary commissions since the 1840s.
Tahir Pasha’s Commission was just a segment of this sequence, a segment that
coincided with the acceleration of the Ottoman occupations.
Sabri Ateş seems to be repeating the same mistake in those parts of his work
where he relies on Schofield IV. Contradicting the whole work of M. Sarıkçıoğlu,223
Ateş states:
… the Ottoman Empire launched what would become its last expansionist
effort. Its attempt to conquer the northwestern Sunni Kurdish parts of the
shah’s domains was in direct contravention to the fifty-years-in-the-making
220 See Appendix D/5, Inclosure in No. 114.
221 Sarıkçıoğlu, Osmanlı-Iran Hudud Sorunları (1847-1913), 17.
222 I say Britian becasue the interest of Britian in Muhammerah, which is a district of Basrah, started
in the 1840s. Although Iran demanded the rejection of additional documents, Russia and Britian
maintianed this agreement becasue the additional documents gave certain parts of Muhammerah to the
Ottoman Empire. However, Russia and Britian appear to have ignored their own signature and gave
Muhammerah unofficially to Iran. By this way, especially, Britian acted easly in Muhammereh which
were consequently given neither to Ottoman State nor to Iran.
223 Sarıkçıoğlu, Osmanlı-Iran Hudud Sorunları (1847-1913).
75
frontier negotiations and, indeed, to all of the treaties that had thus far helped
transform the Ottoman-Iranian frontier into boundary.224
Sarıkçıoğlu’s work indicates that there was not such a big difference or
contradiction in time in the eastern frontier policies pursued by the Ottoman
government. Indeed, the Ottoman occupations showed that the Ottoman
government’s frontier policies remained consistent from the 1840s until Kamil
Pasha’s government in August 5, 1908-February 14, 1909.
In the pre-memorid, the Ottoman government asserted that the view of
Muhteshem es Sultanah that the Treaty of Erzurum settled the frontier question as a
whole did not reflect the reality truly. The Ottoman government suggested that the
two governments should reach first a preliminary agreement on the basic points of
the Erzurum Treaty. They stressed that the treaty was not the sole source for defining
the boundary; there were other documents such as official-joint notes, which were
made an integral part of the treaty by Iranian, Russian and British envoys and
delegates in 1848. According to the Ottoman government, the treaty only dealt with
the ownership of the Sanjak of Zohab, the lands of Muhammerah and Suleymaniye.
The other districts remained controversial, as the treaty did not explicitly deal with
them. The lack of special provision regarding these districts in the treaty meant that
there would be a continuation of the status quo. Article IX of the treaty explains
clearly that ‘all the provisions and effects of previous treaties and, in particular the
provisions of the First Erzurum Treaty in 1823 had been maintained. They stated that
this agreement defined the districts of the boundary where the Second Erzurum
Treaty remained silent. They supported their view by showing the ratification of
those treaties by the mediating powers, namely the British and Russian delegates, in
1848 and 1865 as ‘the validity of the unabrogated portions of older Treaties.’225 To
sum up, the Sublime Porte did not consider the Treaty of Erzurum as final, and
referred to the treaty signed by Sultan Murad IV in 1639, while Iranian government
considered Articles II and III of the Erzurum Treaty as final in deciding the frontier
question.226
By using more specific and precise language, the Ottoman Government did
not make a different claim than that Tahir Pasha had made earlier. Indeed, it
224 Ateş, The Ottoman-Iranian Borderlands: Making a Boundary 1843-1914, 228.
225 Ottoman Government to Iranian Ambassador, Schofield IV, 308.
226 Note Respecting Turco-Iranian Frontier, Schofield IV, 319.
76
supported Tahir Pasha’s claims by presenting new evidences, which were detailed,
well designed, and a better argued. It has been understood that Tahir Pasha’s
decision to leave Urumiah was a clever move taken on time, although the Porte and
many of the consuls had heavily criticized his action. On the other hand, the Iranian
government hesitated to dispatch a special mission to Istanbul that would debate the
frontier question with the Porte or directly with the Palace. A memorandum written
by Muhteshem es Sultanah to Mushir-ed-Dowleh, clearly shows that Iran could not
replay the memorandum of the Ottoman government well.227 Charles M. Marling
believed that Iran did not have any evidence to prove their claims. He found the
memorandum written by Muhteshem es Sultanah ‘unintelligible’ and criticized his
proposition with impracticability that suggested returning to status quo ante. G.
Barclay stated in a telegram he sent to Sir Edward Grey,
Tahir Pasha reasserted that ‘Article 3 of the Treaty of Erzurum alludes solely
to the places mentioned in Article 2 of the treaty. It is stated that clearly in
this Article that these localities are lied down in the note addressed to the
Iranian Ambassador by the Porte. Tahir asserts, again, that all the sanjaks of
Kurdistan belong to Turkey according to the Treaty of 1639, and that up to
the beginning of the nineteenth century they remained in the possession of
Turkey. It was not till then that Iran trespassed on Turkish territory, profiting
by Turkey’s domestic difficulties and disastrous wars to seduce the Kurds.228
Tahir Pasha invited the Iranian Commissioner to continue with the
negotiations in the line mentioned in his statement above. As Wratislaw stated, Tahir
Pasha believed that the Treaty of Murad IV had described the frontier on the
principle of distinction of religion and nationality, and further explanations was
unnecessary beyond the statement that ‘the Shias are not to interfere’.229 This
statement of Tahir Pasha excludes the possibility of the Kurds who can be Shia. He
was most probably thinking that all the Kurds were originally Sunni.
This consistency of the Ottoman commissioners’ arguments changed after
political authority shifted abruptly from the Palace to the Porte in July 24, 1908. This
process of political transformation, which was triggered by the so-called Young Turk
‘Revolution’, prepared the ground for the Grand Vizierate to fulfill its assurances
227 See Appendix D/6, Inclosure in No. 171.
228 G. Barclay to Grey, Constantinople, July 13, 1908, Schofield IV, 327.
229 Wratislaw to Marling, Urumiah, July 12, 1908, Schofield IV, 337.
77
that the Ottoman troops could be withdrawn from the disputed lands they had begun
to occupy back in 1905. One can argue that Russia with its military power and
Britain with its political influence had now increased the pressure they put on the
Ottoman government after the 1908 “revolution”. Sir A. Nicolsan stated that M.
Tcherykoff spoke with the Ottoman foreign minister about the next steps that would
be taken for the sake of a final and amicable settlement of the frontier question by
demanding the mediation of Britain and Russia. He found out that the attitude of the
Ottoman government had changed and the minister was saying that his government
would withdraw the Ottoman troops. Nicolson found this new position of the
Ottoman government satisfactory and stated, with exaggeration, that the constant
efforts of British and Russian governments had created this favorable change by
August of 1908.230 Another point made by Charles M. Marling stressed the
importance of this governmental change for the frontier delimitation. He stated,
It is not impossible that with the recent change of Government in Turkey the
Ottoman Ministries, who have all along shown a far more reasonable attitude
than the Sultan’s unofficial advisers, will now be able to enforce their
instructions on the Turkish Commission, and that Tahir Pasha will either be
relieved or will be induced to be more amenable to argument.231
Towards the end of negotiations, the southern parts of the boundary were
demarcated peacefully. Major General Zeki Pasha, who was the chief commissioner
before Tahir Pasha, had been charged to ratify the status quo line from Suleymaniye
to Musul. Tahir Pasha needed those maps and Zeki Pasha’s explanatory documents
included concluding remarks concerning the boundaries of the southeastern
provinces of Ottoman Empire. Zeki Pasha sent all these documents to Tahir Pasha
after he delimitated the boundary of Musul and transferred all the responsibility of
the Musul boundary to Tahir Pasha’s Commission.232 Towards the end of August,
Tahir Pasha set forth the frontier of the Baghdad Province and Zohab by declaring in
a note that he neither recognized the “identic” zone nor accepted the status quo. He
noted to Wratislaw that he would leave Urumiah if the Iranian commissioner kept
ignoring the arguments Tahir Pasha proposed.
230 Sir A. Nicolson to Grey, St. Petersburg, August 22, 1908, Schofield IV, 335.
231 Marling to Grey, Gulahek, August 14, 1908, Schofield IV, 336.
232 BOA, Y. PRK-ASK., 259/ 29, 29 C 1326/ 29 July 1908, Zeki Pasha’s telegraphy: 23 July 1908.
78
The Ottoman Minister of Internal Affairs instructed Tahir Pasha to rejoin his
post in Bitlis and informed him that Danyal Pasha would succeeded him.233 Thus,
Danyal Pasha continued from the point where Tahir Pasha left. He first went to the
telegraph office to get fresh instructions from Istanbul. On September 1908, M.
Tcharykoff stated that ‘Wratislaw might be instructed to leave when the Turkish
troops have completely evacuated the country between Urumiah and Tabreez on the
north side of the lake.’234 This showed that the hopes of British, Russian and Iranian
representatives for the evacuation of the Ottoman troops from the disputed lands
increased in this period.
Tahir Pasha had been ordered to decrease the number of those troops situated
on the border on August 18, 1908. This order of the new government established by
the intervention of the Community of Union and Progress (CUP), suggests that they
found it unnecessary to alert the Ottoman troops around the status quo line due to the
critical financial situation. The new government ordered to decrease the number of
troops. Although Tahir Pasha found this order inappropriate, he unwillingly recalled
about eleven or twelve troops out of nineteen battalions (tabur) located in two
frontier zones.235
Ali Rıza, the new governor of Van in 1908, opposed decreasing the numbers
of the battalions, but he had to comply with the Porte’s orders. He supported Tahir
Pasha’s argument, which suggested that the troops were very important to maintain
public security in the region. As the Porte knew that they would have difficulty with
Tahir Pasha in terms of the withdrawal of the troops, they directly communicated
with Ali Rıza himself. However, Ali Rıza responded to them with a letter in which
he stated that he did not know the technical sides of the situation and lacked the
knowledge to provide details. He stated that Tahir Pasha had all the information
because he knew the contents of all the correspondence with Istanbul (the Palace?).
The only thing Ali Rıza asserted with certainty was the need for these forces for the
security of the borders of his province. Thus, he gave to Tahir Pasha and the other
233 Wratislaw to Sir G. Lowther, Urumiah, August 27, 1908, Schofield IV, 341.
234 Nicolson to Grey, St. Petersburg, September 12, 1908, Schofield IV, 342.
235 BOA, DH. MKT., 1173/ 41, 1 CA 1325: Tahir Pasha: Decreasing Number of Military Troops in
Two Border Zones, 18 August 1908.
79
frontier actors the technical responsibility to decide whether the Iranian forces could
reoccupy the districts or not, if the Ottoman troops evacuated these districts.236
CUP insisted on the withdrawal of troops by pointing out the current
predicament of the Treasury and budget. The imperial frontier actors found
themselves facing a dilemma due to the financial situation. Either they would
accelerate the depletion of the treasury by maintaining the current number of the
frontier troops or they would expose the eastern borders to Iranian intervention. The
urgency of financial difficulties dominated the inter-departmental discussions.237 Ali
Rıza came up with an alternative. He suggested that the Reserve Troops (Redif
Taburları) in Van, which was held ready for a possible war with Iran, could be
released because their significance was not as high as those regular troops situated in
the districts of the frontier zone.238
In the meantime, the other Ottoman commissioners increased the pressure
they exerted to end the work of the boundary commission because they did not
believe the commission would be useful in defining the rest of the boundary. They
believed that Iran created an impasse in the negotiations by repeating their fallacies
frequently. One of the commissioners, Tevfik Bey, who became the Education
Director of Baghdad later, expressed his opinion regarding the dismissal of the
commission after paying due attention to the current situation of the budget. 239
According to him, they had tried everything that they could to demarcate the
boundary. He believed that this commission had accomplished the political
surveying of the boundary. He asserted that now a technical commission was
urgently needed to draw the boundary lines specifically.240 However, Tevfik Pasha’s
claim about the readiness of the conditions for a technical commission did not have a
basis, because the two commissions had not yet reached a consensus on the articles
of the treaties.
236 BOA, DH. MKT., 1173/ 41, 1 CA 1325: The Governor of Van, Ali Rıza: Giving Opinion
Regarding the Withdrawal of the Ottoman Troops, 14607/425, 20 August 1908.
237 BOA, DH. MKT., 1173/ 41, 1 CA 1325: 978/1109: “... Kuva-yı mütehaşşide hakkındaki suret-i
iş’arata ve hal-i hazır hazinenin ilca’atına nazaran...”
238 BOA, DH. MKT., 1173/ 41, 1 CA 1325: The Governor of Van, Ali Rıza: Giving Opinion
Regarding the Withdrawal of the Ottoman Troops, 14607/425, 20 August 1908.
239 BOA, DH. MKT., 1173/ 41, 1 CA 1325: 16366/390, Tevfik Bey: “Hazine’nin bi-hude görmekde
olduğu zarara daha ziyade iştirak eylememek üzere bendeleri azalıkdan istifa eyledim...”
240 BOA, DH. MKT., 1173/ 41, 1 CA 1325: 16366/390, 2 September 1908.
80
After the duty of Tahir Pasha as chief negotiator ended, he remained as a
member of Danyal Pasha’s commission. This commission could not go beyond being
an extension of Tahir Pasha’s commission. Eventually, Tahir Pasha was sent to
Erzurum. The other commissioners, including Brigadier-General Ali Nadir Pasha
and Tevfik Bey submitted their resignations to Danyal Pasha. They went to Istanbul.
Only Danyal Pasha and Colonel Şakir Bey remained as members of the boundary
commission.241 The Chief Secretary of Internal Affairs expressed his opinion on the
same line with the commissioners. He stated that the telegraph lines between
Urumiah and Tehran were broken, so the Iranian commissioners would not find a
way to keep in touch with their superiors. They stated that the current political
situation in Iran was not suitable to carry on the negotiations because the Iranian
leaders had to deal with socio-political frictions due to the introduction of
constitution in Iran. Danyal Pasha also demonstrated his unwillingness to carry on
the affairs of the commission for “how much time the conclusion of the boundary
negotiations would require was unknown”.242
The Porte began to question Tahir Pasha’s ability and capacity in crisis and
conflict management. However, it seems that he was just implementing the orders of
the Palace. Wratislaw had reached the conclusion that his superiors were instructing
him to encroach on Iranian territories because Tahir Pasha would not take serious
steps on his own unless he was sure that his official superiors approved them.243
Charles M. Marling stated that:
It appears to me, however, that Tahir Pasha had probably not then been
convinced that the formal orders of the Sublime Porte might not still be overridden
by the secret instructions from the Palace. His withdrawal from
Urumiah, as reported by Wratislaw, may very well be consequence of his
having received unmistakable information of the altered condition of affairs
at Constantinople, and that in order to save his face he has chosen to ascribe
his departure to the impossibility of continuing negotiations with Muhteshem
es Sultanah.244
Thus, the new government in Istanbul, and the British and Russian consuls,
who observed Tahir Pasha’s decision, did not like his close relations with the Palace.
241 BOA, BEO., 3379/253385, 23 Recep 1326/ 21 August 1908.
242 BOA, DH. MKT., 1173/ 41, 1 CA 1325: 2028, 5 September 1908.
243 Wratislaw to Marling, Urumiah, August 10, 1908, Schofield IV, 344.
244 Marling to Grey, Gulahek, September 1, 1908, Schofield IV, 343.
81
The Consul-General Wratislaw associated discrepancy between the assurances of the
Grand Vizierate and Tahir Pasha’s action regarding the frontier affairs with his secret
relations with the Palace. Not only the British and Russian consuls but also the
members of the new Ottoman government perceived him as a member of the old
Palace regime.
Kamil Pasha became the new Grand Vizier on August 4, 1908. Throughout
the British reports, it seems that the British consuls hold sympathy for Kamil Pasha.
As they favorably stated, the internal situation of the empire began to settle down
during his time. However, the frontier difficulties intensified upon the withdrawal of
most of the Ottoman troops. The new government could not effectively deal with
these difficulties because they were preoccupied with difficulties they encountered in
the Balkans and internal matters that resulted from constitutional activities. Austria-
Hungary occupied Bosnia-Herzegovina on October 5, 1908. The same day, Bulgaria
declared its independence. A day later, Cretans announced their island’s integration
with Greece.245
Nevertheless, the new cabinet under Kamil Pasha’s leadership sincerely
promised to regularize the position regarding the Ottoman-Iranian boundary. In this
period, the British and Iranian demands for the withdrawal of Ottoman troops from
the disputed areas increased, urging the Ottomans for ‘speedy’ action. Thus, Kamil
Pasha’s government adopted a scheme that suggested returning to the status quo of
three years ago (1905) before the occupation of Vezneh and Pasveh. Sir G. Lowther
showed the current state of the Ottoman troops on the line mentioned above with the
paragraph below:
…three battalions were withdrawn from the Pasveh-Lahijan region, leaving
some four battalions to garrison the frontier. Of these, one battalion remained
at Pasveh, east of the contested zone. Similarly, some five battalions and one
mountain battery were withdrawn from the Van section of the frontier, while
Wratislaw reports that only one mountain battery remained in Mergavar,
Tergavar, and Baranduz, one or two companies at Somai and Charik, and a
handful of Turkish troops in Beradost. It appears that these units are
considerably below their normal strength, and that they are stationed at
Mavana, Charik and other places situated on the eastern edge of the contested
zone, the only Turkish troops stationed actually east of the zone being the
battalion at Pasveh…246
245 Cevdet Küçük, “Abdülhamit II (1842-1909),” Diyanet İslam Ansiklopedisi, I, 1988, 222.
246 G. Lowther to Grey, Therapia, October 26, 1908, Schofield IV, 347.
82
In the following years, the Ottomans supported the constitutional movement
in Iran because they thought the constitutionalists were less dangerous than the
royalists, who claimed the lands that belonged to the Ottoman Empire.247 Due to the
fluctuating polices and the pressure of many other conjectural changes, the Ottoman
government had to recognize the Second Treaty of Erzurum as the basis of the
negotiations in 1910. This recognition implied that the Ottoman government
loosened the diplomatic resilience that it maintained since the 1840s.
4. 2. 3. Where was Ushni and where was the Status Quo Line?
Ushni was one of the controversial lands that became the subject of territorial
ambiguity regarding whether this township was beyond the status quo line or not.
Before the Ottoman officials concluded the debates that would decide its fate, they
decided to occupy Ushni on October 10, 1907 by the troops under the command of
Tahir Pasha. Tahir Pasha had put forth the increasing security concerns in Ushni the
basic reason for its occupation at first. A group of the Sunni-Kurdish tribes in the
western peripheries of Iran began to attack the town of Savuçbulak and plundered the
villages in the neighborhood. The Ottoman troops at Serdasht was ready to support
these tribes and they thought that the local authorities in Savuçbulak would welcome
the Ottoman soldiers and the tribes.248
When the occupation of Ushni started officially, all the foreign and some
Ottoman officials surprised. These astonished group of officials believed that the
occupation was one of the expansionist deeds of Tahir Pasha, although an
information sheet that he wrote on January 19, 1908 indicates that the order for the
occupation was the result of a decision taken in the Special Council of Ministers
(Encümen-i Mahsus-ı Vükela) on September 25, 1907.249 What were the points that
the Council made to justify its argument and the occupation? Yet, there are not clearcut
answers to these questions, but in a meeting where all the Ottoman
commissioners met with the Russian and British consuls on November 11, 1907, the
Ottoman commissioners challenged the arguments of Russian Vice Consul by
publishing a memorandum, and defending the correctness and validity of Dervish
Pasha’s map. This shows that Ottoman government considered Dervish Pasha’s map
247 Ateş, The Ottoman-Iranian Borderlands: Making a Boundary 1843-1914, 266.
248 Marling to Grey, Tehran, October 31, 1907, Schofield IV, 223.
249 BOA, Y. MTV., 305/162, 26 January 1908.
83
and explanatory document valid, and used them as the basis of the occupation of
Ushni. Furthermore, the session focused on two more points. First, they argued for a
convention between Iranian and Ottoman governments concerning the status quo line
(presumably in 1869) by which the joint map is rendered inoperative. Second, they
also discussed the frontier that was established by earlier treaties as embodied in the
map.250
Moreover, some foreign officials saw the occupation as the integral part of a
bigger plan. For instance, the British Vice Consul Dickson had some doubts in his
mind that brought the political side of the question into prominence. He believed that
the Ottoman concern for a future Russo-Turkish war was the main reason of the
occupation. He highlighted the geostrategic and logistic importance of the occupied
lands, as these lands would enable troops to have an easy passage. In addition, he
observed the unfriendly attitude of the Kurds towards the Russian officer who
arrived in Ushni.251 The travelling account that was written by Dickson while he was
in Van shows that he informed Sir. N. O’Conor about the frontier question of
Ottoman-Iran underlining that all classes in Van considered Russia as the real
opponent, and not Iran. Dickson stated that the problem between the Ottomans and
Russians was dormant from 1878 to 1904, when certain Russian activities aroused
the Ottomans’ suspicion. According to him, some key moves gave an idea about the
Russian interests in the region. These moves included the Russian plan for an
extension of their railway to Julfa; building roads to Tabriz and some other places;
the appointment of a Russian Vice-Consul to Urumiah, and the wholesale conversion
of the Assyrians in Iran to the Russian Church.
Obviously, geographical conditions diminished the capabilities of the great
powers to pursue their goals. Russia had experienced this during the Russo-Japanese
War. Dickson believed that for “a railway to be constructed from Russia to Baghdad
or the Iranian Gulf, the easiest way to pass would be through Lahijan and Vezene;
while if a railway or cart road were to be constructed from Beyazid to Baghdad, it
would have to follow through the same pass.”252 Tahir Pasha and the commissioners
knew that they were dealing with Russia and not Iran, and they were convinced that
Britain would support them eventually against Russia. At the end, Dickson judged
250 O’Conor to Grey, Constantinople, November 11, 1907, Schofield IV, 225-6.
251 O’Conor to Grey, Constantinople, November 20, 1907, Schofield IV, 230.
252 Vice-Consul Dickson to O’Conor, Van, December 14, 1907, Schofield IV, 262.
84
that “ the Ottoman State would be glad to fight with Russia now and pay off some of
their old scores because Russia was weak due to the Russo-Japanese War and her
internal troubles”. Thus, he decided, “a strong attitude of Turkey over this frontier
was not a bluff because these districts had vital importance to her”.253
While the British officials were preoccupied with divulging the reasons of the
occupations, the Ottoman frontier officers and commanders, as previously
mentioned, could not identify the townships. The lack of a status quo that was
ratified by both states created the basic problem. The occupation of Ushni caused the
resurgence of this matter again, and it incited the Ottoman frontier officials to seek
an answer during the post-occupation period. Tahir Pasha appointed several officers
to take on its administrative duties, and the government did not see necessary to
fortify the township with additional troops. However, the Ottoman commander in the
frontier zone kept asking whether Ushni was beyond the status quo or not as they
could not understand the map in their hands. If it were within the status quo line, they
would demand deployment of additional troops.254 Tahir Pasha believed that all
parties had recognized the status quo and guaranteed it under the treaty of 1869. As
he interpreted according to the treaty, the two parties should preserve the districts
they held as part of the status quo until the boundary was fully delimitated. Probably,
he believed that this agreement lost its validity due to the efforts of Russian interest
to construct new railways that would increase their capacity in mobilizing their
soldiers and the increasing military fortifications of Iran close to the disputed
lands.255
Nevertheless, Abdulhamid’s order was clear regarding the status quo that
draws the international limits of the disputed lands. According to him, nobody should
transgress the border, but a district within the status quo256 should be definitely
protected. In addition, the Porte stated that all subjects of the empire should be
protected from all threats to their lives. However, it did not answer the question of
what would happen to the people from the disputed lands, who just became Ottoman
subjects from disputed lands? Ottoman state actors of the frontier could not turn
253 Vice-Consul Dickson to O’Conor, Van, December 14, 1907, Schofield IV, 262.
254 BOA, Makam-ı Ser Askeri, Mektubi Kalemi, Hususi, Which side Ushni?, 14 January 1908.
255 BOA, Y. Mtv., 306/111, 16 M. 1326/ 19 February 1908: Tahir Pasha’s one depiction of status quo:
10 Kanun-i Sani 1323/ 23 January 1908.
256 Statüko dahilinde: Within the status quo. This expression reffered to the zone of disputed lands.
Any peace of territory in this zone was subject to status quo. Normally, the Ottoman Empire did not
have a right to be there militarily. Abdulhamid’s order suggested not to go beyond the status quo.
85
down the inhabitants of lands if they appealed to become an Ottoman subject from
the disputed lands.257
During the post-annexation of Ushni, the Ottomans had placed small number
of troops in Ushni. Prince Governor-General of Azerbaijan and the cousin of the
shah Firman-Firma began to collect a force in order to evacuate the Ottoman troops,
and punish the Kurds. He located about 12,000 cavalry, infantry, and mountain
artillerymen in Miyan-ı Devabb, and continued to recruit soldiers and tribal cavalries
in considerable numbers by providing ammunition and arms from other provinces of
Iran such as Azerbaijan, Erdebil, and Hemedan. He attempted to enter Savuçbulak
with these forces in order to push the Ottoman troops out of Ushni.
The First Major General and the Commander of the Ottoman Border Forces
Fazıl Pasha learnt about Firman-Firma’s preparations through the Tabriz newspapers.
He believed that the shah himself had ordered this attack because the shah had
declared a “holy war” against the Ottoman Empire by forcing the Kurds to fight on
his side. Fazıl Pasha stated that he tried to solve this conflict diplomatically. He
believed Russia encouraged Firman-Firma, who refused to consider diplomatic
solutions to the problem, and continued his military fortifications around the frontier
zone after situating himself in Savuçbulak. This situation worried Fazıl Pasha about
the security of Ushni. Fazıl Pasha wanted to be sure that the security of Ushni was
maintained. He considered abandoning Ushni without providing for its security a
breach of state tradition.258 For this reason, the Porte decided to give permission to
the Ottoman troops in Ushni to open fire against the forces of Firman-Firma, if they
attacked Ushni. Accordingly, the government increased the number of soldiers
stationed in the frontier zone and reinforced their capabilities. However, the
government also warned the Ottoman forces not to violate the border rules by
transgressing the status quo.259 All the high-ranking Ottoman frontier actors were
warned not to attack the Iranian fortifications around Savuçbulak, and Fazıl Pasha
was charged to enforce this caution.260
These frictions between Fazıl Pasha and Firman-Firma made the obscurity of
the status quo more apparent. Tahir Pasha himself did not know where the status quo
257 BOA, Makam-ı Ser Askeri, Mektubi Kalemi, Hususi, Which side Ushni?, 14 January 1908.
258 BOA, Y. Mtv., 306/64, Ferik Mehmed Fazıl Pasha, 12 M 1326/ 5 February 1908.
259 BOA, Makam-ı Ser Askeri Mektubi Kalemi Hususi, Serasker Rıza, 18 January 1908.
260 BOA, BEO., 3237/242714, 24 Z 1325/ 28 January 1908.
86
lines lay, although he kept stressing the importance of 1869 provisionally. He
questioned very often the direction that the status quo line would run within the
frontier zone, taking into consideration the demographic characteristics of the
districts as well:
If the status quo line meant the borderline that was drawn by late Dervish
Pasha, Ushni was clearly in the Ottoman side. The earlier registers indicated
that Ushni was a district that previously connected to the center of Şehr-i Zur
Province that belonged to the Ottoman Empire, and whose inhabitants were
Sunni-Kurds.261
According to him, Dervish Pasha’s observation, which was based on
demographic realities, suited all the agreements; so sending additional troops to
Ushni was against none of the former treaties.262 Furthermore, Fazıl Pasha portrayed
Firman-Firma’s aggression bitterly.
Firman-Firma suddenly attacked the villages on their way with the support of
Ahmed Han, a Kurdish tribal leader, and they violated the border by taking
into account the winter conditions that disadvantaged the Ottoman soldiers
and tribal forces. 263
When the Ottoman troops approached them, Ahmed Han ran away. Other
supporters of Firman-Firma also evacuated Savuçbulak, but they had already caused
significant damage to the local people. Fazıl Pasha observed:
Firman-Firma committed a crime against humanity by attempting to clean
Savuçbulak from pro-Ottoman elements. His attempts were totally against
universal values, the necessities of humanity and civilization.264
Nevertheless, most of the people under their oppression had migrated to
Pasve in order to avoid a bigger catastrophe. Accordingly, the number of people who
applied to Ottoman subjecthood increased drastically. Fazıl Pasha knew that he did
not have the authority to accept these refugees to Ottoman citizenship. He put the
task of addressing this issue under the responsibility of the boundary commission.
261 BOA, Y. Mtv., 305/162, 26 January 1908.
262 BOA, Y. Mtv., 305/162, 26 January 1908.
263 BOA, Y. Mtv, 306/64, 12 M 1326/ 5 February 1908: Fazıl Pasha explains why he intervened the
border conflicts.
264 Ibid., Fazıl Pasha: “…[Osmanlı Devleti]’ne ‘arz-ı dehalet idenler haklarında kıyam...”
87
Hearing these appeals could have been considered the duty of the commission,
although deciding them was not. At any rate, Fazıl Pasha did not accept their appeals
because he thought this action could create further diplomatic crisis and delay the
boundary delimitation. 265 This sensitivity regarding accepting the refugee appeals
did not reflect the reality, and the refugee policy of the empire had to change over
time because the struggle with Firman-Firma continued.
The local people and the tribal forces resisted the attacks of Firman-Firma’s
forces by taking the support of Ottoman troops. These joint forces besieged him in
Savuçbulak and prevented the access of military reinforcements and additional
supplies to the city. However, Fazıl Pasha thought the joint tribal force did not have
the ability to resist Firman-Firma much longer. If this local resistance was broken,
the Iranian military forces could march to Basra and Baghdad, and establish contact
with the Twelver Shias (Jafaris) living there. Having these concerns in mind, Fazıl
Pasha thought that Firman-Firma’s aggression could damage the relationship
between the Ottoman government and the tribes of the region because the latter were
being forced to shift their loyalties when they faced superior forces.
To prevent this shift and to end Firman-Firma’s oppressions, Fazıl Pasha
stationed four hundred regular soldiers in Pasve. This number increased to a
thousand, when Fazıl Pasha recalled the six hundred soldiers he had sent to winter
quarters, because of inadequate food supplies and financial resources. However, even
this force appeared inadequate to protect the status quo and those who applied for
Ottoman protection.
As it is discussed in the third chapter, financial struggle shortages new
recruitments. Fazıl Pasha asserted that increasing the number of troops was going to
be a growing burden on government finances day by day. In these circumstances, he
had to prepare a joint force cooperating with the pro-Ottoman Kurdish tribes
persecuted by Firman-Firma. After he put together a sufficient number of armed
men, he began to draw up his strategy and distributed all the soldiers under his
command to strategic points of Savuçbulak.
He left two hundred regular soldiers in Pasve considering the winter
conditions, which usually closed the roads for months. Fazıl Pasha thought that
Firman-Firma had chosen this time of the year deliberately. He transgressed the
265 Ibid., Fazıl Pasha continues reasoning his intervention.
88
status quo in the coldest season of the year because the heavy winter conditions
would cut off the communications and make the flow of urgent information difficult.
He positioned eight hundreds soldiers in the village of Mahmud Shah. He then went
to Köse Güherize, which was a village in a distance four hours away from the center
of Savuçbulak, with the remaining soldiers and fifteen thousands tribal forces.
Map 4.1: This map shows the center of cities where Fazıl Pasha and Firman-Firma
fortified their forces, and it demonstrates their proximity to the rivers and mountains,
which means to the strategic points such as important passageways.266
Meanwhile, Firman-Firma was under the siege of the Kurdish tribal forces.
Fazıl Pasha praised them for their bravery and ardent attachment to their country and
family. However, their resistance against a regular army would not last long, so
Firman-Firma could break their resistance very soon. He reminded as well that these
people had taken refuge in the Ottoman Empire. Before the tribes became totally
exhausted and tired, and ceased fire, Fazıl Pasha charged some officers with the task
of assuring them that the Ottoman military support was behind them. Consequently,
he sent a memorandum to Firman-Firma telling him the evacuation of Savuçbulak
and otherwise, his joint forces would expel them. Firman-Firma found the Ottoman
troops and tribal forces deterrent, and retreated to Miyan-ı Devabb without making
any effort to fight. Fazıl Pasha evaluated Firman-Firma’s withdrawal with an
266 BOA, HRT.h..453, 1 Ra 1328 / 13 March 1910, (Ölçek 1/720000, 3 Piece)
89
interesting statement that Firman-Firma had lost Kurdistan completely to the
Ottoman Empire. 267
These initiatives of Fazıl Pasha would be subject to investigations. In order to
justify his position to the Porte, he stated that:
… Firman-Firma took control of the tribes living in the disputed lands by
force and oppression, so my action cannot be seen as one that breached the
rules because it was obvious that Firman-Firma’s interference would later
create dangerous situation, just as it did before. My action was against the
Iranian military fortifications around the border …268
Fazıl Pasha defended himself that He preserved the prestige of the Ottoman
State in the eyes of the Kurds by interfering in a dispute that threatened them and did
so by organizing a local force made up of the Kurds and backed by regular army
troops. He believed protecting the status quo with only the available troops in the
frontier zone was impossible. Thus, this cooperation between the Kurdish tribal
forces and the Ottoman troops maintained the security of the imperial borders and
people who sought refuge in the Ottoman Empire. Otherwise, the Ottoman
government had to recruit thirty thousand soldiers to protect the status quo for an
unspecified length of time.
As the annexation of Ushni launched new debates, Fazıl Pasha’s
interventions in Savuçbulak created similar debates. The Ottoman Empire found the
status of Savuçbulak also in dispute. Fazıl Pasha asserted that Iran did not have any
right to be in Savuçbulak because they had appointed neither an officer nor sent a
solider there, which meant Iran had never governed this place in the past. The
Ottoman government provided another reason to prioritize the occupation of
Savuçbulak. They stressed the importance of Savuçbulak for different reasons,
although Savuçbulak was obviously beyond the status quo line. One of the reasons
was the township of Pasve. They believed that Pasve was on Ottoman soil and
bordering Savuçbulak. Thus, any dispute in Savuçbulak could directly have a
negative impact on the public security and order of Pasve that was in the status
quo.269
267 BOA, Y. Mtv, 306/64, 12 M 1326/ 5 February 1908:
268 BOA, Y. Mtv., 306/64, 12 M 1326/ 15 February 1908, The Date of Telegram: 6 February 1908.
269 BOA, Y. Mtv., 306/64, 12 M 1326/ 5 February 1908:
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4. 2. 4. Two Tribes and Their Search for Protection
To explain the complexity of the frontier difficulties, Fazıl Pasha’s
intervention to the frontier affairs exemplifies an important instance. How a state
could resist a significant amount of appeals for protection in a contested area where
two states competed for regional superiority constituted one of the difficulties while
pro-Ottoman tribes, who appealed to the Ottoman State for being refugee from the
disputed lands, were being pushed by Firman-Firma to westward. Mekri and
Deveböğri tribes were just two of the tribes who took refuge in the Ottoman Empire
with their five thousand cavalries and infantries in the same number to escape
Firman-Firma’s persecution and oppressions. Fazıl Pasha stated that these people
were subjects of the empire, so the government had to protect them as freely as
Russia did for the well being of those people who chose to become a Russian
subjects in the same region. He stated:
The Russian consul gave a particular importance to the evacuation of two
people, Kerbelayı Osman and Nevruz Ali, who lived in Savuçbulak, but took
refuge in Russia. These people were neither Russian nor Christian, but they
became subjects of Russia.270
He meant that if Russia had the right to accept new subjects from the region and
protect their well being, the Ottoman State had the same right. At first glance, this
was a reasonable wish in terms of maintaining the security of the subjects of the
empire, but it was bringing up new territorial claims, and thus, conflicts. Tahir Pasha
clarified the importance of the refugees for the empire:
… No objections against the people those who accepted Ottoman sovereignty
can be accepted, because they were naturally part of the Muslim community,
and thus, they could be the subjects of the Empire. Ottoman State will protect
their rights and claims for their “ancient lands”...271
He justified these claims for Muslim-Kurds based on old treaties. According to the
treaties, Kurdistan was part of the Ottoman Empire, and Iran did not have any right
270 BOA, Y. Mtv., 306/64, 12 M 1326/ 5 February 1908:
271 Ibid.
91
to intervene in its affairs.272 He found his own interpretation of the treaties
trustworthy and a realistic definition of the boundary, yet Iran ignored this reality
constantly and encroached the disputed lands gradually. According to Tahir Pasha,
they became successful and these attempts of Iranian officials in the past eased their
penetration to the disputed lands. Thus, the old treaties, which showed the real
owners of the lands, lost its basis, and Tahir Pasha realized that the treaties were no
longer valid for the some parts of the frontier zone due to systematic encroachments
of Iran. Moreover, the Ottoman State did not loose its contact with the inhabitants
who felt religiously bound to it. He believed that if the Ottoman State took
possession of these lands, Golden Age (devr-i se’adet) would return. Wratislaw did
not see this nostalgic view of the past correct because he could not be sure whether
Tahir Pasha quoted justly without seeing a copy of the Treaty of 1639.273 He asserted
that they provided public security and order increasingly in these lands on behalf of
humanity and Islam by stopping the tribal raids, so boundary settlement would serve
the same purpose.274
A detailed Ottoman version of Firman-Firma’s intervention shows that a pro-
Kurdish tribal leader who wanted to be dominant in the region played a significant
role in terms of helping Firman-Firma. For example, Ahmed Han, a pro-Iranian
Kurdish tribal leader had interfered with the other Kurdish villages. Like these
attacks for local superiority, Firman-Firma’s military fortifications had roused the
tension on the frontier. His action resulted with his evacuation of Savuçbulak, but he
continued his attacks on the Sunni-Kurdish villages on his way out, and ordered
killing of villagers. According to Tahir Pasha, the Ottoman frontier actors did not
encourage the Kurds, but Firman-Firma had actually provoked the Kurds by
attacking their villages. By taking precautionary measures, Fazıl Pasha had just
prevented the proliferation of this regional instability.
Regarding the relationship between Firman-Firma and Fazıl Pasha, Tahir
Pasha shared an interesting intelligence. Firman-Firma and Fazıl Pasha were friends
for many years in Baghdad. Fazıl Pasha became a commander responsible for the
272 BOA, Y. A. HUS., 518/27, 9 M 1326/ 5 February 1908. Tahir Pasha: “...Kürdistan esasen ecza-yı
Memalik-i Şahane’den olup İran’ın Kürdistan’da müdahaleye hakkı olmadığına dair bir ictima’da
kıraet olunan varaka...”
273 Wratislaw to Marling, Urumiah, July 12, 1908, Schofield IV, 337.
274 BOA, Y. A. HUS., 518/27, 9 M 1326/ 12 February 1908.
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security of the imperial eastern frontiers. Eventually, both of them wanted to
terminate all the quarrels in the frontier zone.
However, Tahir Pasha believed that Firman-Firma was planning to abuse his
friendship with Fazıl Pasha to gain some more time for collecting soldiers that would
enable him to control Savuçbulak. His relation was a cynical ploy of ill intentions
and would give more space to Firman-Firma for his divergent purposes such as
resettling in Savuçbulak, isolating the pro-Ottoman Kurds with magisterial measures,
and finally appointing Iranian officers.
Tahir Pasha criticized Iranian commissioners and he complained that they
were doing nothing for the wellbeing of the people other than accusing the Ottoman
government to the Europeans. He believed that Iran was using this method in order
to prolong the boundary delimitation. He also did not find appropriate Iranian
attitudes, claiming Savuçbulak belonged to Iran unconditionally, so they could do
whatever they wanted in their territories. On the contrary, Tahir Pasha thought that
this claim was not certainly reflecting the truth because Iran must not commit
massacres in Savuçbulak, even if they had a say in these territories. The only
evidence of sovereignty they can show in Savuçbulak was the existence of an Iranian
embassy there, but the treaty of 1869 (1286) did not mention an embassy there as a
reference point. He believed that Iran established that embassy in Savuçbulak in an
illegal manner. He stated that if Iran based their claims on the treaties (he meant the
Second Treaty of Erzurum), they had to show sensitivity to the diplomatic rule
(pacta sund servanda) first by respecting the Ottoman rights (coming from the treaty
of 1639) in Savuçbulak.275
He believed that Iranian commissioners were delaying boundary negotiations
intentionally. By this way, they were gaining some time to apply magisterial
measures to the tribes before they intimidated them. The economic value of the
Savuçbulak plain was making them more aggressive because, as Fazıl Pasha stated,
the region consisted of wide, large and fertile lands. To take the possession of these
lands under their sovereignty, Iran used magisterial measures and sophisticated
strategies for centuries yielding them to win the tribes over living in status quo. Iran
275 BOA, Y. PRK. BŞK., 78/27, 10 M 1326/ 13 February 1908, Tahir Pasha: 7 February 1908.
93
gave these tribes many privileges like high ranks, golden swords, many khalats
(robes of honor) as well as tax reduction.276
Beside Iranian measures and strategies, Tahir Pasha and Fazıl Pasha believed
that the previous Ottoman frontier officers had in the past had created present
situation. They criticized these frontier officers for their condoning of Iranian
infiltration into the region. They accused these officers with behaving irresponsibly
and never asking the tribes again.
Infact, Fazıl Pasha had collected thirty thousand tribal forces in a short time
against Firman-Firma. This showed that Ottoman claims had a ground as they
usually proclaimed that the Kurds were increasingly returning to their real protector.
He said that he did not intend to disregard the order of the sultan regarding nobody
would transgress the status quo, in contrast, he had protected the status quo by
relying on the local forces. If he let Iran to cross the status quo line, Iranian
commanders could apply a forward policy, and threaten Iraq in their next move.277
Meanwhile, Abdulhamid appreciated Tahir Pasha’s effort, and he awarded
him a medal on February 13, 1908, as he found his service on the boundary
settlement loyal and invaluable because he did not allow Iran to transgress the status
quo line even one-hand span and he did not condone Iranian interventions and
violations in the frontier zone.278
4. 2. 5. Ottoman Discourses and Savuçbulak
To describe their connection with the local people in the region, the Ottoman
frontier actors used several distinctive words in their correspondence. These words
indicate how frontier officials justified their actions and positions that transgressed
the position of the Ottoman government regarding the frontier zone. For instance,
Fazıl Pasha had to justify his action discursively when he intervened the affairs of
Savuçbulak.
Fazıl Pasha underlined the importance of Savuçbulak in terms of its high
economic value thanks to its fertile plains, its geostrategic position, and its people.
276 These materials symbolically represented the semi-autonomy of the tribes and their allegiance to
the state that rendered this semi-autonomy possible.
277 BOA, Y. Mtv., 306/64, 12 M 1326/15 February 1908, Fazıl Pasha: “…Zîrâ ‘Acemlere bu def’a
meydân virilür ise durmayub ilerü gideceklerini ve Hıtta-i ‘Irâkıyye içün büyük hazer kapuları
açılacağı ma’lûmdur. Binâ’en ‘aleyh her dürlü fidâ-kârlıkda bulunmaklığım mahzâ bu kapuları
bağlamak maksadına mebnîdir…”
278 BOA, Y. PRK. BŞK., 78/27, 10 M 1326/ 13 February 1908.
94
Savuçbulak was also important for the British interests because it was a township
adjacent to Muhammerah and Basra. Some related British reports in Shofield’s
collection of Volume IV indicates neither shah nor revolutionary groups were able to
implement their authorities completely in Savuçbulak, so Britain was indirectly
governing the region through the sheiks they agreed and threatened.
When Fazıl Pasha began to interfering Savuçbulak, Iran protested him. Tahir
Pasha replied in protest, arguing that some factors had pushed Fazıl Pasha to take
such an action. According to him, Fazıl Pasha had merely expelled Firman-Firma’s
military forces and he had saved the Muslim inhabitants of the township who
suffered from prevalent anarchy and appealed to the Caliph for help and
assistance.279 Yet, Tahir Pasha was not sure whether Savuçbulak was in the Ottoman
territory or not. On February 3, 1908, he announced that all of Kurdistan belonged to
the Ottoman Empire, including the inhabitants of the Kurdish villages scattered in
the Urumiah plain.
Besides Iranian and Russian officials, British consuls did not see Tahir Pasha’
claims something that can be justifiable. In particular, British consuls perceived
Ottoman advancement into Savuçbulak as a threat to their position in Basra. They
suspected that this recent advancement of the Ottoman military showed the Ottoman
State had plan that was prepared carefully.280 Even though they could not find any
evidence exposing the German role in the occupations, they thought that Germany
might be involved in this plan as well.
Fazıl Pasha’s involvement to Savuçbulak increased their anxiety and inclined
them to produce domino effect theories because they feared possible Muslim or tribal
conflagration in Muhammerah that was in the British sphere of influence. Their
situation in this place where they controlled through agents and sheikhs since fifty
years was about to disappear. Fazıl Pasha’s intervention corresponded to the period
when Britain sought methods to consolidate their relations with the sheikhs, so his
action obviously could undermine the British interests. Thus, Savuçbulak strained the
diplomatic relations much more than ever in this period. The British consuls thought
the expansion of Ottoman encroachments into the territories of the sheikhs, where
the British Oil Companies had concessions, could create further problems. To
dominate and control all these local variables, they would demonstrate their navy in
279 O’Conor to Grey, Constantinople, February 1, 1908, Schofield IV, 260.
280 Sir A. Nicolson to Grey, St. Petersburg, January 27, 1908, Schofield IV, 260.
95
Basra, if necessary. They stated, “… any disturbance of the status quo at
Muhammerah would affect British interests and might lead to the active intervention
of the British government, who gave the sheikhs certain assurances regarding their
territory.”281
4. 2. 5. 1. Fundamentals of Ottoman Discourse for Military Fortification and
Intervention
The Ottoman leadership did not accept Shia Iran as a member of the Muslim
community. This opposition had shaped Ottoman and Iranian bilateral relations since
the Safavid period, so this difference reverberated to their language as well. In the
first decade of twentieth century, the Ottoman officials addressed to the problems of
local people who remained out of the Ottoman imperial territory considering this
different understanding of Islam.
Maintaining the security (hâsıl-ı emniyyet), people of Islam (ahâlî-i
İslâmiyye), Ottoman tribes (aşayir-i Osmaniyye), Muslim tribes (aşayir-i Müslime),
People of the Sunni doctrine (Sunniyyül mezhep ahali), preservation of the rights of
Ottoman subjects (teb’a-i şâhânenin muhâfaza-i hukûkları) were groups of words
they used frequently to remind their religious, political and cultural connections with
the local people. In other words, they highlighted tribal interrelations with the
Ottoman government on issues of identity and security.
The frontier actors who reported all the information associated with the
frontier zone to Istanbul used some many other phrases as well. Two of them were
“ancient lands” (arâzî-i kadîme) and status quo line (Istatuko hattı). Like the
previous words, these words draw the frame of the borderlands where these local
people inhabited, and so their connection with the Ottoman State was being
solidified. Most of these groups of local people, mainly Sunni Kurdish tribes, applied
for taking refuge or political asylum (arz-ı dehalet) to Ottoman Empire. However,
these appeals encouraged the Ottoman frontier actors, and the eastern frontier policy
of the empire evolved furthermore by the time to embrace these people as official
Ottoman subjects. Fazıl Pasha became the chief actor of this changing policy. He
took the initiative to maintain the security of the people, who applied to the “Caliph”
for protection, by differing than the Porte. The Porte was opposing new occupations
and was reminding the frontier actors to preserve the status quo rules. They inquired
281 Grey to O’Conor, Foreign Office, February 25, 1908, Schofield IV, 274.
96
the reasons about Fazıl Pasha’s initiative when he occupied Muhammed Shah village
in order to make the River Çığata the boundary between the two states.
Unlike the Palace’s motivation, there was not a political space that Ottoman
government could stay behind these policies and discourse because each move of the
Ottoman Empire was also encroaching the Russian and British spheres of influence.
For this reason, the Russians demanded Fazıl Pasha to inform the Russian Embassy
in Istanbul each day and urged him not to cause a new conflict, so the Russians
began to follow the moves of Fazıl Pasha and the Ottoman troops closely around
Savuçbulak. In fact, the Ottoman government that was informed about the quarrel in
Savuçbulak later did not see territories beyond Pasve including Savuçbulak as part of
the empire, so they decided to withdraw Fazıl Pasha from Savuçbulak when they
learnt about the occupation.
On February 15, 1908, Rıza Pasha, the Minister of War, was notified by a
telegram, which was originally sent from the British Consul in Savuçbulak to the
British Embassy, that Fazıl Pasha was still in Savuçbulak, although the Porte had
decided to evacuate the Ottoman troops a week ago. Instead, Fazıl Pasha took charge
of the government customhouse and appointed an Ottoman consul to govern it. On
this border strip, he wrote letters to the Kurdish tribes in order to formalize the
government’s relations with them by taking their written consent to their obedience
to the Sultan.
Such actions of Fazıl Pasha and his refortifications around Baghdad arouse
the reaction of pro-Iranian parties. Russia and Britain feared any disturbance that
could increase national sentiments in their respective spheres of influence. Russia
sent a military commission to investigate into the roots of this anger of the people
there. The pressure Russia put on the Porte worked. The Porte underlined that Fazıl
Pasha’s presence in Savuçbulak could create problems with Russia. In fact, the
Ottoman Embassy in St. Petersburg indicated that Russia had begun to prepare a
force of twenty thousand soldiers to transport to Caucasia.282 Rıza Pasha assumed
that any close contact with Russian forces before full-delimitation of the boundary
could complicate the situation further. Thus, he ordered Fazıl Pasha to withdraw his
forces from Savuçbulak to Pasve, namely, the other site of the status quo line. Ferid
Pasha shared the same opinion with Rıza Pasha and believed that the situation could
282 BOA, Y. Mtv., 306/64, 12 M 1326, 15 February 1908.
97
get worse if Russia intervened in the conflict in Savuçbulak, so they should withdraw
the rest of the soldiers from there.283 Thus, it seems, Russian opposition restrained
the implementation of the Ottoman discourse about Savuçbulak.284
Tahir Pasha continued dealing with boundary affairs. He became the object of
Muhteshem es Saltanah’s complaints. He criticized him,
Tahir Pasha has fiddled around by claiming the frontier investigations and
negotiations were done already. Tahir Pasha has asserted that Savuçbulak and
Kurdistan belonged to the Ottoman Empire wherever he went from Urumiah
to Selmas, and its villages. He has transformed some buildings into station
houses, fortresses, and customhouses.285
The historical roots of this fact that was problematized by Muhteshem es
Sultanah could be found in the earlier stages of the boundary negotiations. As
Wratislaw observed, the boundary negotiations had been delayed for three months
after the Ottoman commissioners reached to border front. New developments and
violent incidents occurred around the boundary each day. The Ottoman Empire had
significant number of Kurdish population as well. Therefore, the postponements of
the negotiations pushed the representatives of the Ottoman State to seek what their
alternatives were in face of Iranian efforts to win over the tribes in the disputed
lands. Tahir Pasha read the delays as deliberate tactics to suspend the meetings to
gain additional time for Iranian penetration into the disputed lands.
Tahir Pasha found himself in a dilemma. On the one side, the Porte insisted
on the delimitation of the boundary. On the other side, the current impasse made the
Ottoman commissioners unwilling to continue the negotiations under prevailing
circumstances. Towards the end of March, Tahir Pasha could not resist further the
283 Ibid.
284 In the meantime, Tahir Pasha was the governor of Bitlis, but he could not preform his duty until the
boundary negotiations ended. Feyzi Bey, the mutasarrıf of Siird, was serving in his place as the
deputy governor of Bitlis. In 1908, Feyzi Bey encountered some difficulties in Bitlis due to the
activities of Armenian fedais in Mush and its vicinity. The Imperial Fourth Army complained him to
the Porte because he did not have the capacity to govern a province, but governmental weakness.
Grand Vizier Ferid Pasha questioned these accusations and asked Tahir Pasha whether they were
correct or not. Tahir Pasha investigated the problem, and responded to Ferid Pasha by stating that
Feyzi Bey did his job properly, and his governance did not indicate weaknesses. BOA, Y. A. HUS.,
518/59, 17 M 1326/ 20 February 1908. Amedi Divanı Hümayun, 111, Grand Vizier Ferid Pasha
confirms Tahir Pasha.
285 BOA, Y. A. HUS., 519/20, 7 S. 1326/ 11 March 1908: Îrân Hudûd Komisyon Re’îsi
Muhteshemü’s-Saltana (Muhteshem es Saltanah) Hazretleri’nden 2 Safer 326 (6 March 1908)
Ta’rîhlü vârid olan Telgraf-nâme Tercemesi.
98
internal pressure coming from the commission members. He tended to break the
negotiations off, and ended the work of the commission unilaterally and returned
from Urumiah to Bitlis without consulting the central government.
On March 28, 1908, Tahir Pasha informed the Palace that the negotiations
produced eight official reports, which were “signed” and submitted by two frontier
commissions. Seven of these reports were signed by the Ottoman and Iranian
commissioners at the end of the negotiations. One report remained unsigned, but that
one was signed when the Iranian delegates met with the Ottoman commission in the
village of Kuşçu three days after the Ottoman commission left Urumiah.
Tahir Pasha summarized the contents of all these reports in a single report
embodying the results of the border negotiations. In particular, he referred to the
conditions that were ignored in the first treaty (1639). He stated:
The boundary line from Kızılça in Süleymâniyye to Van had not been
mentioned by the Ottoman State and Iran in the first treaty, yet they had
accepted the “sectarian controversy” (ihtilâf-ı mezheb) for the boundary line
by conditioning Kızılbaş must not intervene. This aspect was expressed with
the term of “controversy of people” (ihtilâf-ı akvâm) in our official report.
(Iran) In their response, they did not interfere in this aspect and accepted it.
Finally, Iranian officers began to complain our commission when they could
not find any article that they can use in none of those previous agreements
apart from finding the article III of Second Erzurum Treaty that is unrelated.
If all claims for the possession of lands had to comply with previous treaties,
namely, the rule of pacta sunt sevanda, Iran must reconfirm the rights of the
Ottoman State over the Kurds, coming from the same rule. 286
Ottoman and Iranian officials delimitated the long boundary, mainly from south to
north. When the boundary line reached to Van, a new dispute emerged in the districts
bordering with Van. Before Tahir Pasha left his duty, he considered annexing the
township of Havder on March 26, 1908. He was concerned with the Kurdish tribes
286 “…Birinci Mu’âhede-nâme’de, Süleymâniyye dâhilinde bulunan Kızılça’dan Vân’a kadar hatt-ı
hudûd zikr olunmayub, yalnız Kızılbaşın ‘adem-i müdâhalesi meşrût olarak hatt-ı hudûd içün ihtilâf-ı
mezheb esâsı kabûl buyurulmuşdur. Mazbatamızda bu cihet, ihtilâf-ı akvâm ta’bîriyle ifâde
olunmuşdur. Cevâblarında, bu hakîkate ilişik itmeyüb kabûl eylediler. Ve’l-hâsıl Îrân Me’mûrları bu
işe te’allukı olmadığı meydânda olan Altmış üç Senesi Mu’âhede-nâmesi’nin Üçünci Mâddesi’nden
sonra da işlerine yarayacak mu’âhedelerde bir mâdde bulub götürmediklerinden, hey’etimizi şikâyete
başladılar. Mâdâmki tesarrufun ‘ahde tâbi’ olması meşrûtdur, cerbezelerine i’tibâr idilmeyerek
Kürdler hakkındaki talebimizin te’yîd buyurulması, menût-ı Re’y-i ‘Âlîleridir…” BOA, Y. PRK.
BŞK., 78/27, 10 M 1326/ 13 February 1908, the cipher from Tahir Pasha: 15 Mart 1324/ 28 March
1908.
99
whose leaders urgently asked for protection, so he believed that Havder was also part
of the Ottoman Empire.
Tahir Pasha was resolved to maintain the security of these people and their
protection from Iranian attacks as much as possible. He perceived this event as one
of the outcomes of the friction between the people of Islam (Sunni) and the Shiite in
the northern parts of the status quo area, because the Shiite groups had been
attacking the Sunni villages and plundering their properties. 287
The local conditions reshaped the refugee policies of the Ottoman
government. It seems the government did not have a settled and official plan for
refugees. Frontier actors confused with each wave of appeals for protection that were
causing further ambiguities and complexities. However, these appeals to come under
the protection of Ottoman State increased dramatically. Tahir Pasha or other frontier
officers did not know what kind of official procedure they would follow on behalf of
the sultan in response to these appeals.288 Tahir Pasha could accept all the appeals
personally, but the Ottoman government warned him to abstain from accepting the
applicants as Ottoman subjects because it could create further problems with Iran.
An inquiry of the Minister of War Rıza Pasha asking the Porte about the procedures
to be observed regarding the asylum seekers points to the ambiguities of the issue in
the Ottoman Empire.289 The appeals for refuge kept coming in increasing numbers
from the people who inhabited the northern shores of the Lake Urumiah.
This situation enabled the Ottoman frontier officials to consolidate two other
significant terms that one encounters in Ottoman daily politics in 1908. Dehalet is
one of them, referring to political asylum or refugee. Muavenet was another term,
connoting assistance and protection. These two terms that supported each other
interactively, the inter-tribal quarrels and inter state rivalry accelerated their
application.
Relying on their power or the benefits they hoped to get from the state, the
tribes acted freely in a flexible environment. They did not have advanced war
technologies and military equipment aside from the regular tribal cavalries. They
287 Tahir Pasha did not accept that Shite was part of people of Islam.
288 BOA, Y. Mtv., 308/148, 24 RA 1326/ 26 April 1908, Forth Army conveys Tahir Pasha’s claims
regarding Havder and people living in the region: 22 April 1908: “…‘arz-ı dehalet idecekler ve
mu’avenet taleb idecekler...”
289 BOA, Y. Mtv., 308/148, 24 RA 1326/ 26 April 1908: Minister of War, Rıza informs about the
procedure: 26 April 1908.
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depended on the support of the states to establish superiority over another tribe with
which they quarreled or to protect themselves from the tribe that enjoyed artillery
support from a rival state. This situation brought Iran and the Ottoman State to the
brink of war on several occasions. Neither the Ottomans and nor the Iranians
hesitated to back their tribal cavalry forces with artillery support, when the
conditions required the application of more offensive polices in order to protect their
respective allies in the frontier zone.
Besides these frontier difficulties, the commission members had to deal with
their own needs. Indeed, they served under exhausting climate, geographical, and
sheltering conditions. On April 9, 1908, Tahir Pasha, as the chairperson of the
commission, reported that all members of the commission needed to go to nearby
towns such as Hakkari, Van, and Başkale for three or five days in order to find
doctors, who could check their health, to buy indispensible supplies and materials,
and to wait for their next orders. Tahir Pasha himself went to Erciş from Gevar to
receive his orders.290
4. 2. 6. The States and Inter-Tribal Conflicts
Many cases can be found to illustrate the above-mentioned situation between
1905 and 1908. The Imperial Fourth Army, which was situated in Erzincan, sent a
telegram vividly elaborating the basic pulse of these interstate and inter tribal
activities.
For example, Timur Han, an Iranian Commander-in-Chief, led a joint
military consortium consisting of a group of tribal forces from Arusanlı, Celali,
Abdudi tribes from the Iranian side and three hundred Armenian fedais (guarillas).
They carried a cannon and attacked with this cannon to the Castle of Çari in Sumay.
They also bombarded the Şikak tribe with cannon fire in the same village.
290 BOA, DH. MKT., 1173/ 41, 1 CA 1325: Tahir Pasha: Needs of the Commission Members,
564/116, 9 April 1908.
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Map 4.2: This map shows the northern parts of the Ottoman-Iranian frontier and the
geographical location of Havder, Sumay, Beradost and Selmas. The Lake on the
right is Urumiah. 291
The reason behind the attack was very interesting. It reveals the complex
interrelations between the states and tribal entities in the frontier zone of northern
Urumiah, a zone that was shattered sociologically. The Fourth Army linked this joint
campaign of Iran to the intelligence reports that Iranians received earlier about
Ottoman military plans to annex Havder, Çari, Sumay, and their vicinity.
Upon receiving this intelligence, the Iranians immediately granted these
lands, including Çari, to Ismail Agha, the leader of the Abdudi tribe. The other tribes
resisted this fait accompli. The first tribe who resisted this situation was the Kardar
tribe that has lived in the same district. All these tribes recognized the Ottoman
sovereignty. In order to push its regional rival away from the district, Ismail Agha
prepared his forces to confront them with due military support of the Iranian
government. On the other hand, Ismail Hasup, another agha in Çari and the leader of
the Kardar tribe, adopted a pro-Ottoman position and asserted that the lands they
291BOA, HRT.h..453, 1 Ra 1328 / 13 March 1910, (Ölçek 1/720000, 3 Piece)
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inhabited were part of the Ottoman Empire and they would not recognize Iranian
sovereignty.
This situation pushed Iran to pursue a two-dimensional policy. On the one
hand, they wanted to win Ismail Hasup over with various promises. On the other
hand, they sent five hundred cavalry against the Kardar tribe. Ismail Hasup who was
left to choose between fighting or become an ally wanted assistance from the
Ottoman government. To prevent these kinds of oppressive policies of Iran in Çari,
the Ottoman Empire decided to annex it before Iran consolidated its power in these
lands.292
Thus, the Ottoman State and Iran became involved in a proxy war through
these two tribes who espoused different sovereignties. While the battle continued on
the tribal level, Sertib, the brother of the leader of the Şikak tribe293, and the chief of
Kardar tribe, Ismail Agha came to the Ottoman barracks in order to ask for military
support. The Imperial Fourth Army requested permission to dispatch regular
Ottoman soldiers, namely the troops in Nisah and Şecare in order to help the Şikaks
for a variety of reasons. The conditions of the Şikaks were becoming worse and their
losses were increasing. Furthermore, this situation worried the Ottoman officers and
this situation of panic reverberated on the reports of the Fourth Army that detail these
tribal disputes.
The reports explain that the Şikaks barricaded themselves in the fortress of
Çari to defend themselves against the joint Iranian forces. However, the Iranian
forces brought the fortress under cannon fire. Ottoman officers feared that the tribal
resistance could be broken soon due to destruction of the fortress with cannon fire.
They believed that the Iranian forces could then head towards the Ottoman
headquarters after they killed “the people of Islam”.
The Ottoman officers needed to consolidate their de facto refugee support
policies (muavenet) in the region. They realized that the number of the Ottoman
troops in the frontier zone was inadequate, and they considered that the Iranian
292 BOA, Y. PRK-ASK, 256/90, 17 R 1326/ 19 May 1908, Fourth Army informed the Iranians may
have learned of the occupation of Havder, Çari and Sumay by virtue of intelligence: 6 May 1908.
293 According to the report of Captain Sykes of a Journey through the Turkish Provinces, giving a list
of Kurdish Tribes, he evaluates the Şikak (Shekaks) under the category of semi-nomads of the plains
and southern hills. He states they were from Baban Kurds, and strictly orthodox Sunni Moslems. The
total number of families was 6,000. They are a notable tribe, who are called Revand by the local
Armenians, and they only spend three months in the tents, and therefore may be called sedentary.
Schofield, Vol. IV, pp. 124-130.
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forces could defeat them in a future attack. For this reason, they fortified the
Ottoman military stations in the frontier zone to dispatch the Ottoman troops against
the joint Iranian force fighting the Şikak tribes in Sumay. Brigadier-Commander of
the Ottoman Frontier Forces, Yaver Bey, was responsible for the protection of the
status quo, public security and order in the frontier zone. He suggested the
fortification of the Ottoman troops located in Beradost as well.
The Field Marshal of the Fourth Army explained the trick and the attack of
Iranian state and tribes. He believed that these Iranian attempts could facilitate their
encroachments. It could cause irremediable consequences for the defense of the
frontier zone, so he supported the deployment of additional Ottoman troops.294 This
resistance of Ottoman troops and tribal forces prompted the Iranian troops and its
tribal allies to stop and retreat.
Tahir Pasha set himself to annex Havder, but the Ottoman government was
very reluctant to allow him, although he insisted that Havder was within the status
quo. The Ottoman government believed that both Ottoman and Iranian commissions
should rapidly fix the boundary by avoiding any action that would prolong this
process of frontier delimitation.295 The government considered the frontier
delimitation more important than the protection of some pro-Ottoman tribes, and
thought that the annexation of Havder could block the negotiations for the
delimitation of the frontier zone. They wanted to postpone the decisions to be taken
on Havder’s status for a while, until after the end of the negotiations.
294 BOA, Y. PRK-ASK., 256/90, 17 R 1326/ 19 May 1908: The Ottoman Şikak Tribe was attacked by
other Iranian tribes under the control of Iranian commander: 12 May 1908.
295 BOA, Y. PRK. ASK., 256/90, 17 R 1326/ 19 May 1908: Minister of War, Rıza repeats the Port’s
opinion regarding the occupation of Havder: 19 May 1908.
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CHAPTER 5
CONCLUSION
The primary purpose of this thesis has been to investigate one of the most
controversial Ottoman boundary commissions, namely the one led by Tahir Pasha in
1907-1908, with emphasis on the international conjecture that affected the
commission’s work. This study showed how the boundary commission was formed
and how it interacted with internal and external politics. The reports of Tahir Pasha
and other officials who were in charge of maintaining the security of the frontier and
of the people around the frontier constituted one of the major sources of this study. I
compared these reports to the reports written by the British envoys. These reports
indicate that the boundary commission played a central role in the implementation of
the orders of the Palace, just as the reports of the frontier actors enabled the Palace to
deal with the conflicts emerging in the eastern peripheries.
My argument is that the Ottoman frontier commission under the headship of
Tahir Pasha was a political instrument of the sultan to implement his eastern policy.
Tahir’s conduct and the positions he took suggest that the sultan was wary of
possible Russian encroachments and hoped to create a diplomatic space against
Russia and Iran by winning the loyalty of the predominantly Sunni population of the
frontier zone.
As it has been indicated above, the peripheries of the empire became centers
of conflict late in his history. As well, it has been asserted that the Palace and the
Ottoman government diverged in their approach to and perception of the boundary
affairs. The frontier actors, especially Tahir Pasha, became a source of resistance
against Iran’s increasing military activism around the frontline. The Palace and the
majority of the frontier actors from governors to high-ranking commanders shared a
similar perspective regarding the boundary conflicts. They were willing to occupy
the disputed lands until Iran agreed to negotiate. In fact, Iran’s main goal became
clear in 1905, when it showed its desire to annex the disputed lands with British and
Russian diplomatic support. To prevent this fait accompli, the Ottomans occupied
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significant parts of the disputed lands, and even went beyond the disputed lands in
order to force Iran to negotiate.296
The status quo of the eastern boundary remained unconcluded for many years
after Russia and Britain, the so called mediating powers, and the Ottoman and
Iranian States, known as the contracting powers, specified a neutral or disputed zone
in the 1870s, after fixing other parts of the frontiers as undisputed territory. However,
these states could not reach an agreement to fix the disputed zone, because of frontier
difficulties, such as tribal movements or acts against government authority and intertribal
conflicts.
Review of the existing literature on Ottoman-Persian boundary conflicts
revealed how the states came to the point mentioned above. It showed the complex
nature of historical struggle that indicated the efforts to transform the traditional
imperial frontiers to imperial boundaries. It became clear that the written knowledge
of the states regarding the region, including that of Britain and Russia, was quite
sketchy in the 1840s. The Ottoman government thought Britain and Russia wanted to
settle the frontier disputes in favor of Iran by relying on superficial surveys, which
included thousands of discrepancies regarding the physical and demographic features
of the area. Dervish Pasha, who was aware of these mistakes, had acted unilaterally
to correct the discrepancies by his own surveys. However, he could not persuade
others effectively after he rejoined the negotiations. The issue of frontier conflicts
between the Ottoman State and Iran remained unresolved although several boundary
commissions were established to deal with the problem. The analysis of the existing
literature indicated that the Ottomans had never given up their arguments, and that
their eastern frontier polices of the Ottoman Empire did not fluctuate much. As
Melike Sarıkçıoğlu’s work (2013) shows, these polices were stable, and there was
continuity in their eastern frontier policies throughout history. Thus, it can be said
that the Ottoman occupation of the disputed lands was an aggressive expression of
296 In 1905, the Ottomans began to occupy Vezene, Lahijan, and Pasve. Abdulhamid II had already
ordered to occupy these lands in 1905 before Tahir Pasha was appointed as a chief negotiator in 1907.
Ottoman troops continued to advance close to Savuçbulak on October 1906. Besides previous
districts, Ottomans took complete possession of the districts of Dasht and Mergawer in May 1906, and
the occupation of Mergawar and Tergawar Plains were eventually completed following the Persian
expedition to punish Begzadi (or Dasht) Kurds in 1907. In August 1907, Ala-es-Sultana, Minister of
Foreign Affairs for Persia, declared, “Turks had occupied Mergawer, Tergawer, Chereek, and the
districts of Dasht and Beradost as far as Kotur, that is, up to the eastern limit of the frontier zone.”
106
these polices. Tahir Pasha’s boundary commission did not digress from these
policies.
The main and most important chapter of this thesis is Chapter 5. The other
chapters are meant to provide a theoretical framework and a historical context to
assess the problem. Chapter 3 shows that the boundary commission was formed in a
period whilst the Ottoman treasury suffered from cash shortages. The lack of
insufficient funds to pay the salaries of the boundary commissioners and additional
expenditures related to boundary delimitation efforts, including the flexing of
military muscle around the boundary pushed the Ottoman frontier actors to relying
on tribal forces for military support in order to deter similar Iranian forces. This
study has asserted that taking military action for the Palace was not simply an
expansionist or opportunist move under the prevailing circumstances. Multiple
factors such as ideological, humanitarian, and geopolitical ones played significant
roles in Abdulhamid’s spontaneous act to conquer the eastern peripheries of the
empire in contrast to the British envoys who suspected the existence of a systematic
plan prepared together with Germany.
Tahir Pasha was the governor who implemented Ottoman policies shaped
with unintended consequences in the eastern peripheries of the empire. The
appointment of Tahir Pasha as a head boundary investigator and negotiator was not a
coincidence. His political career, the social network that he cultivated for thirty-three
years by being in the same environment made him the best option available as an
official who could pursue Abdulhamid’s regional goals. Appendix A provides an
original account of the early life, political identity and career of Tahir Pasha as an
Ottoman bureaucrat. It indicates that Tahir Pasha became the chief negotiator two
years after the Ottoman occupation of the disputed lands actually began. A few
newspaper articles, several reports of the British envoys, and the Ottoman reports
portray Tahir Pasha between two opposite poles. He was perceived as an Ottoman
bureaucrat who grasped a conciliatory approach. As well, he characterized a person
who became ‘narrow-minded’ and an ‘obstinate old gentlemen’. The actions he took
in different periods shaped these different judgments, and comments. All the reports
have shown that he was a Kurdish-friendly Ottoman bureaucrat, because for him the
Kurdish people were part of the Islamic community. This did not mean that he
behaved unjustly to other ethnic and religious groups. Was Tahir Pasha merely an
implementer of the state orders? Did his emotions influence his conduct of the affairs
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of the state? How did he balance the state orders, his emotions, and local realities?
These topics need further studies. According to himself, Tahir Pasha was not a
governor-negotiator who acted independently of the Palace. He saw his actions as the
extension of Abdulhamid’s policies. Obviously, he saw Abdulhamid as the head of
the government. He became an instrument of the Palace in the eastern periphery of
the empire. Others suspected that he received secret instructions directly from the
sultan. This situation increased the dissatisfaction of the Ottoman grand vizier (the
Sublime Porte), the other commissioners in Tahir Pasha’s commission, and the
British and Russian delegates.
The dissatisfaction caused by the secret instructions of the palace made
visible the dualism, discord, and friction within the Ottoman government. Not only
did Abdulhamid send secret instructions to governors holding sensitive posts, he also
relied on his advisers to control the empire from the Yıldız Palace rather than letting
the ministers run the empire. Such practices caused discord with the leading officials
of the Sublime Porte, especially the grand vizier. In other words, diverging views
regarding the delimitation of the imperial eastern boundary indicated the existence of
disharmony in conducting the affairs of the Ottoman state in 1905-1908. In this
period, the Palace favored aggressive policies to define the imperial borders in the
east, while the Porte embraced moderate and practical policies for the same purpose.
The policies of the Palace regarding its borders were not compatible with the views
of Russia and Britain, where the Porte advocated ideas similar to those of the
Russian and British ambassadors, consuls, and representatives in general and as such
opposed to those of the sultan or his advisers.
I have elaborated on the issue of inter-governmental relations in the new
imperialist era. Historians in general hold that Britain had close relations with the
Ottoman government and the constitutionalists. Britain followed the same policy in
Iran. It established close contact with the Qajar government and the revolutionaries.
Germany maintained a close relationship with the sultan, while Russia chose the
shah as a political partner. In this respect, Russia and Britain contradicted one
another in their approaches to the internal dynamics of the Ottoman Empire and Iran,
although Britain and Russia agreed in 1907.
While these relations were at the state level, different states acted according
to ethnic and religious differences at the local level. The states used these differences
as an excuse to have a say in the affairs of the groups they backed in the region. In
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this period, the different ethnic and religious identities defined the identity of a
territory or a district on the border front. These two terms were intermixed.
Nestorians and Armenians cultivated close relationships with Russia. Britain was
interested in cultivating close relationships with these two Christian groups, as well.
Iran was interestingly in the same company. In this socio-political environment,
Abdulhamid arranged regional alliances by developing close relationships with the
region’s tribes in order to safeguard Ottoman interests against possible threats.
I have also discussed that the pleas of the local people for inclusion (dehalet)
Ottoman Empire gave legitimacy to the frontier actors’ policy to aid (muavenet)
these people in the disputed lands as an effective way to promote the prestige of the
sultan in the eyes of his Muslim subjects, particularly the Kurds.
I have additionally discussed two political riots that occurred in Bitlis and
Van. The reports indicate that these riots aimed at driving away the governors, who
had different mentalities (Ottomanism?) than that of Abdulhamid and Tahir Pasha
(Islamist Ottomanism?). I also explained how widespread scarcity of grains in 1907
due to inadequate rainfalls played a role in the escalation of public discontent. The
general characteristics of the riots, in other words, certain actions of the protestors
such as the occupation of telegraph houses by the sheikhs in the provinces showed
that the climatic conditions do not suffice to explain the reasons behind the protest.
Other factors such as customary, traditional, and religious ones played crucial roles
as well. I would argue that they simply did not want any governor, because they
thought these governors disapproved the continuity of the sheikhs’ local supremacy.
In Chapter 4, I explained the actions of the boundary commission. The
chapter aimed to inquire how effective the Ottoman governance in the periphery was,
and how the Ottomans co-opted the local people and elites while the government
faced certain grave problems. A. C. Peacock raises these questions in order to
understand the inner dynamics of the Ottoman frontiers. I sought answers to similar
questions in my effort to understand the situation in the eastern peripheries of the
empire. Thus, this thesis sheds some light on the interactions of the Ottomans in the
late period with their neighbor Iran, and what motives they had and which methods
they used to pursue their goals. The chapter also presented examples from the region
that showed the relations of the people of the frontier (tribes) with the Ottoman
garrisons and administration. I argued that pro-Ottoman Kurds saw the Ottoman
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garrison as safe places and asked for military support against Iran, and that religious
and political distinctions influenced neighborly relationships in the periphery.
The taxation systems of these two neighboring states need to be further
studied in order to illustrate the economic activities and concerns of the people at the
frontier, as well as their interactions with one another, because economic motives as
well caused conflicts in the region. Evidence shows that the Kurds who constituted a
great part of the population on the Ottoman side of the frontier were not against the
rule of the sultan. They had a strong sense of ‘belonging’ so long as the
government’s approach to local issues remained flexible. As British reports show,
most of the tribes identified themselves as Sunni and Kurdish. They were engaged in
pastoral activities primarily. This thesis has shown that the Palace was capable of
exerting influence on these people, who in general considered the authority of the
Sublime Porte legitimate.
I have examined how Tahir Pasha prepared to provide a background for the
to his arguments in the boundary negotiations. He examined the imperial edicts, the
Porte’s reports, ancient treaties, Dervish Pasha’s explanatory documents, and maps.
This examination proved fertile in consolidating the Ottoman arguments during the
negotiations. However, the British envoys viewed these evaluated Ottoman
arguments as futile as the earlier arguments put forward in the past.
I discussed how the boundary negotiations progressed, and what kind of
methods the Ottomans followed before and during the negotiations. One can argue
that Tahir Pasha’s approach was civilizational, in that historical phenomena were
compatible with all treaties. He widely used the argument that religious and national
distinctions should be taken into consideration in designating the frontier during the
boundary negotiations. Thus, he asserted that all the Kurds were subjects of the
empire. According to him, they would not desire to stay under Iranian rule, when
Iran relieved them of the force it used against the tribes. As Iranians knew this, they
insisted on the precondition of the withdrawal of the Ottoman troops from the
disputed lands to resume the boundary negotiations. Towards the end of the
negotiations, the Porte advocated similar views subtly. The debates that dominated
the negotiations indicated that the legitimacy of the Ottoman rule and claims in the
region theoretically relied on “ancient” or old treaties. The practical manifestation of
his position was the aggressive policies that the Palace pursued. However, as I
mentioned above, the Porte did not develop a practical policy (apart from accepting
110
Iran’s arguments) though the Porte shared the theoretical vision that informed the
Palace. They did not know how they would achieve their goals if they withdraw the
Ottoman military force from the disputed lands, a space where the interests of the
Great Powers converged and competed.
111
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112
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113
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APPENDICES
A. TAHIR PASHA’S CAREER LINE
The first phase of Tahir Pasha’s bureaucratic career comprises of twelve
years until he was discharged from the chief secretaryship of Salonika. The second
phase of his career embraced a longer period, more than two-thirds of his career,
which started with his tenure as a chief secretary in Bitlis, on January 15, 1880. This
appointment became a turning point in his life and bureaucratic career. He carved out
a mediating role for himself in the eastern provinces at the margins of the empire.
Despite his disadvantages for being ignorant the regional dynamics at first, the time
he spent in the eastern provinces made Tahir Pasha an expert of the region, as based
on the sources. His biographic records did not give much detail that would shed light
on the reasons behind his appointment from Salonika to Bitlis, which on the surface
looks as though he was exiled. At this point, it is important to ask why he was
suitable for a position in Bitlis, while he was not for a similar administrative position
in Salonika. His biographical record indicates two reasons for his dismissal from
Salonika. His status did not match to his ability to govern (hâl ü iktidâr) although his
handling of records and correspondence (mu'âmelât-ı tahrîriyyesi) was good.297
There must have emerged a controversy between him and other officials in Salonika.
Living in Bitlis for a person who did not have any connection in the area was
a big challenge, so he needed an adaptation process in a different social milieu that
was very different than those he experienced in the western parts of the Ottoman
Empire. He knew the local language of his own community in the west, apart from
Iranian and Arabic; he did not know the local languages of the eastern peripheries
such as Armenian and Kurdish. In such an alien community at first, most probably,
his life was affected by a series of special differences stemming from divergent
socio-economic, communal and environmental factors, but it can be said that his
Islamic identity eased the adaptation process. He established good networks with
sheiks and prominent figures of the region that enable him to communicate easily
with the local people, who were very religious. The best example of this can be
observed in his good relations with a Modernist-Kurdish religious figure,
Bediüzzaman Said-i Nursî298, during his governorship of Van. Thus, Tahir Pasha’s
influence in the eastern parts of the empire can be understood through the scope of
his social contacts.299
The First Phase: (1868-1880)
Tahir Pasha was born in Shkodra, one of the oldest towns in northwestern
Albania, in 1849. He was born into a world where the majority of the population
consisted of Albanian-Muslims. There were also people whose ethnic and religious
backgrounds differed. This cosmopolitan nature of Albania shaped young Tahir in
the same way. He learnt several local languages. In 1880, Izzet Pasha, Governor of
297BOA, DH. SAİD. 138.
298 Mehmed Paksu, ed., Son Şahitler Bediüzzaman Said Nursi’yi Anlatıyor: Necmeddin Şahiner, vol. 1
(İstanbul: Yeni Asya Yayınları, 1993), 41–42.
299 BOA, DH. SYS. 43/3, 1330 R 08, 19. 03. 1912. “Nevahi-i cedide işlerinde iyi hizmetlerinden
dolayı Tahir Paşa komisyonu vasıtasıyla maaş ve rütbe ile taltif edilen Mamiş aşireti Reisi Hamza,
Zerzava Aşireti Reisi Şinolu Rıza Han, Zikvar Nahiyesi Kurt ve Zerza rüesası Mustafa Han, Harput ve
Yarattı nahiyesi müdürü Kerim bin Aziz ve saire.”
121
Shkodra, remarked that Tahir had both reading and writing ability of Serbo-Croatian
in addition to Turkish. He indicated that Tahir could fluently speak Turkish, Bosnian,
and Albanian.300
Relating to years when Albanian nationalism accelerated, Tahir Pasha’s
political position is unknown, but his silence in the sources and lack of evidence
regarding his political stance indicates he advocated remaining under Ottoman rule.
He preferred identifying himself as an Ottoman-Muslim bureaucrat. Not only
Ottoman bureaucrats but also foreign officials and their press specifically knew him
as the governor of Van and Bitlis, although he served in many different provinces as
a governor.
Table 3: This table shows tenures of Tahir Pasha’s governerships in various
provinces.
Dates From To
Places Hicri/Rumi Miladi Hicri/Rumi Miladi
Musul 15 Za.1306 13 July 1889 8 Za. 1308 15 June 1891
Van 9 L. 1315 3 March 1898 2 Za. 1324 18 Dec. 1906
Trabzon 28 R. 1325 10 June 1907 19 C. 1325 30 July 1907
Bitlis 19 C. 1325 30 July 1907 30 B. 1326 28 August 1908
Erzurum 30 B. 1326 28 August 1908 1 Ca. 1327 21 May 1909
Bitlis 18 M. 1328 30 January 1910 9 Za. 1330 11 October 1912
Musul 19 B. 1328 27 July 1910 9 Za. 1330 20 October 1912
Tahir Pasha was one of six sons of Haji Ali Bey Efendi, a local ruler in
Podgarica, a district of Montenegro. Tahir married twice. From his first wife, he had
a boy, Cevdet, and two girls, Fikriye and Naima. Cevdet spent all his professional
life as a provincial administrator around Van until he became the governor of Van at
the end. He was imprisoned on the island of Malta during the First World War, but
he escaped later.301 From his second wife, he had Mün’ime, Münibe, Mükrime,
Necdet, Fikret, Hikmet, Fahrünnisa and Mihrinnisa. One of his daughters, Mün’ime
married to Fahreddin Altay Pasha, a commander in the war of independence.302
His primary school education was a religious one. In the Ottoman education
system, the students used to start their primary school at the age of five or six in
order to learn introductory religious subjects and other basic knowledge. In these
schools, students used to learn the Holy Quran, Arabic, Ottoman Turkish, grammar
and syntax, writing/calligraphy, Islamic behavior (ilm-i hal), history of religions,
ethics, and arithmetic.303 After he completed all these courses, he continued his
education in a madrasa. This was an educational institution where relatively
advanced religious sciences (tafsir, hadith, kelam, fiqh, and aqaid), were taught in
addition to introduction to medicine and engineering.304 Young Tahir learnt Arabic
very well, and reached on advanced level in Persian. However, his educational
lineage was not indicating he would be a person who would deal with governance
300 BOA, DH. SAİD. 138.
301 Paksu, Son Şahitler Bediüzzaman Said Nursi’yi Anlatıyor: Necmeddin Şahiner, 1:44.
302 Ibid., 1:40.
303 Mefail Hızlı, "Osmanlılarda İlköğretimin Tarihi," Türkiye Araştırmaları Literatür Dergisi 6, no. 12
(2008). pp. 85-138.
304 Interview (Mehmet İpşirli), "Mehmet İpşirli Ile Medreseler Ve Ulema Üzerine," ibid. p. 457.
122
and administration because he followed on educational trajectory that normally
produced ulema (religious scholars and functionaries).
This educational background shaped Tahir Pasha and his achievements
through his bureaucratic carrier always indicated his background. It can be seen that
he attained positions in various secretariats of different provinces during his earlier
career. In detail, at the beginning of his career, on April 24, 1868, Tahir entered the
secretarial office of Podgorica (Podgoriçe Kazası Tahrirat Odası) for an on-the-job
training into civil service (mülazemet) when he was twenty years old. Five months
later, he was appointed as the secretary of the Koç Sub-district (Koç Nahiyesi Katibi)
with a wage of two hundred and fifty qurushes. In 1872, he was appointed as the
secretary of the Podgorica Land Registry (Podgoriçe Tapu Kitabeti) with an
additional income of twenty to forty qurushes. On March 1, 1873, his mission in the
office changed, and he was appointed as the Second Counterpart of Secretariat
(Tahrirat Kalemi Suver-i Sanisi) with a salary of three hundred and fifty qurushes.
During the time when Tahir Pasha acquired experience in the affairs of the
state, the state itself was also changing. By the dethronement of Sultan Murad V in
August of 1876, Abdulhamid became the thirty-fourth sultan of the empire. The
declaration of the first constitution in 1876 started a new era in the history of the
Ottoman Empire until the outbreak of the Ottoman Russian War in 1877, when the
constitution was suspended Abdulhamid established an authoritarian regime. Tahir
lived the most successful years of his career during the reign of Abdulhamid until the
Young Turk movement dethroned Abdulhamid in April of 1909. Afterward, his
loyalty was frequently questioned. The CUP suspected him as a potential threat to
their regime. The CUP-dominated cabinets changed his place of duty often. They had
to keep him within the bureaucracy because Young Turks had a few well-trained and
experienced bureaucrats in their ranks in the first years of their government. In 1912,
he was retired due to his age, and went to Istanbul to seek treatment for his chronic
thyroid disease, but he died in November 1913.305
The documents of hand indicate that Tahir Pasha was seen as an assiduous
bureaucrat throughout his career in the bureaucracy. He began to work as the chief
secretary of the Shkodra Province (Mektubi Odası) in 1877. The declaration of the
Ottoman constitution called for the formation of a nominated senate (Heyet-i Ayan),
and the organization of an elected chamber of deputies (Heyet-i Mebusan).306 Tahir
was temporarily appointed to the Senate as a clerk with a monthly salary of five
hundred qurushes.307
Following his temporary service, Tahir was transferred back to Shkodra
Province as chief secretary (İşkodra Vilayeti Mektupçuluğu) with a salary of three
thousand qurushes, on October 27, 1878. Thus, he became one of the leading
officials of the province, because the chief secretary of a province undertook
significant tasks as a member of the governor’s main staff and carried out the
province’s correspondence, filing, and the publication of a yearbook (Salname).308
Two years later, Tahir was promoted to the rank of third degree (rütbe-i sâlise) on
March 13, 1880, due to his seniority and good services in the civil service.
305 Paksu, Son Şahitler Bediüzzaman Said Nursi’yi Anlatıyor: Necmeddin Şahiner, 1:40.
306 Hasan Kayali, "Elections and the Electoral Process in the Ottoman Empire, 1876-1919,"
International Journal of Middle East Studies 27, no. 3 (1995). p. 266.
307 BOA, DH. SAİD. 138.
308 Abdulhamit Kırmızı, Abdulhamid’in Valileri: Osmanlı Vilayet İdaresi 1895-1908 (İstanbul:
Klasik, 2008), 127.
123
The Ottoman bureaucracy tended to be quite volatile; officials moved from
one post to another within a few years. It was possible to see sharp breaks or
fluctuations within one’s career. Tahir Pasha was one of those who had a fluctuating
career path. He had to leave his official post while being transferred and appointed to
another post. In one instance, he was not assigned to a post related to his career and
commensurate with his seniority, so he resigned. At this time, Izzet Pasha was the
governor of Shkodra. He filed a report referring to the general qualities of Tahir as a
chief secretary, on November 11, 1880:
Aforementioned (Tahir) is capable of fulfilling his civil service duties
promptly and competently and capable of settling even arduous disputes
between litigious parties thanks to his intuitive understanding of the
time and the necessities of the state and the place. He is a punctual
young bureaucrat who goes to his job regularly. He has the capacity to
fulfill the requirements of his praised title. He has a praiseworthy
personality, which deserves great respect.309
New financial difficulties emerged following the Ottoman-Russian War of
1877-1878. The Ottoman government was struggling to balance its budget, and
trying to reduce or cut the expenses that were not vital. One outcome of this policy
became the promulgation of the Regulation for Salary Adjustment (Tensîk-i Ma’âşât
Karârnâmesi). According to this Regulation, the salaries of many officials were
reduced. By this act, which went into force on March 14, 1880, Tahir Pasha’s salary
was also reduced to two thousand and five hundred qurushes.310 On August 4, 1880,
the Ministry of War stated that Tahir Pasha could not continue in the same post
because the post was not compatible with his qualifications even though he had been
in a similar position before. Thereupon, Tahir Pasha was transferred to the position
of chief secretary in Salonika (Selânîk Mektûbçuluğu) with a raise of five hundred
qurushes, which increased his salary to three thousand qurushes.311 This increase of
his salaries represented that he was gradually promoted due to his growing
knowledge of and experience in state affairs. Eventually, he moved from Shkodra to
Salonika, where he served about four months, beginning on August 10, 1880.
However, when he was transferred to the chief secretaryship of the Bitlis Province
(Bitlis Vilâyeti Mektûbçuluğu) on April 15, 1880, his salary dramatically decreased
to two thousand and five hundred qurushes.
The Second Phase: (1880-1912)
His appointment to Bitlis marked the beginning of the thirty-three years of his
career that he spent in the eastern provinces. This appointment was clearly a turning
point in his life. Bitlis consisted of four sub-districts: Bitlis, Mush, Siird and Genç.
The weather conditions in the region were terrestrial in general. The winters were
very severe and extended to six months. These harsh climatic conditions led to the
closing of roads for a long time. Besides, the mountainous terrain negatively
restricted the transportation and shipping in the region. The province was surrounded
with highlands in the east and bordered on the lake Van, Erzurum, Diyarbakır, and
309 BOA, DH. SAİD. 138.
310 Ibid.
311 Ibid.
124
Musul in the west.312 Demographically, Bitlis maintained a significant number of
Muslim populations together with Armenians, Assyrians, and Yezidis in low number
in the twentieth century.313
After four years in Bitlis, Tahir was promoted to the Second Class (Sâniye
Sınıfı) of his third rank on January 15, 1884. 314 His rise within the state bureaucracy
fluctuated, but continued, and he was promoted to Sınıf-ı Mütemâyizîn, a civil rank
equivalent to army colonel, on January 17, 1885.
Within five years of his tenure in Bitlis, Tahir seems to have adapted to the
social milieu of Bitlis. He established a good network of neighborhood and
cultivated close relations with some of the notables and officials in the province.
However, cultivation of this type of relations by a high-ranking official could create
problems, and it was against Ottoman state traditions and rules. To establish this kind
of networks had been prohibited to prevent the emergence of oppositions and
criticisms by other prominent figures in the province. In this case, we have an
example that some prominent officials complained about Tahir Pasha and his
brother, the governor of the Mûş Sancak (Mûş Mutasarrıfı), because they were
establishing close relations with local people.
The governor of Bitlis decided to send Tahir to another post, which equaled
to his current post, on January 29, 1887. The sources say that the allegations were
proven at the end of an investigation, but they are silent about the kind of relations he
established with local notables. He was allowed to stay in Bitlis until December 4,
1887, when he was appointed as the governor of Suleymaniye (Suleymaniye
Mustasarrıfı) with a salary of seven thousand and five hundred qurushes.315 During
his tenure in Suleymaniye, Tahir Pasha sent a telegraph to Istanbul, to report one of
his good deeds that helped maintain public security. He reported that a bandit of
Hemvend, Ahmed Turşi, was finally killed on March 24, 1889.316 Within a short
time, he was appointed to the deputy governorship of Musul (Musul Vilayeti Vali
Vekaleti) on May 28, 1888 with a salary of fifteen thousand qurushes. Evidently, he
was appointed as the governor of Musul on July 13, 1889.317 He was climbing up to
high ranks and began to take medals for different reasons from not only his own state
but also from France and Iran. However, he became involved in rivalries among
local notables, therefore, attracted complaints frequently.
Several people accused Tahir Pasha during his governorship of Musul. An
investigation was ordered to clarify these allegations. The most significant figure
who complained about him within the bureaucratic structure was Abdülkâdir Pasha,
the governor of Mamurat ül-‘Aziz. The investigator first looked into the reliability of
his reports about Tahir Pasha as Abdülkâdir Pasha severely criticized him on few
points and saw him as a corrupt person participating in corruptive activities. One of
the assertions was more striking than the others. Abdülkâdir asserted that Tahir had
taken money from the fund allocated for orphans and widows, and had depleted it.
Another accusation was that Tahir Pasha released the chiefs of Shimr (Şümür), who
had been arrested during the time of the late-former governor Rashid Pasha, in return
for fourteen Arabian horses. The third accusation was based on that he decreased the
salaries of officers for a few years because the Finance Office (Mâl Sandığı) was
312 Necdet Sakaoğlu, 20. Yüzyıl Başında Osmanlı Coğrafyası (İstanbul: Deniz Bank, 2007), 229.
313Ibid., 230.
314 BOA, DH. SAİD. 138.
315 Ibid.
316 BOA, Y. MTV. 38 / 21, 1306 B 22, 24. 03.1889.
317 BOA, İ. DH. 1143 / 89184, 1306 ZA 15, 13. 07. 1889.
125
short of funds. A personal voucher for five hundred-odd thousand qurushes was
entered in the journal for income and expenditures during the time of Tahir Pasha. At
the end of investigation, he was acquitted of all charges. However, accusations
suggest that Tahir Pasha used available resources to manage local conflicts and
politics in the border provinces, where he served. The case of Arabian horses
illustrates this point.
By basing their arguments on the records of finance office, the investigators
reported that there was not any evidence that indicated that Tahir Pasha was actually
guilty of embezzlement of money from the revenue of province. According to
investigators, these claims were dubious and unfair because Tahir had actually
borrowed the sum in question. As for the charges related to the freeing of the Shimr
(Şümür) chiefs, the inspectors decided that the chiefs had been released due to the
fact that the reason for the arresting was unclear. Besides, they found out that the
chiefs had assisted the Ottoman troops who tried to eliminate the looting activities on
the border, and that the officials took this service into account. When the army
confirmed all these good services of the Shimr chiefs, Tahir was acquitted of these
allegations as well. Indeed, Tahir restored the image of the sultan in the eyes of the
chiefs. Receiving gifts like Arabian horses from the Shimr chiefs, who were in
government service, was the order of the Sublime Porte (Bâb-ı Âlî) and sending
valuable gifts in return was necessary to honor the prevailing custom gift exchange
between the state and the chiefs.
The late Abdulkadir Pasha had reported from Musul that the salaries of the
regular and reserve army officers and of widows and orphans were paid against a
loan. The financial distress of recent years [and the consequent delay of the payment
of salaries] obliged the local officials to borrow [at a discount] against their salaries
[in arrears]. Thus, under Tahir Pasha’s administration, promissory notes worth 500,
000 qurushes were entered into the general daybook [yevmiyye defteri], although no
entry was made in the local Treasury [accounts] for the corresponding years. It
would be unfair to leave Tahir Pasha under suspicion for this reason, even if we
assume these promissory notes represented discounted salaries. When Tahir Pasha
was asked to provide his view on this charge, he reminded his telegram to the Grand
Vizierate on 5 April 1306, where he had explained how the contractors [who offered
cash at a discount against salaries in arrears] would accept only the promissory notes
made to their names and refuses others. Consequently, he had made other
arrangements, vouching for the payment of the salaries of officials and pensioners. In
fact if he had any illicit intentions, he would not have accepted to buy back at a fifty
percent discount the promissory notes in the hands of contractors and then devoted
the revenue of about 3, 000 gold liras that eventually accrued to the local Treasury
due to this transaction to good deeds [in the province].318
On September 25, 1892, the inspectors reported that the accusations were
insubstantial, and Tahir was innocent. The Porte decided that there was no need for a
new investigation because it made no sense to pursue the accusations whether related
to fraud or the matter of Arabian horses.319
Tahir was appointed the deputy governor of Genç, a sub township of Bitlis
(Genc Sancağı Mutasarraflığı Vekaleti). Tahir occupied this position twice. First, he
served there from October 26, 1881, to June 10, 1883, and second, from August 18,
1885, to November 12, 1885, with a salary of 1, 175 qurushes. Bitlis provincial
government ratified the investigation results by noting that Tahir Pasha touched
318 BOA, DH. SAİD. 138.
319 BOA, DH. SAİD. 138 / 139.
126
neither the state’s property nor the people’s money. Similarly, the Local Council of
Administration of Bitlis reported that Tahir Pasha improved public order in Bitlis and
managed very well the auctioning of the tithe (a tax on crops).320
On February 22, 1898, he was appointed as the governor of Van. This
governorship continued until 1906. 321 A week after he became the governor of Van,
he was granted a Mecidi badge of the first order (Birinci rütbe’den Mecîdî nişân-ı zîşânı).
322 However, his medical problems such as thyroid disease began to relapse
quite often towards the end of 1906. Accordingly, the cabinet (Meclis-i Mahsûs-i
Vükelâ) decided that the governmental gaps that occurred in the absence of Tahir
Pasha could not be tolerated any longer because the provincial government of Van
was very significant. Thus, they decided to appoint another person as a governor
instead of Tahir Pasha and to appoint him to another governorship, suitable to his
title after he recovered. Abdulhamid (İrâde-i Seniyye-i Hazret-i Hilâfet-penâhî)
unwillingly approved this decision because Tahir Pasha remained completely loyal to
him, and appointed another official instead on December 18, 1906.
After recovering from illness, he was transferred to the governorship of
Trabzon for a short time from June 10, 1907,323 to July 30, 1907.324 Before long, he
was re-called to Bitlis in order to investigate a local conflict. Then, he was
additionally appointed as the Head of the Investigation Committee for the Iran
Border (Îran Hudûdu Hey’et-i Tahkîkıyyesi Riyâseti) by the approval of both
Abdulhamid and the Grand Vizier on September 2, 1907.325 This appointment
initiated a new era that changed his life significantly while affecting as well the lives
of people who lived on the borderlands between the Ottoman and Qajar empires.
There was a perception among the people who lived in the eastern provinces that all
the officials of the empire represented the Sultan, so the officials had to behave
according to the necessities of this link between the sultan and his subjects.
Abdulhamid chose Tahir for the position indicated deliberately not randomly. This is
evident from the marginal note the sultan added to Tahir’s appointment sheet.326 One
can argue that Tahir’s local knowledge, ability and contributions to settle local
disputes and mose between the rulers and the ruled, as demonstrated by his earlier
performance in Bitlis and Van made him a prominent figure. His background
endeared him to the majority of the population in the eastern provinces.
His service during the border defining process, which was highly appreciated
not only by Abdulhamid but also many Ottoman officials, raised him to the rank of
vizier (Rütbe-i Sâmiyye-i Vezâret) on February 13, 1908, although there were some
participants of the negotiations who frequently criticized him for his expansionist
tendencies. Tahir Pasha continued to enjoy the central government’s confidence so
long as Abdulhamid stayed on the throne. He became the sultan’s eye at the eastern
margins of the empire in a critical time of period. Some other officials and
commissioners anticipated this relationship between Abdulhamid and Tahir Pasha.
For instance, Danyal Pasha implied to Wratislaw that Tahir Pasha pursued a secret
agenda that was instructed directly from the Palace, and about which he did not talk
320 BOA, DH. SAİD. 139.
321 BOA. BEO. 1085 / 81329, 1315 L 09, 22. 02. 1889.
322 BOA, DH. SAİD. 139.
323 BOA, İ. DH. 1455 / 41, 1325 R 28, 10. 06. 1907.
324 BOA, İ. DH. 1457 / 22, 1325 C 19, 30. 07. 1907.
325 BOA, DH. SAİD. 139.
326 Ibid.
127
even to other commissioners.327 For that reason, he was one of the people who were
highly affected by the dethronement of Abdulhamid, because CUP saw him as one of
the loyal servants of the sultan. Actually, this perception of CUP initiated a new era
for all officials who advocated the policies of Abdulhamid. Many of them were sent
to exile and suppressed. For similar reasons, Tahir Pasha was frequently removed
from his post, but the main reason was the skepticism of the CUP leadership about
the employees of the old regime whom they thought were favoring the reign of
Abdulhamid.
Nevertheless, Tahir was recalled to duty several times, as the CUP did not
have very many qualified and experienced administrators until they retired him due
to his age and illnesses. Thus, we can see the 1908 movement as another turning
point in his life, for reasons indicated above and because all the bureaucrats’ life
underwent to experience fundamental changes and transformations after 1908. The
border commission that he led did not continue long after 1908. After the
commission was dissolved, Tahir Pasha was transferred to the governorship of
Erzurum with a salary of twenty one thousand and five hundred qurushes on August
27, 1908. However, he was paid a salary of twenty thousand qurushes plus a sum of
two thousand qurushes earmarked for special expenses. They continued decreasing
his salary until it became seventeen thousand qurushes without additional funds in
1909. These constant salary decreases show that CUP was willing to discard such an
experienced bureaucrat.
He had to leave the governorship of Erzurum due to the decision of the
Commission of Ordinances and Regulation under Domestic Affairs (Dâhiliyye
Tensîk Komisyonu). It declared he did not have the capacity and stamina to
administer the province. Finally, he was asked to retire on September 2, 1909 based
on the eleventh article of the commission.328 There were also some other reasons
why Tahir Pasha was removed from his post, including his reputation for having
sympathies towards the reign of Abdulhamid II.
CUP announced an Imperial rescript that linked Tahir Pasha with reactionary
groups and dismissed him accordingly as they thought Tahir Pasha maintained
contact with the counteractions against CUP in Erzurum. They blamed him for
supporting and provoking those people in Erzurum who wanted to revive the reign of
Abdulhamid. When CUP noticed this side of Tahir Pasha, they immediately
discharged him, and appointed another official in his place, on May 30, 1910.329 As
Gerard Lowther, the British ambassador in Istanbul, expressed in his annual report
about Turkey in 1908, “the news of the Constitution was generally received in the
Asiatic provinces with rejoicing, although in some cases employees of the old regime
were roughly handled.”330 His analysis regarding how the people in the eastern
provinces perceived the constitution is particularly striking. For instance, “[In] Van,
Diyarbakir, and Musul, there was inability on the part of the population to
accommodate themselves to the new idea of a common country, based on the
principles of justice, fraternity, and equality.”331 The Kurds, who had more than
those principles under the reign of Abdulhamid II, did not have a positive look on the
proclamations of CUP. Under these circumstances, CUP reappointed Tahir Pasha to
327 Lowther, General Report on Turkey for the Year 1908, 15.
328 BOA, DH. SAİD. 139.
329 Ibid.
330 Lowther, General Report on Turkey for the Year 1908, 5.
331 Ibid.
128
Bitlis with a salary of twelve thousand and five hundred qurushes, on February 28,
1910332.
CUP’s act was compatible with the statements of the Ottoman officers who
paid attention to the need to entrust Bitlis to a person who had the capacity to govern
a province where fragile interrelations existed. Actually, the fragility came from the
failure of the new governors to appreciate the conservative nature of Bitlis. For that
reason, the bureaucracy needed an officer who had deep knowledge of the local
people as well as experience about handling the fragility of the region.333
In general, the salaries of the Ottoman officials corresponded to the
qualifications and seniority of the official for the post to which he was appointed.
The salaries could roughly change according to these parameters or, perhaps, salary
changes occurred according to the hierarchy of the provincial administration system
in general. The decrease in salaries generally indicated that an official, whether high
ranking or not, had constantly lost his importance for the bureaucracy. This pattern
became more apparent when an official was denied additional duties that would
bring extra income. In this case, Tahir Pasha was appointed to Musul as a governor
from Bitlis with the same salary on July 14, 1910. The comparison of his salaries
with the previous years indicates that there was a dramatic decrease in his payment
as his salary decreased from twenty thousand to ten thousand qurushes.
The fluctuations in Tahir Pasha’s career continued in these years. CUP’s
intervention in politics was quite normative. They expected to create a rapid change
in order to break away from practices of the reign of Abdulhamid, but they had to
lean on the legacy of the old regime. Tahir Pasha was victim of this transition period
because CUP treated him unjustly. Neither his personality nor the environment in
which he worked appears to have been well prepared for such a grand change in
state-society relations. They suspected him again, of establishing close relations with
those groups who were trying to revive the reign of Abdulhamid, and considered this
link as a significant weakness for his governmental capacity.334 However, it was
impossible, for a senior bureaucrat, who was aged and spent his entire career in the
eastern provinces under Abdulhamid, simply to forget the influences of his reign and
to adapt to a new civil officialdom, which CUP had just begun to shape. The salary
cuts became prevalent throughout the empire for the sake of balancing the budget. In
fact, they did not pay Tahir Pasha’s pension. For this reason, he wrote a petition
demanding his pension, as he did not have any other source of income. Instead of
allowing Tahir Pasha a pension, the Ministry of Internal Affairs asked whether Tahir
Pasha could work for a ministry or not. In a note dating December 1, 1912, they
simply decided that Tahir Pasha could actually work, when he was sixty-three years
old and suffered from thyroid disease in 1912.335
332 BOA, DH. SAİD. 139. “…mahalliyyeye vâkıf ve tecrübe-kâr bir zâta tevdî’i hâlen ve maslahaten
muktezâ bulunduğuna ve müşârun ileyh evvelce orada ve vilâyet-i mütecâvirede müddet-i medîde
valilikle bulunarak ahvâl ü ihtiyâcât-ı mahalliye hakkında vukuf-ı ma’lûmât-ı tâmmeyi hâ’iz olduğuna
binâ’en…”
333 Ibid.
334 Ibid.
335 Ibid.
129
B. BIOGRAPHICAL REGISTER OF TAHIR PASHA
BOA, DH. SAİD. 138-139.
130
131
C. SOME EXAMPLES FROM TAHIR PASHA’S REPORTS
BOA, Y. PRK. BŞK, 78/27, 10 M 1326.
132
BOA, Y. PRK. BŞK, 78/27, 10 M 1326.
133
BOA, Y. A. HUS, 518/27, 9 M 1326.
134
BOA, Y. A. HUS, 518/27, 9 M 1326.
135
BOA, Y. A. HUS, 518/59, 17 M 1326.
136
D. MEMORANDUMS EXCHAGED BETWEEN THE COMMISSION OF
TAHIR PASHA AND THE DELEGATES OF OTHER STATES
D/1: Schofield IV, pp. 245-246.
137
138
D/2: Schofield IV, pp. 289-290.
139
140
D/3: Schofield IV, pp. 293-295.
141
142
D/4: Schofield IV, pp. 299-300.
143
D/5: Schofield IV, pp. 307-308.
144
145
D/6: Schofield IV, pp. 317-318.
146
D/7: Schofield IV, pp. 328-330.
147
148
149
E. BRITISH TRANLSATION OF SECOND TREATY OF ERZURUM
150
151
152
F. THE JOINT MAP OF RUSSIA AND BRITAIN
Reduced from the Anglo-Russian “Identic Map” completed in 1869 (communicated to the
Ottoman Government in 1869, and to the Iranian Government in 1870).
G. THE MAP OF OTTOMAN-IRANIAN FRONTIER IN 1910
153
154
H. REPRODUCTION OF THE MAP OF OTTOMAN-IRANIAN FRONTIER IN 1910
Sarıkçıoğlu, Melike, Osmanlı İran Hudud Sorunları (1847-1913), Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu,
2013, p. 233.
155
I. THE PICTURES OF TAHIR PASHA AND WRATISLAW
Tahir Pasha
156
Mr A. C. Wratislaw336
A Consul-General in the Levant Consular Service.
He served at Basra as Consul and later at Tabriz as Consul-General.
He was observer of the British interests during the Boundary Negotiations
336 G. E. Hubbard, From the Gulf to Ararat: An Expedition through Mesopotamia and Kurdistan, New York: E. P.
Dulton & Company, 1917. (The picture of Mr A. C. Wratislaw), pp. 16-17.
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