2.1.
Sivilizasyon
According to Tuncer Baykara, the word ―medeniyet‖ as the translation of the
French word civilisation possibly appeared for the first time in the
Turkish language in 1834 when it was used by Mustafa
Reşid Pasha, himself
being praised later by Şinasi as a ―messenger
of civilization‖ (medeniyet resulü).361 For Mustafa Reşid Pasha, civilization meant the
―upbringing of the population and the execution of orders‖ (terbiye-i nas ve icra-i nizamat). Sadık
Rifat Pasha also mentioned ―the present civilization of Europe, i.e., the
principles of familiarity and culture‖ (Avrupa‟nın
şimdiki sivilizasyonu yani usul-i me‟nusiyet ve medeniyeti‖), also equating
Europe and ―medeniyet‖. It is also
very illuminating to check the translation of the French word civilisation into Ottoman Turkish in the
dictionaries of the time. Artin Hindoglu in his Dictionnaire Français-Turc in 1831 translated civilisation as ―edeb, erkan
öğrenme‖ (cultivation, learning of manners) and civilité as ―edeb, erkan,
çelebilik‖ (cultivation, refinement). The Vocabulaire Français- Turc of Bianchi
published in Paris
in 1831 translated civilisation as ―insaniyet‖ (humanity). In short, the word civilisation in Turkish implied good manners and elegance on the
eve of the Tanzimat. By the 1870s, the word had attained a more political and
ideological connotation besides its more personalized aspects. Redhouse, in his
Lexicon in 1877, translated
civilization as ―a-) medeniyet; terbiye;
terbiye-i medeniye: tehzib-i ahlak ve tervic-i ulum ve fünun; içtma‟-ı
kemalat-ı edebiye ve ilmiye b-) vahşilik halinden çıkarub terbiye ve medeniyet
yoluna dahil etmeklik‖ (a-) civilization, politeness, development and
perfection in learning, politeness and morality b-) giving up barbarism and becoming
361 Baykara, Tuncer,
―Bir Kelime-Istılah ve Zihniyet Olarak ‗Medeniyet‘in Türkiye‘ye Girişi‖, in Osmanlılarda Medeniyet Kavramı ve
Ondokuzuncu Yüzyıla Dair Araştırmalar, İzmir: Akademi Kitabevi, 1992, pp.
16-17.
civilized and developing good manners). In his 1880 dictionary,
Redhouse translated civilization as ―terbiye‖ (good manners).
In short, medeniyet meant at the same time being refined and polite determined
according to the contemporary code of conduct standards of Europe, which did
overlap and complement each other.362
One of the important
points to underline is that according to the perception of the time,
there was one single civilisation. It
was understood in some ways as the European civilization, and in some ways it
was perceived as a laudable notion without any geographical and cultural
references. The second point to be underlined is that this notion had an
unambiguously positive connotation. Thirdly, civilization was an ideal to be
emulated and attained. Furthermore, it was perceived as open to all who were
eager to endorse it and who had the ability to internalize it.
Although we have tried to list the non-political conceptualization of ―civilization‖, this does not mean that ―civilization‖ was
a non-ideological concept. On the contrary, civilization was an ideological concept reflecting and imposing the
value system of a class, the class that distinguished itself from ordinary
folk.
In the mindset of Tanzimat officialdom, the ideal of
civilization was a very pivotal theme. In the culture of the classical Ottoman
Empire, influenced by the pre-Islamic Persian and Islamic ideals, the state was
associated with refinement and cultivation. Thus, a member of the privileged member of the askeri class (being part of the state), the Ottoman scribe was to
be a figure of emulation. He perceived himself as a figure of emulation and was
supposed to be distinctive from the common men due to his upbringing and
refinement363. This traditional Ottoman/Islamic perception and ideal
overlapped with the 19th century ideal of civilization. In fact, before the impact
of the 19th century Western
civilization ideal, a certain ideal of cultivation was a very prevalent and
pivotal aspect of the classical Ottoman
officialdom and worldview. In this regard,
the endorsement of the
362 For the
civilization entries and the quotes from Mustafa Reşid Pasha and Sadık Rifat
Pasha see Baykara, Tuncer, ―Bir Kelime-Istılah ve Zihniyet Olarak ‗Medeniyet‘in
Türkiye‘ye Girişi‖, in Osmanlılarda
Medeniyet Kavramı ve Ondokuzuncu Yüzyıla Dair Araştırmalar, İzmir: Akademi
Kitabevi, 1992, pp.15-32.
363 For the ideal of
Ottoman refinement in classical age of the Ottoman Empire, see Fleischer,
Cornell, Bureaucrat and Intellectual in
the Ottoman Empire, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1986.
19th century civilization ideal was not an entirely new phenomenon
but an alteration/modification of classical Ottoman vision and ideology.
Civilization epitomized the imperial ideal as well.
Civility was one of the hallmarks of
being an empire and state. An empire was to be distinguished and revered by its
claim to refinement, which set it apart from the sheer military might of
usurpers and tyrants. These are some reasons why the endorsement of Westernization was so smooth before it began
to be problematized in the
late 19th century. In this regard, the import
and endorsement of the
―ideal of civilization‖ has to be explained in structural terms rather than cultural terms.
Ebubekir Hazim, then a lower
level official working
in the Governorship of Konya and
a dilettante poet and man of letters,
was advised by the governor of Konya,
Müşir Mehmed Said Pasha, as follows:
―I am reading your poems in newspapers. I do not get any taste from our poems which
are mere imitations of the Persian poems....we have to acknowledge that in this
country genuine talent in fine arts is restricted to only a few. I
never heard of any poet,
artist, or musician who became prosperous. Especially, all the poets live without
any exception in conditions of misery and curse what they call fortune (felek)....I do not want to see you join
this miserable community....You can specialize in a certain science. Even if
you decide to continue your career in the bureaucracy, you have to have
proficiency in fiscal, judicial, or administrative matters ... To acquire such
an expertise in any of these fields, you are obliged to learn one of the
European languages. This is because there
are not enough books in any of the fields (in Turkish). To read the available books
again and again is to be like a horse with his eyes closed and to run and run
in a small circle. You cannot move one step forward in progress and maturity.‖364
Taking the advice of the governor seriously, Ebubekir Hazim decided
to learn French although he was desperate to find a printed alphabet in Konya.
He mastered the French language in the miserable conditions of the provinces in
ten years.365 The French language symbolized the opening of a new
world. In the person of Ebubekir Hazim, the learning of the French language
also allowed him to become familiar with modern French poetry instead of only encountering ―monotonous‖ Ottoman poetry. The French language was a
364 Tepeyran, Ebubekir Hazim, Hatıralar, İstanbul: Pera, 1998, pp. 33-34
365 ibid, pp. 40-45.
passport allowing the bearer entrance into the modern world and
civilization, and permitting travel from one world to another.366
Civilization was perceived as an elite ideal rather than
a political and ideological concept. The endorsement of Westernization by the
pre-political inter-elite world of the Tanzimat was based on this perception
and asssumption. Münif Pasha equated civilization with Islam. For him, Islam
advocates Bildung and civility in
opposition to ignorance (cehalet) and barbarism (bedeviyet).367 Civilization was yet to be an subject of contestation. In fact, during the abolition of the janissaries
and the establishment of a modern military corps, drastic reforms were presented as the clash between the righteous defenders
of Islam and the ignorance and (religious) corruption prevalent among
janissaries and other defenders of the ―old regime‖.368 Apparently,
there was a class background to these representations since whereas the state
and state elite were associated with (genuine as opposed to rhetorical)
piousness, righteousness, and morality, the mob was associated with incivility,
barbarism, and heresy. During the Tanzimat-period, rather than being an
impediment to westernization, Islam was perceived as a supportive force in the
course of Westernization. In the classical Ottoman Empire as well as throughout
Islamic history, Islam epitomized civility, refinement, and the distinction of
the elite. The contrast was drawn between the ignorant barbarism of the nomads
and the ordinary folk, and the cultivated elite which were distinguished by their
careful and strict observance of Islam. The ordinary folk were ignorant
of Islam and its refinements. Tanzimat advanced on this
366 The impact of French novels in French on Mehmet Rauf was similar.
He wrote that after reading and being
disappointed by the literarily weak novels written in Turkish, the French novels
mesmerized him and opened a new world
in front of him. ―Halit
Ziya ile İlk Temas‖, Şebab, 23 July 1336,excerpted in Mehmet Rauf, Edebi Hatıralar, Kitabevi,
2009,
p. 14. For the transformative function of the
French language in the 19th century Ottoman Empire, see Davison, Roderick. ―The
French Language as a Vehicle for Ottoman Reform in the Nineteenth Century‖, in De la Révolution Française a la Turquie
d‟Atatürk: La Modernisation Politique et Sociale Actes des Colloques d‟Istanbul
(10-12 Mai 1989), Istanbul-Paris, 1990, pp. 125-140.
367 For the long paragraph where Münif Pasha elaborates on his
argument, see Budak, Ali, Münif Paşa,
İstanbul: Kitabevi Yayınları, 2004, p. 551. Also see the contrast established
between ―bedeviyet‖ and the
(civilized) state, see Es‘ad Efendi, ibid, p. 623.
368 Es‘ad Efendi, Vak‟a-Nüvis Es‟ad Efendi Tarihi, pp. 644-650; Ahmed
Cevdet Paşa,
Tarih-i Cevdet, pp. 154-170.
premise. Therefore, Islam was an integral part of the Tanzimat
civility. It did not pose an obstacle. On the contrary, the Islamic ideal was complementary to and harmonized with the Tanzimat ideal.
We do not observe a contradiction between Islam and the zealous
―imitation‖ of the Western ideal. Of course, such a harmony was
possible within the traditionalist and elitist interpretation of Islam espoused
by the Ottoman elite. An alternative and oppositionist Islam was also in the process of development,
especially those ideas associated
with the Khalidiyya-Naqshibandi order.369
We observe the emergence of a process of parting of the
ways during the Hamidian era as religion/religiosity began to be perceived, particularly among the younger
generations of educated intellectuals, to be incompatible with science and the
emerging materialistic thought.370 This 19th century
Ottoman blend of Islam, progress, and science was not unlike the Victorian
ideal which was in contrast to the strictly secular and emancipationist
republican ideal of republican France. Much as the Victorian consensus was
retreating in the very late post-Darwinian decades of 19th century,
simultaneously the Young Turks were
revolting against the Islamic ideal (and Islamic-and Western- civility as
well). Nevertheless, many other Young Turks continued to retain both their
commitments. Contention over the ideal of civilization will emerge also as an
impact on the West after the
radicalization of German right with its emphasis on the deadly antagonism of
the Western Zivilisation and the
German Kultur among writers such as
Oswald Spengler and Ernest Jünger.371 Nevertheless, it also has to
be pointed out that the first signs of this anti- civilizationist discourse
developed during the Hamidian era. It is ironic that the post-
369 For the 19th
century rise of Khalidiyye-Naqshibandi order, see Weismann, Itzchak, Taste
of Modernity:Sufism, Salaffiya and Arabism in Late Ottoman Damascus,
Leiden; Boston; Köln: Brill, 2001; Gaborieau, Marc & Popovic, Alexandre
& Zarcone, Thierry (ed.), Naqshbandis,
İstanbul: Editions Isis, 1990; Mardin, Şerif, Religion and Social Change in Modern Turkey: The Case of Bediüzzaman Said Nursi, New York: SUNY Press,
1989; Algar, Hamid, Nakşibendilik,
İstanbul: İnsan Yayınları, 2007; Gündüz, İrfan, Gümüşhanevi Ahmed Ziyaüddin: Hayatı-Eserleri-Tarikat Anlayışı ve
Halidiyye Tarikatı, İstanbul: Seha Neşriyat, 1984.
370 Doğan, Atila, Osmanlı Aydınları ve Sosyal Darwinizm,
İstanbul: Bilgi Üniversitesi Yayınları, 2006,
pp. 185-203; Bein, Amit, The Ulema, Their Institutions and Politics in the
Late Ottoman Empire (1876-1924), unpublished dissertation, Princeton
University, 2006.
371 Herf, Jeffrey, Reactionary
Modernism, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 1986, pp. 18-108.
Tanzimat anti-westernist discourse of the multiplicity of
civilizations and of Western civilization as the (toothless) evil incarnate was
also an outcome of Westernization.
It was the impact of the late 19th and early
20th century discourse of multiple civilizations and the rhetoric of
anti-civilizationism especially prevalent in Germany that had diluted
Tanzimat‘s civilizationism and generated the discourse of
Ottoman/Turkish/Muslim authenticity and distinctiveness claiming to descend
from a different and superior civilization. Although the great Islamic past was
a theme to be articulated, its juxtaposition in opposition to western civilization and its transformation into a strategic asset exposing the deficiencies and
hypocrisies of western civilization emerged from the late 19th
century onwards and gained prominence with the radicalism of Young Turks.372
In fact, anti-civilizationism and the rhetoric of multiple civilizations were partially influenced by and imported from
the German anti-civilizationism developed during the Wilhelmine era and peaked
in the thoughts of post-war right-wing intellectuals such as Oswald Spengler373
and Ernest Jünger374. As these intellectuals juxtaposed Geman Kultur against cosmopolitan Western
Civilization, the Young Turk generation proclaimed the irreconcilability of the
Western Christian imperialist ―Civilization‖ with Turks and Muslims being the
political leaders and representatives of Islam. In this view, imperialism,
Europe, and Christianity became indistinguishable and virtually meant the same
thing. It was equally true for the Turks, Islam, and the innate
anti-imperialism of this cultural/political entity who began to be depicted
as the diametrical opposite of the
―toothless‖ Western civilization.
2.2.
Reformism, Civilization, Progress, Science and Islam: The Consensus of the
Tanzimat Bureaucratic World
372 Aydın, Cemil, The Politics
of Anti-Westernism in Asia, New York: Columbia
University Press, 2007, p. 69.
373 Spengler, Oswald, The Decline of the West, New York: A.A.Knopf, 1926.
374 Herf, Jeffrey, Reactionary Modernism, Cambridge, U.K. :
Cambridge University Press, 1986; Repp, Kevin, Reformers, Critics and the Paths of German Modernity, Cambridge,
Mass: Harvard University Press, 2000.
It is another question
whether the Tanzimat scribal class
had a comprehensive political
worldview. It may be argued that they had divided political orientations and
dispositions. The notion that people are to have encompassing political
worldviews and orientations appears to be hardly applicable to the 19th century
Ottoman context.375 Some fundamental assumptions of the Tanzimat
scribes were clearly non-political or supra-political. Furthermore, these
assumptions were not contested assumptions but the expression of a common
understanding regardless of the minor differences among the political/social views of the Tanzimat officials. We have
to await the Young Turk Revolution of 1908 or perhaps the Hamidian era for the
differentiation and the flourishing of alternative and rivaling
political/ideological stances.
One feature of the mindset of Tanzimat Ottoman
officialdom was commitment to and belief in a standardized and fixed scheme
of programs of reform. In the numerous
―reports‖ of the time, the issues suggested to be undertaken and
accomplished were almost identical and straightforward: regulation of fiscal
matters, improvement of education, alleviation of the agricultural
infrastructure, improvement of the efficiency of the bureaucracy, et cetera.
The very basic idea was that once all these reforms were accomplished, the
serious, age- old problems would be overcome. This faith in progress via
implementation of the necessary technical
reforms was limited to the replication of what had been already done in the ―West‖. No structural impediments
were to be expected once the necessary will and skills were put into effect. The agenda
for the advancement of the Ottoman state was rather straightforward.376
One of the most overt examples of this optimism
was arguably Mustafa
Sami Efendi‘s
―Avrupa Risalesi‖ (Pamphlet on Europe) first published in 1840. Mustafa
Sami‘s travel
375 For a criticism of the ―internal consistency of the text‖, see Skinner, Quentin,
―Meaning and Understanding in the History of Ideas‖, History and Theory, vol. 8, no.1 (1969),
pp. 16-22.
376 A very similar state of mind in 19th century Persian reformists is
caught by Shaul Bakhash. He dubs this the ―open sesame‖ approach which assumes
that Persia can enjoy the benefits of Western civilization without any friction
once they are introduced. For Bakhash, the ―open sesame‖ approach also assumes
that when the positive effects of westernization become evident, any resistance
or opposition to reform will evaporate. Bakhash, Shaul, Iran: Monarchy, Bureaucracy & Reform under the Qajars 1858-1896,
London: Ithaca Press, 1978, p. 30.
account is a striking example of an utmost confidence in the
achievements of Europe. At the end of his book, Mustafa Sami concludes that the
advanced state of Europe was neither due to the climate of Europe nor to the
fertility of its soil. For Sami, the reason for the advanced state of Europe
was due to science and to science only. Mustafa Sami suggested that once Ottomans emulated this model, the abode of
Islam would be even more advanced
than Europe given that its land is fertile, its climate is fine, and its people
are intelligent by birth.377 It is striking to notice that almost
the same ―developmentalist‖, optimistic interpretation was articulated in the
Rescript of Tanzimat in which it was claimed that due to the fertility of the
soil and intelligence of its people, the Ottoman Empire will be an advanced
nation ―in five to ten years‖ once the necessary measures were taken.378
In fact, what Mustafa Sami did was to reiterate and propagate the ideas of the
Rescript of Tanzimat. Given that
Mustafa Sami was appointed as a secretary in the Ottoman embassy to Paris
(after serving in the Ottoman embassy to Vienna) and that this travelogue was
written based on his observations while on his way to Paris to begin to serve
in his new post and furthermore given
that he was a confident of Mustafa Reşid Pasha, the political agenda of this
text is evident. A similar and earlier analysis and prescription was presented
by Sadık Rifat Pasha in 1837, who at the time of writing his report was the
Ottoman ambassador to Vienna.379 It may be claimed that in his
report, Sadık Rifat foreshadowed Tanzimat. In his risale, Sadık Rifat noted that the basis of advancement no more lay
in military improvement but in peaceful means.
In fact, both Sadık Rifat Pasha and Mustafa Sami Bey‘s
accounts could be understood as
variations of the Rescript of Tanzimat. In fact, the same reasoning and policy
proposals will be reiterated in many political pamphlets. Tunuslu Hayreddin
Pasha forty years later suggested similar policy proposals to Abdülhamid.
Although he was critical of some aspects of Tanzimat, his reasoning and
arguments were strikingly reminiscent of Mustafa Sami and Sadık Rıfat. Like his predecessors, for him the Ottoman Empire regressed due to
377 Mustafa Sami Efendi, Avrupa Risalesi, İstanbul:
Kitabevi, 1996, pp. 80-81.
378 See the text of the rescript in Alkan, Mehmet Ö, (ed.), Tanzimat ve Meşrutiyet‟in Birikimi v. I, İstanbul:
İletişim Yayınları, 2001, pp. 449-451.
379 See his report‘s transcription in
Seyitdanlıoğlu, Mehmet, ―Sadık Rıfat Paşa ve Avrupa Ahvaline Dair Risalesi‖, Liberal Düşünce, 1996, no.2.
its internal corruption and its diversion from the path of the
golden age of the Ottoman Empire. The Empire will ascend by employing the Staatswissenschaft of Europe,
reorganizing the state as a modern state, and avoiding corruption and lethargy.380
Münif Pasha was another
representative of early Tanzimat. His years in Berlin as a secretary in the Ottoman
embassy in his youth
were constitutive of his
later intellectual formation. Facing
Western intellectual superiority, young Münif developed a radically Westernist
orientation and contributed significantly to the transmission of Western
knowledge in an encyclopedia format in the 1860s.381 The same
observation is equally valid for İbrahim
Edhem, who along with Münif Pasha served as a secretary in the Berlin embassy in the same years. As
suggested above, Münif‘s and İbrahim Edhem‘s were educated at a time when the astronomical gap between the Muslim Ottomans
and Europe did not produce enmity
but admiration of the West. Münif Pasha began his career in the
Translation Office before his appointment to Berlin. ―In 1859, he returned to the Porte and
reentered the Translation Bureau. In this year, he provided the Muslim Ottomans
with the first translation into Turkish of what may be termed the ideas of the Enlightenment.‖382
After a brief tenure in the Bureau,
he rose to other governmental departments including a five- year tenure at the embassy to Teheran.‖383
Münif Pasha belonged to the very early Tanzimat generation and
preceded Namık Kemal and his colleagues, who were frustrated by the shortcomings
of Tanzimat and the attitudes of the Western powers and were seeking an authentic identity
for Ottomans, Turks, and Muslims.384
Nonetheless, the optimistic vision of the undertaking of
the necessary technical reforms and improvements was not as naive as it may
seem. This faith also contained a resilient trust in the state as it was the only possible
actor to direct
and administer this sweeping
380 See Çetin, Atilla, Tunuslu Hayreddin Paşa,
Ankara: Kültür ve Turizm Bakanlığı,
1988,
pp. 254-75. For the texts of his three policy proposals presented
to Abdülhamid, see ibid,
pp. 312-56.
381 Budak, Ali, Münif Paşa, İstanbul:
Kitabevi Yayınları, 2004, p.
22.
382 Mardin, Şerif, The Genesis of Young Ottoman Thought,
Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1962, p. 234.
383 Budak, Ali, ibid, pp. 21-24, 31-35.
384 See for a comparison between Münif
Pasha and Namık Kemal, Mardin, Şerif, ibid, pp. 233-246.
transformation. Gazi Ahmed Muhtar Pasha‘s impressive account is a
perfect example of the perception that the establishment of the order by the state
was the primary condition for the establishment of a
modern and well-ordered infrastructure.385 Ahmed Muhtar Pasha, an
officer motivated by professional ethos and confidence in the progressive
capacity of modern organization and technology, carried out his assignments by
suppressing revolts in the various peripheries of the Ottoman Empire, moving
from Yemen386 to Montenegro, from Lebanon to Serbia. In his account,
he was anxious to suppress these revolts by violence if necessary, not because
he was a merciless soldier filled with loyalist zeal, but because he regarded
these rebels as unruly savages needing to be educated and tamed. For him, the
modern organization of the state and society had to be handled with the iron
and authoritative hand of the state, which was by definition the only
legitimate authority capable of undertaking this demanding mission.
Apparently, the reform
project was welded around a benevolent state.
For the reformers, the state represented the ultimate
good, not unlike the classical Ottoman and classical Islamic political
imagination. The local resistance to the state simultaneously symbolized
obscurantism, uncivilized manners, and treachery. That axiom definitely led to
the assumption that all the opponents and critics of the state, at least those
who were not favorable to the territorial integrity of the empire, were motivated
by evil goals. The discourse of orientalism and colonialism of the Ottoman
center towards the periphery had been scrutinized by Usama Makdisi.
―By casting the Ottoman Empire
as the progenitor of the Enlightenment ideal (and therefore its natural inheritor), capable of its
385 Gazi Ahmed Muhtar Paşa, Serzügeşt-i
Hayatım, İstanbul: Tarih Vakfı Yurt Yayınları, 1996 (2 volumes)
386 The Ottoman
governmental elite‘s colonial perceptions of Yemen became a recent subject of
inquiry. For colonial perceptions and remarks on Yemen in the memoirs, see
Mahmud Nedim Bey, Arabistan‟da Bir Ömür,
Istanbul: Isis, 2001; Gazi Ahmed Muhtar Paşa, Serzügeşt-i Hayatım, İstanbul: Tarih Vakfı Yurt Yayınları, 1996, v.
I, pp. 40-97; Biren, Mehmet Tevfik, II.
Abdülhamid, Meşrutiyet ve Mütareke Devri Hatıraları, İstanbul: Arba
Yayınları, 1993, V. I, pp. 265-370. Ahmet İzzet Paşa, Feryadım, İstanbul: Nehir Yayınları, 1992, v. I, pp. 87-107, Doktor
İbrahim Abdüsselam Paşa, Yemen
Seyahatnamesi ve Bitkisel Coğrafyası, İstanbul: Pan Yayıncılık, 2009;
Süleyman Şefik Paşa, Hatıratım,
İstanbul: Arma Yayınları, 2004, pp. 7-43. Also see Namık Kemal, ―Yemen‘e Dair
Mütalaa‖, in Namık Kemal: Osmanlı
Modernleşmesinin Meseleleri, Nergiz Yılmaz Aydoğdu & Ismail Kara (ed.),
İstanbul: Dergah Yayınları, 2005, pp. 56-57.
own renaissance, Ottoman reformers also articulated the notion of
the ‗Ottoman man's burden‘ toward its subject populations, who would have to be
disciplined and reformed before the Ottoman Empire could firmly establish
itself as a civilized power387.‖ Apparently, these ―reforms‖,
―disciplining‖ and civilizationist practices also included violence. The
destruction of the Kurdish principalities388, the forced settlement
of Turcoman tribes389, and the introduction of modern governance in Yemen390
were all achieved by violence legitimized on progressive and civilizationist
grounds. These premises were the sanctity and rightfulness of the Ottoman
state, and the intellectual and ethical superiority of the Ottoman ruling elite.
A new expansionism molded with a civilizationist discourse emerged in the
Tanzimat, especially in the Arab
lands.391 Here, the undertakers of the ―progenitoring of the Enlightenment ideal‖ were ―members
of the state elite‖, ―Muslims‖ and gradually ―Turks‖ (especially vis-à-vis ―Kurds‖ and ―Arabs‖).
Not only the Tanzimat statesmen, but also Ottoman
intellectuals displayed the amalgamation of these complex and overlapping
identities and self-perceptions. Namık Kemal
epitomizes the intertwined nature of these
identities and ideals.
In his article,
―Terakki‖ (Progress), published in the daily Ibret in 1862, we observe his commitment to
―civilizationism‖ and adoration
and admiration of the West. Namık Kemal defined London as
―the photograph of the display
of the progress of civilization‖.392 After this introduction,
387 Makdisi, Usama.
―Ottoman Orientalism‖, The American
Historical Review, June 2002,
Vol. 107, No:3, p. 27.
388 Van Bruinessen,
Martin. Agha, Shaikh and State,
London: Zed Books, 1992, pp. 175- 84.
389 Gould, Andrew
Gordon, Pashas and Brigands: Ottoman
Provincial Reform and its Impact on the Nomadic Tribes of Southern Anatolia
1840-1885, unpublished dissertation, UCLA,
1973; Ahmed Cevdet Paşa, Tezakir, Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu Basımevi,
1963,
v. III, pp. 107-215.
390 Messick,
Brinkley Morris, The Calligraphic State, Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1993, pp. 37-58; Farah, Caesar, The Sultan‟s Yemen, London: I.B. Tauris,
2002.
391 Kurşun,
Zekeriya, Necid ve Ahsa‟da Osmanlı Hakimiyeti, Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu,
1998; Anscombe, Frederick F, The Ottoman
Gulf: The Creation of Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, New York: Columbia
University Press, 1997.
392 Namık Kemal, ―Terakki‖, Ibret, 3 Ramazan 1289/ 23 Teşrin-i
Evvel 1288. Excerpted
in Aydoğdu, Nergiz Yılmaz & Kara, İsmail (ed.), Namık
Kemal, Bütün Makaleleri 1, İstanbul: Dergah Yayınları, 2005, p. 212
Namık Kemal makes an imaginary visit to London with his readers.
Namık Kemal describes certain buildings and what is done there. He visits
Westminster, a building in which the hard-working parliamentarians are
contributing to the progress of their homeland; the Palace of Justice, in which
justice is distributed with utmost civility and politeness; schools in which
children are given manners and erudition; libraries in which people are reading
books about science, et cetera. After long paragraphs of fascination, Namık
Kemal concludes by asking why the Ottomans were left behind. He also asks the reader
if ―we‖ lost all our learning and why ―we‖ are in such a desperate situation.393
Namık Kemal suggests that London
with all its glamour, civility,
and elegance is the model to imitate. It is the ultimate goal
in the quest for progress. In his other articles, Namık Kemal entertains
colonial visions towards the Arab lands (with the motive of rehabilitating
Arabs to their distinguished past as the original nation
of Islam)394, dreams
of a pan-Islamic enlightenment and revival395, claims
authenticity and cultural distinctiveness from the Europeans396, and envisions an Ottoman Empire which has fully appropriated
―civilization‖ and ―modern technologies‖.397 A recurring concern in his articles was to
show and prove that Islam was not the cause of the deterioration of the Islamic
lands. In other words, in Namık Kemal we observe the perplexed mind of the 19th
century Ottoman intellectual/bureaucrat, where all of these concerns exist
intertwined and are meaningful only in interrelation with each other. Likewise,
the ―we‖ of Namık Kemal remains vague. For example, although he has a clear
idea of a community of Islam, Islam is inevitably politicized, and as soon as
Islam was imagined as a politicized identity, the prospects of Islam were to be defined in terms of the prospects of the Ottoman
Empire. Furthermore, for Namık Kemal, the Ottoman Empire was
clearly an empire led by the Turks though they were supposed to serve an
altruistic goal.
Namık Kemal‘s perception of Arabs is intriguing because
although he respects the Arabs as the original nation of Islam, noting that Arabs had converted Turks to Islam and
393 Namık Kemal, ibid, p. 220.
394 Namık Kemal, ―Yemen‘e
Dair Mütalaa‖, ibid, p. 57.
395 Namık Kemal, ―İttihad-ı İslam‖, ibid, p. 84-87.
396 Namık Kemal, ―Medeniyet‖, ibid pp. 358-361.
397 Namık Kemal, ―Nüfus‖, ibid, pp. 69-79; ―Maarif‖, pp. 109-113.
―educated them‖ (terbiye etmek),
at the same time he points out that the Arabs were in a miserable condition at
the time (Arap bizim fesad-ı rüzigar ile a‟sabına halel gelmiş üstadımızdır).
Turks were to save the Arabs from their backwardness and restore them to their
historical greatness.398 Apparently, he sees Turks as the nation
destined to educate, civilize, and lead the nations of Islam as Turks were the
ruling nation (millet-i hakime) of
the Ottoman Empire. Thus, his ―we‖ is a complex one, amalgamating discrete
identities although it is rather clear within his worldview and within his
historical context that he arranges Ottoman imperialism, the Turkish nation,
and Islam within
a hierarchy. Given
that there is no space here to enter into the convoluted structures of
the mindset of Namık Kemal, it will be only noted that Namık Kemal illustrates
the multilayered and anomalous nature of the late mind of the Ottoman
bureaucratic elite at its best.
Within this encyclopedic intellectual milieu,
―knowledge‖ was perceived as a semi- sacred and ―objective‖ notion, not unlike
the Islamic notion of ―ilim‖ with its
divine/religious connotations. In fact, it may be argued that the Islamic ―ilim‖399 (which served as
further proof of the existence and magnificence of God) was replaced by the
modern/Western notion of science (ulum-plural
of ilim) and thus, that the positivism of late Ottoman thought was derived from Islamic premises
and outlook. ―Knowledge‖ was hailed as
emancipating people (from ignorance and unjust oppression) and functioned as
the beacon of humanity and progress. Thus, the attitude
towards ―knowledge‖ derived
not only from the 19th
century European positivist perception, but also from the authentic Islamic
culturalization that consecrated authority and authoritative knowledge. Thus, 19th century
―Western knowledge‖ was perceived as authoritative and worthy of being
imported. However, this did not mean that they should merely imitate Western
techniques and become ―modernists‖. On the
contrary, their adaptation of technical
knowledge was not to be in conflict with or in contradistinction to their authentic culturalization and
398 Namık Kemal, ―Yemen‘e Dair Mütala‖, ibid, p. 57.
399 The value attributed to Western/technical knowledge and Ottoman
positivism was in a sense the persistence of the traditional Islamic perception
of knowledge. ―The concept of knowledge enjoyed an importance unparalleled in
other civilizations.‖ Rosenthal, Franz, Knowledge
Triumphant: The Concept of Knowledge in Medieval Islam, Leiden: Brill, 1970, p. 334.
distinctiveness. The western technical ―objective‖ knowledge was to
be employed to strengthen the Ottoman state.
In the early Tanzimat, science and knowledge lacked any
cultural connotations. There was yet no contestation over knowledge and science
or an effort to Islamicize and indigenize them.
Nevertheless, the discourse of the ―Islamic golden age‖ accompanied the
reception of Western knowledge and science. The Western science and knowledge
was adapted and digested with the discovery and articulation of
―Turkish-Islamic‖ scientists, such as Avicenna and al-Farabi, the glorification
of the ―Islamic golden age‖, and an emphasis on the crucial Turkish-Islamic
contribution to the development of (modern) science. A discourse of
authenticity and distinctiveness in the late 19th century developed.
In fact, this discourse of authenticity was partially based on the conjectures
of 19th century French republican historiography -which constituted
the chief and almost only source of information regarding the European medieval
period for the Ottoman intelligentsia- and positivist thought, which depicted
the feudal, European medieval age as obscurantist, uncivilized, and ―dark‖ and which juxtaposed the alternative civilization of the
―enlightened Muslim East‖ against obscurantist Christendom.400
Nevertheless, there was not yet the ―indigenization of knowledge401‖
and development of a discourse of an alternative and rival
―Islamic/local/traditional knowledge and civilization‖ which became visible
later, especially after the Revolution of 1908.
Faith in science, a shared attitude among the late Ottoman
bureaucrats, reached an extreme level within the context
of the Darwinian ideas circulating in the Ottoman Empire
400 Ahmed Rıza, La Faillite Morale de la Politique
Occidentale en Orient, Librarie Picart, 1922, pp. 100-132; Mizancı
Murad, La Force et Faiblesse de la Turquie, Geneva, 1897,
pp. 10-16
quoted in Emil,
Birol, Mizancı Murad Bey,
İstanbul: Kitabevi, 2009,
p. 374; Ziya Paşa, Endülüs Tarihi, Dersaaadet: Karabet ve Kasbar Matbaası, 1887 (4
volumes)
401 For a parallel development of the ―indigenization of knowledge‖ and
the emergence of nativism in culture, the social sciences, thought, and even in
technology in Iran, see Boroujerdi, Mehrzad, Iranian Intellectuals and the West, Syracuse: Syracuse University
Press, 1996; Fazeli, Nematollah, Fazeli, Politics
of Culture in Iran, London; New York: Routledge, 2006. The 19th century
Iranians also developed the idea that pre-Islamic Iran was ―the source of knowledge for the Greeks,
the Egyptians, and (it) had been the fountain
of civilization and education (chismish-i tamaddun va tarbiyat)‖. Thus, what
had to be done was simply to
rediscover the authentic and historic magnificance and erudition of Iran.
Kashani-Sabet, Firoozeh, Frontier
Fictions: Shaping the Iranian Nation, 1804-1946, Princeton: Princeton
University Press, 1999, p. 68.
in the 1890s.
A new generation emerged, endorsing a materialistic worldview
in reaction to conservative ideas, most famously in
the thoughts of Doktor Abdullah Cevdet402 and Beşir Fuad, but not
limited to a small circle of people.403 However before the 1890s,
the perception that science and religion are inevitably contradictory did not
exist either in the Ottoman Empire or in Europe in general. Until then, science
had been welcomed as the beacon of humanity. Such an infinite faith in science
was also compatible with the assumption that the superiority of the European
nations was principally due to science. Once the Ottomans appropriated science
as the Europeans already had, they would reach the level of progress
of Europe. Therefore, the superiority of Europe was not a matter of
―culture‖, as would be claimed from the 1890s onwards, but only a
matter of delay. The ones who were suspicious of the achievements and limitless
opportunities of science were mocked for failing to comprehend the modern world
and were regarded as examples of an obsolete and archaic mentality as can be
observed in numerous accounts of the time.404
A break in this optimistic faith in science and the idea
that science and religion were not compatible but mutually exclusive emerged
only in 1890s, a decade which was also critical for the transformation of the
―European mind‖ as well.405 In this regard, the generational drift
observable in the Ottoman context was actually a continent-wide phenomenon and
has to be assessed as part of a European intellectual phenomenon. The fall of the conservative Tanzimat
men with their optimistic, conservative, and evolutionist
402 For an impressive account of the prevalence of materialist thought
among the students in Tıbbıye while
Abdullah Cevdet was a student, see Hanioğlu, Şükrü, Doktor Abdullah Cevdet ve Dönemi, İstanbul: Üçdal Neşriyat, 1981,
pp. 8-20.
403 For the prevalence of Darwinian thought in the late Ottoman Empire,
see Doğan, Atila, Osmanlı Aydınları ve
Sosyal Darwinizm, İstanbul: Bilgi Üniversitesi Yayınları, 2006. The book
reveals the prevalence of Darwinian and social Darwinian thought in the late Ottoman Empire before the Young Turks. The
book‘s study of the Darwinian and social Darwinian thought of the
―conservative‖ Ahmed Midhad Efendi is particularly striking. See pp. 147-165.
404 See Biren,
Mehmet Tevfik, II. Abdülhamid, Meşrutiyet
ve Mütareke Devri Hatıraları, İstanbul: Arba Yayınları, 1998, vol I, pp.
34-35. He mentions and illustrates ―softa
zihniyeti‖, which he depicts as not believing in science and progress.
405 The last three decades of the 19th century were transformative. The
conservative and static nature of the social order of Europe was challenged by
a new generation influenced by the materialistic and radical thought of the
age. See Stuart Hughes, Consciousness and
Society, New York: Alfred Knopf, 1958.
visions was yet another manifestation of the European-wide transformation as has been
previously pointed out.406
2.3.
The Image and Representation of the Tanzimat-Period in Official Hamidian Discourse
The discourse of the Hamidian regime did not level an
open assault against the Tanzimat. On the contrary, the establishment and
consolidation of the Hamidian regime was presented and legitimized by its
contribution to the Tanzimat. The official Hamidian discourse acclaimed and
extolled Tanzimat, which it celebrated as the rebirth and regeneration of the
Ottoman state.407 The year
1839 continued to be year zero and the annus
mirabilis of the ―new Ottoman Empire‖. For example, Mehmed Memduh Pasha,
who served as the Minister of Interior between 1895 and 1908, eulogized Mustafa
Reşid Pasha as follows: ―When we look at history, we see that the greatest
achievements are performed not by administrators, but by geniuses who possess
extraordinary skills from birth and who act in ways which no one else thinks
of. Mustafa Reşid Pasha is such an unequalled person.‖408 The same
commentary was also enunciated verbatim by Mahmud Celaleddin Pasha, who was one
of the grandees of the Hamidian regime409. Mehmed Memduh shared the
antipathy towards Mahmud Nedim Pasha, whom he described as an unskilled and malicious, and towards his loyalists whom he defined
as hypocritical and
406 ―Liberal
conservatism‖, a disposition quite different from conservatism and liberalism
and displaying a distinct and comprehensive political view within the context
of the 19th century European context, is analyzed succinctly by Alan Kahan, See
Kahan, Alan S, Aristocratic Liberalism:
The Social and Political Thought of Jacob Burckhardt, John Stuart Mill and
Alexis De Tocqueville, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1992. Also see
Kahan, Alan S, Liberalism in
Nineteenth-Century Europe: The
Political Culture of Limited Suffrage, Basingstoke; New
York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2003.
407 For the history
textbooks of the Hamidian regime, see Demiryürek, Mehmet, Tanzimat‟tan Cumhuriyet‟e Bir Osmanlı Aydını: Abdurrahman Şeref Efendi,
İstanbul: Phoenix, 2003, pp. 153-173.
408 Mehmed Memduh Pasha, Mi‟rat-i
Şuunat, İstanbul: Nehir Yayınları, 1990, pp.18-19
409 Mahmud Celaleddin Pasha, Mira‟at-ı
Hakikat, İstanbul: Berekat
Yayınevi, 1983, p. 32
careerist.410 The tone of Üss-i İnkilap (Foundation of the Revolution), which may be taken as
the authorized account of the Hamidian regime, written by Ahmed Midhat Pasha to
eulogize the ―revolutionary‖ takeover of Abdülhamid went along the same lines.411 Ahmed Midhat presented Abdülhamid as the
revolutionary leader whose mission was to fulfill the undertaking of the
Tanzimat. The book was not entitled Üss-i
İnkilap for nothing. The name of the book established a connection and
continuity from the elimination of the Janissaries412 to the
Hamidian takeover. The book‘s criticisms were directed not towards the founders
of the Tanzimat and not towards its founding motivations/orientation, but
against those who diverged from the glorious path of the Tanzimat. The Hamidian
discourse presented itself as the corrector of the misdeeds of the corrupters
of the Tanzimat.
2.4.
De-whigging Late Ottoman History
How should we interpret
the Hamidian takeover in light of the developments of 1870s
? As mentioned previously, the old paradigm was to present the
Hamidian takeover as the return of reaction. However, scholars such as Stanford
Shaw and Engin Deniz Akarlı challenged and demolished this cliché. Instead of
symbolizing a break, the Hamidian establishment legitimized itself using the
Tanzimat.413 We may suggest that with the realization that reformism is not sufficient to maintain the empire
intact and with the rise of authoritarian/conservative states
such as Prussia and Russia
(after the discrediting of liberal France), a mental
turn was observed. The Hamidian regime
was a process of redefinition of
410 Mehmed Memduh Paşa, ibid
pp. 62-64.
411 Ahmed Midhat Efendi.
Üss-i İnkılap, İstanbul: Selis,
2004.
412 The book‘s name was inspired
by Esad Efendi‘s
Üss-i Zafer, in which Esad Efendi
narrates and eulogizes the act of Mahmud II.
413 For the
textbooks, see Demiryürek, Mehmet, Tanzimat‟tan
Cumhuriyet‟e Bir Osmanlı Aydını: Abdurrahman Şeref Efendi, İstanbul:
Phoenix, 2003, pp. 153-173.
the Tanzimat after disillusionment with the liberal reformism of
Tanzimat as it became apparent with the ―incident of Mahmud Nedim‖.414
The ―whig interpretation of history‖ was first
criticized by Herbert Butterfield and Lewis Namier. Butterfield defined the
―whig interpretation of history‖ as follows: ―To praise revolutions provided
they have been successful, to emphasize certain principles of progress in the
past415....(and)...imagine it as working not to accentuate
antagonisms or to ratify old party-cries but to find the unities that underlie
the differences and to see all lives as a part of the one web of life.‖416
For Namier, 18th century British political history was limited to factional
strife among groups consisting of self-interested individuals. Namier denied
any role to ideology and ideas. For him, politics was an arena for the clash of
personal ambitions rather than the historic struggles of ideologies and social
interest groups.417
In the Ottoman context, it was Rifat Abou-El-Hajj who
applied the Butterfield-Namier paradigm for the first time. Based on a case
study on the origins and meaning of the 1703 Edirne Incident, he questioned the
teleological assumptions attributed to developments in the early modern Ottoman
Empire. By establishing factional lineages and coalitions between factions, he
showed that the main tension was not between alleged progressives and defensive
reactionaries, but between rivaling factions.418
414 Davison,
Reform…, p. 269.
415 Butterfield,
Herbert, The Whig Interpretation of
History, London: G. Bell and Sons, 1959, p. v.
416 ibid, p. 3.
417 Among his books,
see England in the Age of American
Revolution, London: St. Martin‘s
Press, 1961; The Structure of Politics at
the Accession of George III, London: Macmillan, 1929. For a short biography
of Namier, see Colley, Linda, Lewis
Namier, St. Martin‘s Press, 1989. Also see, Price, Jacob M. ―Party,
Purpose, and Pattern: Sir Lewis Namier and His Critics‖, The Journal of British Studies, vol. 1, no. 1 (November 1961).
418 Abou-El-Hajj, Rifat Ali, Formation
of the Modern State, New York: State University of New York Press, 1991; Abou-El-Hajj, Rifat Ali, The 1703 Rebellion and the Structure of Ottoman Politics, İstanbul: Nederlands Historisch-Archaeologisch
Instituut te Istanbul,1984. Baki Tezcan also
leveled a critique of this whiggish tendency. See Tezcan, Baki. ―The 1622
Military Rebellion in Istanbul: A Historiographical Journey‖, International Journal of Turkish Studies,
8 (2002), pp. 25-43, Tezcan, Baki, Searching
for Osman: A Reassessment of the Deposition of the Ottoman
Sultan Osman II (1618-1622),
In order to de-whig the 19th century Ottoman Empire, we
have to reassess power struggles along these lines. That does not mean that we
have to ignore/exclude ideology and politics, but we have to reassess ideology
and politics in interaction with factionalism and to a certain extent, as a
corollary of factional divisions. We may define the Hamidian status quo as a ―transition to a
controlled and restrained modernization in reaction to the advancing threats
supported and administered by the newly established Muslim elites aiming to
avoid the rise of rival elites be it Muslim or non-Muslim‖. This endeavor
necessitates the establishment of its value system organized hierarchically and
symbolized in the persona of Abdülhamid.‖ Elites are not ideologically motivated.
They seek to maximize their interests. The claim here is not that this elite
had created Abdülhamid. What may be modestly suggested is that the consolidation of an established state
elite after the precarious decades of the early Tanzimat provided the
appropriate conditions for an autocracy to rise which nurtured and monitored an
established status quo representing and upholding the values and priorities of
this elite in the persona of the sultan and in the symbolism of the imperium. The state was reified for these self-interested reasons. The
―officials both contribute to the creation of standardized views of
the state and experience the constraints on action that result from this
constant process of reification.‖419 Engin Deniz Akarli also notes
that, ―This new elaboration of bureaucratic structure penetrated deep into
society and enhanced the visibility, control, and to a certain extent also the
respectability of the government. Equally important, it served as a mechanism
to create a growing cadre of officials committed to the Ottoman cause.‖420
As it happens, self-interest and social/political visions are often negotiated
and intertwined.
2.5.
Hamidian Autocracy as Class Politics and Class Formation
unpublished
dissertation, Princeton University, 2001. Also see Erimtan, Can, Ottomans Looking West? The Origins of the
Tulip Age and its Development in Modern Turkey, London: I.B. Tauris, 2008.
419 Herzfeld, Michael,
Cultural Intimacy, London;
New York: Routledge, 1997, p. 10.
420 Akarlı, Engin
Deniz, ―The Tangled Ends of an Empire: Ottoman Encounters with the West and
Problems of Westernization—an Overview‖, Comparative
Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East, 26.3 (2006), p. 362.
Fatma Müge Göçek analyzes the making of Turkish
modernity as a class formation. Discussing and criticizing the Marxist and
Weberian interpretations of class formation, she establishes that, ―(i)n the context of Ottoman
Empire, the Marxian
and Weberian analyses help identify three
significant elements of Ottoman social change: households as the unit of
analysis, the sultan and the state
as the significant social
actor, and war and commerce with the West as the external catalyst.‖421 She
constructs a dichotomy between what she calls
the ―commercial bourgeoisie‖ and the ―bureaucratic bourgeois‖. Without
discussing the reliability of her label ―bureaucratic bourgeoisie‖ (a term
which is an oxymoron), she explains the demise of the empire by pointing
to the failure of the two social clusters to co- opt. For Göçek, these
two social clusters felt apart because the bureaucratic bourgeoisie was
predominantly Muslim/Turkish and the commercial bourgeoisie was predominantly
non-Muslim. For Göçek, the bifurcation and polarization of the two segments
became apparent in the late Hamidian regime and the polarization ended with the
tragic collapse of the Ottoman Empire and the formation of the nation-states
founded with blood and iron. In Göçek‘s account, the culpability for the
emergence of this polarization belongs to the Young Turks.422 It is
important to highlight that the bureaucratic bourgeoisie of Göçek had already seeded the mentality of the Young Turks. In a way, the
bureaucratic bourgeoisie of the Hamidian era was already concerned with the
question of how to deal with the non- Muslim commercial bourgeoisie. The
motivations of the Hamidian ―bureaucratic bourgeoisie‖ were in accord with the
coming generation sharing the same concerns with their successors. In fact,
they were not only non-bourgeois, but also disturbed by the emerging commercial
bourgeois which was predominantly non-Muslim.
For this particular reason, the Ottoman
state aimed to establish and promote a Muslim entrepreneurial class as well as Muslim professionals whom the state perceived as reliable and loyal, and
421 Göçek, Fatma
Müge, Rise of the Bourgeoisie, Demise of
Empire, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996, p.18.
422 Göçek uses the memoirs of Mehmed Reşid to illustrate the changing
and radicalizing tone of the Turkish/Muslim community (pp. 134-37). It is
important to remember that Mehmed Reşid was the governor of Diyarbekir during
the massacres of 1915 and was one of the most wanted perpetrators of the Armenian
massacres. His extremely xenophobic and brutal tone cannot be taken as indicative of his generation.
established several agricultural, industrial, and commercial schools
as well as schools of veterinary medicine and pharmacology.423 The
state elite of the Hamidian era‘s vision of politics was centered on the
well-being and security of the state. The macro-understanding of state politics
which relates the interests of the state to the interests of the society and
social forces was lacking in the Hamidian
elite. Its reflexes
derived from its class formation welded around a state. For that
reason, it envisioned a class of entrepreneurs and professionals loyal to the
state and not posing a threat to the state as opposed to entrepreneurs and professionals alienated from and adverse
to the state. The Hamidian
state elite conceptualized the interests of the state in
contradistinction to the interests of the non- state actors, especially when
the non-state actors were at the same time non-Muslim and therefore unreliable
and even treacherous.
One of the crucial dynamics which set the ground for the
Hamidian autocracy to emerge and to consolidate itself was the fear of the
Tanzimat state elite of the rise of the non-Muslim bureaucrats. With the Reform
Edict of 1856, public service was opened to non-Muslims. By the 1860s, the non-Muslims were beginning
gradually to be promoted.424
Musurus Pasha was the first non-Muslim to hold the title of pasha. Non-Muslims
were admitted to the Supreme Council (Meclis-i
Vala) and later to the Council of State (Şuray-ı Devlet), established in 1868 and organized as the
legislative organ of the Empire.425 The rise of the non-Muslims in
the bureaucracy and the inevitability of the increasing presence and prominence
of the non-Muslims within Ottoman statecraft with the supposedly hidden
destructive agenda of the non-Muslims created questions in the minds of the
state elite.426 The personal autocracy of Abdülhamid enabled the circumvention of the non-Muslims and
avoided the interference of the rising non-Muslim threat within the government. The
423 For the observations of Eşref Albatı, one of the earliest military
veterinary graduates, see Albatı, Eşref, Hatıraları,
İstanbul: Türkiye Yayınevi,1945, pp. 16-17.
424 For the lists of the members of the Meclis-i Vala and the gradually increasing percentage of non-Muslisms appointed in the 1860s after the
appointments of Logofet Bey and Mihran Bey in 1864-1865 (H. 1282), see
Seyitdanlıoğlu, Mehmet, Tanzimat Devrinde
Meclis-i Vala (1838-1868), Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu Yayınları, 1994, pp.
202-218.
425 Shaw, Stanford
J. & Shaw, Ezel Kural, History of the
Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University
Press, 2002, v. II, p. 80.
426 For example,
see Ahmed Cevdet
Paşa, Ma‟ruzat, İstanbul: Çağrı
Yayınları, 1980, p. 2.
number of non-Muslims and their promotions were restrained during
the Hamidian rule although the number of non-Muslim officials continued to
increase exponentially.427 The imperial prerogative served as the
assurance of the preponderance of the Muslim character of the polity and the bureaucracy. It was the presence
of the sultan and his title as ―caliph‖ which were the hallmarks of
the Muslim (and tacitly Turkish) character of the polity. In short,
Abdülhamid‘s personal autocracy resembled a coup in a situation in which elite
interests could not be protected unless
a deus ex machina was asked to intervene. Although
Abdülhamid‘s autocracy partially eliminated a certain cabal, it was not simply
a takeover of power from the Tanzimat
bureaucracy given that the Tanzimat bureaucracy‘s institutional capacity and
institutionalization had deepened and been strengthened. The Hamidian takeover
may be regarded as a half-conscious strategy of the Tanzimat officials to counter
the new realities. ―Fine tuning was concerned in the
first degree with the power elite, the men who formulated and
applied policy. Even as autocratic a sultan as Abdülhamid II, who was in effect
the last real sultan of the empire, had to rely on a staff who fed him
information, advised him, and indeed influenced him. So, the so-called ‗Red
Sultan‘
who rarely left his palace, and never left his capital, depended
on these men(.)‖428
With the 1870s, as discussed above, a reaction to the Reform Edict
and to the new conditions triggered by that document
was in the air. 429 Since the Reform Edict, trust in the Tanzimat reformism had eroded
drastically. The autocracy of Abdülhamid was the only viable and optimum
solution to the discomfort felt by the state elite in restructuring the Ottoman
state to evade mounting European pressure and the troublesome non-Muslim
clamor. Hamidian modernization was an example
of ―controlled modernization‖ as an
427 Kırmızı, Abdülhamid, ibid, p.60; Ortaylı, İlber, ―II. Abdülhamid
Devrinde Taşra Bürokrasisinde Gayrımüslimler‖, in Sultan II. Abdülhamid ve Devri Semineri, İstanbul: Edebiyat
Fakültesi Basımevi, 1994, pp. 161-71.
428 Deringil, Selim, The Well-Protected Domains, London: I.B. Tauris, 1998, p. 10.
429 For the severe opposition of Mustafa Reşid Pasha, the architect of
the Rescript of Tanzimat, to the Rescript of Islahat based on his anxieties
concerning the increasingly privileged role of the non-Muslims and its possible repercussions, see Ahmed Cevdet
Paşa, Tezakir, Ankara: Türk
Tarih Kurumu Yayınları, 1991, vol I,
pp. 75-82.
alternative to the uncontrolled modernization of the liberal
Tanzimat.430 In short, the Hamidian era was a fine tuning which
adjusted the Ottoman state machine against the newly rising and encroaching
threats, whether merely perceived or real.
2.6.
Governance versus Politics: On the Social and Political
Cosmology of the Tanzimat Bureaucratic World
Another issue that has to be highlighted is the lack of
political space in the 19th century Ottoman Empire.
Politics may be defined as
―judgments and proposals for the conducting of
matters of governance and society‖, whereas
―governance‖ may be defined as the
―application of the expert and decided policies.‖ Politics a priori assumes that there are equally
legitimate alternative ways of addressing and resolving problems. Governance by
contrast presupposes that the means to deal with the problems is a matter of
technicality. It may be argued that
the Tanzimat denied any legitimate
role to politics.431 Not distinct from the classical Islamic notion that was apprehensive of fitna (sedition), politics was perceived as divisive and corrupting.
While the Young Turks, like the Young Ottomans preceding them, challenged the
rule of Abdülhmid, they did not oppose him on political grounds.432
They accused Abdülhamid of mismanagement of the state and of treachery. For
them, Abdülhamid was betraying the supreme interests of the Ottoman polity,
which was assumed to be monolithic, fixed, and identifiable. Abdülhamid
departed from serving the metaphysical Ottoman polity and cared only about his own interests and throne. Thus,
430 For an
impressive assessment of the Hamidian modernization, see Akarlı, Engin Deniz, The Problems
of External Pressures, Power Struggles, and. Budgetary Deficits in Ottoman
Politics under Abdülhamid II (1876-1909), unpublished dissertation, Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 1976,
431 See Findley, Carter
Vaughn, ―The Advent of Ideology in the Islamic Middle East (Part I)‖, Studia Islamica, No. 55 (1982),
pp. 143-169; Findley,
Carter Vaughn, ―The Advent of Ideology in the Islamic Middle East
(Part II)‖, Studia Islamica, No. 56
(1982), pp. 147- 180.
432 For a discussion
of the prevalence of Islamic notions in the thought of Young Turks such as
Abdullah Cevdet and Ahmed Rıza, see Mardin, Şerif, Continuity and Change in the
Ideas of the Young Turks, İstanbul: Robert College, 1969, pp.23-27.
Abdülhamid‘s reign was not legitimate for these reasons. The Young
Turks claimed to defend the genuine interests of the Ottoman polity, which was
facing the grave danger of partition and dissolution. Although they did not aim
to introduce ―politics‖ and replace it with ―governance‖, it was the Young Turks who had unintentionally crashed the notion of the legitimacy of
governance and introduced politics after the 1908 Revolution.433 It
was the strikingly new conditions of 1908 that had imposed the introduction of
―politics‖. The Revolution of 1908 opened new channels for the democratization of the political
sphere not in terms of
procedures, but in terms of the emergence of a new legitimacy based on the
masses (and political programs and manifestos) instead of on elite bargaining
and compromises, especially observable in Armenian and other non-Muslim
communities.434
The ideological assumption that politics was fitna and therefore evil and
illegitimate does not mean that there was no politics. On the contrary,
although not recognized as a legitimate activity, the deeds of the leading
Tanzimat figures and the prerogatives of Abdülaziz and Abdülhamid were all acts
of politics. The impetus behind these acts was clearly political concerns. Some
concerns were related to the domestic inter-elite struggles and some others
were strategies developed as responses to international developments. In many
cases, international and domestic concerns were indistinguishable and cannot be
taken into consideration in isolation. However, a conceptualization based on
the understanding of differentiation of ideas and the equal legitimacy of varying
opinions was non-existent due to the lack of a legacy similar to the European
religious wars, which gave birth to an at first reluctant and gradually internalized respect for or at least recognition of
433 Carter Findley discusses the same development with regard to the
advent of ideology. Findley claims that it was the Young Ottomans that had
introduced the notion of ideology but only partially due to their strong
allegiance to traditional Islamic thought. For Findley, whatever the limits of
the Young Ottomans‘ vision of ideology, their impact was remarkable. Findley,
Carter Vaughn, ―The Advent of Ideology in
the Islamic Middle East (Part II)‖, Studia
Islamica, No. 56 (1982), pp. 147-180. For a discussion of the role of
ideology, also see Türköne, Mümtaz‘er, İslamcılığın
Doğuşu, İstanbul: İletişim Yayınları, 1991.
434Kansu, Aykut, Politics in Post-Revolutionary Turkey,
1908-1913, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1992; Kayalı, Hasan, Young Turks and Arabs, Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1997; Prator, Sabine, Der Arabische Faktor
in der Jungtürkischen Politik,
Klaus Schwarz Verlag, 1993.
alternative beliefs and opinions.435 Politics were yet to
become legitimate in the late Ottoman Empire.
The Hamidian regime
may be defined as an amalgamation of
the institutionalization of a
modern bureaucratic state under the supervision of a semi-aristocratic and
patriarchal polity. The Hamidian bureaucracy was a loyalist bureaucracy, not
necessarily loyal to the persona of the sultan, but loyal to the Ottoman
polity, its image, its representations, and its ideal. Loyalty to the sultan
was one of the indispensable and fundamental components of the Ottoman polity
as the sultan‘s personality embodied and symbolized the integrity and immortality
of the empire. In such a complex organization, the role of the sultan was
pivotal. The office of the sultan was indispensable not because there was
consensus over the legitimacy and
efficiency of the system, but
because there was no viable and promising alternative to it, not unlike the
Habsburg monarchy in the perception of the German- speaking bureaucracy or in
the perception of the Russian bureaucracy. The presence of the sultanic
authority also excluded politics from the legitimate sphere of governance.
Moreover, there would be no transcendentalization of the governing elite and
the social internalization of the inherent superiority of the governing elite in the absence of the sultan and his
metaphysical aura. Allegiance to the sultan meant allegiance to the class
itself. Of course, the Turkish and Muslim (and caliphal) identity of the sultan
established the ethnic and confessional nature of the imperium as well.
Therefore, this was a class identity embedded in confessional and (to a certain
extent) ethnic identities. In Marxian terms, this was class consciousness
rather than a false consciousness.
It is also noteworthy to note that Engin Deniz Akarlı,
one of the leading authorities on the Hamidian bureaucracy, suggests that the
highest echelons of the Hamdian bureaucracy were an exception to the impressive
professionalization and structuring of the lower and middle echelons. Akarlı
writes that, ―other contradictions that embittered these young bureaucrats were
related to the politicized nature of the upper reaches of the Ottoman
officialdom. Each pasha was at once an administrative expert and a political
figure, susceptible to the influence of different interest groups. Petitioning,
persuasion, shared profits, and bribery
were among the means available to influence a pasha's decision; the
435 On the ―birth of
tolerance‖, see Zagorin, Peter, How the Idea of Religious Tolerance Came to the West, Princeton: Princeton
University Press, 2003.
nature
of the business at hand as well as the personality and current power
of the pasha in question determined the means chosen.‖436 For Akarlı, the
critical function of Abdülhamid was to be the
supreme arbiter between the
pashas. Nevertheless, Abdülhamid‘s job was not easy. ―For one thing, he was
openly afraid of the pashas' proven ability
to seat and unseat sultans; for another, he believed that it was ‗the
royal fountain of favor‘ that produced "the best harvest on the field of sovereignty.‖437 Of course, the arrogance and pettiness of the
pashas does not mean that the Ottoman
polity was mere the
preserve of pashas for their corruption and plunder. On the contrary, it was a metaphysical entity in which pashas felt
at ease and embodied
the social and political cosmology of a certain mindset.
It was Şerif Mardin who first demonstrated that the
thought of Young Ottomans in particular and the Tanzimat in general could not
be understood without taking the Islamic worldview and Islamic visions of
political and social order into account. Young Ottoman thought was very much
molded within this mental/ideological formation. The Young Ottomans showed an
intense ―concern for the welfare of the Islamic community.‖438 On
the other hand, Selim Deringil showed that the Hamidian state policy displayed
a more secular and utilitarian stance employing Islamic concerns for other
political ends. In the words of Reinkowski, the Tanzimat aimed at ―the
institution of a secular foundation for state ideology, but through the use of
Islamic vocabulary and ideological tools. After having sifted a great amount of
documents it seems rather that the Ottoman routine bureaucratic correspondence
during the Tanzimat period shows, if anything, a kind of secularized ‗Islamic‘
vocabulary.‖439 He further argued that;
436 Akarlı, Engin
Deniz, ―The Tangled Ends of an Empire: Ottoman Encounters with the West and
Problems of Westernization—an Overview‖, Comparative
Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East, 26.3 (2006), p. 363. Also see İrtem, Süleyman Kani, Sultan Abdülhamid ve Yıldız Kamarillası,
İstanbul: Temel Yayınları, 2003.
437 Akarli, Engin
Deniz, …, p. 363
438 For a perfect demonstration of the role and meaning of Islam in the
classical age, see Crone, Patricia, Medieval
Islamic Political Thought, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2005.
439 Reinkowski, Maurus, ―The State‘s Security and the Subjects‘ Prosperity:
Notions of Order in Ottoman Bureaucratic Correspondence (19th Century)‖, in Legitimizing the Order, Hakan Karetepe, & Maurus Reinkowski (ed.),
Leiden; Boston; Köln: Brill, 2005, p.199.
―At the heart of
the Tanzimat political idiom it is a state ideology of order cum prosperity. Central to it is the
term asayiş (public order, public
tranquility; repose, rest). Similar to it, but more narrowly referring to the
technical production of security is emniyet
(safety, freedom from fear, security;
confidence, belief; the police, the law).
Security is granted by the state to its subjects, but the state
is entitled in recompense to the
subjects' complete obedience. The immediate outcome and positive product of as- vvi,s- is prosperity, expressed by the
terms rahat (ease, rest, comfort,
tranquility) or istirahat and refah (easy circumstances, comfort,
luxury, affluence). The term refah is
based on the general notion of mülkün
ma‟murluğu (flourishing condition,
prosperity) which seems nothing
else than the Roman
salus publica (public wealth) in an Ottoman
disguise. Prosperity, hand in hand with security, will be of maximum benefit to
the state's and society's order440….The
official announcements of the Tanzimat stressed the quest for enlightened state policy and sought a new basis on
which to legitimize the rule of the central power over the polity.
However, the standard terminology of
the bureaucracy stuck closer to the
traditional concepts of order. All the images and terms that have been
discussed to this point were in use not only in the early Tanzimat period but also in the later phases which
started with the second reform rescript of 1856 and were to be enforced even in
the empire's most remote provinces. New concepts central to the Tanzimat
ideology did not supersede old concepts but only supplemented them, e.g., the
confessionally neutral kb' a which could be applied to all
subjects of the Ottoman state coexisted with the representation of the
Christian people as members of the "flock" (re` aya). Tanzimat rhetoric and political terminology remained
deeply embedded in the traditional Ottoman imagination of a perfect order and
society.‖441
This does not mean that Tanzimat remained within the premodern
and traditional cosmology. On the contrary, gradually the Tanzimat figures learnt and adapted the modern political
and social discourses and visions. These two cosmologies do not exclude each
other. Based on the aforementioned premises, the Hamidian bureaucracy blended the
traditional Islamic Ottoman
political and social
cosmology with the modern cosmology and institutionalized it. In this regard, Hamidian
institutionalization of the bureaucracy sealed the perimeters of Turkish
modernity. The Hamidian bureaucracy, considerably institutionalized and
enlarged by the 1890s as an interest group which could influence (although not
shape) the forging of the modern Ottoman polity was also compatible with their interests as individuals and as an
interest group. This was an internalized and intimate state meaningful within a certain
social and political
cosmology. In this perception, the
440 Reinkowski, Maurus, ...,
p. 200.
441 Reinkowski, Maurus, …, p. 204.
nation was defined in reference to the state which was perceived
within a cultural prism. The nation was to be submissive to the imperial state
which represented the nation in it. This state also internalized the habitus of
this state elite. Therefore, the ―nation‖ was imagined in line with the
habitus, cultural formations, and premises of this state elite. The state was
reified as long as it served as the embodiment of this habitus and become its
disseminator.442 Thus, the Turkish nation was imagined ―secular‖ and
―modern‖ as opposed to ―backward‖ and ―pious‖.
2.7.
The Enigma and Spirit
of Tanzimat in the Eyes of
Western Beholders
The Western perceptions of the Tanzimat and the Tanzimat
men may be insightful for us to identify the patterns in which the ―new men‖ of
Tanzimat were depicted and enable us to imagine the nature of the state elite
of the Tanzimat and Hamidian periods. The Westerners‘ accounts perceived and
interpreted the course of the 19th century Ottoman Empire entirely with regard
to the developments in the Ottoman state apparatus. This narrative was
―statist‖ in the sense that the state was assumed to be the sole determinative
actor in the flow of history and historical development.443 The
Western interest was focused upon
this supposedly omnipotent actor. They were interested in the reformation of
the cruel Muslim institution called the Ottoman state. The Tanzimat, which was
identified simply as ―reform‖ in the western accounts, constituted the central
theme of the historical narrative. The disagreements among various accounts
revolved around two questions: the
442 For an impressive analysis of the familiar and intimate relation
established by the people and by the
bureaucracy, see Herzfeld, Michael, Cultural
Intimacy, London; New York: Routledge, 1997.
443 For a balanced evaluation of the Tanzimat with pro-Turkish
leanings, see Engelhardt, Turquie et le
Tanzimat ou Historie des Reforms Dans L‟Empire Ottoman, Paris, 1882.
Engelhardt portrayed the 19th century Ottoman transformation as
reformism and reorganization enacted by the state for reasons of state.
Engelhardt focused specifically on the administrative and organizational
reforms. However, he emphasized that this was not a technical process, but an
ideological/mental decision and breakthrough.
degree of successfulness of the reforms
and the sincerity of the reformers.444 With
―reform‖, they implied the Ottoman state‘s reorganization but also
more importantly its evolving/emerging new mentality. Thus, the term ―reform‖
was associated more with a mental change of the Muslim ruling elite of the
Ottoman Empire than a technical/organizational change.
So, here in these accounts we encounter not a Weberian
legal/bureaucratic state, but a state governed by ideological concerns and
ambitions. Here, the ideology determines the nature of the state, not vice
versa. That is, these accounts assume an idealist theory of state and history. These accounts supposed that by
understanding the dominant mentality of the ruling Muslim elite, they could
grasp the nature of the Ottoman state. The Ottoman state was merely an
embodiment of the ideological and mental disposition of the Muslim ruling elite.
It may be also claimed that these accounts did not
specifically explore the ideological dispositions of the Ottoman elite
(Islamism, liberalism, et cetera) but attempted to trace the intentions and
good will of the Ottoman state as an abstraction. The critical question they
had endeavored to decipher was if the Ottoman state had (inherently) ―good‖ or
―evil‖ intentions.
The western accounts had a very idealistic conceptualization
of state of affairs. They discussed the political situation and developments in
terms of ―good‖ or ―bad‖, or within the Christian value
system, in terms
of ―good‖ and ―evil‖. This is obviously not unexpected given
that most of the accounts were written by the evangelical Protestant
missionaries. However, the accounts of non-missionaries (diplomats,
journalists, et cetera) were not very different. This is because the English
observers especially revealed an intense Protestant devotion and commitment
which guided the formation of their worldviews.445 There were two levels of ―idealizations‖ within this discourse.
The first level was with regard to the
444 For example, David Urquart, the foremost Turcophile, in his effort
to convince skeptics regarding the sincerity
of Turkish reformism wrote that, ―all Turks nowadays
exhibited
‗the strongest desire of
instruction and respect for our customs and institutions.‘ ‖ Cunningham, Alan, Eastern Questions in the Nineteenth Century, London, Portland:
Cass, 1993, vol II, p. 73.
445 The most important name whose worldview and political commitments
were shaped by Protestant evangelism was definitely Stanford Canning. To
understand his worldview, see the collection of his essays, Eastern Question,
John Murray, 1881.
―essential nature‖ of the reforming Ottoman state, whether
it was essentially blameless and innocent, determined to get rid of
its unspeakable sins of yesteryear, or was it the old sinister and deceitful
Ottomans posing as if reforming in order to deceive ―civilized nations‖. The
second level concerned the extent of success of reforms if it was assumed that Ottomans were sincere in their
endeavors. The accounts rated the level of ―purity‖ of the Ottoman
state in terms
of its success in its reformism. The more it was found
―reformist‖, the more ―benevolent‖ it was. It is worth
noting that even the word ―reform‖
itself was a religious/Protestant concept and refers to a spiritual rebirth
purifying the soul from degeneration and sinister corruptions, sins, and vices.
Here, ―reform‖ did not imply the connotation the word gained in later times
(gradual and modest transformation as opposed to a radical transformation), but
on the contrary implied a strong commitment to complete transformation. This
approach apparently reflected a Christian/Protestant worldview.
It is also important to bear in mind that the 19th century accounts
were speaking of
―national traits‖ and ―national characters‖. As one ethnicity/nation/race might have round cheeks, narrow foreheads, and tough
faces, they might be also sly, treacherous, hospitable, or quiet. These
―national characteristics‖ in fact reflected the moral judgments objectified by attributed national characteristics. These alleged
characteristics might not necessarily be entirely good or entirely evil but in the amalgam of these
attributes, authors revealed their sympathies and antipathies towards different
―races‖446. In various traveler accounts of Ottoman lands, some
sympathized with Greeks and despised Armenians, whereas other travelers boosted
Bulgarians and scorned
Serbians.447 It is as if all the authors had their
446 For some obvious
examples of attributing certain traits to certain ethnicities, among many
other, see Mrs. Fanny Janet Blunt and Stanley Lane Poole, The People of Turkey: Twenty Years‟ Residence Among Bulgarians, Greeks,
Albanians, Turks and Armenians, John Murray, 1878, 2 volumes; Reid, John, Turkey and the Turks Being the Present State of the Ottoman Empire, Robert Tyas
& Paternoster Raw, 1840; Pardoe, Julia, The
City of Sultan and the Domestic Manners of the Turks, 1862. For a study on the Russian observer‘s perceptions of the ―Persian‖, see Andreeva, Elena, Russia and Iran in the Great Game: Travelogues and Orientalism,
London; New York: Routledge, 2007.
447 Because Armenians inhabit poor and inaccessible mountainous
regions, display an authentic and uncorrupted pure version of Christianity, and
possess a noble savage image, Armenians were the most sympathetic group.
Armenians were the group most open to Protestant missionary
propaganda, whereas Greeks were subjects of the strong and
―favorite races‖ among others which
they observed as humble, trustworthy, hard-working, et cetera in contrast to other ―races‖ sinister,
untrustworthy, and pernicious. Similarly, all these writers developed their
opinions of Turks and their national traits, some high, some low, some very low.448 Apparently, different from the ―subject
races‖, Turks were the
―master race‖, and therefore appraisal of the Turks could not be
done without making statements about Ottoman rule. Some differentiated between
the Turkish populace at large and Ottoman officialdom, and some commented that
the differences were only on the surface.449 These prejudices
(although derived from some factual observation) also influenced their
assessment of the capacity of Turks to ―reform‖. They also judged the genuine
sincerity of the Turks to reform. If the Turk was to be essentially sinister and
treacherous, there would be no reason to believe in the word of the Turk.450 Of course, it
authoritarian
Greek Patriarchy, which was perceived as a corrupted body. For such sympathetic
Armenian accounts, see Tozer, H.P, Turkish
Armenia and Eastern Anatolia, London, 1881, Dwight, H.G.O, Christianity in Turkey (A Narrative of the
Protestant Reformation in the Armenian Church), London, 1854, Bliss, Edward
M, Turkey and the Armenian Atrocities,
London, 1896. Hamlin, Cyrus, Among the
Turks, London, 1878.
448 For very useful documentation, Reinhold Schiffer
documents parts of several early 19th
century English travel accounts based on the subjects. For the analyses of the
―natural Turk‖ in five accounts (Thornton, Frankland, Madden, Kinneir, Carne,
Emerson), see Schiffer, Reinhold, Turkey
Romanticized: Images of the Turks in Early 19th Century English Travel
Literature, Studienverlag Dr. N. Bockmeyer, 1982. Also see his Oriental Panaroma: British Travellers in 19th
Century Turkey, Rodopi, 1999.
449 Edwin Pears distinguishes between the ―private
Turk‖ and the public Turk. He writes;
―(T)here was no one among us who hated the Turk as a private man. We all recognised that he had traits of kindliness,
simplicity, and generosity which made him lovable. It was only when he was
acting as one in authority, and when the damnable spirit of fanaticism took
possession of him, that he became a savage beast.‖ Edwin Pears, Forty Years in Constantinople, Herbert
Jenkins Limited, 1916, p. 60. Likewise, American journalist and historian William
McCracken distinguishes between
―rural Turk‖ and the ―official Turk‖. Whereas the ―rural
Turk‖ is hospitable, temperate, considerate, and kind to animals, ―there is, of course, nothing to say in
favor of the official Turk.‖ Quoted in Moore, John Hammond, America Looks at Turkey, unpublished
dissertation, University of Virginia, 1961, pp. 165-66.
450 In the introduction of his book, Sir Charles Eliot relates a story
in this fashion. The vali of ―Karakeu‖ after all politeness reveals that he
sees all the Christians as swine. The vali says that his father kept saying
that all Christians were swine and that as a youth he disagreed with his
father. He goes on: ―I thought my father was a fool. But now that my own beard is getting grey - by God, I think the old gentleman
was right.‖ Eliot believes that
should be emphasized that these clichés predominantly derived from
religious beliefs and premises.
Another predominant paradigm of these western accounts was ―liberalism‖.
―Liberalism‖ embedded in these accounts was not an ideology with its
20th century implications and overt political connotations. Although French
influence had its impact on the making of liberalism, the 19th century
Anglo-Saxon weltanschauung was the
primary foundation of 19th century liberalism. This liberalism was not a
normative ideology but an expression of a time and space specific perception of
social order. The liberalism of the 19th century (beginning with 18th century British political commentators, as
well as Adam Smith, who succeeded them) was primarily the belief that with the
progression of modern world, more liberties and freedom will make the world a better place.451 This optimism was less a coherent ideology than a
certain mindset and a set of attitudes and beliefs. Although this mindset was
necessarily secular and distanced itself from conservatism, it had a strongly
embedded religious motivation behind it. Liberalism was also an ethical
perspective interpreting political
developments in terms
of value judgments, such as
―good‖ and ―bad‖. In this regard, liberalism in the eyes of ―liberals‖ was defending the
―good‖, the ―just‖,
and the ―right‖ against the ―evil‖ and ―unjust‖. In this perception, the forces of conservatism and ―old mentalities‖ represented
the evil. The shining brave new world was against the dark forces of the
medieval mind. Therefore, in its assessments and perceptions, 19th century
Anglo-Saxon liberalism was the reformed and secularized form of
Christianity/Protestantism in the 19th century.452 It was the new
expression of the Christian/Protestant faith and ideals.453 In other words,
liberalism was not a worldly
this anecdote
exposes the real nature of the Turkish governing elite under their Western
disguise. Sir Charles Eliot, Turkey in
Europe, London: Cass & Co. Ltd., 1965, p.14
451 For an overview of eighteenth century British liberalism, see
Patterson, Annabel, Early Modern
Liberalism, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 1997.
452 The word ―whig‖ would be more appropriate for the peculiar version
of 19th century British liberalism.
453 Democracy was also seen as the perfection of the Christian/Protestant
ideal. Graham Maddox contrasts the 19th and 20th century
views of the emergence of Western democracy as follows. ―Whereas the religious influences upon emerging communities were once taken for granted, the very process of
secularization required the preservation of religious liberties has in turn produced a climate in which the secular foundations are assumed to be
ideology with a political/economic program, but the political
expression of Dissenting Protestantism. With regard to the Ottoman Empire,
liberals tended to support or condemn the Ottoman state depending on their
theological images and their interpretation of the divine essence of the
Ottoman Empire.454
The pivotal and complicated problem in all these
discussions was the Muslim character
of the Ottoman polity. Could a Muslim polity ever be ―good‖? If the answer to
this question was affirmative, then the entire Tanzimat was to be perceived as
a test of this bold statement455. Although an analysis of the
numerous accounts would show that most of the accounts tended to answer this
question negatively, quiet a number of accounts were optimistic, some for
political reasons (seeing Turkey as a political ally against the Russian menace456)
or for religious reasons (the Christian idea that people are inherently good
and act accordingly when the opportunity is given). The Palmerstonian foreign
policy of safeguarding the integrity of the Ottoman Empire was launched against
the expansionist ambitions of Russia. This Turcophile
stance was criticized by many liberals
for supporting
the only ones
important to modern democracy.‖ Maddox continues; ―(t)his book attempts to
reaffirm the essential nature of the religious background to democratic
theory.‖ Maddox, Graham, Religion and the Rise of
Democracy, London; New York: Routledge, 1996, p. vii. Also for the
―modernity‖ of the evangelical/Protestant inspiration and theology, see
Bebbington, D.W, Evangelicalism in
Britain: A History from the 1730s to the 1980s, London; New York:
Routledge, 1989; Brian Stanley (ed.), Christian
Missions and the Enlightenment, Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, 2001.
454 For a classic account of the perception of the zealous Dissenting
Protestantism towards the infidel and barbarous Turks, see Shannon, Richard, Gladstone and the Bulgarian Agitation,
Archon Books, 1975. The book‘s introduction perfectly illustrates the religious
nature and origins of British liberalism.
455 ―Can the Koran stretch
to this point
?‖ asks ―(o)ne Englishman, looking
at the need for regenerating
the Ottoman Empire in 1812(.)‖ Cunningham, Allan, ibid, p.99. Stratford Canning
was very negative regarding the nature of Islam. He observes that ―(t)he master
mischief in this country is dominant religion‖. For him, the prosperity and
progress of the Ottoman Empire is ―to be measured by the degree of emancipation
from the source of injustice and weakness‖ which is Islam. Ibid, p. 126.
456 The foremost advocate of Turkey
as a staunch ally against Russia is David Urquart. See his Turkey and its Resources,
London, 1833. His extreme Turcophilism
(or his Turcomania according to some of his contemporary critics) was
scorned and seen as the eccentricity of a
crazy man. See Timur, Taner, Osmanlı
Çalışmaları, V Yayınları, 1989, pp. 178-181. For an account of the thought
and deeds of David Urquart, see Nash, Geoffrey, From Empire to Orient: Travellers to the Middle East
1830-1926, I.B. Tauris, 2005, pp. 43-73.
and buttressing Muslim oppression of the Christian rea‟ya. For these opponents of the
policy, the Christian rea‟ya would
prefer their co-religionist Russians vis-a-vis the Ottomans.457 The
counter-argument argued that Turks were less oppressive than the Russians and
furthermore that Turks were reforming with a tremendous zeal. Therefore, Turkey was by now a much better
polity, and the old Turkish brutality
was about to end for good
soon458. In fact, throughout the 19th century, the
British political scene was characterized with the struggle between the
Turcophil conservatives versus skeptical liberals (who represent different
confessional and theological constituencies).
It is also noteworthy that the same word in English
(reform) had two possible translations into Turkish
with diverging connotations. Both ―Tanzimat‖ and ―Islahat‖ were referring to the same concept in the English
political/theological vocabulary: Reform. In Ottoman political terminology, ıslahat (reform) referred to reforms
addressing the rights of the Ottoman
Christians whereas tanzimat (reorganization) implied the reorganization of the Ottoman state within the age-old,
intra-Muslim world. Whereas ―tanzimat‖
was espoused unanimously by the bureaucracy, ―ıslahat‖ encountered fierce opposition, including Mustafa Reşid Pasha.459 For the Tanzimat
bureaucracy, ―tanzimat‖ was ―necessary‖ and
―good‖, and therefore it had to be undertaken immediately and
seriously whereas ıslahat was
secondary, irrelevant, and even treacherous. Such differentiation was
irrelevant for the Christian/Western observers of Ottoman reform for whom the
gist of the matter was the amelioration of the sufferings of the Ottoman
Christians. Within this perspective, the reorganization of the Ottoman state
was a means to improve the conditions of the Christians. Amelioration of the life conditions of the Christians was perceived as the
457 Richard Cobden, the arch-liberal, pacifist, and strongest opponent
of the pro-Ottoman policy in the parliament, said ―If I were a rajah I should prefer
a Russian government rather than a Mohamedan one.‖ To this statement, Palmerston
responded with saying that Cobden was ―greatly misinformed as to the state of
Turkey for the last thirty years.‖ praising the advancements achieved by the
Tanzimat. Cunningham, Allan, ibid, p. 214.
458 Cunningham,
Allan, Eastern Question in the Nineteenth
Century, London, Portland: Frank Cass, 1993, v. II, pp. 67-8.
459 For the notice
of Mustafa Reşid Pasha against the Rescript of Islahat, see Ahmed Cevdet Pasha,
Tezakir, Türk Tarih Kurumu Yayınları,
1953, v. I, pp. 75-85.
principal criterion measuring the level of the success of the
―Ottoman reform‖.460 These diverging perspectives caused
misunderstanding between the two parties.
The assumption in these accounts was that the Ottoman
state was the only agent of Ottoman political
development. The will of the omnipotent Ottoman
state was to determine the prospects of the Ottoman
lands and the miserable Ottoman Christians. The litmus test of Ottoman goodwill was its commitment to ―reform‖. Reform was associated with
all the good deeds. All the other issues were derivatives of reform
with a capital R. The ―reform‖
requires the ―will‖ of the Ottoman leadership and also the
technical/administrative capability of the Ottoman leadership. Both sympathetic and unsympathetic
observers of the 19th century Ottomans make the observation that whatever the
efforts of the leadership may be, the execution of the reform encounters severe
problems.461 There were different and varying arguments brought up
by the observers who acknowledged the limitations of the reform. Some spoke
about the lack of modern, technical knowledge. Some pointed out the financial
inadequacy of the empire. Some others who preferred more ideological reasoning for the partial failure of the reform indicated the discrepancy between the visions and mentalities of
the ruling central elite and the conservative provincial administrators and officials. For these observers,
although there was an enlightened and determined leadership in Constantinople
which was anxious to endorse liberal/western
governance, the local officials were subscribing to the old,
despotic oriental mind. This
assumption was one of the most
overt clichés of the paradigm
of westernization which contrasts
the enlightened few of the
leadership with the ignorant and barbaric unenlightened oriental flock. In this
assumption, with the emanation of the new enlightened ideas
from the privileged few to the lower cadres of government and to the bulk of the Muslim populace, the transformation of
460 Davison,
Roderick, Reform in the Ottoman Empire,
1856-1876, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1963, p. 6. Also see
Iseminger, Gordon Llewellyn, Britain‟s
Eastern Policy and the Ottoman Christians, 1856-1877, unpublished
dissertation, University of Oklahoma, 1965.
461 A very
sympathetic and optimistic account is by Ubicini, H.A, Etat Present de L‟Empire Ottoman, Paris, 1876. For a work very
unsympathetic to the reforms of early Tanzimat, see Macfarlane, Charles, Turkey and its Destiny, Lea and
Blanchard, 1850. Also for a severe criticism of Mahmud II‘s reform, see Slade,
Adolphus, Records of Travels in Turkey,
Greece, etc. and of a Cruise in the Black Sea with Capitan Pasha in the Years
1829, 1830, and 1831, London: Saunders and Otley, 2005, 2 volumes.
the Ottoman Empire will be completed. Given the small possibility of
a mental transformation on such a scale, the western observers feel obliged to
admit that the enlightened views of the leadership are not enough as long as
the bulk of the officials retain
oriental despotic worldviews.
As stated above, without developing a Weberian state
theory of post-Holocaust 20th century, the western observers perceived the
Ottoman state (as any other ―state‖) as the embodiment of a certain mentality and will of the ruling elite. In other words, the state was for them a matter
of ―mentality‖. It was a mere reflection of the minds of the people holding the
commanding positions. The western accounts observed that the emanation of this
―idea‖ could not be achieved by decree. This was a problem given that the
Muslim masses and provincial petty officials continued
to be ―fanatics‖ regardless of the intentions of the Tanzimat bureaucrats. The ―idea‖ had to be
disseminated to be effective. Therefore, the ―old Turks‖
of all levels have to be eliminated, marginalized, sidelined, or transformed.
As stated above, this line cannot be explained by reducing it to a modernist
paradigm. This approach is also ―ethical‖. It perceives a struggle
between ―good‖ and ―bad‖. We should bear in mind that in the 19th
century, western supremacy was associated with Christian ideals, especially
when encountering the non-Christian world.
Another major
point that has to be emphasized is the dynamics
of international relations and
politics shaping the development of these clichés, prejudices and assumptions.
Apparently, the sympathetic discourses developed by British and Franch authors
towards the Ottomans derived from the fact that the Ottoman Empire was an ally
of the British- French axis against
the Russians.462 With the dying out of this alliance
and the failure
of
462 On the birth of Turcophilism in the establishment circles of
Britain and its association with the championing of reformism in the Ottoman
Empire, Alan Cunningham notes that
―(Turcophiles)
during the rest of the 1830s....banished the traditional and picturesque
impressions of the barbaric pageantries of old Turkey, and gave the Sultan‘s
empire a new image and a new importance (T)hey were Turcophiles who set out to show that common
problems
confronted states, and that while the Ottoman Empire rather lagged behind other
countries in dealing with these, there was no inherent reason why her rulers
should not solve them successfully, given the time and the guidance. A
rejuvenated Ottoman Empire would be a logical friend for Britain, she would
stay the Russian penetration of central Asia, and consequently check the
tsarist threat to the security of British India (.) Cunningham, Alan, ibid, p.
67. As seen clearly, the thrust of the Turcophile argument is that the Turk is not the unchanging barbarous
and imprudent man. On the contrary, he is as
the Ottoman treasury to pay its debts to its English and French
creditors in 1875, the English and French accounts will also change.463
The accounts written after the waning of Tanzimat were more critical and
mistrustful of the Ottoman reformation. Around that time, the image of the
unreconstructed barbaric character of the Ottomans made a sudden comeback. This is very understandable because as the Ottoman
Empire lost its stance in the
19th century ethical battle to be placed on the side of the ―good‖ against the
―evil‖. By departing from the British-French axis, the Ottomans began to
represent barbarism, bigotry, and the
enemies of civilization. Its inadequacies and negative attributes became
visible and disturbing in the eyes of the Western observers. The optimism of
the early Tanzimat waned after the failure of the enactment of the reforms, and
thus the shortcomings of the entire Tanzimat became more apparent in the eyes
of the western accounts.464
2.8.
“Old Turks”
―Old Turks‖ versus ―Young Turks‖ was one of the favorite
themes of the western observers of the Ottoman Empire, who felt no need to
explain what these labels meant and assumed that they were self-evident. Mordtmann in his 1877 book Stambul und Das
normal as the
others and therefore open to improvement and civilization. The British support
for peripheral countries very much depends on the reformist zeal of the
countries in question. Backing the
British was one of the fundamental motivations for the political authorities to
reform and empower the reformist party. For the case of Iran, see Bakhash,
Shaul, Iran: Monarchy, Bureaucracy &
Reform under the Qajars 1858-1896, London: Ithaca Press, 1978. For the
Moroccan case, see Burke, Edmund, Prelude
to Protectorate in Morocco, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1976. In
the Persian case, similar to the role they played in the Ottoman Empire, Russia
was the chief sponsor of the anti-reformist party, whereas in Morocco, this
role was assumed by France and Spain. Although the British ―open door‖ policy
was the principal reason for the British championship of reform, the
peculiar 19th century evangelical/Protestant liberal ideology of Britain was
also a supportive motivation not to be ignored.
463 Clay, Christopher, Gold for
the Sultan, London: I.B. Tauris, 2000, pp. 314-331, 544, 550-51.
464 For example see Dwight, H, Turkish Life in War Time,
London, 1881; Sir Charles Eliot,
Turkey in Europe, London: E. Arnold, 1908.
Moderne Türkenthum465
elaborated on the meaning of these categories and
criticized the erroneous usage of these categories. Mordtmann noted that westerners used the term
―Young Turks‖ in relation to Young Germany and Young Italy (which
were movements with overtly liberal
overtones) and understood Junkers when referring to the ―Old Turks‖. Mordtmann wrote that the genuine Old Turks were gone forever
after the breakdown
of the janissary corps. For
Mordtmann, if there were a few of them surviving, they could never form a
faction. Mordtmann established that there was no Old Turk party defending their
interests fervently as the Junker party was doing in Germany.466 The
―Old Turks‖ were a new formation rather than being the unreconstructed remnants
of the old guard and representing an old class. For Mordtmann, the Old Turks
were conservative in the sense that they defended the autocracy in its existing
form. The principal motivation of ―Old Turks‖ was to avoid foreign interference
as much as possible. Here, Mordtmann made an interesting point, arguing that
for this reason the Old Turks were keen to satisfy the non- Muslims and
maintain good relations with the Western powers. Mordtmann opposed the commonly
held view among European observers that Young Turks were preferable to Old
Turks.467 Mordtmann went further and wrote that, ―Old Turks are with
a few exceptions honorable men.‖ For Mordtmann, it was the Young Turks who were radical although
he
465 A.D, Mordtmann, Stambul und das Moderne Türkenthum,
Verlag Von Duncker & Humblot: Leipzig, 1877.
466 ―Old Turk‖ in the romantic 19th century western accounts referred
to the oriental man with his turban on his head, sitting on his divan
symbolizing the immortal Orient with all its
idleness and lack of a concept of time. Mordtmann warns the readers that no
such person exists, at least not in
Istanbul. Charles MacFarlane, writing in 1850, illustrated the
transformation/alteration of the ―Turk‖ vividly . ―The Turks over in
Constantinople certainly looked much less like Turks, and were far more civil
than in 1828. They were incomparably less picturesque and imposing in their
outward appearance....(i)n many cases,
it cost me thought and trouble in distinguish between Mussulmen and Rayahs.
Twenty years ago, there was no possibility of confounding them; for, even without the then marked distinctions of dress, of
head-gear, of boots and papoushes, the Osmanlees were to be known by their
swaggering gait, their overbearing looks, and their contemptuous insolent manners.‖
Macfarlane, Charles, Turkey and Its Destiny, Lea and Blanchard, 1850,
p. 41.
467 Andreas David
Mordtmann, İstanbul ve Yeni Osmanlılar,
İstanbul: Pera Yayıncılık, 1999, pp. 153-54.
regarded all the Turks as chauvinists whatever party they belonged
to.468 To sum up, what distinguished Old and Young Turks for
Mordtmann was the methods they employed rather than their mentality. Moreover,
because the ―Young Turks‖ were on better terms with modern equipment, they were
more capable of realizing their ambitions and hence were more dangerous.
Mordtmann‘s assessment was prophetic. He was exceptional
in seeing the complexities and
contradictions of modernization in general and Turkish modernization in
particular. The fundamental misrepresentation the western accounts held to was
to construct the clash between
the supposed ―Old Turk party‖
and the ―Young
Turk party‖ as constituted with regard to their
approaches to Westernization and modernization. This alleged distinction
between the Old Turks and Young Turks was illusory and superficial in many
ways. While it has a grain of truth in it, this distinction did not reflect a
sharply defined ideological antagonism or even a factional division.469
The post-World War II Anglo-Saxon historiography was in
agreement in calling the men of Tanzimat reformers470, but although the
term ―reform‖ was in common usage at the time, what was meant by the word
―reform‖ was not always clear. The reformers did not face any apparent antagonistic party of considerable strength before the 1870s.
In this regard, ―reform‖ did not imply any
political or ideological standpoint, but implied only the concern to undertake administrative and legal changes to render
the Ottoman state more efficient, stronger, and better able to respond
to the challenges of the modern world (hence, Tanzimat). For
―reformers‖, reform was a technical matter rather than an
ideological imperative in the absence of an outspoken opposition organized
within the political/bureaucratic sphere. We observe the politicization and factionalization of ―reformism‖ with the1870s
as alternative
468 ibid, p. 168.
469 Family ties and connections were more determining than ideological
positions. A striking example of the
priority of lineages over ideological
stances was exemplified by the active support of Mehmed Bey for his
uncle Mahmud Nedim Pasha. Mehmed Bey, a Young Ottoman who fled to Paris in
1865, epitomized the radical wing of the Young Ottomans, published Inkilab
seeking a revolution, and personally fought with the Paris Commune publicly
advocated the prime ministry of his conservative uncle. See Davison, p.218
470 See Bernard
Lewis, The Emergence.... p. 127;
Roderick Davison, Reform..... p. 81,
Niyazi Berkes, The Development… p.
155.
voices within the bureaucracy and political sphere were heard and
liberalism had to accompany the reform process.
Western observers were divided in their assessment of the capability of ―old‖ Turks to
reform. Throughout the 19th century, British authors had a tendency
toward ―showing a very English respect for the Ottoman governing class‖ and
―constructed indigenous peoples (of the Balkans-DG) through
the familiar motifs
of chaos, savagery, backwardness, and obfuscation.‖471 Burnaby, a
Turcophile and propagator of support for the Ottoman Empire against the Russian
aggression just before the 1877-78 Russo-Turkish War, saw Turks as a race capable of governing, even governing Christians after the ―cadi‘s
law‖ was abrogated given that
this law, as Burnaby emphasized, does not accept the testimony of a Christian. Burnaby‘s
sympathy for and confidence in the ―Turk‖
increased, especially after he encountered the unruly and
savage Kurds in East Anatolia.472 Although others were dubious of
the ability of the ―Turk‖ to govern, they still respected the remarkable
characteristics of the ―Turk‖. Mark Sykes, who travelled throughout Anatolia
and Arab lands, observed the ―rule of the Turk‖ and wrote, ―A Turk will understand an Englishman‘s
character much sooner than he will an Arab‘s; the latter is so subtle in
his reasoning, so quick-witted, so argumentative, and so great a master of
language that he leaves the stolid Osmanli amazed and dazed, comprehending
nothing. The Turk is not, truth to tell, very brilliant as a rule, though very
apt in assuming Western cultivation.‖473 In Edhem Bey, he found a reformist Turk who resolved
the Armenian disorders. ―(H)ere the chapter
of Zeitun closes, for within three weeks Edhem Pasha, a noble example
of what a cultivated Turk can
be, arrived on the scene, and with the assistance of the European Consuls
concluded an honorable peace with the town(.)‖474 In another
passage, he expressed his doubts that Turkey could ever be reformed in the grip
of financial shortcomings, given the lack of a developed infrastructure and educational opportunities, though these structural limitations
471 Hammond, Andrew,
The Debated Lands: British and American
Representations of the Balkans, Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2007,
p. 5.
472 See Burnaby, Fred, On Horseback Throughout Anatolia, Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1996, p. 193, pp. 224-26 among many other anecdotes.
473 Sykes, Mark, Dar-ul-Islam : A Record
of a Journey Through Ten of the Asiatic
Provinces of Turkey, London: Darf, 1988, p.64.
474 Sykes, Mark, ibid, p. 76.
did not lessen his respect for the ―Turk‖.475 Likewise,
the war correspondent of the Daily Telegraph in the Balkan Wars wrote, ―We were
received on every hand with the greatest courtesy and politeness, the Turk
being by instinct the first gentleman in Europe.‖476 These western
(and indeed very much Anglo-Saxon ) stereotypes are presented to exemplify the
complex reception of the ―transformed Turk‖ in the eyes of the western
beholders. The personification of the nations was a prevalent theme in 19th
century political writings. The national stereotypes were not limited to
distinguishing ethnicities, but also to distinguish between the imagined ―old
Turk‖ and the ―young Turk‖. In fact, these supposedly ethnic stereotypes were
in effect class-based observations. It was a habit of the 19th
century observers to associate ethnicities with certain class formations.
Interestingly, ―the old Turk‖ was generally preferred by the Europeans, and
especially by the British, who found their oriental counterpart in the
gentlemanliness of the Tanzimat-Hamidian pasha. ―Ghazi Moukhtar. s a
splendid specimen of the old type of Turk(.)‖477
Obviously, there was no scientifically defined
categorization of the ―old Turk‖. Gazi Ahmed Muhtar Pasha, who was an
impressive military officer with a Western education, a distinguished
professional record, and considerable erudition, turned out to be an ―old Turk‖ in 1913 (the year this account was published) in the reign of the young Turks. Here,
475 ―This may sound
extraordinary but is nevertheless
true so far as my experience carries
me. Every Turk I have met who has dwelt for a considerable period in any
European country, although never losing his patriotism and deep love for his
land, has become in manners, thoughts and habits an Englishman, a German or
Frenchman. This leads one almost to suppose
that Turks might be Europeanized by an educational process without any prejudicial result, for at present
they have every quality of a ruling race except initiative, which is an
essentially European quality. Their ardent patriotism is their only incentive; and their intelligence is scarcely
sufficient to show them that serving their country as soldiers is not the only duty of
citizens. There are few Turks who would not lay down their lives for their country, there are fewer who would
save it from internal decay; notwithstanding this, however there are many able
and great men in Turkish official circles,
but they are paralysed in action by the limited field open to them, and by want
of funds and lack of communication. A Kaimakam may improve his Sanjak, a Vali
his Vilayet; more than this it is impossible for one individual to do. A
Colonel may bring his regiment to a pitch of efficiency, but he cannot organize
the War Office, and so it is in Turkey(.)‖ Sykes, Mark, ibid, pp. 64-65.
476
Ashmead-Bartlett, Ellis, With the Turks
in Thrace, London: William Heinemann, 1913, p.12.
477 ibid, p.13.
the label ―old Turk‖ attains an ideological connotation. The Young
Turks, with their Prussian and social Darwinian attributes, were disdained by this British correspondent who favored men with whom he can
trustingly bargain and compromise. The assumption was that they could
collaborate with a Turkey which was governed by a class resembling the British cultural
formation (in its social and cultural connotations) and
the British governing elite.478
That is to say, ―old Turk‖ was not simply a cliché to refer to the
―modernization index‖, but a cultural/political/ideological concept determined
by concerns and interests of the states coinciding with the imperatives of
international politics. In this study, we are trying to portray this vanished
elite dubbed by many Westerners as ―old Turks‖, but without the cultural
implications the Westerner accounts maintain, and situate it within a historical
framework and historical structure.
2.9.
The Problem of Generations: A Key to the History
of the Late Ottoman Empire
?
It can be maintained that the world of the Tanzimat
could also be understood by taking ideal-type generations into consideration.
―Generation‖ is a concept that seemingly refers to our individual daily lives rather
than those lofty social concepts
such as ―class‖,
―bureaucracy‖, ―status‖, and ―stratification‖. However, early
experiences and particular modes of socializations in particular periods are
crucial for the formation and development of individuals and constitutive of
pervasive and shared mindsets. Arguably, a person who is a member of a certain generation has more affinity with his
coevals than his parents regardless of differences of class, status, et cetera.
However, it is also important to point out
that a generation does not automatically include
any person that is born within a
certain time range. Generations are also class-bound. Generation is an
ideational and cultural concept. Therefore, generations are exclusive rather
than inclusive. For example, Robert
478 For the notion
of ―cultural formation‖, see Poovey, Mary, Making
a Social Body, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995. Also see
Corrigan, Philip & Sayer, Derek, The Great Arch: English State Formation as
Cultural Revolution, Oxford; New York: Blackwell, 1985; Lloyd, David,
Thomas, Paul, Culture and the State,
London; New York: Routledge, 1998.
Wohl defines the generation of 1914 as follows: ―In early twentieth
century Europe generationalists (generation of
1914-DG) were almost always literary
intellectuals living in large cities. They were members of a small elite
who were keenly aware of their uniqueness
and proud of their intellectual superiority. What concerned these writers or
would-be-writers was their decline of culture and the waning of vital energies;
what drove them together was the desire to create new values and to replace
those that were fading; what incited them to action was the conviction that
they represented the future in the present(.)‖479 Paradoxically the generation of 1914
subsumed all Europe surpassing national borders, but excluded many of the
layers and cultural formations of Europe at the same time. Likewise, the
Tanzimat generations were also exclusive and inclusive at the same time. In
short, generations do matter480, and they are not only simplifications
and vulgarizations. Generation is a historical category constructed within
social and political circumstances rather than a cultural
conceptualization. In this regard, some generations are
―more generations‖ than others in the sense that they reveal very
particular characteristics differentiating them from others. This is
particularly so when history accelerates. Certain time periods witness drastic
changes and transformations brought forth by certain generations. It is needles to point out that generation is a modern concept, meaningful only
479 Wohl, Robert, The Generation of 1914, Cambridge, Mass:
Harvard University Press, 1979, p. 5
480 Studies of generations are numerous although these studies of
generations did not enable the
emergence of an established conceptualization of generation as a historical and
sociological category. For locating generations within a social framework, see
Mannheim, Karl, ―The Problem of Generations‖, in Essays on the Sociology of Knowledge, London: Routledge & Paul, 1952;
Eisenstadt, Shmuel, From Generation to Generation: Age Groups
and Social Structure, London: Routledge, 1956. For a review of studies
taking generation as a proper sociological category, see Kertzer, David,
―Generation as a Sociological Problem‖, Annual
Review of Sociology, Vol. 9, (1983), pp. 125-149. For some remarkable
studies on certain ―generations‖; see Spitzer, Alan, The French Generation of 1820, Princeton: Princeton University
Press, 1987; Wohl, Robert, The Generation
of 1914, Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 1979, Ekstins, Modris, Rites of Spring, Boston: Houghton
Mifflin, 2000; Owram,
Doug, Born at the Right Time,
Toronto; Buffalo: University of
Toronto Press, 1997. Some generations are ―more generations‖ than others. Both
Spitzer and Wohl emphasized the extraordinary and exceptional nature of the
generations they studied. Both the
French generation of 1820 and the Europe generation of 1914 were
revolutionaries and displayed very distinctive features that easily
distinguished them from their preceding and succeeding generations.
in the context of the modern age in which time accelerates and the
sharp discrepancies between fathers and sons are very easily noticeable.481
The first Tanzimat generation was arguably the first generation in the course
of the Turkish/Ottoman history per se that experienced an intentional and
dramatic break from their fathers‘ experiences and intellectual formations. As
Wohl points out, ―Historical generations are
not born; they are made.‖482
The second Tanzimat generation and Hamidian generations were more ―modest
generations‖ in terms of their self-consciousness of their own generation and
of their displaying the characteristics of a generation. The Young Turk
(subsuming the young officials of the late Hamidian era) generation exemplifies
a tremendous rejection of the values, codes, and mentalities of their fathers.
As pointed out above, generational politics cannot be isolated from social
changes and transformations. The reshaping of the class structures and the
export of new thoughts gave rise to the emergence of new politics and new
cosmologies. For example, Peter Wien illustrates a similar contrast in Iraq in
the interwar period. Wien demarcates between the old school ―Sherifian
generation‖ of officers in conflict with the coming radical nationalist ―Young
Efendiyyah‖ generation sympathetic to Germany and inclined to fascism. Wien
defines the Sherifian generation/class as ―regard(ing) themselves as an elite of Arab
nationalism. Many of them
had received an elevated military education at the Ottoman Staff College in
Istanbul and had learned Western languages. The Sherifian officers had managed to enter the old urban
landholding elite through shady moves in legislation, and thus the
old and new urban landlords had the upper hand483.‖ For Wien, the Sherifian officers
who turned out to be a
481 Here, I do not refer to the ―fathers and sons‖ genre. Here, by generation, I understand a rigidly socio-economical formation
determined by the conditions of the socio-economic and political realities.
Although it is an undeniable fact that the 19th century may be read along the narrative of the revolt of the sons against
their fathers, too much emphasis on this aspect of the 19th
century would lead us to fail to consider that every generation has established
their (strict) code of morality. The image of the hedonistic and dandy son which is prevalent in the Tanzimat
literature would lead us to fail to see how slightly refashioned codes of
moralities had been reproduced throughout 19th century Ottoman Empire. For a
glance at the generational struggle in the Tanzimat, see Parla, Jale, Babalar ve Oğullar, İstanbul: İletişim
Yayınları, 1990.
482 Wohl, Robert,
ibid, p. 5.
483 Wien, Peter, Iraqi Arab Nationalism : Authoritarian,
Totalitarian and Pro-Fascist Inclinations 1932-1941, London; New York:
Routledge, 2006, p. 16.
ruling conservative elite had compromised with the landholding Sunni elite. In contrast, the Young Efendiyya were ―educated in the
newly established nationalist schooling system...they challenged the ruling
elite of the 1920s(.) They were disappointed by the collaboration of the
Sherifians with the Mandate Power and by their abuse of power...Instead of the
conciliatory and pro-British inclination of the Sherifian elite, the Young
Efendiyya absorbed ‗Western Ideas‘ and ideologies as they were transported as
translations in the press and on the book market.‖484 In short,
generations are sets that intersect class, status, social backgrounds and
age-groups, and are therefore a crucial
social formation themselves.485 As argued above, the Hamidian
generation represented the apex of
the imperial elite at a time when the limits of liberal politics became
apparent and the empire was failing
to respond to the demands
of its constituents. It is no coincidence that in these conditions, the last imperial
generation had been crashed by the first generation of the
nation. Nevertheless, this last imperial elite cluster was also constitutive of
the first and later generations of the nation.
To conclude this chapter, because generations are not
solely determined by time, but also by class and socializations, it has to be
noted that all these clusters of generations are actually restricted to small elites. In fact, the Tanzimat period constitutes a process of elite- formation and elite-expansion. What we will investigate in the following
chapters is an
―intermediate‖ generation that paved
the way for the emergence of a new generation
that I will call the ―Unionist generation‖. Nevertheless, as argued in the
beginning of this chapter, the Tanzimat generation did not die out without leaving a trace. On the contrary,
484 Wien, Peter,
ibid, p. 16. The case was no different in the Japanese
modernization. ―This
generation was ‗new‘ relative to the ‗old men of Meiji‘ who had engineered the
revolutionary reforms of the Restoration; specifically, they were ‗the first
generation of Japanese to attend the new Western-oriented schools of higher
learning.‘ Reaching maturity in the
decade before the Sino-Japanese War of 1894-95, this generation struggled with
the fundamental problem of national identity and of the proper use to be made
of the Japanese heritage in the process of modernization.‖ Smith II, Henry
Dewitt, Japan‟s First Student Radicals,
Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, ix. Also see Pyle, Kenneth B, The New Generation in Meiji Japan: Problems
of Cultural Identity, 1885-1995, Stanford: Stanford: Stanford University
Press, 1969.
485 For the forging
and dissolution of class/status groups in the course of time, see Batatu,
Hanna, The Old Social Classes and the
Revolutionary Movements of Iraq, Princeton: Princeton University Press,
1978.
its worldviews, premises, and cultural and
intellectual formations made a decisive impact upon the subsequent generations.
CHAPTER III
PRIMACY OF INTERNATIONAL POLITICS,
DIPLOMACY, APPROPIATION OF THE
“NEW KNOWLEDGE” AND THE OTTOMAN TRANSFORMATION
This chapter aims to show how diplomacy emerged as a
primary concern of Ottoman statecraft and how this development triggered the appropriation of ―new knowledge‖ which consequently resulted
in a new organizational and ideological restructuring of the Ottoman polity. In
other words, it suggests the ―primacy of foreign affairs‖ in certain historical
conjectures.
3.1.
Discovery of Diplomacy and the Rise of
“New Knowledge”
Since the formation of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
in 1836 as a modern bureaucratic structure replacing the previous scribal
service attached to the Office of the Grand Vizierate, the Ministry became a preeminent part of Ottoman
statecraft.486 Although conducting foreign relations had never been
an insignificant business, the increasing impact
of international developments on the Empire, growing vulnerability vis-à-vis
neighboring major powers such as Russia and Austria, as well as the requisites
of the rise of the modern state
turned the conduction of foreign relations into a prominent preoccupation of statecraft.
Therefore, the Ministry
gained an importance of unprecedented
levels within the Ottoman establishment. It rose from a secondary position
(especially vis- à-vis the military
and the ilmiye) within the
state to the forefront of Ottoman statecraft. The
486 The foundation of the Tercüme
Odası in 1821 was also an important milestone in the modernization of the
Ottoman Empire which preceded the reorganization of Ottoman foreign policy
office.
Ottomans had to play according to the rules of the international
game to respond to the immediacy of the international pressure on the Empire.
It may be argued that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
was the bureaucratic institution that played the most significant role in
Ottoman transformation, a role different and more intense than that
played by the military, especially after it became
evident in the eyes of the state elite that something more fundamental than military prowess was necessary to survive the
emerging international challenges.
This became apparent after the acknowledgement of the enormity of Russian
military might which became evident throughout the disastrous Ottoman-Russian
wars in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth
centuries.487 The Russian army had the capacity to mobilize millions
of peasants as Ottoman contemporaries observed, and therefore it was literarily
unbeatable given Ottoman military capabilities.488 The Ottomans
suffered severe defeats by the terrifying Russian army in 1774, 1812, and 1829,
when Ottoman defenses in Bulgaria collapsed and the Russian army crossed the
Balkan mountains and reached as far as Burgas, Aydos, Varna, and even targeted Edirne.489
Under such circumstances, no domestic policy could be
developed and implemented independent of its international consequences and
imperatives. The Ottomans were well aware that they were dependent on and
subject to international developments. This was also an opportunity for the Ottomans since exploiting diplomacy
and the dynamics of the international balance of power provided them room for
maneuver against the otherwise militarily invincible Russians. Especially from
1774 onwards, the Ottomans were cognizant
of their retreat and reluctance
to act in such an environment. They were obsessed
487 For the Russian-Ottoman wars and their impact on the Ottoman
establishment, see Aksan, Virginia, Ottoman
Wars, New York: Pearson Longman, 2007. For a risaleh of primary importance
originally named Hülasat ül Kelam fi Redd il Avam, see Uçman, Abdullah (ed.), Koca Sekbanbaşı Risalesi, Kervan
Yayıncılık, 1974. Also see Aksan, Virginia, ―Ottoman Political Writing,
1768-1808‖, International Journal of
Middle East Studies, Vol. 25, No. 1 (Feb., 1993), pp. 61-62.
488 For the czarist
Russian army, see Keep, John, Soldiers of
the Czar, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1985; Duffy, Christopher, Russia‟s Military Way to the West,
London; New York: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1994.
489 Aksan, Virginia, Ottoman Wars,
New York: New York: Longman Pearson, 2007, pp. 349-356.
with the efforts to reverse their seemingly inevitable collapse.
From 1774 onwards, the prospect of an eventual collapse
of the Empire guided
a substantial portion
of diplomatic as well as domestic policies. The Ottomans
knew that they were no more an independent actor
in the international arena. The international alignments, rivalries, and
aggressions were of primary importance for the prospects of the Ottoman Empire.
The Ottoman establishment acknowledged that its well-being was dependent on a number of overlapping factors. Therefore, they had
to accommodate themselves to the world around them.
To accommodate to the new circumstances, they had to import and appropriate the
―new knowledge‖. The ―knowledge‖ to govern, maintain and defend the
state was no longer held by the ilmiye class,
the prestigious class that held a monopoly and the halo of respectability for
possessing the privileged knowledge throughout all the classical age. Although kalemiye rose to prominence within the
Ottoman state as early as the eighteenth century (if not earlier), the ilmiye class was at the forefront of the
ideological backbone of the state. Certainly, the very critical moment that had
brought the sudden decline and marginalization of the ilmiye was the abolition of the janissaries given that the
janissary- ilmiye alliance was the
fulcrum of the institutional power of ilmiye. With the organization of the new army, the
ilmiye
retreated from its preeminent position
within the power bloc.490
Nevertheless, we cannot explain this retreat merely as a consequence of the
changing alliance structures. If that were the case, it would be even harder to
explain the paradoxical involvement and support of ulema in the destruction of the janissaries. It is possible to
conjecture that the ilmiye‟s prestige
collapsed suddenly and drastically with the realization that they no longer
possessed the superior and relevant knowledge. Islamic knowledge and science
were increasingly discredited in the process of the Ottoman encounter with the
modern and ―Western‖ sciences (in the process of military revolution) as their
―knowledge‖ remained
irrelevant and impractical.491 The ulema became sidelined
and
490 Levy, Avigdor, ―The Ottoman Ulema and the Military Reforms of Sultan
Mahmud II‖,
Asian and
African Studies, Vol. 7 (1971), pp. 13-39.
491 Timothy Michell explored the meaning of modernity and the
employment of modernity in the non-Western world. In his landmark study, Colonising Egypt, Mitchell argued that
the inevitable entrance of the ―new knowledge‖ and ―modern mind‖ brought the
collapse of the ―old ways of making things‖ and forced Egypt to submit to the
modern discourse and therefore to the penetration of Western imperialism, which holds the monopoly on
marginalized within the new circumstances, and the social-cultural
environment in which their knowledge remained was restricted to the private and
non-political spheres.492
The holders of the ―technical knowledge‖, who had been
recruited for conduction of daily affairs, were elevated from being secondary
class auxiliaries to being captains of statecraft. The quality of having the
definite skills to lead the ship of state had been taken over by a new group of
officials from the kalemiye equipped
with positive and pragmatic knowledge distinct from the
―philosophical knowledge‖ the
ilmiye maintained. The ilmiye
class gave way to a new class which was more compatible and in touch with
the new developments (after a period in the late 18th
and early 19th century in which the prominence of the ulema was at its zenith).493 The 18th century rise of the kalemiye class,
as shown by
modern
knowledge. Local ―experts‖ also established their dictatorship based on their
monopoly of the ―new knowledge‖. They were the only ones who were familiar with
―making things
rationally‖. In ―Rule
of Experts‖ Mitchell
shows how the modern Egyptian bureaucracy had developed a
novel mentality which recreates Egypt in their image and causes the eradication
of the old knowledge. Thus, in the argumentation of Mitchell, the local elite
of ―experts‖ and the Western imperialists collaborated, and the local experts
functioned as the ―compradors of western knowledge‖ adapting the Marxist
notion of
―compradorial bourgeoisie‖. Mitchell, Timothy, Colonising Egypt, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991; Mitchell,
Timothy, Rule of Experts : Egypt,
Techno-politics, Modernity, Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002.
Also for the eradication of the effective ―local knowledge‖ by the states and
the detrimental effects of states‘ intrusion into the traditional society, see
Scott, James, Seeing Like a State,
New Haven: Yale University Press, 1999. For another inspiring essay on the
meaning of modern/Western bureaucracy, see Herzfeld, Michael, The Social Production of Indifference:
Exploring the Symbolic Roots of Western Bureaucracy, Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 1993.
492 For the 19th
century of the Ottoman ulema, see
Kara, İsmail, ―Turban and Fez: Ulema as
Opposition‖, in Late Ottoman Society: The
Intellectual Legacy, London; New York: Routledge Curzon, Elizabeth Özdalga
(ed.), 2005, pp. 162-200; Kushner, David, ―The Place of the Ulema in the
Ottoman Empire During the Age of Reform (1839-1876)‖, Turcica, XIX, pp. 51-74; Itzkowitz, Norman & Shinder,
Joel, ―The Office of Şeyh ül-Islâm
and the Tanzimat: A Prosopographic
Enquiry‖, Middle Eastern Studies,
Vol. 8, No. 1 (Jan., 1972), pp. 93-101; Bein, Amit, The Ulema, Their Institutions and Politics in the Late Ottoman Empire
(1876-1924), unpublished dissertation, Princeton University, 2006. For a
case study demonstrating the decline of ulema in terms of prominence in the
provinces as well, Yazbak,Mahmoud, ―Nabulsi Ulama in the Late Ottoman Period,
1864-1914‖, International Journal of
Middle East Studies, 29(1997), pp.71-91. Also see, Yazbak, Mahmoud, Haifa in the Late Ottoman Period, 1864-1914,
Leiden; Köln; Boston: Brill, 1998, p. 158.
493 The whole Tarih-i Cevdet can
be read as a polemic against the crumbling ilmiye
class. Coming himself from the ranks of ilmiye,
Cevdet in his Tarih is a staunch
modernist
Aksan, reached its apex in the early 19th century.
Although the rise of kalemiye can be
witnessed as early as the 17th century, it was only in the early 19th
century that kalemiye became a
self-conscious group assuming immense political prominence and power. The new
knowledge was now the monopoly of this new class, who had acquired the
necessary skills to thrive in the new circumstances that were pushing the
Empire into a corner. It was this group that assumed power with the Edict of
Reform in 1839. Paradoxically, the authoritarian policies of Mahmud II that
eradicated the opponents of the reform (i.e., policies of Mahmud II) enabled the newly rising
class, who enjoyed
the elimination of their
rivals from offices of prominence, to grab power from the palace and the sultan
with the coming to the throne of the young and inexperienced Abdülmecid in
1839.494
The analysis of Christoph Neumann on the foreign policy
decisions of the Ottoman Empire in the reign of Selim III in his aptly named
article, ―Decision Making without Decision Makers‖, demonstrates that the
policy making was a fragmented vocation and that
there was no authorized corporate structure to decide foreign policy. Neumann
also underlines the prominent role of the ilmiye
class in the making of foreign policy. In addition, Neumann shows that
foreign policy decisions were dependent on personal relations and household
rivalries. Before its institutionalization, foreign policy was hostage to rivalries of ―political
factions aimed at achieving personal career enhancement, not political
programs.‖495 Although members of ilmiye class had a prominent role in foreign policy, many other
actors were also extensively involved in this process, such as the Admiral Gazi
Hasan Pasha who had veto power over matters relevant to the North African
Barbary Coast. From such a chaotic, uninstitutionalized configuration in which personal
propagating the
new way of conducting the state. He
does not spare his words when it comes to scorning the ilmiye and making fun of
their lack of understanding of the new world. For Cevdet, the alternative to
accepting the new modes of statecraft is the death of the Ottoman polity. See a
broad analysis of the discourse of Tarih-i Cevdet, Neumann, Christoph, Araç Tarih Amaç Tanzimat: Tarih-i Cevdet‟in
Siyasi Anlamı, İstanbul: Tarih Vakfı Yurt Yayınları, 2000.
494 For the power struggles after the death of Mahmud II and the
subsequent victory of the reform party and Mustafa Reşid Pasha, see Ahmed Lûtfi
Efendi, Vak‟anüvîs Ahmed Lûtfi Efendi
Tarihi, İstanbul: Yapı Kredi Yayınları, 1999, pp. 1006-1025.
495 Christoph K. Neumann,
―Decision Making Without
Decision Makers: Ottoman
Foreign Policy circa 1780‖, in Decision
Making and Change in the Ottoman Empire, Caesar E. Farah (ed.), The Thomas
Jefferson University Press, 1993, p. 34.
and interpersonal relations shaped foreign policy, the creation of
an institutionalized and impersonal organization isolated from daily and
personalized petty politics was no less than
a revolution.
This institutional revolution was a victory of ―modern knowledge‖ replacing the reign
of traditional knowledge496. This epistemological revolution
compelled an institutional reorganization. The institutional reorganization was
a corollary of the epistemological revolution. Apparently, ―modern knowledge‖
necessitated the erection of an autonomous bureaucracy to reproduce itself.
Furthermore, it generated the development of notions of expertise and
specialization. The modern epistemology maintains that what is valuable is not ―knowledge as a whole
and in a totality‖ but knowledge as specified and particularized.
Modern officialdom and its bureaucracy were to an important extent founded on
these premises.497
In fact, the modern epistemology enforced a radical
reorganization in the military.498 The Ottoman transformation began
with the military sector.499 The reasons were obvious. The very
visible symptoms of the Ottoman failure were observed in the devastating military defeats. Although the immediate
aim of all the efforts was to reorganize and strengthen the military, in the ―new world‖, military prowess and military victory
was less
496 In Iran, the reformist Malkom Khan makes
a differentiation between
―natural intellect‖ and ―acquired education‖. He criticizes Iranians for
preferring to see the former as more valuable and important, whereas for Malkom,
this is not tenable in the modern world. Menashri, David, Education and the Making of Modern Iran, Ithaca; London: Cornell
University Press, 1992, p. 33.
497 For the rising prominence of the ilmiye in conducting foreign affairs in the last quarter of the eighteenth
century, the subsequent, drastic decline
of their role in the
first quarter of the nineteenth century, and a detailed survey of the
ilmiye members in the conduct of foreign affairs, see Cihan, Ahmet, Reform Çağında Osmanlı İlmiye Sınıfı,
Birey, 2004, pp. 91-101.
498 For an
application of the rationalized military reorganization and its proud
announcement, see Mahmud Raif‘s Tableau
des Nouveaux Reglemens de L‟Empire Ottoman printed in 1798 to advertise the
recent Ottoman military reforms which made the Ottoman military a fully-fledged
modern military. For the text, see Terzioğlu, Arslan; Hatemi, Hüsrev (ed.), Osmanlı İmparatorluğu‟nda Yeni Nizamların
Cedveli, İstanbul: Türkiye Turing ve Otomobil Kurumu, 1988.
499 See Levy,
Avigdor, The Military Policy of Sultan
Mahmud II, 1808-1839, unpublished dissertation, Harvard University, 1968.
decisive than before. After long efforts to overcome the military
deficit, it was recognized that changes had to be made elsewhere. A new kind of
knowledge other than military prowess had to be acquired. These motivations
prepared the ground for the emergence and rise of the future-diplomats as a
group.500 The discovery of diplomacy was the new great white hope
for the Ottomans.
To establish a chronological order, we may contextualize
the rising prominence of conducting foreign affairs beginning from the late
eighteenth century. The continuous Russian wars, especially from the disastrous
1774 onwards, exposed the reluctance to know
and exploit international political dynamics.501 The helplessness of
the Empire against the Russian menace compelled the Ottomans to seek
long-lasting and comprehensive alliances rather than temporary alliances. The
Western European states were now potential new comrades for the Ottomans
against the Russians. These future comrades were sharing a common fear, the
rise of the Russian bear.502
The second crucial period in the emergence of modern
Ottoman diplomacy was the Napoleonic Wars. The term ―Napoleonic Wars‖
encompasses a more than twenty-year period not of continuous warfare, but a
period in which coalitions and alliances were formed, dissolved, and reestablished. It was a period in which modern diplomacy became
500 The same can also be said for the rise of the modern bureaucracy.
The bureaucratic model copied from the West was first introduced by Mahmud II,
but it took the bureaucracy several
decades to mature and exemplify a modern Western-type bureaucracy.
501 The ―Russian dimension‖ had been neglected in the Ottoman
historiography. The permanent Russian wars and menace had been treated as a
side issue rather than the very fundamental problem of the Ottomans throughout
the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The ―Russian dimension‖ is significant
not only in terms of military defeats, but also because the Russian army as a
modernized army with western skills and training since Peter the Great was the
first western model the Ottomans encountered face to face. This led the Ottomans to want to imitate
it. The Russian army that overwhelmed the Ottoman army was the modern army
Selim III, and subsequently Mahmud II, wanted to establish. Virginia Aksan
writes: ―Napoleon‘s bold thrust into the Eastern Mediterranean in 1798, prelude
to his imperial reign is very often
held to be the beginning of the ―modern‖ age in the Middle East. My sense is
rather that the modern age for the Ottoman Empire began on the fields of Kartal (referring to the Russian
victory at the Battle
of Kartal in 1770-DG) and at the walls of Ochakov.‖ Aksan,
Virginia, Ottoman Wars, New York:
Pearson Longman, 2007, p. 170.
502 Blanning, T.C.W,
The Origins of the French Revolutionary
Wars, New York: Longman, 1986,
pp. 55-60.
formed and reached unprecedented levels of sophistication. The
Congress of Vienna of 1815 can be seen as the founding moment of modern
(aristocratic) diplomacy with its established codes of conduct.503
It was a very constitutive moment in the rise of the role and significance of foreign affairs in
government policies, which was particularly true for the Ottomans. The
Napoleonic Wars were an unprecedented episode in which war and peace were
indistinguishable from each other and in which no power in Europe had the
luxury of isolating itself
diplomatically. The Ottomans were entangled in this complex web of relations oscillating within the complex
web of alliances. With the aim of preventing a possible European-wide deal at
the expense of the Empire, the Sublime Porte struggled to make the best of it
within the European-wide politics of alignment, and thus the Ottomans became
incorporated into the European order, albeit in a passive posture.
The European-wide Napoleonic ―Cold War‖ was also an
opportunity for the Ottoman Empire. Russia and Austria had to give up their
campaigns against the Ottomans by 1792 as
a response to the French Revolution.504 After the break of the
French Revolution and once the European powers including Russia and Austria
were forced to track the post- revolutionary developments instead of fighting,
the Ottomans not only found breathing space but found a chance to be allies with
the Russians and others. Playing a diplomatic game between France on one side
and Britain on the other, the Ottomans endeavored to maximize their interests.505
Recent studies have revised the Orientalist/reductionist
image that Ottomans were completely ignorant of their time, demonstrating that on the contrary Ottomans
were
503 For an appraisal
of the congress, see Schroeder, Paul W, The
Transformation of European Politics 1763-1848, Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 1994, pp. 575-582.
504 Blanning, T.C.W,
The Origins of the French Revolutionary
Wars, New York: Longman, 1986, p.
83.
505 For a diplomatic
history of Ottoman during the Napoleonic Wars, see Shaw, Stanford, Between Old and New: Ottoman Empire Under
Sultan Selim III, Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 1971; Yıldız,
Aysel Danacı, Vaka-yı Selimiyye or The
Selimiyye Incident: A Study of May 1807 Rebellion, unpublished
dissertation, Sabancı University, 2008; Aksan, Virginia, Ottoman Wars, New York: Longman, 2007; Gosu, Armand, ―The Third
anti-Napoleonic Coalition and the Sublime Porte‖, International Journal of Turkish Studies, 9(2003), pp. 199-237.
perfectly aware of the conditions they were in and cognizant of the
transforming world.506 However, such awareness does not automatically
break the impasse. Diplomacy requires a massive technical knowledge to be
acquired as has been best exemplified by Venetian diplomacy.507
Diplomacy also needs accumulated
experience and practical skills developed over a long time span.
Diplomacy as a craft and an art developed in Europe in the early modern period,
first becoming visible in the Italian city states in the fifteenth century and
gradually becoming established in the sixteenth century throughout Western
Europe.508 The Ottomans
were not complete foreigners to the world of diplomacy. They pursued a rather
sophisticated diplomacy in the post-classical centuries.509 However,
Ottoman diplomacy failed to adopt
many of the specifics of the
intra-Christian codes and cultures of diplomacy. Moreover, they failed to
modernize the craft and techniques of diplomacy such as information-gathering
and utilization of gathered information. The Ottomans had to acquaint
themselves with the new language, new skills, and new code of conduct. They
lacked the accumulation of knowledge and experience which Europeans amassed in
the few centuries of early modernity.510 Furthermore, the terrain of diplomacy was a foreign
506 See Aksan,
Virginia, An Ottoman Statesman in War and
Peace: Ahmed Resmi Efendi, 1700-1783, Leiden; Boston; Köln: Brill, 1995;
Goffman, Daniel, The Ottoman Empire and
the Early Modern Europe, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 2002;
Goffman, Daniel & Aksan, Virginia (ed.), The Early Modern Ottomans: Remapping the Empire, Cambridge, U.K. :
Cambridge University Press, 2007; Agoston, Gabor, Guns for the Sultan, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press,
2005.
507 For a
reassessment of early Venetian diplomacy, see Valensi, Lucette, The Birth of the Despot: Venice and the
Sublime Porte, Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1993, pp. 14-20.
508 For the
classical study on how diplomacy had risen to become the professional and
institutionalized activity of states beginning from the early modern era, see
Anderson, M. S, The Rise of Modern Diplomacy, 1450-1919, New York: Longman, 1993.
Also see Anderson, M.S, The Origins of
the Modern European State System 1494-1618, New York: Longman, 1998.
509 For example, see
Kolodziejczyk, Dariusz, Ottoman-Polish
Diplomatic Relations (15th- 18th Centuries), Leiden; Boston; Köln: Brill,
2000.
510 In 1838, while he was the foreign minister, Mustafa Reşid Efendi
was appointed as the ambassador to France, retaining his ministerial post. This
was ―to examine the European codes of conducts and the developments in Europe
in situ.‖ Akyıldız, Ali, Tanzimat Dönemi Osmanlı Merkez Teşkilatında Reform,
İstanbul: Eren, 1993, p. 79.
land for Ottomans, and they were trying their best not to act not as guests, but
as one of the hosts. In other words,
they were on the fringes, but not quite ―in‖.
In short, the Ottomans were not unaware of the world
around them as they used to be portrayed by the earlier Eurocentric
historiography, but they were certainly far from grasping the very exact
circumstances in which they could thrive. They had a clear vision of what to do
to survive in this new jungle, but they lacked the necessary equipment to
implement complex and sophisticated policymaking. The Ottomans were not naïve
observers failing to understand the world around them and the new developments
therein. However, the lack of background knowledge and background training
rendered them incompetent to react effectively although they were not entirely
unaware of their incompetence and
superficiality.511 Knowing the
existing circumstances around and
having the skills to master those circumstances are two different phenomena.
After the defeat of Napoleonic France and the conclusion
of the Congress of Vienna, the new ―European concert‖ and the diplomatic world
became even tougher for the Ottomans. Ahmed Cevdet Pasha in his Tarih-i Cevdet is highly critical of the
non- participation of the Ottomans in the Congress of Vienna, which in his
opinion Pasha cost the Ottomans
greatly in the diplomatic arena.512 He went
further in exposing the diplomatic
blunders of the Ottomans which were to a large extent responsible for the Greek
independence movement, which was unthinkable and undesirable in the eyes of the
Western powers at the beginning of the rebellion.513 The blunders of
the Ottomans guaranteed the changing attitude of the European powers towards
the Greek rebels. This fiasco was the last warning for the Ottomans that full
participation and involvement within the Concert of Europe was necessary to
avoid further setbacks. Ottoman reformism was born in such an environment. The
so-called Ottoman Westernization was not only motivated, but also led, by anxiety about surviving in such a predatory environment. The
511 For 18th century
Ottoman diplomats, see Aksan, Virginia,
An Ottoman statesman in War and Peace: Ahmed Resmi Efendi,
1700-1783, Leiden; Boston; Köln: Brill, 1995.
512 Ahmed Cevdet Pasha,
Tarih-i Cevdet, İstanbul: Darü't-Tıbaat'ül Amire, 1309, v. XII,
pp. 194-196.
513 Ahmed Cevdet Pasha, ibid, v. XII, pp. 215-219.
Ottoman reformism cannot be dissociated from these diplomatic
entanglements.514 It was a function of international developments
and alignments. The so-called Ottoman Westernization was not a process that
started at a certain time in history with a clear intention and direction. It
was only a set of responses to Western (mainly Russian) aggression. There existed no conscious ―break/rupture‖ from the ―old‖. The operation
was limited to the acquisition of new knowledge first in military
matters (Nizam-ı Cedid soldiers
onwards) and then in diplomacy. Instead of being a dependent variable of socio-
economical and political developments, diplomacy became a transformative force
itself, and it shaped and influenced socio-economical and political
developments.
The new knowledge was to be rational, measurable, and
free of any metaphysical assumption, hence ―modern‖.
Therefore, ―modern‖ was first and foremost a methodology
and organization designed by people mindful of the aforementioned principles.515
The implementation of this methodology was dubbed ―Westernism‖ or ―reformism‖
retrospectively with the hindsight of the drastic transformation it triggered.
In short, although it prompted an inevitable massive scale transformation, it
was not an intentional project. As argued above, diplomacy and diplomatic
considerations were major dynamics in this process.
3.2.
Origins of the Ottoman Foreign Ministry
514 For the emergence and development of the concept of
―Westernization‖ in Turkish historiography,
see Murphey, Rhoads,
―Westernization in the Eighteenth-Century Ottoman Empire: How Far, How Fast?‖, Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies vol.
23, 1999, pp. 116-139.
515 This is no place to discuss or evaluate the ―nature of modernity‖.
However, it may be necessary to define
what we understand from modernity. It will be
denied that modernity is an unprecedented transformation of our mode of thinking and,
therefore, of our relations with the world. Modernity is a passionate challenge
to transform/control the natural world around us. However, this kind of
passionate modernity reflects the mental worlds of Enlightenment philosophes,
adventurers, overseas tradesmen, and bankers but not necessarily the world of
everybody facing modernity. The understanding of modernity by the Ottoman
statesmen will be evaluated throughout the essay.
The Ottoman Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Umur-u Hariciye Nezareti) was
established in 1836 by an edict of Mahmud II.516 Akif Efendi, the
incumbent Chief Secretary of the Sublime Porte (Reis-ül-Küttab) since 1832, was named as the first Foreign
Minister.517 Hulusi Pasha replaced Akif Efendi after the latter was
dismissed in four months‘ time. However, it was with the appointment of Mustafa
Reşit Pasha in 1837 that the new ministry
began to become a modern office. Before the establishment of the Foreign
Ministry, the institution of Reis-ül-Küttablık
was a department within sa‟drazamlık. The official titles of the
Reis-ül-Küttabs were lower in
comparison to the other holders of prominent offices. Whereas the Chief
Financial Official (defterdars) and
the Drawer of the Sultanic Seal (nişancıs)
were among the top functionaries of the Sublime Porte (erkan-ı Babıali), the reis-ül-küttabs
belonged to the rank of ―higher officials‖
(rical-i Babıali). Recognizing
the rising importance and increasing role of foreign relations, Mahmud II
allowed the upgrading of the title of the Reis-ül-Küttablık.
Mahmud II in the very beginning of
his edict established that the the title of the Foreign Ministry had to be
upgraded because they represent the Ottoman Empire vis-avis the European powers
and they are in a position to serve the Empire in very important issues. (“çünki rütbe-i evveliyede bulunanlar
Devlet-i Aliyye‟mizin en büyük hizmet ve maslahatlarına me‟mur olduklarından ve
zat-ı me‟muriyetleri i‟tibarıyle lazım gelen nüfuz ve haysiyyetleriçün fi ma
ba‟d müşirlik ve vezaret rütbe-i celileleri sıralarında
add ve i‟tibar olunmaları hususu
geçende tıbk-ı irade-i şahanem üzre icra olunmuş idi.”518)
By 1836, the new Foreign Ministry became an independent
body with the ministers enjoying the title of vezir.519 A regulation for the new organization had
already been prepared by 1835. The regulation clearly established that only the
ministry had the authority to conduct foreign relations. Parallel to Mahmud‘s
centralizing policies and institutionalizing and restructuring of the state bureaucracy, the new Foreign Ministry was
516 See Salname-i Nezaret-i Hariciyye, (1301/1885),
pp. 162-163.
517 For the foundation of the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs,
see Akyıldız, Ali, Tanzimat Dönemi Osmanlı Merkez Teşkilatında
Reform, İstanbul: Eren, 1993, pp. 70-91.
518 For the text, see
ibid., p. 152.
519 Akyıldız, Ali, Tanzimat Dönemi Osmanlı Merkez Teşkilatında
Reform, İstanbul: Eren, 1993, p. 78.
established and organized as the sole authority to conduct foreign
policy in contradistinction to the fragmented and collective nature of the
earlier policy-making organization and process.
However, the ministry did not become a modern/Weberian
institution overnight. On the contrary, it took a few decades for the
institution to professionalize and create its own esprit de corps. Before its professionalization and specification
of knowledge in the Hamidian era, it was one of the major offices of the
Sublime Porte where there was a flow of recruits in and out. In the absence of
trained bureaucrats, many preeminent statesmen served in diplomatic posts for a
while. The Foreign Ministry became an office where bureaucrats and men of
future political prominence were trained and acquired experience.
The Tanzimat Foreign Ministry had a very minor influence
in the making of foreign policy as an institution.520 Foreign policy had been determined
in the upper echelons by the
―political initiative‖. In this regard, it would be wrong to speak
of a self-serving and autonomous bureaucratic polity
reminiscent of the Prussian model.521 It seems that, the 19th
century Ottoman pattern resembled the Russian example more than the Prussian
one.522 The Foreign
Ministry‘s mission was confined to carrying out the tasks it was given. This
can also be seen in the very low number of Foreign Ministers who came from the
ranks of the ministry itself, especially in the Hamidian era. The post of
Foreign Minister was a political post and not a bureaucratic post, being merely
the supreme functionary of the ministry on top of the undersecretary.
Nevertheless, given the small size and intertwined nature of the
political-bureaucratic elite, it was not a place of minor significance.
Reviewing the literature on 19th century
Ottoman foreign affairs, one sees too much written on foreign relations and almost nothing
on the actual daily conduct
of foreign
520 Akyıldız, Ali,
ibid, p. 90.
521 The myth of Prussianism had been questioned by John Röhl. See his The Kaiser and His Court. Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press,
1996. Röhl shows the role of the Kaiser and his personal circles in the making
of foreign policy. In Röhl‘s assessment, German foreign policies did not
develop from professional analysis and work, but from personal and irrelevant
motivations.
522 For a sharp contrast between the Prussian and Russian bureaucratic
structures in the 19th century, see
the articles in Heper, Metin (ed.), The
State and Public Bureaucracies: A Comparative
Perspective, New York: Greenwood Press,
1987. However, such a dichotomy has been discredited by the
latest studies on Russian bureaucracy.
affairs, particularly in view of the relatively recent
declassification of the files of the Ottoman Ministry of Foreign Affairs. That
is to say, we know a lot about Ottoman foreign policy yet almost nothing about
the technicalities and procedures of making the foreign policy. In the absence
of documents kept in the archives of the Ottoman Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
the archival evidence used in all the relevant studies on Ottoman foreign
relations consists of sources other than the archives of the Ministry. The bulk
of the material used in these studies are irades and correspondence between the
Palace (in the reign of Abdülhamid II) and the Babıali, and the correspondence
between the Foreign Minister and his international counterparts. Given all
these, we still know very little about the Foreign Ministry. This observation
contradicts the superficial impression that diplomatic history is one of the
most developed areas of 19th century Ottoman historiography.523
In other words, diplomacy has been interpreted and analyzed as a response to
international developments rather than a comprehensive profession. Moreover, we
lack the insights of the new critical diplomatic history. We have not gained
sufficient information and insights about the Foreign Ministry from all these
diplomatic histories. The men in
charge implemented their policies based on certain information, but how this
information had been obtained has yet to be researched.524
523 The doyen of Ottoman diplomatic history is arguably Roderick
Davison. Yet in the absence of the diplomatic archival sources of the Ottoman
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, we learn very little (almost nothing) from his
collected essays about the Foreign Ministry. See his Nineteenth Century Ottoman Diplomacy and Reforms, Istanbul: Isis
Press, 1999. Also see his Essays in
Ottoman and Turkish History: 1774-1923, Austin: University of Texas, 1990. Also it should be noted
that in his ―Reform in the Ottoman
Empire‖, he did not show a particular interest in the
bureaucracy. He focuses on the ―political level‖ to prove the development of
Ottoman reforms. Here, it is not claimed that he is wrong. The point made here
is that we lack sufficient knowledge of the Ottoman bureaucracy and cannot determine the role of the bureaucracy
throughout the 19th century.
524 The same criticism was leveled against the diplomatic historians by
a student of the diplomatic establishment. ―The attention of those studying
modern history and international relations in the past has focused largely upon
three areas: the political substance of major foreign policies, the
personalities of leading decision makers, and the events of dramatic crisis
situations. As a result, our knowledge of diplomacy frequently has been confined to ―high policy‖ regarding such issues as war
or peace, to a restricted number of leaders whose names and actions made
headlines, or sporadic episodes of tension and conflict. Obviously the problems
and intricacies of international politics are infinitely more complex than indicated by these few highlights. Integral
–but largely
What we know is that the Foreign Ministry was a very
fundamental source of knowledge required for the age. Findley speaks
of the renunciation of ―military politics‖ in favor of
diplomatic politics.525 A competent Foreign Ministry became more decisive than a strong army
in the survival of the state. Civilians (efendi-turned-pashas in Itzkowitz‘s
formulation) began to rise in the state administration as early as the 18th
century.526 However, it was the Tanzimat in which the civilian
supremacy was made routine, institutionalized, and consolidated after the
reorganization of the military as subordinate to the political authority
following the destruction of the janissaries and the pre-modern military
organization. The reign of Abdülaziz was the high point of the Foreign Ministry
with many recruits of the Ministry
occupying the highest posts. ―(I)t became common for the foreign minister to go
on to serve as grand vizier. Dominating this combination of posts, Mustafa Reşid (1800-58), Keçecizade
Fuad (1815-1869) and Mehmed Emin Âli Pashas (1815-71) shaped the period.‖527
But with the coming of Abdülhamid, the Foreign Ministry lost its glory days.
The reason for that relative decline in prominence within the state machine may
lie in the fact that the Foreign Ministry cadres lost their monopoly on
speaking French and being acquainted with the European realities. Their
technical information and relatively superior level of knowledge regarding
European realities might have continued to be useful, but possessing the
technical knowledge no longer automatically provided political prominence. By
then, Ottoman statecraft was much more sophisticated than it had been half a
century earlier. Nevertheless, the Ottoman Ministry of Foreign Affairs continued to be one of the most prestigious
offices.
neglected-
features of diplomacy, particularly in the twentieth century, must include the
management of those policies encompassing more subtle commercial or ―cultural‖
questions, the responsibilities of lesser bureaucratic officials in periods of
both turmoil and stability, and the actual administrative machinery or
organized context of policy formulation and execution.‖Lauren, Paul Gordon, Diplomats and Bureaucrats, Stanford:
Hoover Institution Press, 1976, p. xvii.
525 Findley, Carter, ―The
Tanzimat‖, in The Cambridge History of Turkey, vol. 4, Reşat Kasaba (ed.), Cambridge, U.K. :
Cambridge University Press, 2008, p. 13.
526 Itzkowitz, Norman, ―Eighteenth
Century Ottoman Realities‖, Studia
Islamica, No. 16 (1962), p. 86.
527 Findley, Carter, ―The Tanzimat‖,
in The Cambridge History of Turkey, vol.
4, Reşat Kasaba (ed.), Cambridge,
U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 2008, p. 13.
3.3.
Ottoman Foreign Ministry as Precursor of “Westernism” and Pseudo- Nationalism:
Making of the Ottoman Modern Transformation
As has been suggested several times above, the Ottoman
Foreign Ministry was a preeminent institution in the process of the Ottoman
transformation in the 19th century.
This was because after the final collapse of the conventional
prescription advocating stronger military stockpiling for the healing of all
ills, it was the Ministry that had represented
the novel and ambitious promise
of ―salvation‖ through
―other‖ means. It was
the Foreign Ministry that held the means to deal with and weather the dire
situation. In the early Tanzimat period, the ministry was the institution which
had the foremost and best direct contact with the ―West‖. The ministerial personnel were in everyday touch with the
―Christian‖ powers, and therefore they had the advantage of
following the latest developments closely in comparison to the other
governmental offices. Hence, they were the ones who felt the urgency,
acuteness, and graveness of the situation not only regarding diplomatic
realities, but also regarding the technical retardation of the Ottomans.
Furthermore, they ―possessed‖ the best available prescription for the healing
of the ―Sick Man‖. Only they had the skills to apply the proposed
remedy. They were the ones who were
perfectly aware that a new and complete reorganization of the state and state
affairs was not a matter
of intellectual debate
and preference, but an imperative. For these reasons, the
Ottoman Foreign Ministry not only recruited and trained the bulk of the
Tanzimat (Mustafa Reşid Pasha, Âli Pasha, Fuad Pasha)
leadership, but also represented a role model
for the desired new Ottoman civility. It assumed the role of the carrier of the
Ottoman transformation before this
model had been endorsed by the larger
bureaucracy within a few
decades. It is not a coincidence that Western observers of the Ottoman Empire
found diplomats those with whom they most sympathized while considering them to be the most
―Westernized and civilized‖.528
One example of how the Ministry of Foreign Affairs was
perceived to be the transmitter of the Western
way of conduct and Western
knowledge is the fact that
528 For example, see
Mordtmann, Andreas David, İstanbul ve Yeni Osmanlılar, İstanbul: Pera, 1999, pp. 279-304.
institutions such as the ―Council of Agriculture and Manufacture‖
and the ―Council of Quarantine‖ were established in 1838 under the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs. The Council of
Agriculture and Manufacture was transferred to the Ministry of Trade in 1839.529
Likewise, the ―Council of Public
Education‖ was established in 1846 under the supervision of the ministry. Apparently,
these committees were established under the ministry due to its proximity and access to the ―centers
of modern/Western knowledge‖. The Foreign Minister was also the head of the
Board of Health (Meclis-i Umur-ı Sıhhiye)
and therefore de facto ―Minister of Health‖.530 Thus, the offices to
monitor and improve public health were to be included in the Hamidian Foreign
Ministry yearbooks. The Board of Public Education, founded in 1846, was also to
be monitored by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.531
The diplomats functioned as intermediaries for the ―import of Western and
technical knowledge‖ into the Ottoman Empire in addition to their diplomatic
responsibilities. For example, it was the embassy to Paris that found,
negotiated, and contracted two French forest engineers to come to Istanbul,
supervise the forests, and establish a modern forestry office.532
The embassies were coordinating the recruitment of experts of all kinds of
engineering, mining, medicine for the introduction of industrial production and
establishment of modern public institutions in the Ottoman Empire and actively
involved in this process. The first president of the board established to
modernize Istanbul and create a modern
municipal organization (İntizam-ı Şehir Komisyonu) was
529 Martha Mundy,
Richard Saumarez Smith, Governing
Property, Making the Modern State, London: I.B. Tauris, 2007, p. 42. Also
see ―Hariciye Nezareti‖, DİA
530 Findley, Carter,
Bureaucratic Reform in the Ottoman Empire,
Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1980, p. 261.
531 Akyıldız, Ali, Tanzimat Dönemi Osmanlı Merkez Teşkilatında
Reform, Eren, 1993, p. 81, 231.
532 Keskin, Özkan. Orman Ma‟adin Nezareti‟nin Kuruluşu ve
Faaliyetleri, unpublished dissertation, Istanbul University, 2005, p. 18.
These two forest engineers were invited for the following reasons: “Esbab-ı
siyasiye ilcasıyla Avrupa
Hey‟et-i Düveliyyesine mümaşat etmek ve hoş görünmek, peyda-yı
vukuf olunamayan fünun ve „ulum-ı mütenevvia tahavvülat ve tebeddülatından
istifade etmek, bizde henüz tatbik edilmeyen fenn vesair mevadı tatbik ve
ta‟mim etdirmek”.
Emin Muhlis Efendi, a diplomat and a chief official at the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs.533 Apparently,
his experience and knowledge he obtained in his
years in Europe should be the
reason of his appointment to this post. Likewise, ―Kamil Bey, the chief of protocol
in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, was the first director of the Sixth
(municipal-DG) District‖ comprising of Pera, the European part of Istanbul. The
board of Sixth District was created comprising of Europeans, non-Muslims and a
few Muslims resident in the Sixth District to administer and develop Pera
following the West European urban planning and urban developments.534
Apparently the pioneering role of the Foreign Ministry
was not unique to the Ottoman Empire. On the contrary, the same pattern was
visible in all the other non-Western modernizing states. Like the Ottoman case,
the first generation of the Iranian modernization
movement was comprised of employees of the Foreign Ministry who were assigned
to posts in the Persian embassies in Europe. The Persian diplomats, who all
came from the traditional bureaucracy not
unlike the first Ottoman generation of reformers, were frustrated with their
homeland‘s incapacity to adapt to the modern world.535
―Persia‘s
diplomats also assigned to the ministry of foreign affairs and themselves as
members of it a pivotal role in bringing the new civilization to Persia. Malkam
believed that the foreign ministry had the duty of acting as a channel through
which the achievements and knowledge of Europe could be directed towards
Persia. Others, as we have noted, believed that Persia‘s ambassadors abroad had
a special mission to enlighten their government and people and lead both along
the right path to progress.‖536
―Those who were advocating reform in the 1860‘s were never a large group,
and they were not a tightly
knit one. But their contacts with one another and the fact that they shared
many attitudes in common seems to have given them a certain group feeling...The
diplomats urging reform in the 1860‘s also believed that their foreign
experience and training better qualified and equipped them to guide the country
than those who had not been abroad. In vaunting the superiority of the new arts
and sciences of Europe,
they were also suggesting that as Persians
with a knowledge of
533 Ergin, Osman
Nuri, Mecelle-i Umur-ı Belediyye,
İstanbul : İstanbul Büyükşehir Belediyesi Kültür İşleri Daire Başkanlığı, 1995,
v. III, p. 1275, quoted in Gül, Murat, The
Emergence of Modern Istanbul, London; New York: I.B.Tauris, 2009, p. 44.
534 Gül, Murat, ibid, p. 45.
535 See Bakhash….p. 28.
536 Bakhash, Saul. … p. 52.
these sciences,
they had a special claim to higher offices of the state537…This
elitist attitude, which owed something both to the Persian bureaucracy and to
Islamic traditions, was closely
bound up with the attitude
to government that they looked on as the central guiding force in determining and directing the
affairs of the people. They favored schools and newspapers because these
offered a means for creating a better informed and better educated public. But
this was at the same time a desire for newspapers, for instance, that would
educate the public in ideas they believed
suitable for Persia rather than as a means for permitting many schools of
thought to compete for the people‘s allegiance.‖538
In Persia, the role and active involvement of diplomats was arguably
significantly stronger than in the Ottoman Empire due to the less
institutionalized nature of the early modern Persian state. In China, the transformative, modernizing, and civilizationist functions of the foreign
ministry far exceeded the missions of its Ottoman and Persian counterparts.
―The activities of the Tsungli
Yamen (the de facto Chinese
Foreign Ministry) involved not only foreign affairs but
also the promotion of modernization and defense projects. The office was
concerned with the introduction of Western science and industry, modern
schools, customs and the purchase of ships and guns539…Functionally,
the Yamen handled many duties far beyond the normal limits of a foreign office.
In addition to diplomatic affairs, it coordinated almost the entire range of
‗Western affairs‘ (yang-wu) such as
foreign trade, customs, education, overseas affairs, postal service, national
defense, and cultural affairs. It oversaw the work of the Trade Inspectorate
General of customs and indirectly supervised the port commissioners in
consultation with the two trade superintendants. It was involved in mining,
machine factories, telegraph construction, Chinese laborers abroad, missionary
incidents, and the manufacture and purchase of guns and ships. Further, the
Yamen supervised the two T‘ung Wen Kuan for the training of language students
and future diplomatic and consular personnel. After 1867, when astronomy, chemistry, mathematics, and physics were added to the curriculum of
the school, the Yamen defended this development against conservative
opposition. All in all, the Yamen‘s activities were too diverse to be
functionally efficient.‖540
The same was true for the Japanese Foreign Ministry. ―In this
quarter-century (the end of the late 19th century), the Foreign Ministers
enjoyed high status since they had generally
537 Bakhash,
Saul...pp. 51-52.
538 Bakhash,
Saul...pp. 52-53.
539 Immanuel C.Y.
Hsü. ―The Development of the Chinese Foreign Office in the Ch‘ing Period‖, The
Foreign Ministry: Japan‖, in The Times
Survey of Foreign Ministries of the World, Zara Steiner (ed.), Westport:
Times Books, 1982, p. 126.
540 Immanuel C.Y.
Hsü. ―The Development of the Chinese Foreign Office in the Ch‘ing Period‖, The
Foreign Ministry: Japan‖, in The Times
Survey of Foreign Ministries of the World, Zara Steiner (ed.), Westport:
Times Books, 1982, p. 128.
played some role in the civil war or the imperial restoration that
followed it. In a way, many of them were statesmen and enjoyed a prestige second only to the Prime Ministers of today. In some
cases, they possessed an exceptional knowledge of foreign countries by virtue
of having travelled abroad. Of the early Foreign Ministers the following had
visited overseas before taking up office: Inoue Kaoru; Saionji Kimmochi; Mutsu
Munemitsu; Enomoto Takeaki; and Aoki Shuzo.‖541 For the same reason,
many Japanese foreign ministers subsequently became prime ministers, a pattern
reminiscent of the Ottoman pattern in the Tanzimat era.542 In all of
these four countries, bureaucratic modernizers were to introduce ―modern
knowledge‖ to their people as well as minor officials. In all four countries,
these bureaucrats were members of a small elite originating from the
traditional elites of the preceding decades and centuries.543
In fact, the Ottoman statesmen and diplomats-to-be were
exporters of their mission. The Persian modernization project was influenced by
and modeled on the Ottoman modernization. Malkam Khan, the Persian ambassador
to London and other capitals, and a pioneer and leading figure of the Persian
modernization, was heavily influenced by Ottoman reformers during his post in
the Persian embassy to Istanbul.544 While, he was a low-ranking
official in the Persian embassy in Istanbul, he cultivated friendships with
people such as Âli Pasha, Fuad Pasha, Ahmed Vefik Pasha, and Münif Pasha.545
His closeness to these names benefited him financially as well. When the
Persian government stopped paying his salary (for reasons which remain
obscure), he was granted a salary by the Ottoman Empire.546
541 Nish, Ian, ―The Foreign
Ministry: Japan‖, in The Times Survey
of Foreign Ministries of the World, Zara Steiner (ed.), Westport: Times Books,
1982, p. 328.
542 Nish, Ian. p. 328.
543 For the social
origins of Persian diplomats, see Bakhash, Saul, Iran: Monarchy, Bureaucracy and Reform under the Qajars: 1858-1896,
London: Ithaca Press, 1978, p. 28.
544 Algar, Hamid, Mirza Malkum Khan, Berkeley: University
of California Press, 1973,
pp. 66-67.
545 Algar, Hamid… pp. 65-74. Also for Abdülhak Hamid‘s meeting with
Malkom Khan several times in the residence of Ahmed Vefik Pasha (and also in
London), see Abdülhak Hamid… p. 178.
546 Bakhash, Saul… p. 27.
The transformation was not limited to the reorganization
of the state. The officials‘ own conduct of affairs and their self-imagination
changed as well. As pioneers and promoters of the modernization/Westernization
process, 19th century bureaucrats
endorsed and replicated a new way of ―officialdom‖ and ―refinement‖. The
servant of the state turned into a civil servant. However, that does not
necessarily imply the transformation of the pre-modern servant of the state
into a rational, modern bureaucrat. The adaptations are not necessarily ―transformations‖. This ―process of adaptation‖ may be divided into several
stages. Shifting of the structures of mentalities throughout the decades
of the Tanzimat were examined in the previous chapters. However, such a periodization should not be understood as a
linear evolution from one world to another. Continuities as well as disruptions
can also be observed. It may be a more insightful perspective to perceive the
transformation not simply as the renunciation of the ―old‖ and
adoption of the ―new‖, but instead as a complex historical
process in which a new reference and value system was created coexisting with
the previous reference and value system. Following this perspective, the
Ottoman Foreign Ministry exemplifies a distinct internalization of modernity in
a certain social-political milieu and weltanschauung.
This selective reception of modernity by the Ottomans was not a phenomenon
peculiar to the Ottomans. Rather, it was a pattern observable in other
exemplary experiments of non-Western modernization.
3.4.
The Foreign Ministry in
the Hamidian Era
Abdülhamid II preferred to appoint men originating from
other civilian organizations to prominent posts in the Sublime Porte. Of the
sixteen Grand Viziers of Abdülhamid, only one of them (Arifi Pasha) was a
diplomat. Two others (Ibrahim Edhem Pasha and Safvet Pasha) served as ambassadors, but it would not be appropriate to regard them as diplomats.
Of the ten foreign ministers of Abdülhamid, only three (Turhan Hüsnü Pasha,
Arifi Pasha, Ahmed Tevfik Pasha) had extensive diplomatic backgrounds.
Possibly, Abdülhamid was suspicious of the power of the Ministry and feared
that he might be forced to share power with the ministry
in foreign policy
decisions once he allowed others
some power in the
decision-making process.547 The memory of the dictatorial
Âli Pasha and his close associate
Fuad Pasha (who were known for their sympathies to Britain and France) should
have been a warning for Abdülhamid not to favor diplomats in statesmanship. He
might also have thought that appointing ex-ambassadors to posts in the foreign
ministry or prime ministry might enable the countries where these
ex-ambassadors had served to interfere and
develop influence over the policy making of the Ottoman Empire. The suspicion
of Abdülhamid was equally true for any individual of the Porte who might rise to
challenge the supreme authority of the sultan as Said Pasha
had. Instead, he preferred the Palace
to be the sole authority in
making foreign policy. He used to correspond with the ambassadors and
consulates personally from the Palace and bypassed the Ministry and Grand Vizirate548 as he
did with governors and local officials.
Abdülhamid founded an alternative and coexisting
bureaucracy in the Yıldız Palace. It
was a very efficient and well-structured manifestation of a modern bureaucracy.
The immense and orderly correspondence, their registration, and the
documentation of the Yıldız offices clearly demonstrates that it was a
modern-bureaucratic structure in terms of organization and methodology, albeit
patrimonial in other aspects and rivaling and interfering with the regular
offices and bureaucracy.549
On the other hand, it was the Hamidian period in which
the ministry was professionalized and bureaucratized like the other
bureaucratic offices. It was this period in which the modern Turkish Foreign Ministry
as a professional Weberian bureaucracy emerged. Mahmud Esad Bey (later Pasha)
was the first career diplomat to be appointed as ambassador after passing
through necessary levels and promotions. He was recruited following his graduation and promoted consistently beginning from his first appointment
547 For how
Abdülhamid II had established direct contacts with officials bypassing the
Grand Vizirate and the Sublime
Porte in general,
see Akarlı, Engin
Deniz, The Problems of External
Pressures, Power Struggles, and.
Budgetary Deficits in Ottoman Politics under Abdülhamid II (1876-1909),
unpublished dissertation, Princeton University, 1976.
548 See Yıldız Esas Evrakı-Elçiler,Şehbenderlik ve Ateşemiliterlik
under the Yıldız archives in BOA.
549 For depictions
of the Yıldız bureaucracy, see Mayakon, İsmail Müştak, Yıldızda Neler Gördüm ? İstanbul: Semih Lütfi Kitabevi, 1940;
Tahsin Pasha, Abdülhamid Yıldız
Hatıraları, İstanbul: Mualllim Ahmet Halit Kitaphanesi, 1931. Also
Georgeon, Francois, Sultan Abdülhamid,
İstanbul: Homer, 2006, pp. 170-74.
as the third secretary in the embassy to St. Petersburg and then
serving as the second secretary and
the first secretary in the embassy to Paris, besides his services in the
ministry in Istanbul (a total of twenty years before reaching the rank of
ambassador).550 Mahmud Esad Bey was first appointed as ambassador to
Vienna in 1877 and then subsequently as ambassador to Paris in 1880. He also
served as the ministerial undersecretary for one year in 1879. By the 1880s, the Ottoman ambassadors were
predominantly career diplomats who had begun their service as third secretaries
in the 1850s. Furthermore, it was the Hamidian era in which appointments and
promotions created career paths, which became regularized and standardized. New
recruits were to be appointed as third secretaries and promoted in time. After
they were promoted to the rank of first secretary, many served in the embassies
to Balkan capitals as ambassadors or undersecretaries before they were appointed
as ambassadors to the capitals of Western Europe. In short, in the Hamidian
era, Ottoman representatives of the higher and lower echelons were
predominantly professional diplomats
who had risen within the ministry (with the exception of some military
appointments to various ambassadorial posts).
The presence/representation of the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs was remarkably high in the
senates of both the first and the second constitutional periods, demonstrating
the prestige and distinguished place of the ministry. It is not possible to
make a table and a comparative analysis of the senators due to the lack of
stable career patterns for the Ottoman bureaucrats, especially with regard to
the Senate of 1877. The names of those who rose up from the ranks of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to be appointed to the Senate in 1877 were Musurus Pasha, Ahmed
Arifi Pasha, Ahmed Vefik Pasha, Ali Rıza Bey, Kostaki Antopoulos Pasha, and
Server Pasha, not counting a few others who served in diplomatic posts briefly.
A typical career pattern for a member of the Senate of 1877 required an earlier
appointment in the Şuray-ı Devlet (Council
of State). For their lack of domestic experience, the diplomats were rarely
appointed to the Şuray-ı Devlet and
therefore lacked a very crucial stepping
stone for promotion
to either a seat in the senate or
550 For a biography
of Mahmud Esad Pasha, see Salname-i
Hariciyye Nezaret-i Celilesi, (1306/1889), p. 537-538; Kuneralp, Sinan.
―Tanzimat Sonrası Osmanlı Sefirleri‖, in Soysal, İsmail (ed.), Çağdaş Türk Diplomasisi: 200 Yıllık Süreç,
Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu Yayınları, 1997, pp. 113-114.
a position in the cabinet. In that regard, a diplomatic career was
not as promising as a career in the
military or in the civil administration.
In the early Tanzimat period, the lack of
sufficient education and necessary knowledge
permitted the diplomatic service to assume a privileged position
by holding a monopoly on
―Western knowledge‖. By the Hamidian era, the development of better
communication facilities and access to Western printed materials rendered the
privileged knowledge of the earlier decades more accessible.
The Senate convened in 1908 displayed the increasing
prominence of the diplomatic service. The career diplomats who began their
civil service careers in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, served only in the
ministry, and developed distinct professional socializations and intellectual
formations emerged as a group only in
the second half of the reign of Abdülhamid II
and constituted a sizeable
number in the senate of 1908, which was in fact a council of the
dignitaries of the Empire. The senators of 1908 with Foreign Ministry backgrounds included Gabriel Noradonkyan,
Yusuf Ziya Pasha, Keçeçizade İzzet Fuad, Yusuf Azaryan Efendi, Abdülhak Hamid,
Ali Galip Bey and Damad Ferit Pasha, disregarding those who served briefly in
diplomatic posts. Several others began their careers in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs but then moved to
other administrative offices at various points such as Dimitri Mavrokordato
Bey, Ibrahim Faik Bey, Bohor Efendi and Nail Bey.551 All these
figures were elected not only due to their impressive diplomatic careers but
possibly also for their aristocratic genealogies. Almost all of the non-Muslim
senators were from well-known (and therefore reliable) families. This was
especially true with regard to the Greek senators. Thus, we can argue that the
diplomats were acknowledged as constituting one of the most prestigious
segments of the state elite (although lacking the political power and
prominence normally accompanying this social prestige).
551 For the list and
biographies of the senators, see Demirci, Aliyar, İkinci Meşrutiyet‟te Ayan Meclisi 1908-1912, İstanbul: Bilgi
Üniversitesi Yayınları, 2006, pp. 453-508; Türk
Parlamento Tarihi- I. ve II. Meşrutiyet, Ankara: Türkiye Büyük Millet
Meclisi Vakfı Yayınları, 1997, v. II.
3.5.
Changing International Environment and Changing, Transforming Identities
The Foreign Ministry tried its best to enable the
Ottoman state to survive against all odds through its involvement in European
diplomacy and its tackling of the delicate and robust matters the Empire
had to face and resolve. The Ministry had not developed, but had
pursued the idea that the Ottomans had to
emulate the Westerners in order to survive. From correspondence, we may
observe that, bearing the anxiety regarding the (non)future of the Empire in
mind, the Ministry had contributed
to the crafting of its imperial nationalism not necessarily by referring to a
certain ethnicity (Turkishness), but by allegiance to a certain imperial
center. In other words, their preoccupation and responsibilities were to create
an identity formation. This identity formation was not an ideological
preference, but the imposition of a raison
d‟etat. Their structures of loyalty were also formed by their appreciation
of the imminent and longer term threats to the Empire, and therefore to
themselves, as an examination of the ambassadorial dispatches will reveal in
the coming chapters.
A new Ottoman identity had been forged in the 19th
century, influenced by modern and medieval European traditions. The Ottoman
imperial ideology inherited from the classical ages of the Empire had been
redefined and refashioned in interaction with the modern European imperial
pageantries and discourses. The synthesis and integration of different
traditions created an entirely new Ottoman imagination. Of course, it is
senseless to assume that the 19th century Ottoman imagination directly evolved
from the earlier Ottoman imperial tradition. On the other hand, it is also
important to recognize the critical role of the former Ottoman
representations in the forging of the novel 19th century
Ottoman imperial symbolism. However,
again we need to emphasize that it is the brand new modern framework that utilized the
traditional Ottoman representation to propagate the new modern Ottoman imperium. The Ottomans were ready for the modern
challenge at least in their politics of imagination.
The content and essence of the new imperial ideology
(officialization of Ottomanism by the 1860s)
is another subject
for debate revolving
around the questions of whether
there was room for Ottoman universalism; whether the imperial ideology
was merely window- dressing for the control of the ―sovereign nation‖; whether this ―sovereign nation‖
was
comprised of Turks or Muslims.
An Ottoman imperial nationalism referring to various
and not necessarily contradicting identities had developed in defense
against European aggression.
The structures of loyalty of the diplomatic service will
be investigated in the coming chapters. Some questions that may be posed are as
follows: What were the motivations of the Ministry personnel in fulfilling their
duties? Was their supreme
loyalty towards the idea
of the supra-national Ottoman Empire as believers in a Kaisernatioanalismus or did they nurture a superior loyalty to the Ottoman dynasty without a
certain political agenda ? What did the imperial family and the sultan mean to the ranks of the Ministry?
Was the dynasty a central
figure in their conception of the political body they were serving ? How did
they relate the survival of the Empire with Islam? For them, did the Ottoman
Empire represent the realm of Islam and did serving the Ottoman Empire also
imply serving religion and God? How secular were their political commitments?
Were they ―political‖ in any sense beyond dealing with technicalities and
bureaucratic niceties? Did they have
a perception of representing Turks, ―the sovereign nation‖
among other Muslim
―nations‖, the ―Muslim nation‖
being the nation more sovereign than others ?552 Although no
conclusive or even satisfactory answers will be given to these questions in the
coming chapters, some preliminary observations will be made based on the
limited evidence available.
The interrelations of Muslim identity (as a political
modern construct rather than a personal faith) and imperial-dynastic discourse
(based on various legitimizations) will be explored. As has been shown in many
places, identity construction is a modern phenomenon and a consequence of
modernity. In the Ottoman context, the identity- formation was also directly
related to European aggression against the Empire. Modes of identity-formations
are strategies to react to the complexities of international, social, and
political developments.
The Foreign Ministry‘s crucial efforts were directed
towards incorporating the Ottomans into Europe proper. This was presumably a
foundational motive in the construction of loyalties
and ideological commitments in the diplomatic
service. Instead of
552 A recent but
already classical study on the forging of the imperial Ottoman ideology is
Deringil, Selim, The Well-Protected
Domains: Ideology and Legitimation of Power in the Ottoman Empire: 1876-1909,
London; New York: I. B. Tauris, 1998.
being relegated to the collapsed nations/states, the Ottoman Empire
had to be elevated to the league of European powers. The international situation was such that there was no third option. It was a zero sum game in
which the Ottomans will lose everything or will be victorious in the end,
victorious in the sense that the Empire will be stabilized and saved from
collapse.
The founding diplomatic strategy of Tanzimat was
persistently to seek an alignment with the ―West‖ (England and France against the Russians)
and a strict adherence to the
―order
party‖. This ―French-British‖ connection was the basis of what had been labeled
as
―reformism‖. Being in alliance with the French-British bloc, the Ottomans
were influenced by the
―French way‖. ―To gain internal strength and external legitimacy (in the eyes
of France, the symbol of progress), the Empire must modernize itself.‖553
However, the Ottomans knew that these alignments were not between two equal
parties but between states at two different levels. It was not up to the
Ottomans, but up to the British to decide the future of the alliance. As is
well known, the British decided to loosen the ties between the two states after
observing the devastation of the Ottomans against the marching Russian army in 1877-1878. By then, the
British realized that it seemed unsustainable to bet on the protection of the Ottoman
Empire against the Russians.
Britain gravitated to new alternative diplomatic policies and
took Egypt as its new defensive border in the south against Russian aggression.
Britain assumed the control of Cyprus (and subsequently Egypt) to sustain its
new policy.554 By the 1880s, Abdülhamid was obliged to turn to
Germany for a new partnership, a new move in his game of survival. The new
partnership was not between two equal parties, either. The Ottomans were
placing yet another bet on their survival. These diplomatic and strategic
shifts and moves were influential in the redefinition of ideological fronts as
well. The three modes of international alignments of the Ottomans (in the Tanzimat, in the Hamidian era, in the
Unionist rule) were accompanied by three modes of modernizations and
ideological dispositions.
553 Hanioğlu, Şükrü, A Brief
History of the Late Ottoman
Empire, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2008, p. 77.
554 Millman,
Richard, Britain and the Eastern Question,
Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1979, p. 459.
In such an environment, the self-representation of
Ottomans became ambivalent. It was up to the Ottoman Empire itself to survive.
These circumstances enforced Abdülhamid to fabricate an imperial grandeur.
Although on the one hand, the very fear of being annihilated was pervasive, on the other hand, a certain pride in
belonging to the pompous Ottoman imperial body was entertained to counter and
avoid the fear. These two motivations were not necessarily contradictory. On
the contrary, they complemented each other. The fiction of ―grandeur‖ magnified
the obsession with being annihilated, and the fear of collapse motivated the
construction of a fictitious grandeur in response.555
Abdülhamid strove to create an aura around himself. He
personalized the Empire in himself. The traditional Ottoman self-representation
was married to the 19th century modern European imagination and reached its
zenith in the Hamidian era. In short, the Ottomans did not fail to present
themselves as another prestigious and well-respected Empire.556 The
limits of persuasion were yet another matter. The Hamidian Empire was in a sense the era of the ―invention of
Empire‖.557
―Empire‖ is one of the latest ―fads‖ of historiography and social sciences.
While
―Empire‖ used to be a specialty of a small circle of historians
until recently not highly regarded by others,
the retreat of nation-states in the 1990s
has made ―Empire‖
an
555 For some prominent and impressive works on Ottoman imperialism and
colonialism, see Usama Makdisi.
Makdisi, Ussama, The Culture of
Sectarianism, Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000; Makdisi,
Ussama. ―Ottoman Orientalism‖, American
Historical Review, 107(3), June 2002, p. 768-796; Ersoy, Ahmet, ―A Sartorial Tribute to Late Tanzimat
Ottomanism: The Elbise-i Osmaniyye Album‖, Muqarnas,
Vol. 20 (2003), pp. 187-207; Deringil, Selim,
―They Live in a State of Nomadism
and Savagery‖, Comparative
Studies in Society and History Vol. 2, (2003), pp. 311-343.
556 For a study on
the self-image and self-display of the Ottoman Empire in its ambivalences, complexity, and contradictory manifestations, see Çelik, Zeynep,
Displaying the Orient:
Architecture of Islam at Nineteenth Century World‟s Fairs, Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1992.
557 Deringil, Selim, The
Well-Protected Domains: Ideology and Legitimation of Power in the Ottoman
Empire: 1876-1909, London; New
York: I. B. Tauris, 1998; Karateke, Hakan, Padişahım Çok Yaşa,
İstanbul: Kitap Yayınevi, 2004. For the ―invention of emperor‖ in Japan in the
late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, see Fujitani, T. Splendid Monarchy, Berkeley: University
of California Press, 1998, p. 233.
attractive theme to study. Yet, Bernard Porter, one of the oldest
scholars of ―Empire‖558 and one of the foremost ―imperial
historians‖ of the British Empire, criticizes the new, booming interest in ―studying Empire‖ arguing that the ―imperial rhetoric‖ was restricted to the ruling aristocratic class, and hence
it would be inappropriate to discover the
―imperial‖ elsewhere.559 Bernard
Porter was particularly critical of the studies advanced
by Mackenzie560 which purported to establish that ―Empire‖
was at the center of 19th century British society, politics, and culture. For Porter, ―Empire‖
was a class-related phenomenon
and ideology. Therefore, one must not
be thrilled with the attraction of ―Empire‖. Nevertheless, the discovery of the
Empire opened new horizons challenging the conventions of ―modern historical
scholarship‖ which was mesmerized by the modern- nation-states and tacitly took
the premises of the modern nation-states for granted.
Impressed by these new horizons, Fujitani, a prominent
historian of 19th century Japan, writes; ―In this respect, I
consider myself to be among a number of scholars of the so- called emperor
system who have begun in various ways to critique the view long espoused by Japanese
Marxists of the koza school, as well as modernists such as Maruyama Masao, that treated the prominence of the monarchy
in modern history
as a reflection of and
reason for the incompleteness of Japan‘s modernity. By resituating the
emperor at the center of a modern panoptic regime,
as I propose, we see not only that the cults of nation and emperor
558 For an impressive introduction to the concept of ―Empire‖, see Howe, Stephen,
Empire: A Very Short Introduction,
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002. For a few other impressive studies, see
Pagden, Anthony, Lords of the World:
Ideologies of Empire in Spain, Britain and France 1500-1800, New Haven: Yale University Press,
1995; Armitage, David, The Ideological Origins of the British
Empire, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 2000; Porter,
Bernard, The Lion‟s Share: A Short
History of British Imperialism 1850-2004, New York: Longman, 2004.
559 Porter, Bernard,
The Absent-Minded Imperialists,
Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. viii-x.
560 Mackenzie, John,
Propaganda and Empire: Manipulation of
British Public Opinion 1880-1960, Basingstoke; New York: Palgrave
Macmillan, 1984; Mackenzie, John, The
Empire of Nature, Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1997; Mackenzie,
John, Orientalism: History, Theory and
the Arts, Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1985; Mackenzie, John (ed.), Imperialism
and Popular Culture, Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1989. Mackenzie also edited the Manchester University Press‘ series of
―Studies in
Imperialism‖ which published books examining the impact of imperialism in the
19th (and 20th) century on politics, society and culture.
were created in relatively modern times, but also that what has been
called the emperor system, far from being characterized by its ‗feudal‘
characteristics, was central to the production of Japan‘s modernity.‖561
Apparently, what Fujitani did with respect to Meiji
Japan (and Richard Wortman to imperial Russia562) was done by
Deringil to the Hamidian Ottoman Empire.563 The premodern political
structures all used mechanisms of legitimizations, but traditional strategies
of legitimizations came following the construction and consolidation of
political powers rather than vice versa. However, modern political structures should have a
―mission‖ and ―meaning‖ from their very beginning. The political power struggle should never mean a
merciless struggle for domination. The modern polities struggle for an ideal.
This was the case for Great Britain, France, Russia, and also the 19th
century Ottoman Empire. What did the Ottoman Empire mean in the eyes of its
reorganizers ? Or to formulate the question
better, what did the reorganizers want the Ottoman Empire to mean
? Furthermore, how much of this
pursued ideal had been internalized ?
Of course, instead of speaking of the ―Empire‖, we need
to historicize and contextualize the ―Empire‖. The Tanzimat was the
introduction of a totally new and unfamiliar language. With Tanzimat, the
self-imagination and self-representation of the Ottoman Empire were recast from
the medieval to the ―modern‖. Whereas the Rescript of Tanzimat in 1839 may be
seen within the traditional Ottoman political vocabulary564, the
Rescript of Reform (Islahat Fermanı)
in 1856 marked a drastic shift in taking and endorsing the ―modern‖ and ―universalist‖ (with regard to its subjects) discourse. The
561 Fujitanii, Takashi,
Splendid Monarchy, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1998,
p. 26.
562 Wortman,
Richard, Scenarios of Power: Myth and
Ceremony in Russian Monarchy, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1995.
563 Deringil does not develop his arguments from Fujitani‘s book which
appeared just two years before the publication of Deringil‘s book. Deringil
depends on Carol Gluck for his comparison with Japan and was inspired by her
analysis of the representation of the Japanese monarchy. See Gluck, Carol, Japan‟s Modern Myths, Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 1985.
564 Abu Mannah,
Butrus, ―The Islamic Roots of the Gülhane Rescript‖, in his Studies on Islam and the Ottoman
Empire in the 19th Century 1826-1876, Istanbul:
Isis Press, 2001,
pp. 73-97.
spontaneous and necessary alignment
of the Ottoman Empire with the European ―party of order‖ was strongly grounded in the
Crimean War.565 The vocabulary and language employed in the Edict of
Reform demonstrated the transformative role of the diplomatic alignment of the
Ottoman Empire in the previous two decades with regard to political discourse
and visions. The Rescript of Reform also symbolized the entrance of the
Ottomans to the ―European family‖, following the wartime alliances with France
and Britain and the signing of the Paris
Treaty which admitted the Ottomans into the
―Concert of Europe‖.
The reign of Abdülhamid can be interpreted as the
perfection and sophistication of the Tanzimat discourse dressed in
authoritarian garb (not unlike the authoritarianism discourses of Russian czardom566, Prussia, and the
European-wide conservative- reactionary monarchism in reaction to the
―democratic‖ currents of the time). It was the zenith of Ottoman imperialism.
The Hamidian era may be regarded as the maturation of Tanzimat after its
infancy in the 1840s and its adolescence in the 1860s. It was the legal and institutional undertakings in the late
1860s, such as the new codes of Public Education (1869), Provincial
Administration (1867), and Citizenship (1869), that set the ground for the
Hamidian autocratic institutionalization. At the same time, the Hamidian regime
was the foundational stage in the emergence of the Republic, not only in the
microcosm of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, but in the entirety of Ottoman
statecraft. This was not only true in
an institutional context. The men who had been educated and recruited to the
state service in this reign would establish the Republic and constitute its
bureaucratic and political elites.
565 For an impressive study on how the Ottomans used symbolism to
deepen the temporary military alliance
with the countries of Order in the Crimean War, Eldem, Edhem, İftihar ve İmtiyaz: Osmanlı Nişan ve Madalyaları
Tarihi, İstanbul: Osmanlı Bankası Arşiv ve Araştırma Merkezi, 2004. The
book shows the very strong urge of the Ottomans to present themselves as a
respectable European Empire equal to the others. For the earliest observation
of such symbolism back in the reign of Selim III, see Berktay, Halil &
Artan, Tülay, ―Selimian Times: A
Reforming Grand Admiral, anxieties of re-possession, Changing Rites of Power‖,
in The Kapudan Pasha, His Office and His
Domain, Elizabeth Zachariadou (ed.), Crete University Press, 2002, pp.
7-45.
566 For the display
of Russian authoritarian glory, see Wortman, Richard, Scenarios of Power: Myth and Ceremony in Russian Monarchy,
Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1995
As has been tried to be established, international
developments were at the center of changing and transforming Ottoman
identities, cultural and intellectual formations, and the structures of
mentality of the Ottoman bureaucratic establishment. Therefore, the Ottoman
diplomatic service was at the hub of these shifts, formations, and
transformations. In this foundational stage, the identity formation of diplomats
was constituted by three complementary dynamics, one primarily ―political‖, the
second ―structural‖, and the last primarily ―socio-cultural‖. The first one was
the encounter with external actors ranging from Düvel-i Muazzama (Great Powers) to Armenian, Albanian, Arab
dissidents, and from the social and
cultural habituses of Europe
to various political networks of Turcophobe
and Turcophile tendencies. The second dynamic was international politics,
entanglements, and rivalries. The last was their social culturalizations and
social backgrounds which influenced
and determined their reactions and perceptions in encountering political
developments. In fact, it was the intersection of these three dynamics that led
to the formation of a certain identity and cultural/ideological/mental
formation.567 Moreover, the Hamidian regime‘s official views and
stances (with the legacy of the Tanzimat in the background) had shaped their
political, social, and cultural dispositions. Therefore, the international
entanglements and encounters were constitutive in the intellectual formation of
the Ottoman state elite in general and Ottoman diplomats in particular.
567 For a recent collection of articles in tribute to Norman Itzkowitz
with a particular emphasis on ―identity
formation‖ in the Ottoman
Empire, see Barbir, Karl &
Tezcan, Baki (ed.), Identity and Identity Formation in the
Ottoman World, Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 2007.
CHAPTER IV
A SOCIAL
PORTRAIT OF THE DIPLOMATIC
SERVICE
4.1.
The Service Aristocracy: Who Were
The Diplomats?
The 19th - century Ottoman bureaucracy was a
habitus with regard to its mores, internal codes of conduct,
socialization and attitudes, and it also lacked Weberian structure. The visits of Ahmed İhsan in his travels have already
been mentioned. When two sons of Hayrullah Efendi, Abdülhak Hamid and Nasuhi
arrived in Paris in their teens to study at the
Ottoman School and Saint-Cyr, respectively, they immediately went to the
embassy. The ambassador, Cemil Pasha, welcomed them at the embassy. Abdülhak
Hamid, who claimed to be the first Ottoman child ever in Paris,568
visited the embassy daily throughout his stay in Paris and was entertained by
the ambassador. The child Abdülhak Hamid also became friends with the scribes
Artin, who was to become Artin Dadyan Pasha, and Esad, who became Esad Pasha,
the first career diplomat to be appointed as ambassador (first in Vienna, then
in Paris). He also met Edhempaşazade Hamdi, the future Osman Hamdi Bey, who
also happened to regularly visit the embassy while studying law in Paris.569
When their father, Hayrullah Efendi,
arrived in Paris, he also immediately visited
the embassy.570 During his stay in Paris, he frequented the embassy
regularly.571 We may observe that, the ambassadorial staff
performed their daily
routines in line with the habitus in which they
568 Abdülhak Hamid, Abdülhak Hamid‟in Hatıraları, İstanbul:
Dergah Yayınları, 1994, p. 32.
569Abdülhak Hamid, ibid, pp. 33-34.
570 Hayrullah
Efendi, Avrupa Seyahatnamesi, Ankara: Kültür Bakanlığı, 2002, p. 89.
571 Abdülhak Hamid, ibid, pp. 44-45.
operated and from which they had been recruited in the first
instance.572 Apparently, Ottoman embassies, besides attending to
their professional obligations and preoccupations, served as the hub of an
Ottoman network and an ―Ottoman club‖ where Ottomans belonging to the same
social class met, socialized, and asked for help when necessary.573
Ahmet İhsan, in his travels
to Europe, visits
the Ottoman embassy as soon as he arrives at a certain capital city. In his travel account, which was one of
the earliest of the genre of Ottoman/Turkish touristic guides, he found worth
mentioning to describe the physical aspects and qualities of the Ottoman
embassies in the cities he visited as one of the most important information
regarding the cities. His socialization and the intimate relations he nurtured
with the staff in the embassies are instructive. For example, desperate to
check if the new issue of his journal Servet-i
Fünun was printed and in circulation, he obtained a copy of the latest
issue of his journal from Rıfat Bey, the military attaché in the Berlin
embassy.574 In Rome, Mahmut Nedim Bey awakened from his sleep to
welcome Ahmet İhsan and hired the carriage of the embassy for Ahmet İhsan to
wander in the city575. Ahmet İhsan found and befriended Katibyan
Efendi in London, a new graduate of the school of engineering and a secretary in the embassy, who was a
nephew of Hayik, a
friend of Ahmet İhsan‘s from his high school, and they wandered around
in the city together.576 Ahmet İhsan met and befriended many Ottoman
university students working as secretaries in
the Ottoman embassies.577 Reading
Servet-i Fünun and other
journals, and socializing
572 The term ―habitus,‖ as first used by the French sociologist Pierre
Bourdieu, is defined as, ―…the durably installed generative principle of
regulated improvisations, produces practices which tend to reproduce the
regularities immanent in the objective conditions of the production of their generative
principle, while adjusting to the demands inscribed as objective potentialities
in the situation, as defined by the cognitive and motivating structures making
up the habitus.‖ Bourdieu, Pierre, Outline
of a Theory of Practice, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press,
2004, p. 78.
573 For example, see Abdülhak Hamid, ibid., pp. 356-57;
Ahmet İhsan, ibid., pp. 432-33.
574 Ahmet İhsan, Avrupa‟da Ne Gördüm ? İstanbul: Tarih
Vakfı Yurt Yayınları, 2007, p. 315.
575 Ahmet İhsan, ibid, pp. 432-33.
576 Ahmet İhsan, ibid, p. 161.
577 Alain Servantie, Preface
to Avrupa‟da Ne Gördüm, p. xlviii.
within the same milieu inhabited by
the privileged few, we may observe
that, Ahmet İhsan and the staff in the embassies shared the same closed world.
One rejected applicant to the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs was the
future Mehmed Tevfik Bey, later governor,
Minister of Finance and President of Şuray-ı Devlet (Council of State). He
applied for a position in the Foreign Correspondence Office in the ministry
after his graduation from Mülkiye in 1885. Yusuf
Ziya Bey (the future Ziya Pasha, the ambassador to Paris and Vienna) was a
close friend of young Mehmed Tevfik‘s family. Therefore, young Mehmed Tevfik
asked the acquaintances of his family to get him a post in the ministry.
According to Mehmed Tevfik‘s account,
Ziya Bey had shown interest in the request of the young Mehmed Tevfik. He asked
his brother, Mustafa Reşid Bey (Mustafa Reşid Pasha, the future Minister of
Foreign Affairs), to arrange Mehmed Tevfik‘s employment through Naum Efendi
(the future undersecretary of the ministry), then an official in the Foreign
Correspondences Office. To his regret,
no suitable post was arranged for the young Mehmed Tevfik. Instead, he was assigned to a less prestigious position
in the Translation Office.
Mehmed Tevfik resigned after three months to move to the Mabeyn (the chancellery
of the Ottoman palace).578 Mehmed Tevfik Bey‘s application for
employment and his short tenure is yet another demonstration of the intra-elite
character of the Ottoman bureaucracy. He was admitted to the ministry
not due to his merit but because he was the son of Şirvanlı Ahmed Hamdi
Efendi, an educator and a high-ranking bureaucrat who served in various posts
related to education (though he was a graduate of Mülkiye and his credentials were superior to any ordinary son of a
bureaucrat). Young Mehmed Tevfik was not the only recruit appointed due to
family connections. Galip Kemali‘s (Söylemezoğlu) employment in the Foreign
Ministry was thanks to his father‘s post. At the start of Galip‘s bureaucratic
career, his father was no less than the Head of the Committee of Recruitment
(of Civil Servants). Apparently, he
secured the appointment of his son to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in the office of Tahrirat-ı Hariciye.579 Abdülhak Hamid‘s appointment as a scribe
to the embassy in Paris was arranged
by Ibrahim Bey,
578 Mehmet Tevfik
Biren, II. Abdülhamid, Meşrutiyet ve
Mütareke Devri Hatıraları, İstanbul: Arba Yayınları, 1998, v. I, pp. 13-14.
Also see Naciye Neyyal, Mutlakiyet,
Meşrutiyet ve Cumhuriyet Hatıraları, İstanbul: Pınar Yayınları, 2004, p.
40.
579 Söylemezoğlu,
Galip Kemali, Hariciye Hizmerinde Otuz Sene, İstanbul: Şaka
Matbaası, 1949, p. 53.
who was a relative
of Abdülhak Hamid and son-in-law of Raşid
Pasha, the foreign minister at the time.580 Given that Abdülhak
Hamid came from a prominent family and had many family connections, all his
appointments were made due to personal requests and some of his undesired
appointments were annulled thanks to his connections.581 Young
Mehmet Murad (yet to be Mizancı Murad) was appointed to an office (kalem) in the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs thanks to the patronage of Midhat Pasha.582 After arranging
the appointment of his younger brother Receb as an official in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ahmed Tevfik Bey (Pasha) thanked the sultan in a rather
submissive tone rearticulating his
obedience and allegiance to the sultan.583
In the pre-modern perception, this was the most
reasonable and anticipated recruitment pattern. It was yet to be dubbed as
nepotism in a culture in which oral communication was as reliable as, if not
more so than, the written word. This was far from a bureaucratic culture of
individualism and meritocracy. This was seen as the most reliable method for
recruitment in a culture of orality before the culture of the text. It was the
usual way of conduct in a system of references in which genealogies and family
reputations were taken as more substantial credentials and references than
personal achievements and competences. This was viable not only because there was no regularized official
procedure of recruitment, but also because the recruitment pool was small and
those who were within the circle knew each other, if not personally, at least
by name. The recruitment pool would grow after the number of graduates of
imperial colleges increased exponentially and class/social origins of the
officials changed and became diversified. Recruitment patterns would become considerably regularized and formalized after the 1908
Revolution and after the purge (tensikat) of officials on a grand scale. In fact, as argued previously, the ―myth of
580 Abdülhak Hamid, ibid, pp. 99-101.
581 Abdülhak Hamid… pp. 213-14,
p. 321.
582 Emil, Birol, Mizancı Murad Bey, İstanbul:
İstanbul Üniversitesi Edebiyat
Fakültesi Yayınları, 1979, p. 57.
583 BOA, Y.PRK.EŞA, 19/6, 1311 C 19.
the bureaucracy‖ in its rigid Weberian definition was hardly
applicable to the 19th century European bureaucraciesas well where
patronage reigned.584
Nevertheless, efforts to transform the bureaucracy were
attempted in the Western European polities at an earlier stage. The
Northcote-Trevelyan Report of 1853‘s Ottoman counterpart585 was to
be undertaken in the Ottoman Empire only after the 1908
Revolution. The reaction to the bureaucratic machine of the Hamidian era and
concerns with reform and
modernization of the bureaucracy became one of the most pressing issues of the
early Second Constitution Era.586 Hüseyin Cahid Bey was an outspoken
critic of the Hamidian bureaucracy.587 For him, the inefficient
bureaucracy was a product of the degenerate ancien régime (devr-i sabık) and was completely corrupt and self-interested. What
he (and all the other reformers) proposed was recruitment based only on merit
measured by objective and standardized examinations and promotions again based on merit measured
by strict criteria. ―Examination‖
became a magical word/concept in the writings of Hüseyin Cahid Bey and other
political opinion leaders, as well as in the eyes of the parliamentarians.
The Hamidian bureaucracy can be characterized as a
closed world in which personal relations were
of primary importance. This
was more evident in the highest echelons of the bureaucracy, where social
exclusion and elitism survived after its dissolution in lower echelons of the
bureaucracy. This culture was most manifest in the diplomatic service given that it was one of the most elite
governmental offices. The end of the Hamidian
584 For example for the patronage in the British navy in its transition
to a bureaucratic institution, see Dandeker,
Christopher, ―Patronage and Bureaucratic Control--The Case of the Naval Officer in English Society
1780- 1850‖, The British Journal of
Sociology, Vol. 29, No. 3 (Sep., 1978), pp. 300-320
585 For the Northcote-Trevelyan Report and reforms based on this report
in Britain, see Dreyfus, Françoise, Bürokrasinin
İcadı, İstanbul: İletişim Yayınları, 2007. In Britain, France and the
United States, a dispassionate Weberian bureaucracy
appeared only in the second half of
the nineteenth century, when it began to be institutionalized, albeit partially
and slowly. It was only in the 20th century when a modern
bureaucracy based on strict procedures and formality, and on merit instead of
recommendations was institutionalized.
586 For the
political debates and reforms, see Tural, Erkan, Son Dönem Osmanlı Bürokrasisi: II Meşrutiyet Dönemi‟nde Bürokratlar,
İttihatçılar ve Parlamenterler, Türkiye ve Orta Doğu Amme İdaresi
Enstitüsü, 2009.
587 ibid., pp. 76-78, 96.
regime widened the pool of recruitment and weakened the intimate
nature of the bureaucracy. However, the dispassionate Weberian bureaucracy
never replaced the Hamidian bureaucracy. No such duality existed. This culture
of bureaucracy was considerably modified but continued to reproduce itself.
Michael Herzfeld argues
in his study on bureaucracy that ―the family provides an easily
understood model for the loyalty and collective responsibility that citizens
must feel towards the state.‖588 He also argues that; ―(t)here is no
such thing as an autonomous state except in the hands of those who create and
execute its ostensibly self-supporting teleology…To recover accountability, we
should not simply revert to the Weberian ideal type of the legal-rational
bureaucratic state. We should instead ask who makes each decision on the basis
of ‗the law.‘ Restoring time and individuality to our analyses –the recognition
of human agency- is the only viable defense against the reification of
bureaucratic authority.589‖ For the late Ottoman bureaucracy, and
especially for the diplomatic service, where the staff was recruited from a
small and intimate social milieu, Herzfeld‘s suggestions are particularly
applicable. The perceptions of the state by the bureaucrats and their self-perceptions were to be understood within
the metaphor of the
―family.‖ This perception maintained a loyalty to the ―intimate state‖ and developed
a
―group identity‖ imagined
and forged around
the familiarized state.
Thus, the state was not an entity above the clouds to be
subordinated. It was the perceptions and self-perceptions of the members of this group that had
constituted and developed the idea of the state, which was transcendentalized only to serve more personal goals
and aspirations. The rhetoric of submissiveness and rhetorical obedience to the
sultan, which was one of the hallmarks of this imperial culture, was also a
manifestation of this familiarization process. For example, the thank you
letters of Yusuf Ziya
Bey for his appointment as ambassador to Vienna
and the thank you letter of Mahmud
Nedim Bey for his appointment as ambassador to Rome display the extent of level of submissiveness to the sultan.590 However,
this
588 Herzfeld, Michael, The Social Production of Indifference, Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1993, p. 12.
589 Herzfeld, Michael, ibid., pp. 156-57.
590 Mahmud Nedim Bey writes the sultan: ―velinimet-i bi- minnetimiz padişahımız şevketmeab efendimiz
hazretlerinin sadık bir abd-ı memluk
ve ahkârları olmaktan
başka
allegiance of obedience
was less referring to submissiveness
to authority than reiteration of
adherence to a certain community (family) which was legitimized and upheld by a
culture of hierarchy. The sultan was perceived as the pivot that enabled the
maintenance of this habitus. The relationship established with the sultan and
the symbolism employed in addressing the sultan was reminiscent of intra-family
relations.
Despite the somehow aristocratic character of late Ottoman
diplomatic service, the Hamidian diplomats were not financially secure. On the contrary, in their
missions abroad, many suffered from financial problems arising from the
financial difficulties the Empire was facing. Complaints to the sultan for the
non-payment of the salaries of the ambassadorial staff abounded.591
The embassies were not financially supported adequately enough to be able to
pay their routine daily and professional expenditures.592 The second
military attaché of the embassy to St. Petersburg complained that he had been
paid one salary for the preceding seven and a half months.593 It was
not only the average officials who complained about unpaid salaries. Şerif
Pasha, the ambassador to Stockholm and son of Kürd Said Pasha requested his back
salary to be paid594. Tevfik Pasha, while he was ambassador to
Berlin in 1899 asked for his back salary from previous years to be paid595.
After eight years (in 1907), he reiterated his request asking the palace either
to pay his unpaid salary or to remove him from his post.596 Izzet
Pasha, the ambassador to Madrid and son of Fuad Pasha requested
a loan from the treasury to be repaid by cuts in his future
asla bir değer ve liyakatim olmadığı halde bu kere
dahi nail ve mazhar olduğun lütf ve inayet-i mahsusa-yı cenab-ı tacdarinin
binde birinin ifası faraza-yı şükran ve ubudiyetten vücuh ile acizim bulunduğum
dua-yı bil-hayr-ı şehriyarilerini bu vesile ile dahi yüzümü yerlere sürerek…‖ BOA, Y.PRK.
EŞA, 13/29, 1308 Ş. 13. For the thank-you letters of the ambassadors to Vienna
(Yusuf Ziya Bey) and to Madrid (İzzet Pasha) with the same submissive and
obedient language, see BOA, Y. PRK.EŞA, 13/30, 1308 Ş.13; BOA, Y.PRK.EŞA,
42/21, 1320 Z. 4.
591 BOA, Y.PRK.EŞA 41/15, 1320 C. 29; 40/67, 1320, Ra. 27; 40/45, 1320 S. 27; 40/26,
1320, M. 27;38/52, 1319 Ra. 14.
592 BOA, Y.PRK.EŞA, 40/83, 1320 Ra. 30; 44/31, 1321 Ş. 2.
593BOA, Y.PRK.EŞA, 35/101, 1318 Ra.
15.
594 BOA, Y.PRK.EŞA, 42/63,
1321 M. 8.
595 BOA, Y.PRK.EŞA, 28/46,
1315 C. 29.
596BOA, Y.PRK.EŞA, 47/75, 1323 Ra.
26.
salary.597 Mustafa Reşid Pasha, while serving as
ambassador to Rome complained of the financial burden caused by his unpaid
salary and expenditures.598 Apparently, only those who were able to
bear such financial burdens could be diplomats, not unlike the European
diplomatic services. Although many diplomats suffered financial burdens abroad,
they enjoyed a privileged life in Istanbul and, more importantly, shared a
culture of their own. More importantly, the social capital and prestige they
entertained was more valuable and preferable than material wealth in a world
where many benefits were enjoyed not based on cash but based on reputation and
social respectability.
The annal of the Foreign
Ministry published in 1889 (1306)
provides us an opportunity
to view the social portrait
of the Ministry (as of 1889). A list of the officials of the Ministry is
presented with information on the occupation of their fathers, their
birthplaces, and the offices they held. Although three other annals of the
Ministry were published during the Hamidian
era, the best and most
comprehensive information is provided in this annal. Only the data in this
annal is suitable to prepare a statistical observation although the rich data on the social background of the officials
in the other three annals are also employed throughout this chapter599.
This survey of the middle and lower cadres of the ministry illustrates clearly that Hamidian diplomats were predominantly scions of state officials and members of
this semi-closed world. The ranks of the fathers of the diplomats vary
significantly. The sons of grand viziers, governors, and ministers worked
together with the sons of minor
officials. These minor officials
whose sons became diplomats predominantly worked in offices
in the capital rather than in the provinces. For example, of the 35 Muslims who
were employed in the ministry working in Istanbul as of 1889 and who are listed
in the annals of the ministry, only eight were not born in Istanbul. Of these
eight, only three of them were sons of provincial officials. That is, of the 27 officials who were
597BOA, Y.PRK.EŞA, 48/42, 1323 L.
15.
598BOA, Y.PRK.EŞA, 28/23, 1315
C. 1.
599 Carter Findley develops a much more sophisticated social portrait
of the Ministry from the early Tanzimat to the demise of the Empire based on
the Sicil-i Ahval (Personal
Registers). With regard to the social
origins of the Muslims and non-Muslims, many of the conclusions suggested below had been
already made by Carter Findley based on his findings and counts. Findley,
Carter, Ottoman Civil Officialdom: A
Social History, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1989.
sons of officials, only three of them were born outside Istanbul.
The others not from Istanbul were fathered by ulema (2), local notables (2) and merchants (1). In short, a typical official in the Ottoman Ministry
of Foreign Affairs was raised in Istanbul in the family of a state official. Some also had grandfathers who were
state officials that had been
recruited in the very early
phase of Tanzimat. Of all the officials of the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs counted (a total of 152) and listed in the annals of
the ministry for the year 1889600 including the consulates, only 28
were born outside Istanbul. However, some were born outside Istanbul while
their fathers were serving in the provinces – for example, the magisterial
Sadullah Pasha, who was born in Erzurum while his father was serving as the
governor of Kurdistan. Therefore, not all of those born out of Istanbul can be regarded as recruits from the
provinces. Of these 28, some others were sons of minor provincial officials and
three were sons of provincial ulema.
Two of the Muslim officials were born out of the domains of the Ottoman Empire:
one in Anapa in Crimea, the other in Circassia. The map of the births of the
Muslim and non-Muslim officials does not display any meaningful variation. The
Arab lands, Macedonia, and Anatolia seem to be equally represented. The only
meaningful variation observed in the geographical distribution of their births
is the prevalence of Istanbul as a birthplace.