According to Hüseyin Cahit Yalçın and Ziya Gökalp, ―public consciousness‖ guarantees that no one can dare to wear a hat in public.943 Living in European countries, the diplomats faced the challenge of the ―hat‖, and they ended up wearing hats and normalizing what had previously appeared to be taboo (and subsequently turning into open or shy defenders of the hat and again finding in it an intense symbolism unassociated with the realities of the fez and hat).944
941 Söylemezoğlu,
Galip Kemali, Atina Sefareti (1913-1916),
Türkiye Yayınevi, 1946, p. 40.
942 İbrahim Hakkı Pasha was another staunch defender of the hat.
According to İbnülemin, he proudly defended wearing
a hat in his Berlin tenure while he was the Grand Vizier. İbnülemin Mahmut
Kemal İnal, Son Sadrazamlar,
İstanbul: Dergah Yayınları, v. IV, p. 1798. For the depiction of the unusually
Westernized habits and lifestyle of İbrahim Hakkı Pasha, see Findley, Carter, Ottoman Civil Officialdom, Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 1989, pp. 195-200.
943 Hüseyin Cahit Yalçın, Siyasi
Anılar, Ankara: Türkiye İş Bankası Kültür Yayınları, 1976, p. 237.
944 The irritation to the hat can only be compared with the uneasiness
shown towards the pigs. For the symbolism of dirtiness (mekruh) and the anthropology of
aversion to pigs and hats, See Douglas, Mary, Purity and Danger, London; New York: Routledge & K. Paul, 1965.
Apparently as
a general observation, Islam turned out to be a private matter in the minds and
perceptions of the diplomats and other bureaucrats by the end of the Empire.
İbrahim Hakkı Pasha perfectly illustrated this privatized and individualized
understanding of Islam and faith. For İbrahim Hakkı; “Beş vakt de nemaz kılamıyorum…Kimsenin hakkını gasb etmiyorum.Üstümde
kul hakkı yokdur. Allah, kendi hakkını afv buyurur emma kulun hakkını afv etmez…İman kalbdedir.
Müslümanlık kelime-i şehadetten ibarettir…Esas budur, ibadat ve taat bunun
füru‟udır.”945 (I don‘t pray five times (per day)…I do not
infringe anybody else‘s right. God forgives those committed against himself but
does not forgive infringements of the rights of his subjects. Faith is in the
heart. Islam is a matter of believing in the Almighty. This is its essence;
rituals and obedience (to God) are means to that.)The members of the Hamidian
diplomatic service were the first generation who retained and upheld their
Islamic heritage but adjusted and rationalized it.946 As will be
shown in the coming pages, the next generation was indifferent to religion,
preferred to disregard it, and did not take it as a reference system.
Galip Kemali Söylemezoğlu‘s proposals to reform and
restructure the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and diplomacy are also worth
mentioning. Galip Kemali Söylemezoğlu suggested recruiting diplomats
from the privileged families as it was done in Europe. In his memorandum on the ―Reform of Diplomatic Service‖
in 1909, he noted that ―like the other
countries, the diplomats who will be appointed to the embassies have to be from prosperous families.‖ He recommended that,
those graduates of Mülkiye who want
to serve in the Ministry should be employed as Ottoman representatives abroad
without being paid any salary or allowance for one year. After completing one
year in the embassies without any salary, they should be entitled to be third
secretaries. However, for one year they were to be paid only salary, but not an
allowance.947 Apparently, this policy prevalent in European
diplomatic services was a mechanism to eliminate those who could not support
themselves and privilege those with financial means.
945 Quoted in İbnülemin
Mahmud Kemal İnal, ibid, pp. 1796-99.
946 Also for the ―liberal‖ interpretation of Mehmet Rifat Pasha with
regard to veiling and education of women, see Muhammed Ferid, Mısır Mısırlılarındır, İstanbul: Klasik
Yayınları, 2007, p. 90.
947 Söylemezoğlu, Galip Kemali. Hariciye Hizmerinde…, pp. 202-204.
For Galip Kemali, diplomats have to be familiar with the
European social codes (adab-ı muaşaret)
and with the codes of conduct of the European higher classes with whom they
will be in contact throughout their diplomatic careers. For Galip Kemali, this
was another reason why the diplomats had to come from families of
respectability. Only people from reputable families can easily socialize with
the European refined classes. Abdülhak Hamid was in concurrence with Galip
Kemali on this point. He wrote ―an ambassador has to be from the high classes
of the society which he is supposed to represent and has to be a career diplomat. If an ambassador lacks
these qualities, there would be a loss of prestige….There had been several
cases in which ambassadors of secondary ranks were more respected and taken
into consideration by the aristocracies, rulers, and governments to which they were appointed948.‖ For Abdülhak Hamid, ―those ambassadors who
lack social prestige are doomed to be failures. An ambassador has to be
respected not only by the governments, but also by the social circles in which
he is socializing. Otherwise, he will
be unsuccessful (as a diplomat).‖949 Thus, ―an official in an embasy
either should come from aristocratic background or should maintain aristocratic
attitudes and outlook.‖950
Refinement and sociability were the unwritten
requirements of diplomacy. The otherwise disappointing and unimpressive memoirs
of Esad Cemal Paker seem to be written for the purpose of convincing the reader
that he lived the life of a bon vivant and
that he drank best wines.951 Apparently, the diplomatic establishment was associated
with a
―Westernized‖ life style. This established prejudice had both
positive and negative connotations. The diplomats were particularly targeted by
the Islamists. Derviş Vahdeti in his journal Volkan targeted diplomats exemplifying the prevalent perceptions
within the Islamic and Islamist milieus regarding the diplomats. For him;
―(a)mbassadors had taken Christians wives, had many children, and educated them in the mother‘s western European
way. They learned European languages and were educated
in Islamic beliefs
and morals
948 Abdülhak Hamid, Abdülhak Hamid‟in
Hatıraları, İstanbul: Dergah
Yayınları, p. 64.
949 Abdülhak Hamid, ibid, p. 64.
950 Abdülhak Hamid, ibid, p. 387.
951 Paker, Esat Cemal, ibid.
only by governesses and teachers of other religions.‖952
They were preys for the populist discourses, as well. Fazıl Arif Bey, a
parliamentarian representing Amasya in the parliament of 1908, was outraged with the diplomats
whom he regarded
as those ―who are
bringing governesses and courtesans from Europe‖ and living in luxury while the
Ottoman populace was in poverty.953 While this imagery
was to be abused in the
hands of populists, it made
the diplomats objects of emulation for others. Feridun Cemal Erkin, one of the
doyens of the Republican diplomatic service, is illustrative. His childhood memories vividly display the
image of the ―superwesternized‖ Ottoman diplomat. In his memoirs, Erkin writes
that when he was a kid, his father, who was a civil servant
of prominence, was visited by two men. One of them was
sporting a goatee and a white moustache, the other wearing a glass monocle.
Impressed by their elegance and courtliness, Feridun asked who these visitors
were. When his father responded that they were ―sefir-i kebirs‖, the impressed young Feridun, as he recalls after more
than half a century, decided
to be a sefir- i kebir like them.954 At least this is
how Feridun Cemal Erkin explains why he wanted
to be a diplomat. Abdülhak Hamid argued that the ambassadorial officials
and military attachés not only have to be presentable, but should also be ―good-looking‖. ―Even a rich diplomat
should not be poor in his physical appearance.‖955 He recalled ―that
once an Ottoman foreign minister refrained from sending a son of a Pasha as an
ambassador because of the son‘s poor appearance.‖956 For Abdülhak
Hamid, ―especially the members of the demi- monde are superficial (so that they
pay attention to physical appearance very much)‖957, and they had to be impressed accordingly.
In short, these accounts should be a disclaimer to Marcel Proust who in his ―In Search of Lost Time‖ portrayed the Turkish ambassador
952 Kıbrıslı Derviş Vahdeti,
―Dindarlık-Dinsizlik ve Tarikatlar‖, Volkan, no. 36, 5 February
1909, quoted in Baer, Marc David, The
Dönme: Jewish Converts, Muslim Revolutionaries and Secular Turks, Stanford:
Stanford University Press, 2010, p. 104.
953 MMZC, 1909, V. III, p. 50.
954 Erkin, Feridun Cemal,
Dışişlerinde 34 Yıl, Ankara:
Türk Tarih Kurumu
Yayınları, 1987, vol. I, pp.
6-7.
955 Abdülhak Hamid, Abdülhak Hamid‟in Hatıraları, İstanbul:
Dergah Yayınları, 1994, p. 246.
956 Abdülhak Hamid, ibid, p. 246.
957 Abdülhak Hamid, ibid, p. 246.
and his wife as superfluous Orientals alien to the refinement and
elegance of the aristocratic European
culture and the diplomatic establishment.
Apparently, for Galip Kemali (and Abdülhak Hamid), the
training of diplomats was also a major consideration. He resented the
unsatisfactory level of training of the diplomats. After noting that the
principal source of recruits for the diplomatic service was Mekteb-i Sultani, Galip Kemali argued
that a higher college was necessary for the graduates of Mekteb-i Sultani for further study to be eligible to be recruited
into the diplomatic service. What was in the mind of Galip Kemali was a
part-time college of political science (ulum-ı
siyasi). In the plan suggested by Galip Kemali, these youths were to begin
to work in the ministry while attending the college until noon. They also had
to be taught English or German as their second foreign language in their
advanced studies. Galip Kemali did not ignore the practicalities either. These
youths also had to be introduced to the European diplomats in Istanbul, so that
they would not feel ignorant of the European code of conduct.
In short, Galip Kemali
emphasized ―refinement‖ and ―civility‖. However, he was also very strict regarding the necessity of fostering the erudition of the diplomatic service. Apparently, he was disappointed with the miserable
level of the erudition of the Ottoman diplomatic service.
Nevertheless, concluding his memorandum, Galip Kemali was optimistic. He believed that by training prospective diplomats in a distinguished college with an intense curriculum, teaching them the basics of
politics, and integrating them into the European world of culture
and more, their skills and erudition would be enhanced. Thus, the quality of the
performance of the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs will be satisfactory.
Galip Kemali‘s memorandum was consistent with the self-portrait he drew in his memoirs. He depicted himself throughout
his tomes as a professional-aristocrat. That is to say, in his self-representation, he was simultaneously very sensitive on the refined
and socially exclusivist nature of the craft of diplomacy and on the intellectually
demanding aspect of the profession. He was a professional in the sense that for him one needed to be
hard-working, working diligently days and nights when
necessary.
Interestingly, his memorandum resembles the reform of
the British and French Foreign Offices undertaken in the first decade of the twentieth century in some ways and
contradicts them in other ways.958 The similar themes
were maximizing bureaucratic rationality and efficiency. Nevertheless, Galip
Kemali also suggests retaining a culture of elitism and social exclusion, which
the European reformist programs sought to diminish or eliminate. Galip Kemali,
on the contrary, wanted to formalize what was de facto practiced and maintained
and avoid ―democratic currents‖. What has been revealed here so far regarding
Galip Kemali Söylemezoğlu is a portrait of an aristocratic diplomat decorated
with codes of courtliness. Yet, Galip Kemali is a staunch Turkish nationalist
on the fringes of xenophobia.
Galip Kemali‘s propaganda publication in French, ―L‟Assasinat d‟un Peuple‖959,
written for the purpose of defending the rights of Turkey under occupation,
displays an amalgamation of different discourses: anti-imperialism,
civilizationism, and Turkism. The pamphlet addresses Westerners and was written to unmask the hypocrisy of the West.
He criticized the West for glorifying civilization and styling itself as the
very embodiment of civilization, but ignoring the requirements of civilization
when it comes to actual policy decisions. Galip Kemali criticizes the
prevailing view of Turks in the West as barbarians and argues that the reality
is just the opposite. He reminds the Western reader of the murdered, mutilated,
and expelled Muslim civilian populace of Thrace and the atrocities committed by
Greeks, Serbs, and Bulgarians. Galip Kemali develops the idea that European powers have a particular problem
with Turkey. The Europeans‘ unjustified actions and attitudes towards Turkey
were distinctive and could not be explained by the imperatives of Realpolitik alone. However, Galip Kemali
refrains from revealing the motivations of Europeans in their mean attitude
towards Turkey. He refrains from presenting the European
great powers‘ aggression as a crusade
against the banner of Islam
958 For the 1906
reform in the British Foreign Office, see Steiner, Zara, The Foreign Office and Foreign Policy 1898-1914, Cambridge, U.K. :
Cambridge University Press, pp. 76-78. For the 1907 reforms in the French
Foreign Office, see Hayne, M.B, The
French Foreign Office and the Origins of the First World War 1898-1914,
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1993, pp. 144-170.
959Galip Kemali
Söylemezoğlu, L‟Assasinat
d‟un Peuple, 1920. For its Turkish translation,
Yok Edilmek İstenen
Millet, İstanbul: Selek
Yayınları, 1957.
like many others although he seems to perceive this aggression as a
crusade.960 He also refrains from presenting the case against the
―Turks‖. He appeals to the conscience of the European audience and evokes the
notion of Western civilization to convince his European audience. Nevertheless,
it is not very hard to detect his ―unspoken assumptions‖. Apparently,
underneath the text we observe that he shared the ―commonsense perception‖ and
hearsay knowledge that for ―certain reasons‖, Europeans cultivated an uncompromising
enmity towards Turks. This enmity did not originate from Realpolitik reasons.
It derived from historical animosities and was therefore a timeless and an
eternalized antagonism that was not expected to be easily resolved.
He is more explicit in his memoirs given that here he
addresses a Turkish audience rather than the conscience of the Westerners. In
his memoirs and correspondence after the publication of his propaganda
pamphlet, he revealed that his disgust and abhorrence of the Western powers was
immense. He writes in a style influenced heavily by the Unionist rhetoric.961
In these texts, Galip Kemali, the elegant aristocratic and imperial patriot,
apparently surrendered to a vulgar nationalist rhetoric (with sycophantic
praise of Mustafa Kemal). For example, he wrote; “Mondros mütarekesinin devamı müddetince hak namına kılıçlarını
çektiklerini senelerden beri bütün aleme haykırmış olan muzaffer devletler
tarafından en mukaddes haklarımız kahpece ayaklar altına alındı…Yedi yüz
senelik koca bir devletin, ezeldenberi hür yaşamış, asırlarca dünyaya meydan
okumuş yüce Türk milletinin yalnız istiklali değil mevcudiyeti bile sarsıldı.
Kendine yakışan bir coşkunluk ile, koca Türk, kalbindeki milli imanı, ruhundaki
irsi celadeti göstermemiş, onun nelere kadir olduğunu keşfederek tam vaktinde başına geçecek bir Dahi çıkmamış ve nihayet
960 The rhetoric
of the ―crusading instincts of the West‖
can be observed in the Young Turk press in the Hamidian era. For an
article expounding on the crusading instincts by Mizancı Murad in Mechveret,
see Emil,Birol, Mizancı Murad Bey,
İstanbul: Kitabevi, 2009, pp. 137-38.
961 See
Söylemezoğlu, Galip Kemali, Hariciye
Hizmetinde Otuz Sene: IV., Maarif Basımevi, 1955. For the level of
degradation of the once courtly high-ranking diplomatic corps by 1921, see a
―poem‖ written by the ex-ministry of foreign affairs Asım as quoted by Söylemezoğlu. ―Dünya değişirde
Türk değişmez/Bak vakti hazerde bir kebuter !...Yareb bu necibi Aliosman…/Olsun mu
yarin esiri Yunan ?/Sönsün mü ocağı şanlı Türkün/Olsun mu o nam karini nisyan‖
Söylemezoğlu, Galip Kemali,ibid, p. 7-8.
memleketin en temiz evlatları, bir nur gibi gökten
inen, bu ümit şiraresi etrafında
büyük bir feragati nefis ile
toplanmamış olsaydı, maazallah !”962
Yet, the making of a crude nationalist out of Galip
Kemali was neither exceptional nor idiosyncratic. The recurring military and
political defeats created a fear that fomented a blatant and unapologetic
nationalism. The change of the political elite also forced the old timers to
accommodate themselves. For example, Sami Paşazade Sezai, who had served in the ministry
since 1885, had been a staunch defender
and promoter of the ―West‖
and
―Western values‖, and had supported the incorporation of the Ottoman
Empire into the
―Concert of Europe‖ (which he called a ―Peaceful Conquest‖ -feth-i sulhperveri-)963 also
lost his enthusiasm for ―Western civilization‖ during his ambassadorship in
Madrid between 1914 and 1921 and after observing the occupation of Turkey in
1918.964 For him, after observing the policies of Britain in the
World War I, the ―West‖ began to be associated with hypocrisy and imperialist Britain was the embodiment of
this hypocritical West.965 Although he was also critical of the
Christian prejudice and double standards of the West previously, for him these were side issues
not eclipsing the superiority of Western values and
political culture. Abdülhak Hamid, the elegant aristocrat of the 19th century
Ottoman world, wrote in a strong anti-imperialist and anti-Christian jargon in
1924. ―The ones who share most responsibility
(for the decline of humanity and
civility) are those who acquired most territories in the Great War. Yes, those
plunderers and pirates….. This cannibalistic personality wants to swim in the
blood of Muslims. He enjoys eating Muslim flesh and even Muslim carcasses. In
his eyes, no nation can have its own state and patrie except himself.
Whenever he sees independence, freedom,
and survival, he thinks of
962 Söylemezoğlu,
Galip Kemali, Başımıza Gelenler: Yakın
Bir Mazinin Hatıraları, İstanbul: Kanaat Kitabevi, 1939, p. 6.
963 Samipaşazade Sezai,
―Riya‖, Tanin, 4 October 1333/1917, in Samipaşazade
Sezai Bütün Eserleri, Ankara: Türk Dil Kurumu, 2003, vol III, pp. 313-316.
964 ―Sezai
(Samipaşazade)‖, Tanzimat‟tan Bugüne
Edebiyatçılar Ansiklopedisi, İstanbul: Yapı Kredi Yayınları, 2001, vol. II,
p. 735. For some of his anti-Western articles published in Tanin, see Kerman,
Zeynep, Sami Paşazade Sezai, Ankara:
Kültür Bakanlığı Yayınları, 1986, p. 14.
965 Samipaşazade Sezai, ―Riya‖, Tanin, 4 October 1333/1917, in
Samipaşazade Sezai Bütün Eserleri, Ankara: Türk Dil Kurumu, 2003, vol III, p.
516-520
annihilating it and plundering it, destroying whatever the nation
has.‖966 In his anti- Western
and anti-Christian tirade quoted above, he went as far as calling the
personalized European imperialism as ―dünyadaki
vatanların en kahbe haini‖ (the most whorish traitor of the fatherlands of
the world). The Christian West as the eternal foe of the Muslim Turk emerged as
an invented image prevalent not only
in the Young Turk generation, but also in the elder generation. Nonetheless,
this imagery was much more profound in the next generation of the diplomatic
service. The next generation of the Ottoman diplomatic service introduced young nationalist poets and men of letters.
Müftüoğlu Ahmet Hikmet and Enis Behiç (Koryürek) were two gifts of the
diplomatic service to the nationalist literature.
6.1.
The New Generation and Cumulative Radicalization
Ahmet Hikmet was born in 1870 with a background typical
of the bulk of the diplomat service (a middle-level bureaucrat father serving
in the provincial administration, a respectable genealogy going back to the
Peloponnesus, and himself born in Istanbul) and was a graduate of Mekteb-i Sultani, like most of his
colleagues. He got his first appointments to Marseilles, Piraeus, and Poti in
the Hamidian era. In his later career, he was appointed ambassador to Budapest
in 1916, apparently to fulfill his Turkist and Turanist ambitions. He was
active in Turkist activities in his tenure in Budapest, participating in the
Hungarian Turanian circles and academic clubs enthusiastically. He died while serving as the ministerial undersecretary in 1926. Like Abdülhak
Hamid, today,
966 Abdülhak Hamid, Abdülhak Hamid‟in
Hatıraları, İstanbul: Dergah Yayınları, 1994, p.
60. ―Ve bunun ilk ve en büyük saik ve mesulleri
Harb-i Umumi‟de en çok yer kazananlardır. Evet, o yağmagerler, o
korsanlardır….O yayman şahsiyet, İslam kanında yüzmek ister. İslam eti, hatta
İslam ölüsü yemekten hazzeder. Ve onun nazarında onlardan başka hiçbir milletin
vatanı, milleti olmamalıdır. İstiklali, istikbali, hürriyeti, hakk-ı hayatı
hangi millette görürse, onu mutlaka ya imha, yahut zir-i pa vü pençesine almak
üzere maddi ve manevi nesi varsa yağma etmeyi düşünür.‖
he is not known and remembered for his remarkable diplomatic career
but for his literary output and his contribution to the nationalist literature.967
Enis Behiç belonged to a later generation.968
Born in 1892, like Ahmet Hikmet, he possessed the attributes of the social and
cultural background of a ―typical‖ diplomat. He has the three attributes of the
average diplomat. He was fathered by a military doctor (a civil servant), was
born in Istanbul, and was a graduate of Mülkiye.
He entered the diplomatic service in 1913. Serving in mediocre posts abroad and
in Istanbul, he is remembered better for his extremely nationalist poems. His
poem ―Kırmızı Şezlong‖ (Red Chair)
was an outrageous anti-Semitic poem recounting the lives of a greedy Jewish
speculator, Mişon, and his lustful wife, Rebeka, who was deceiving her husband,
and is a masterpiece of anti-Semitism, portraying the Jewish characters as
nasty, corrupt, and disgusting rascals. The
motives for writing such a poem remain conspicuous given that no full-fledged
anti-Semitism developed in the Ottoman Empire and that such enmities were
reserved for Christian groups within the Ottoman Empire. The anti-Semitism in
this poem is a perfect illustration of the anti-Semitic themes prevalent in
Germany and France at the time. Probably, Enis Behiç was influenced by
European/French anti-Semite discourses of the time. Enis Behiç‘s poems are
sharply divided into two: very individualistic poems reflecting the loneliness,
failed aspirations, and melancholy of the modern individual and extremely
nationalist poems depicting war scenes in which victorious Turkish soldiers are
seeking Turan or are about to reconquer the lost Roumelia up to Budapest. Enis
Behiç was definitely a ―salon
Turanist‖. By this time, in the third generation of the Tanzimat, we meet a ―modern‖
individual in the personality of Enis Behiç, with whom we share the same
sensibilities and for whom we feel empathy. He was at the same time a Turkish
nationalist as a product of his own times.969 His nationalism is explicitly and blatantly secular.
There
967 For a biography
of Ahmed Hikmet Müftüoğlu, see Tevetoğlu, Fethi, Büyük Türkçü Müftüoğlu Ahmed Hikmet, Ankara: Milli Eğitim Basımevi,
1951.
968 For a biography
of Enis Behiç Koryürek written by Fethi Tevetoğlu, see Koryürek, Enis Behiç. Miras ve
Güneşin Ölümü, İstanbul: Güneş Matbaacılık T.A.O., 1951.
969 The same observation is equally valid for Ahmet Hikmet. While half
of his literary works are elaborations of Turkist themes
with crude nationalism, such as Gönül Hanım and Çağlayanlar, the other
half of his works elaborate
themes of very personal angst
and quests reflecting the sensitivities of the modern
urban individual, such as his short stories
is no aspect of religion in his poems whether they are nationalist
or individualist. His poems display
how, in three generations, religion had gradually retreated and then vanished from the worldview of the
cosmology of the Ottoman bureaucrats. As suggested previously, secularization
as relativization and decline of the individual faith does not soften or
terminate the anti-Western rhetoric. On the contrary, like many other modernists
nationalists of their time, famous names like Ömer Seyfeddin and diplomats like
Enis Behiç and ambassador Galip
Kemali were increasingly becoming anti-Westernist and xenophobic. In fact, in
Galip Kemali‘s case (as with any other member of his generation), such xenophobia was enhanced by secularization. As monotheist universalism and morality had
disappeared or been marginalized into the private realm; the nation and
national ethics/morality emerged as
the only reference points.
The extreme nationalism of two
close friends of Halid Ziya970, Reşid Safvet and Safveti Ziya,
should also be mentioned as two other exempla of the third generation of
Tanzimat and the third generation of Tanzimat diplomats.
Reşid Safvet did not get impressive promotions. His
highest positions were first secretariat in the embassies of Bucharest,
Washington, Madrid, and Teheran. He participated in the Lausanne Conference as
the general secretary of the Turkish delegation. He became a member of
parliament in 1927, serving for two terms. However, his major achievement was
arguably his foundation of TURING (Touring Club Turc) in 1923. Reşid Safvet was
an impressive personality with various interests and talents. Halid Ziya
remembers him as a young man, a minor official in the Regie, who was about to
join the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and whose sole interest was reading books.
Halid Ziya tells us that Reşid Safvet lived in an apartment in Akaretler, which
was so full of books and his many notebooks
that there was only enough empty space for
his writing desk. According to
collected in Haristan. Nevertheless, some of his
stories collected in Haristan and published after 1908 contain themes such as
West versus East with their mutually exclusive
attributes and the equating of Westernized cosmopolitism with decadence and
corruption emerges.
970 The cosmopolitan Halid Ziya is hardly free of nationalist
instincts. His memoirs reveal how the clashes and contradictions between Turks
and non-Muslims are decisive in the formation of his political opinions.
Experiencing the social worlds of Izmir and the intellectual milieus of
Istanbul, he assumes a nationalist outlook. See
Uşaklıgil, Halid Ziya, Kırk Yıl,
Istanbul: Matbaacılık ve Neşriyat, 1936, pp. 114-19.
Halid Ziya, he read whatever he found on history, sociology,
philosophy, politics, and religion (but never literature). He never went out,
slept little, and showed up in the office exhausted but ahead of his
colleagues.971 In short, Reşid Safvet was a man of his times, driven
to learn and discover the whole new world in front of him. He displays the new
intellectual of the third generation of Tanzimat who established for himself a
completely new world and severed himself from the past
explicitly, a move that is striking
taken in this generation. He was a third generation Tanzimat figure like many others, fascinated with the enormity of
Western knowledge and science. The encyclopedic curiosity of this new
generation is embodied in the person of Reşid Safvet as well.
Reşid Safvet produced numerous books in French in later
life, defending Turkey and Turks before the international public in such works
as ―Turcs et Arménians Devant l‟histoire:
Nouveaux Témoignages Russes et Turcs sur les Atrocitiés”.972
These publications demonstrated the outstanding contributions of Turks to world
civilization973 and defended the Turkish Historical Thesis adamantly
in the heyday of the Kemalist regime. Reşid Safvet displays the contrast
between the conspicuous Westernism in his life style and hatred towards the
West. Reşid Safvet adopted a fervent nationalist outlook, not unlike that of
his colleagues Ahmet Hikmet and Enis Behiç. Yet, Reşid Safvet was also a bon
vivant and loved the good life. Coming from a rich family and married to the
granddaughter of Rıza Pasha, Abdülhamid‘s chief of staff, he provided the
demimonde in the marginalized and déclassé Istanbul of the Republic with
various entertainments mimicking the grandeur of the Istanbul of yesteryear
during the Empire 974. Yet, his hedonism did not hinder or soften
his rhetoric of extreme and obsessive Turkism. He also volunteered to be an apparatchik of the Republican regime in Ankara.
Nevertheless, the
971 Uşaklıgil, Halid Ziya, ibid, vol.V, pp. 177-184.
972 Kara Schemsi, Turcs et Arménians devant l‟histoire:
Nouveaux Témoignages Russes et Turcs sur les Atrocitiés, Genéve: Imprimerie
Nationale, 1919.
973 Atabinen, Rechid
Saffet, Contributions Turques a la
Sécurité et a la Civilization Méditerranéenes, İstanbul: Çituri Biraderler
Basımevi, 1950; Atabinen, Rechit Saffet, Les Apports Turcs dans le Peuplement et la Civilization
de l'Europe Orientale, T.A.C.T., 1952 (n.p).
974 For a biography (without any references)
of Reşid Safvet, see Çelik Gülersoy,
―Ölümünün 29. Yılında Reşid Safvet Atabinen‖, Tarih ve Toplum, February 1994, no: 122,
pp. 68-73.
idiosyncratic playboy of the Ottoman Ministry of Foreign Affairs
seemed to have his counterparts in other European diplomatic services. For
Vladimir Lamsdorff, a diplomat serving the Russian Foreign Ministry, ―the court
had ‗the character of a café‘, the Yacht Club was a ‗temple of idleness‘ and
much of the aristocracy was ‗…a clique of which the court and the circle of
profligates and idlers called ‗society‘…the Foreign Ministry was indeed not
only the focus of Lambsdorff‘s professional skills and energies but also his
home and his ‗fatherland‘, whence he drew most of his personal friendships…‖975
Safveti Ziya was one of the major figures of the Edebiyat-ı Cedide (New Literature)
influenced from French poetry and literature of the late 19th
century. A man of exquisite manners and elegance, Halid Ziya describes his
artistic and bohemian worlds and circles. Coming from a respectable Istanbul
family which sent many of his members to the privileged offices in the government,
for Safveti Ziya, life meant good food, good clothing, spending money, and all kinds
of luxury. In the account of Halid Ziya, he was well-known for frequenting the
most trendy venues in Pera in order to be close to beautiful women. He danced
the best, spoke the most fluent French and English, and was the most handsome.
In short, for Halid Ziya, Safveti Ziya was a prototypical dandy. Nevertheless,
his eccentric life style did not
obstruct his successful career. At his sudden death (aged 54 in 1929), he had
just been appointed as ambassador to Czechoslovakia after serving as the
director of protocol of the ministry.
He died during a party at
the Yacht Club in Principio. Safveti Ziya lived well, dined
well, and died well. Apparently, he belonged not to the Tanzimat generation,
but to a new generation with different socialization and mores.
He was, like his other colleagues, a passionate Turkist
and Westernist. His novel
―Salon Köşelerinde‖ was a novel originally ―published in…Servet-i Fünun,
told the story of a ‗Europeanized‘ Ottoman man who
socialized in the foreign quarters of Istanbul and tried to prove by waltzing
like a European that he was ‗civilized‘ to an English girl with whom he had
fallen in love. The protagonist of the novel writes that, ‗….I changed my plan
of action, thinking that it would be necessary to prove to an English girl and
an English family that Turkishness within a society is not an example of
barbarity, but an adornment, and that the Turks too are a civilized nation.‘ Even in this non-political,
975 Lieven, Dominic,
Russia „s Rulers Under the Old Regime, New Haven: Yale University
Press, 1989, p. 167.
romantic novel, the Europeanized character, who was ready to
accommodate to European culture, exhibited a reactionary attitude to the
European perception of the Turk and fought against this ‗misperception‘ by
dancing(.)‖976 In the beginning of the novel, the author voices his
regrets at Turks‘ failure to dance elegantly and hopes that one day Turks will
master European dances.977 Safveti
Ziya was encouraged to write such a book by Ahmet Hikmet, who opined, ―how great it would be if you account for
your experiences in the salons and high society with regard to our nationality.
No such work has been yet written.‖978 Apparently, both Safveti Ziya
and Ahmet Hikmet perceived personal encounters
with Westerners within a political prism. The politicization of every sphere of
private life was an aspect of the third generation of Tanzimat.979
Whereas politics, Westernization, and the expression of Westernization were
limited to public display and the
political sphere while preserving the distinctly traditional lifestyles in the
private sphere980 in the first and second generations of the
Tanzimat, with the third generation of Tanzimat, there was a Westernization of
every sphere of life, and every sphere became a contested zone of nationalism
in which national displays and national enmities became prevalent.981
Safveti Ziya, like many of his generation, defined Turkishness with reference
to their individual attributes and developed a Turkish nationalism to challenge
and outdo the Europeans. Safveti
Ziya‘s book ―Adab-ı Muaşeret
Hasbihalleri‖ (Conversations on
976 Boyar, Ebru, Ottomans, Turks and the
Balkans, London: Tauris, 2007, pp. 87-88.
977 Safveti Ziya, Salon Köşelerinde, İstanbul: İş Bankası Yayınları, 1998, p. 14.
978 Safveti Ziya, Salon Köşelerinde, p. 11.
(in his preface to the
novel)
979 Ömer Seyfeddin‘s short stories were also a good demonstration of ―the politicization of the personal‖ and ―the politicization of every sphere of
life‖. For example, see his Fon Sadriştayn‘ın Karısı, (Bütün Eserler, İstanbul: Dergah Yayınları, 1999, V. II, pp. 191- 202), Nakarat (V. III, pp. 17-34), Bir Çocuk Aleko (V. IV, pp. 310-327).
980 The outward Westernization was not accompanied by the
Westernization of the private lives of the Ottoman upper classes. For a vivid
portrayal of the intimate lives and family relations of Ottoman dignitaries,
see Melek Hanım, Haremden Mahrem Anılar,
İstanbul: Oğlak Yayıncılık, 1996.
981 For the politicization and nationalization of consumer culture
and personal realms
in the late Hamidian era, see
Frierson, Elizabeth, ―Cheap and Easy: The Creation of Consumer Culture in the
Later Ottoman Empire‖, in Consumption
Studies and the History of the Ottoman Empire, 1550-1922, Donald Qutaert
(ed.), New York: State University of New York Press, 2000, pp. 201-243.
Good Manners) published in 1927 was another exposure of the
prioritization of the national
identity over daily social interactions. Safveti Ziya encouraged Turkish youth
to participate in the rebirth of the Turkish nation by adopting the code of
conduct of civilized societies and nations.982 In his ―guide book‖,
Safveti Ziya particularly gives importance to the role of women
within polite society. For him, respect towards women was an important sign of the degree
of the civilized nature of a nation. For him, the code of good conduct and politeness was first and foremost a
matter of national dignity. The subsuming of the personal manners and codes of
conduct of the individuals was an extreme example of the politicization and
nationalization of individual lives.
Definitely, these men had different mores and a
different reference system than their predecessors. We observe the emergence
and development of a new intellectual/cultural formation subsuming a particular
national imaginary, a secularized worldview, and a militarized political
imagination.
6.2.
Accommodating the New
Times
Galip Kemali‘s aforementioned pamphlet in defense of the
nation under attack was not unique. Two
years earlier, Alfred Rüstem Bey, another senior
Ottoman diplomat, published a tract in Bern in French to
counter the Armenian allegations and address Western public opinion regarding
the Armenian massacres.983 The text was conspicuous in the sense
that its author, although a Turkish diplomat born in Turkey, was of Polish
origins whose father was also a diplomat who converted to Islam after
emigrating to the Ottoman Empire from Poland in Russian occupation. Ahmed
(Alfred) Rüstem Bey was acquainted with Western knowledge and Western
intellectual erudition thanks to his Polish origins. After denying the
accusations regarding the Armenians, Ahmed Rüstem pointed to the hypocrisy of
the West. He especially recounted the atrocities Britain
perpetrated in her colonies. Not
982 Safveti Ziya, Adab-ı Muaşeret
Hasbihalleri, Ankara: Türk Ocağı Merkez Heyeti, 1927,
p. 3.
983 Ahmed Rustem Bey, La Guerre Mondiale
et La Question Turco-Arménienne, Bern, 1918.
restricting himself to conventional anti-imperialist rhetoric, he
also exposed the British brutality in
Ireland and condemned the British
policies in Ireland. Not unexpectedly, he did
not fail to mention the brutality of
imperial Russia in Poland. Questioning the
credibility of those who were
themselves perpetrators of unspeakable crimes, he related the allegations
regarding Armenians to the perpetual hatred of the Turks. Regarding the
Armenian events, Ahmed Rüstem acknowledges the tragedy Armenians had suffered
during World War I, but he
subsequently pleaded with Europeans to acknowledge the great suffering Turks
had experienced during World War I as well. Moreover, the cause of this tragedy
was the militant activity of
Armenian revolutionary committees,
who tried to mobilize the innocent Armenian masses against Turkish rule.
Ahmed Rüstem represents a complex but characteristic
exemplar of post-Unionist Turkish nationalism. The text was in some ways very
emblematic of the Turkish nationalism of his time. On the other hand, some
aspects were idiosyncratic and reflected his European origins. But it is
striking to observe how his Polish Russophobia had easily rendered him a
sincere Turkish nationalist resenting the hypocrisy of Europeans and European
liberalism. He arrived at an anti-imperialist position more sophisticated than
the average Unionist anti-imperialist or even Galip Kemali‘s anti-imperialism.
His anti- imperialism was compatible with the European political language and
vocabulary. Unlike many Unionist or quasi-Unionist texts and pamphlets, Ahmed Rüstem never abandoned the rhetoric of rights and liberties. On
the contrary, he repeatedly reiterated his allegiance to humanitarian values.
He claimed that his criticism was directed to those who were hypocritical and
insincere in defending rights and liberties and did not abandon 19th century liberalism. Nevertheless, one can
easily observe that his disillusionment with the West caused an alteration in
his belief in rights and liberties as well. The development of his anti-imperialistic
views was arguably very much prompted by the Russian expansionism towards
Poland, the support the British gave to the Russians in the war, and the
atrocities Russian committed against Polish civilians during World War I; this
background enabled him to endorse and internalize the Turkist and Islamic anti-
imperialism of the Unionists. The Polish aristocrat was forced to speak the
language of a Roumelian upstart.
As suggested above,
the years Galip Kemali and Ahmed Rüstem composed
their French propaganda texts were traumatic. It was the time when the
last bastion of Turkishness was occupied and humiliated. A similar propaganda
text was composed by Ahmed Rıza, a figure who distanced himself from the
Unionists after 1908 and displayed the same traits. Ahmed Rıza, the
arch-secularist depicted the current situation as a part of the eternal
struggle between Islam (and Turks as the banner of Islam) and the treacherous,
barbaric West.984
The deterioration of the once-gentlemanly Ottoman civil
officialdom, which was a product and unique composite of the Westernization and
the classical Ottoman efendi tradition,
was dramatic. Nevertheless, names who became prominent political figures after
1908 and before the Young Turks assumed direct control of cabinets, such as
Ahmed Tevfik Pasha, and İbrahim Hakkı Pasha kept their distance from the new
radicals of the time. They were the last ones to defend and uphold the Bab-ı Ali tradition. Lütfi Simavi‘s
memoirs, which we will scrutinize in the coming pages, also reflect such a
contemptuous attitude towards the Young Turks.985
6.3. Voices From the Tomb?
Hayreddin Nedim Bey‘s book on diplomacy published in
1910 reflected the 19th century diplomatic socialization and its
intellectual/mental build up as it coalesced with Tanzimat‘s official discourse
at its best. Hayreddin Nedim‘s account of the 19th century Tanzimat diplomacy
was laudatory. His praise of Tanzimat was not limited to its achievements in
diplomacy. For Hayreddin Nedim, Mustafa Reşid Pasha was a man of extraordinary
gifts and any Ottoman should be grateful to him.986 This was
especially so because he managed
to introduce the Ottomans into the concert
of Europe as a reputable
984 Ahmed Riza, La Faillite Morale de la Politique
Occidentale en Orient, Paris: Librarie Picart, 1922.
985 Lütfi Simavi, Sultan Mehmed Reşad Hanın ve Halifenin
Sarayında Gördüklerim, Dersaadet: Kanaat Kütübhanesi, 1340, p.
159.
986 Hayreddin Bey, Vesaik-i Tarihiyye ve Siyasiyye, 1326,
vol. I, p. 94.
member of the club987 Reviewing the close relations the
Tanzimat statesmen developed with France and Britain to balance against
the Russian danger,
he noted that diplomacy and the diplomatic skills of the
statesmen were crucial in the making of international politics and that the
Tanzimat statesmen and diplomacy did an excellent job in upholding the Ottoman
Empire via diplomacy. He emphasized that the conduct of diplomacy was settled
predominantly by personal
skills and qualities.988 Thus, Hayreddin Nedim
regretted that the Ottoman diplomats and statesmen did
not write their memoirs like the European diplomats and statesmen. He was
impressed with the careers and accomplishments of prominent European diplomats
who mastered their craft and inspired diplomats such as himself, who had
studied them by reading their memoirs
or the memoirs of their colleagues. Apparently, Hayreddin Nedim saw himself and
his fellow Ottoman diplomats and statesmen as a part of the post-Vienna Congress European diplomatic family. In
short, the intellectual cosmos of Hayreddin Nedim illustrates the emblematical
Tanzimat diplomat loyal to the premises and principles of the Tanzimat and
trying to invigorate the Ottoman Empire within the concert of Europe of the
19th century Europe. That is, in Hayreddin Nedim, the Congress of Vienna went
hand in hand with the Tanzimat as if they complement each other. He was a believer in the ideal of a peaceful
Europe in which an enlightened Ottoman Empire participated as an equal member.
His ideal coincided with the ideals of the British, French, and Austrian
diplomatic establishments as well. In fact, as already indicated, his (and the
Tanzimat ideals in general) were partially taken from the 19th century European
order and ancién regime ideals.
In another book of his on the Crimean War which he published
in the same year, he regretted the collapse of the British/French alliance with
the Ottomans, which was forged during the Crimean War and sealed in the Paris
Treaty. Surprisingly, Hayreddin Nedim put the blame on both sides instead of
indicting Britain unilaterally as his Ottoman contemporaries did. He criticized
the Ottoman party for not
fulfilling the commitments and reforms it had promised and criticized the
British/French for their indifference and negligence towards the injustices the
Ottomans and the Muslim population had suffered since then. Another surprising commentary developed by Hayreddin Nedim was with
987 Hayreddin Bey, op.cit.,
vol I, pp. 11-12.
988 Hayreddin Bey, ibid, vol I, p. 6.
regard to Ottoman-Russian relations. Observing the Russian
aggression towards the Ottomans, he claimed that the best interests of these
two ―great nations‖ were an alliance and peace.989
Salih Münir Pasha, one of the most reputable (or
notorious in the eyes of the Young Turks) diplomats of the Hamidian ancien régime, in his book on Russian
foreign policy published in Lausanne in 1918990 while he was in
exile, reconstructs the course of the history of Tanzimat as the lethal
struggle between hostile and expansionist Russia and the defending Ottomans.
Whereas all the internal disorders of the Ottoman Empire perpetrated by Christian groups were either instigated or manipulated by the Russians,
all the Tanzimat polices whether
they may be international diplomacy, administrative reform or military action
were undertaken to encounter this many-headed threat. In Salih Münir Pasha‘s
account, Britain and France appear as bystanders in the Russian aggression.
Although they also advance their interests in the Ottoman Empire and espouse the causes of the
―oppressed Christians991‖ of the Ottoman
Empire (mainly because
of the pressure of public opinion and Christian prejudice),
their role remains secondary in contrast to the Russian menace. Salih Münir‘s
approach to international relations is within the framework of international
diplomacy and within the world of the post-Bismarckian European order. He
perceives the Russian policy of the ―Eastern Question‖ as ―expansion‖ (rather
than imperialism) and sees the ―Eastern Question‖ primarily as a diplomatic
phenomenon.
Lütfi Simavi, a diplomat who served in various posts as
the Ottoman consul and in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Istanbul before
his appointment as the Lord High Chamberlain of Mehmed Reşad (and was appointed
as the undersecretary of the embassy to St. Petersburg and before his appointment as the Lord High Chamberlain992) was another
voice from the tomb. Appointed
to the palace chamberlainship, he was distressed
to move
989 Hayreddin Bey, 1270 Kırım Muharebesinin Tarih-i Siyasisi,
Dersaadet: Ahmet İhsan ve Şürekası
Matbaacılık, 1326. For similar remarks regarding Ottoman-Russian relations, see
Lütfi Simavi… v. II, pp. 44-47.
990 Salih Münir
Pasha, La Politique Orientale de la
Russie, Istanbul: Isis, 2000 (original publication in 1918 in Lausanne)
991 Salih Münir
Pasha, ibid, p. 66.
992 Lütfi Simavi…,
p. 10 (1)
from Europe to an archaic court and palace.993 In fact,
what was expected from his was to modernize the imperial rituals and adapt them
to European court ceremonial.994 What Lütfi Simavi did, according to his
memoirs and his account, was to blend the traditional Ottoman rituals and the modern European court ceremonial and
invent an Ottoman imperial pageantry.995 He administered Mehmed
Reşad‘s public and ceremonial appearances. For this task, he benefited from his
immense knowledge of European imperial and official ceremonies and the code of
conduct, knowledge of which he was extremely proud. In Mehmed Reşad, Lütfi
Simavi attempted to invent an Ottoman imperial pomp and pageantry in line with and in competition with the European
imperial pomp and rituals. The low
profile character and modesty of Mehmed Reşad was suitable for this newly
defined and appropriated role.
Although in Lütfi Simavi, Ottomanism encompassed the
non-Muslims996, the Muslim and Turkish character of Ottoman
imperialism was not to be marginalized, sidelined, or obscured. On the contrary,
its Muslim/Turkish character was
blatantly expressed within the refashioned imperial
ritualism. The new manifestation of the Ottoman imperium was to include
non-Muslims, but not to renounce its Islamic heritage completely, and it was to
render the overt Muslim/Turkish character not disturbing and threatening in the
eyes of non-Muslim Ottomans. For Lütfi Simavi, the new imperial display should
proudly reflect the heritage and
magnificence of the classical age of the Ottoman Empire.997 In short, Lütfi Simavi tried to invent the Ottoman imperium
as the very symbol and embodiment of an
993 Lütfi Simavi…
p. 11, 72, 83 (2).
994 Lütfi Simavi…
p. 6, 68, 83 (2).
995 For the monarchial and imperial ritualism, see the landmark book, David
Cannadine & Simon Price (ed.), Rituals
of Royalty: Power and Ceremonial in Traditional Society, Cambridge, U.K. :
Cambridge University Press, 1992. Also see Fujitani, T, Splendid Monarchy, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1998;
Burke, Peter, The Fabrication of Louis XIV, New Haven: Yale
University Press, 1992.
996 For example, see Lütfi
Simavi… p. 10 (2), 11-12 (2),50 (2),
64 (2).
997 Lütfi Simavi…
pp. 123-24.
Ottoman patriotism, to be endorsed by non-Muslims and to be esteemed
and glorified by the Muslims/Turks.998
Lütfi Simavi was critical to the developments that
commenced with 1908. He was not only distanced from the vigilance and
nationalism of the Unionists, whose socializations and culturalizations were
alien to him. He had legal reservations about the post-1908 politics as well.
He was critical of the appointment of members of parliament to ministries.999
He pointed out the technical problems thus created. He argued that the Ottoman
Empire moved from absolute monarchy to absolute parliamentarianism, which rendered
parliament omnipotent. This was due to the habit of imitating the French. He
notes that absolute parliamentarianism was the French practice. Lütfi Simavi
argues that the French model was one
of various alternatives and certainly not a suitable one in the Ottoman
context. In this system, the ministers and prime ministers were to be elected
from the parliament. The principal problem with the appointment of members of
parliament to ministries and the prime ministry was mainly that most members of
parliament did not possess any prominent official titles. However, in the
Ottoman tradition and political culture, the Ottoman ministers and prime
ministers had to possess titles and had to come from a socially privileged background. They were to be
addressed with deference and held in high esteem. If they were to be given a
title because of the importance of the prime ministry, then still it would not
be appropriate because the title would have to be revoked after the holder no
longer held office. It would be inappropriate for an ex-prime minister not to
carry a lofty title, and, moreover, it would be embarrassing for an ex-prime
minister to have to work to make his living, e.g., to work as a lawyer and live
as a humble man. He wrote that in France neither the presidents of the state
nor the prime ministers were bestowed with any titles. Presidents of the state were not even officially entitled
998 Fujitani interprets the transformation of Japanese imperial
ritualism along the same lines. For Fujitani, the Japanese monarchy turned into
a symbol of the nation and the Japanese political community in the making. In
the image of the emperor ―the leaders of the Meiji regime (aimed to channel)
the longings of the people for a better world and the inchoate and scattered
sense of identity as a people in the direction of modern nationalism.‖ Fujitani, T, ibid, p. 9. For Carol Gluck‘s
analysis of the image of the emperor,
see Gluck, Carol, Japan‟s Modern Myths, Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 1985, pp. 73-101.
999 Lütfi Simavi… pp. 81-84.
―Excellency‖ although he was addressed
as ―Excellency‖ out of respect.
If prime ministers were to be elected from among
members of parliament, this would create a problem of authority and respect. In
short, for Lütfi Simavi the Republicanism of the French political system was
not to be replicated in a political organization completely alien to it.
Apparently, the concerns and priorities of Lütfi Simavi were alien to the Young
Turks, who had much different
concerns and priorities. Thus, Lütfi Simavi, who came from a reputable family1000,
is an example of a loyalist and liberal/conservative imperial aristocrat whose
loyalty was not to the monarchy per se, but to the idea the monarchy represents
or should represent in a constitutional monarchy. He also entertained a strong
civilizationist discourse.1001 He was distant from the Unionists, but
not entirely opposed to them. In this regard, he was highly representative of a
certain social cluster.
Nevertheless, the traditional nature
and characteristics of the diplomatic service as a
―voice from the tomb‖, the survival of the 19th century European
gentlemanly statesman ideal lived on in the
names of Ahmet Tevfik Pasha and Mehmet Rifat Pasha, the ambassadors to London
and Paris in the Unionist government. The appointment of Mehmed Rifat Pasha as
the minister of foreign affairs after serving one year as the ambassador to London was welcomed by the British
as ―the only safeguard for the dubious British orientation of the new
Cabinet.‖ But it was noted by Lowther that, ―his capacity to cope with the CUP was also in doubt.‖
In his reply, Hardinge concurred. The new regime was ―gradually tending to a
military despotism of a nationalist and chauvinistic character.‖1002
Mehmed Rifat served for two years as
the minister of foreign affairs without much
say in foreign policy decisions. After his appointment as ambassador to Paris
in 1911, he continued to be neglected by the Unionist
leadership like Ahmed
Tevfik Pasha, the ambassador
to London. Mallett, the British ambassador, just after the beginning of World
War I related that, ― ‗(i)f Tewfik
had had control of Turkish policy, there would
be no war with Turkey now(.)‘ But Tewfik was poorly regarded by the Young Turks, as was
1000 For Lütfi
Simavi‘s pedigree, see Gökman, Muzaffer, Sedat
Simavi: Hayatı ve Eserleri, İstanbul: Apa Ofset Basımevi, 1970, p. 1.
1001 Lütfi Simavi... pp. 26-27, 37-38.
1002 Heller, Joseph, British Policy Towards the Ottoman Empire 1908-1914, London;
Portland: Frank Cass, 1983, p. 26.
Rifat in Paris, and during most of October he obtained no replies to
the numerous letters in which he had urged the Porte to abandon its policy,
which as he had told Nicolson ―must inevitably end in disaster
for the country.‖1003
Ahmed Reşid (Rey) also agreed with the observation made
by the British embassy. In the homage
he wrote after the death of Rıfat Pasha in Servet-i
Fünun in 1925, he pointed out the resentment of Rıfat Paşa towards Enver
and his cronies.1004 Apparently, it was no coincidence that the
Unionists preferred to appoint aged, pro-Entente (Anglophile and Francophile),
and very experienced diplomats to these capitals. While the Young Turk
leadership pursued its own agenda in sympathy with revisionist and adventurist
Germany, these ambassadors tried to co-opt and conciliate the traditional
powerhouses of Europe.1005 However, by 1914 their efforts turned out
to be futile and irrelevant as the pro-German orientation of the Young Turks
progressed.
6.4.
The Unionist Generation
It is legitimate to question if these idiosyncratic
personalities were representative of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs as a
whole. Some anecdotal evidence may also be gathered from otherwise unknown
officials of the lower ranks, such as the comment of Mehmed Ali Bey, the
secretary of the Bern embassy in 1917, who made a racist remark regarding the
Armenians to his German counterpart.1006 A cumulative radicalization
was not limited to the diplomatic service, but was observable in the other
Ottoman government offices as well.1007 In short, we may observe that there was an apparent radicalization of diplomats
1003 Heller, Joseph, ibid, pp. 153-54.
1004 Çankaya, Ali, ibid, vol. III, pp. 93-96.
1005 For Mehmet
Rifat‘s pro-Entente credentials, also see the remarks of Mahmud Şevket Pasha in his memoirs.
Mahmut Şevket Pasha, Sadrazam ve Harbiye
Nazırı Mahmud Şevket Pasha‟nın Günlüğü, İstanbul:
Arba Yayınları, 1988, p. 48.
1006 Quoted in Kieser, Hans-Lukas, Türklüğe
İhtida, İstanbul: İletişim Yayınları, 2008, p. 78.
1007 For the
cumulative radicalization of the military officers throughout the Hamidian era,
see Akmeşe, Handan Nezir, The Birth of Modern
Turkey: The Ottoman
Military and the
with the coming of the third generation of Tanzimat in line with the
pattern observable for the Ottoman political, intellectual, and bureaucratic
elite in general. These third generation diplomats did not share much with
their elder colleagues. The radicalization had three manifestations:
nationalism, secularism, and modernism. These three traits of radicalization complemented and
consolidated each other. Nevertheless, a resistance to the radicalization
within the ministry was observable. The ministry, like its counterparts in
Europe, was one of the most conservative and elitist offices within the Ottoman
bureaucracy. Of course, they were not in a position to influence the
decision-making process, except by providing the flow of information
from European capitals and providing legal and technical support. The old guard
diplomats were contemptuous of the amateurishness and crudeness of the Young Turks.1008 Moreover
as an institutional instinct,
the ministry had to be cautious and avoid any tensions. However, it must be
said that the resistance was limited to the shifting mentalities and
orientation of foreign policy. Disillusionment with long-trusted Britain was a
significant factor in this process.1009 This was also due to the
fact that the radicalization derived not from particularistic developments within the Ottoman Muslim
elite, but derived from a radicalization of the state of mind in Europe.
It was a generational phenomenon as
well. The younger diplomats
socialized in a milieu which
forced them to maintain radical
political stances. Thus,
instead of speaking of a Unionist political leadership or ideological
disposition, we may speak of a
quasi-Unionist generation capturing
the minds and souls of a particular generation.1010 This
March to World War I,
London: I.B. Tauris, 2005. For the intellectual trajectory and evolution of
Ebubekir Hazım. See Tepeyran, Ebubekir Hazım, Zalimane Bir İdam Hükmü, İstanbul: Pera, 1997. Compare and contrast
this account with his account depicting his experiences in the Hamidian era.
Tepeyran, Ebubekir Hazım, Hatıralar,
İstanbul: Pera, 1998. A similar observation can be made with regard to Ahmed
Ihsan, the owner and publisher of Servet-i
Fünun. His memoirs display an ideological and intellectual evolution before
events crystallized in 1908. For his nationalist rhetoric, Tokgöz, Ahmed İhsan,
Matbuat Hatıralarım, İstanbul:
İletişim Yayınları, 1993, p. 205.
1008 Söylemezoğlu, Galip Kemali, Atina
Sefareti, pp. 82-83;Lütfi Simavi… p. 159; Abdülhak Hamid… p. 352.
1009 Ahmad, Feroz, ―Great Britain‘s Relations with the Young Turks
1908-1914‖, Middle Eastern Studies,
Vol. 2, No. 4 (Jul., 1966), pp. 302-329.
1010 For the aggressive nationalist literature prevalent after the
Balkan Wars, some written by authors with clear Unionist
sympathies but others
written by authors
aloof from the
process was not a distinctly Ottoman evolution but a manifestation
of the global forces enhancing the radicalization of minds and ideologies.1011
Recently, conventional assumptions of the discipline of
international relations have been criticized.1012 International
relations‘ isolation from the other disciplines of social science came to an
end, and it was integrated into the larger framework of social sciences.
Critical of the conventional paradigms of international relations and rejecting
approaching states as ―black boxes‖, constructivists in international relations
argued ―(1) that the structures of human association are determined by shared
ideas rather than material forces, and (2) that the identities and interests of
purposive actors are constructed by these shared ideas rather than given by
nature.‖1013 Therefore, within the constructivist paradigm, foreign policy orientations and
international alignment preferences are determined not merely by Realpolitik
and the ―supreme
interests of the nation‖ but by ideologies and
Unionist
intellectual environment, see Aksakal, Mustafa, The Ottoman Road to 1914, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University
Press, pp. 19-41.
1011 For the national radicalization of the German
intellectual elite, see Verhey,
Jeffrey, The Spirit of 1914, Cambridge,
U.K. : Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University
Press, 2000, p. 231; For the national radicalization of French intellectual
elite, Hanna, Martha, The Mobilization of
Intellect, Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 1996. For ―radicalization‖ as a reaction
to conventionalism and order, see George Mosse, The Image of Man, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998; Eksteins,
Modris. Rites of Spring, New York:
Anchor Books, 1990; Gentile, Emilio. ―The Struggle for Modernity: Echoes of the
Dreyfus Affair in Italian Political Culture, 1898-1912‖, Journal of Contemporary History, Vol. 33, No. 4 (Oct., 1998), pp.
497-511; Gentile, Emilio. ―Fascism as Political Religion‖, Journal of Contemporary History, Vol. 25, No. 2/3 (May - Jun.,
1990), pp. 229-251; Berghaus, Günter, Futurism
and Politics, Berghahn Books, 1996. For a book overviewing the
radicalization as a generational attribute, Wohl, Robert, The Generation of 1914, Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press,
1979.
1012 Among many
others, see Hobden, Stephen; Hobson & John, M. (ed.), Historical Sociology of International Relations, Cambridge, U.K. :
Cambridge University Press, 2002; Wyn
Jones, Richard (ed.), Critical Theory
& World Politics, Boulder: Lynne Rienner, 2001; Wendt, Alexander, Social Theory
of International Relations, Cambridge,
U.K. : Cambridge
University Press, 1999;
Smith, Steve & Booth, Ken & Zalewski, Marysa
(ed.), International Theory: Positivism & Beyond, Cambridge, U.K. :
Cambridge University Press, 1996.
1013 Wendt,
Alexander, Social Theory of International
Relations, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 1999, p. 1.
perceptions determined by social, cultural, and other factors.1014
Foreign policy considerations are (to a certain extent) reflections of
struggles within elites and between different social amalgamations.
In the case of the pre-World War I Ottoman priorities,
we clearly observe that the difference regarding the foreign policy
orientations derived from diverging class origins and mentality structures. The
upstart and radical revolutionary Young Turks detested the status quo, and they found an alignment with the revisionist
Germany, relating their efforts to crash the Ottoman establishment‘s status quo
with Germany‘s drive to demolish the European conservative status quo designed
by Britain and France. Needless to say, Young Turk ideological dispositions
(and those of the Young Turk generation as a whole) were compatible with the
German radical/militarized modernist vision (especially prevalent in the German
general chiefs of staff) which was on the eve of World War I in the process of
escalation.1015 In contrast, the Hamidian old guard, having faith in
the 19th century conservative optimism in order and progress, remained aloof
from Germany‘s revisionism and felt close to
the conservative international order
of Britain. They also kept their faith in resolving of matters with diplomacy, a view not only not shared but detested by the Young Turks. The Hamidian
establishment was defensive within the changing circumstances, resisting the
rising new generation with its different agenda and social background. It was
in their interests to stick to an order in which they could safeguard
themselves. The old world was a world they knew and a world in which they felt
secure and content.
Apparently, in terms of domestic politics, Germany
embodied the conservative order as portrayed
by Wehler, Mommsen,
and many others.
However with regard
to international
1014 For the role of
the perception of threat determined by the ideological backgrounds and
dispositions of the foreign policy
decision-making elite, see Haas,
Mark L, The Ideological Origins of Great Power Politics 1789-1989,
Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2005.
1015 For example, for an interesting text exalting the German social and
political order of Germany during World War I written by the General Director
of Secondary Schools after visiting Germany as quoted in Gencer, Mustafa, Jöntürk Modernizmi ve “Alman Ruhu”,
İstanbul: İletişim Yayınları, 2003, pp. 114-15, see (Taylan) Muslihiddin Adil. Alman Hayat-ı İrfanı, İstanbul, 1333.
For other pamphlets exalting the achievements of Prussianism and Germany‘s
military preparedness just before World War I, see Aksakal, Mustafa, The Ottoman Road to War in 1914,
Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 2008, p. 31,33. For Enver‘s
admiration of Germany, Trumpener, Ulrich, Germany
and the Ottoman Empire 1914-1918, Princeton: Princeton University Press,
1968, p. 18.
politics, German militarism was the revolutionary/revisionist
dynamic threatening the conservative order and the status quo. It was Great
Britain that was desperate to defend the international order and resist change.
That is to say, the political regime of Germany was contradicted by its
international aspirations. Nevertheless, this does not mean that political
stances and international visions contradict each other ideologically. On the
contrary, they manifest an affinity. The expansionism of the conservative
Germany had led the political regime to transform
itself to a radical
and revolutionary position
in two decades. This is not
to say that this transformation was inherent in the Prussian order, but it is
an example how interactions between the level of international politics and
domestic politics influence and shape each other.1016 The
revisionist zeal in terms of international politics restructured Germany as a militarized autocracy in which the military and the newly rising classes were in the ascendancy by 1914.1017
It is equally true for the Ottomans. The revisionism of
the Young Turks on the international level led them to endorse a radical and
modernist agenda and policy program.
Such a comprehensive vision was quiet different from the dispositions of those
who were not pursuing territorial revisionism and who were eager to accommodate
the international order. Therefore whereas the Young Turks allied with Germany
(although this was not the original intention), others looked to side with
Britain and France even after the break-up after World War I in Europe. Apparently, the Young Turks‘ association with Germany was not
limited to a political alliance.
It was the German vision
with which they were
1016 This is not the
place to discuss the multifaceted and controversial historiography of late imperial Germany.
Nevertheless, the approaches of Wehler and Mommsen
were previously criticized.
Some studies listed above are valuable readings to attest the transformation of
the German political regime
within. Eley, Geoff, Reshaping
the German Right, Ann Arbor: University
of Michigan Press, 1990; Chichering, Roger, We
Who Feel Most German, London; Boston: Allen & Unwin, 1984; Fritzsche,
Peter, A Nation of Fliers: German
Aviation and the Popular Imagination, Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University
Press, 1992; Repp, K, Reformers, Critics
and the Paths of German Modernity, Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University
Press, 2000.
1017 Responsibility
for the outbreak of World War I is a subject which has preoccupied scholars
since 1914. For a review of the
question of German
responsibility for the outbreak of World War I, see Mombauer,
Annika, The Origins of the First World
War. Controversies and Consensus, New York: Longman, 2002.
fascinated.1018 The same was equally true for the pro-English
and pro-French old guard and the opponents of the Unionists (as well as
pro-British and pro-French Unionists such as the liberal Minister of Finance
Cavid Bey), who were pursuing a moderate political stance (arguably both for
their class interests and due to their political socializations).
Although such orientations may derive from formations
that developed based on class backgrounds, aspirations, and identities, once
they are developed, they surpass social differences and socializations. The
sons of old Istanbuliots and diplomats of the new generation who came from
socially exclusive backgrounds were also heavily influenced and shaped by the
new radicalism. As argued in the previous chapters and in this chapter, this
was a generational phenomenon determined by interacting complex dynamics
(surpassing class interests). As the new intellectual historians and new
cultural historians have shown, patterns and structures of mentalities were
formed, constructed, and developed
within certain milieus, and subsequently these structures of mentalities also
stimulate their surroundings and transform them.1019
1018 For the impact of German militarism and effective governance, see Gencer, Mustafa,
Jöntürk Modernizmi ve “Alman Ruhu”, İstanbul: İletişim Yayınları, 2003.
1019 For some
prominent studies of new intellectual history and new cultural history, see
Darnton, Robert, The Literary
Underground of the Old Regime, Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 1982; Darnton,
Robert, The Forbidden Best-Sellers of the
Pre- Revolutionary France, New York: W.W.Norton, 1995; Hunt, Lynn Avery, Family Romance of the French Revolution,
1993; Furet, Francois, Rethinking the
French Revolution, Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 1982; Ginzburg, Carlo, The
Cheese and the Worms, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992;
Grafton, Anthony, Defenders of the Text, Cambridge, Mass:
Harvard University Press, 1991; Keith Michael Baker, Inventing the French Revolution, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge
University Press, 1990; Pocock, J.G.A, The
Machiavellian Moment, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1975; Skinner,
Quentin, Visions of Politics,
Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press,
2002 (3 volumes); Chartier, Roger, The
Cultural Origins of the French Revolution, Durham: Duke University Press,
1991.
CHAPTER VII
THE EUROPEAN
PATTERNS AND THE OTTOMAN FOREIGN
OFFICE
7.1.
The End of the Old Order and the Old Diplomacy
Regretting the decline of the influence of the Foreign
Office over policymaking and criticizing the ignorance of the political elite
of Britain regarding international affairs, Permanent Undersecretary Hardinge
wrote to Buchanan, the British ambassador to St. Petersburg, in 1917: ―We have two diplomacies-one the Foreign Office
and the other
‗amateur,‘ running side by side.‖1020 Harold Nicolson,
one of the foremost historians and scholars of diplomacy and himself a
prominent diplomat in the service of the Foreign Office, narrates several witty
anecdotes reflecting the amateurishness of the leaders participating in the
Paris Peace Conference. One of them
is as follows: ―Addressing the House of Commons on April 16, 1919, he (Lloyd
George-DG) made the following frank, modest, and eminently reasonable
statement: ‗How many members have ever heard of Teschen? I do not mind saying I
had never heard of it.‘ Obviously, no more than seven members of the House of
Commons could ever have heard of that remote and miserable duchy, yet Mr. Lloyd
George‘s admission of that fact struck horror into the heart of those
specialists, such as Mr. Wickham Steed, who had been familiar with the Teschen
problem for many years.‖ Nicolson was evidently emphasizing the ignorance of
Lloyd George but nevertheless shared the apprehensions of Wickham Steed, who
reacted to the self-exposure of Lloyd George‘s ignorance as follows: ―The cry
was raised at once. ‗Lloyd George knows nothing of the problems
which he is attempting to solve. From his own lips, we
1020 Neilson, Keith, Strategy and Supply: The Anglo-Russian
Alliance 1914-1917, London; Boston: George Allen & Unwin, 1984, p.18.
learn it. The whole British Delegation in Paris, the whole
Conference in fact, are ignorant and unprepared. Disaster is upon us.‖1021
Ironically, the Cassandran prophecy of Wickham Steed1022 turned out to be correct. The Paris Peace
Conference failed to maintain a peaceful
Europe. Instead, it sowed the seeds of future conflicts.1023 The
snobbish amateurishness of Lloyd George became even more marked in its
mismanagement of Turkish affairs to the opposition and resentment of the
British Foreign Office, and the Turkish-Greek war ended up as a disaster for
Britain.1024
Nicolson, in his book on the Paris Peace Conference,
from which the above excerpts are taken, makes his points clear. He did not see
the political leaders as personally responsible for this failure.
―Given the atmosphere of the time, given the passions aroused in all democracies by four years
of war, it would have been impossible even for supermen to devise a peace
consisting of moderation and righteousness. The task of the Paris negotiators was,
however, complicated by special circumstances of confusion. The ideals to which they had been pledged by President
Wilson were not only impracticable in
and of themselves but necessitated for their execution the intimate and
unceasing collaboration of the United States. It was thus the endeavor
of men like Clemenceau and Lloyd George to
find a middle
way between the desires of their democracies
and the more moderate dictates of their own experience, as well as a
middle way between the theology
of President Wilson
1021 Nicolson, Harold, Peacemaking 1919, London: Constable & Co Ltd, 1933, pp.
24-25
1022 For Wickham Steed, see Macmillan, Margaret, Peacemakers, John Murray, 2003, p. 123-125. Wickham Steed was not a
member of the ―old school‖ like Harold Nicolson. Originally a journalist, in
the course of World War I, he subscribed to the cause of the Slavs. A
Germanophobe, he advocated the collapse of the Habsburg Empire and supported
the dissidents of the Habsburg Empire from various non-German nationalities.
His views became very influential in the higher echelons of Foreign Office at
the end of the war.
1023 The settlement of the Paris Peace Conference was long taken as the
cause of the miseries of the 1930s. See Fromkin, David, A Peace to End All Peace, New York: H. Holt, 1989. Recently
Margaret Macmillan tried to save the Paris Peace Conference from disparagement
and rehabilitated it. She criticized the view of the conference as the main
culprit in the developments that took place in no less than ten to fifteen
years. Macmillan, Margaret, Peacemakers,
John Murray, 2003. For Lloyd George‘s own views on the conference, see Lloyd
George, David, The Truth about Peace
Treaties, London: Gollancz, 1938.
1024 Maisel, Ephraim,
The Foreign Office and Foreign Policy
1919-1926, Brighton: Sussex Academic Press, 1994, pp. 64-66.
and the practical needs of a distracted Europe.‖1025
Nicolson situates the shortcomings of the Peace Conference within
a wider framework. ―I have tried to deal with the transitional
phase between pre-war and post-war diplomacy and give some picture of the Paris
Peace Conference.‖1026 For him, the diplomacy of Peace Conference
reflected the changing times and milieu. For him, in the new world of the
post-war, no effective and constructive diplomacy could be pursued. He clearly
sympathized with the ―old diplomacy,‖ the world he had known from his
childhood, from his career in the Foreign Office and from his father, who was also a prominent diplomat in
the Foreign Office and served as the undersecretary of the Foreign
Office between 1910 and 1916. Nicolson wrote, ―Diplomacy
essentially is the organized system of negotiation between sovereign states.
The most important factor in such organization is the element of
representation-the essential necessity
in any negotiator that he should be fully representative of his own sovereign
at home... in other words, it is the incidence of sovereignty which has
gradually shifted and not the essential principles by which efficient diplomacy should be conducted.‖1027 In
these lines, he was clear. Post-war diplomacy represented interests other than
those of the 19th century diplomatic services.
Arno Mayer contrasts the participants of the Paris Peace
Conference with the participants of the Congress of Vienna a century earlier.1028
―In 1814-15, the peace was negotiated ‗in elegant
and ceremonious privacy.... (by) a group of Aristocrats life-trained
1025 Nicolson, Harold, Peacemaking
1919, London: Constable & Co Ltd, 1933, p. 7.
1026 Nicolson, Harold, ibid, p.5.
1027 Nicolson, Harold, ibid, p.4.
1028 Almost all the diplomatic participants of the Paris Peace
Conference had the image of the Congress of Vienna in their minds. For example
Sir James Headlam-Morley, who initially worked in the Propaganda Department
during World War I and joined the British Delegation at the Conference, wrote in his diaries, ―It is very interesting and amusing here. On the whole, I am coming to have
much higher respect for the Congress of Vienna than I used to have.‖ (Sir James
Headlam-Morley, A Memoir of the Paris
Peace Conference, Methuen & Co Ltd, 1972, p.17) Also see the
introduction of Harold Nicolson to his book on the Congress of Vienna;
Nicolson, Harold. The Congress of Vienna,
London: Constable & Co Ltd, 1946. Evidently, the Congress of Vienna, the
triumph of the ―party of order‖ against the revolutionary tide symbolized an
impressive illustration of the old school gentlemanly diplomacy which
established the peace and order for the upcoming half a century before the rise
of Prussia in the 1860s. The experience of the Paris Peace Conference hardly
accomplished such enduring peaceful results.
as statesmen or diplomats‘ who considered themselves responsible to
crowned sovereigns and barely worried
about partisan pressures. The situation was not so serene a century later when seasoned party politicians of petit-bourgeois background - two
professors, a journalist, a solicitor- gathered around the conference table. The Big Four
were responsible to parliaments, and they never seriously
considered insulating themselves from the political parties, pressure groups, mass
media, and mass electorates, which were highly agitated over the peace question. To be sure, compared to Metternich,
Castlereagh, and Talleyrand, the Big Four were ―amateur‖ diplomats.‖1029
Arno Mayer developed an impressive interpretation of the
logic of the Paris Peace Conference. For Arno Mayer, it was the last stand of the ―party of order‖ to reestablish and impose the status quo, which had been
severely crushed. Mayer notes that, in 1917-18, during the heat of war, the
―parties of movement‖ were in a strong position. With the end of the war and
the treaties concluding war, the ―party of order‖ reclaimed its supremacy.1030
However, this victory remained only on paper. The good old days of the party of order were already gone. For him, the
Paris Peace Conference was the last stand of
the party of order.1031
The Italian Prime
Minister Francesco Nitto
wrote in his memoirs, ―Europe
was happy and prosperous,
while now, after the terrible World War, she is threatened with a decline and a
reversion to brutality, which suggests the fall of the Roman Empire.‖1032
World War I was certainly a watershed
for the ―old regime‖ and ―ruling elites.‖ There were few republics in Europe in
1914. The end of the war brought the
collapse of four monarchies and declarations of numerous republics, big and
small and continent wide. At the end of the war, the first socialist state of the world was calling for a world revolution. Democratic
1029 Mayer, Arno, Politics and Diplomacy of Peacemaking,
New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1967, p. 12. Zara Steiner, one of the foremost
diplomatic historians, also contrasts Vienna of 1815 and Paris of 1919.
Steiner, Zara, The Lights that Failed, Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 2005, pp.
16-17.
1030 Also see Mayer,
Arno, Political Origins of the New
Diplomacy, 1917-18, New York: Vintage, 1973.
1031 For the transformation of the diplomatic corps after World War I,
also see Steiner, Zara, ―The Foreign
Office Reforms 1919-1921,‖ The Historical
Journal, Vol. 17, No. 1 (Mar., 1974), pp. 131-156.
1032 Nitti, Francesco S, Peaceless
Europe, London: Cassell and Company, 1922, p.3
and revolutionary currents were on the rise. The world of 19th-century
Victorian conservative values was gone forever. The red scare of the postwar
era was to be accompanied by the fascist scare at its zenith in the 1930s.
Socialism, fascism, and liberalism were all challenging the status quo in their
own unique ways. Although they
diverged in their political visions,
with regard to the threat they exerted on the conservative
orders and the milieu in which
they were fostered, they were different manifestations of the
same phenomenon. They were all the products of the post-1918 milieu and the
consequences of the collapse of the old order.
In that sense, 1918 was a landmark year. It sealed the
end of the Old Regime. Many old
guards like Harold Nicolson lamented the passing of the good old times in which
diplomacy was not a quarrel (and not philanthropy in the Wilsonian sense) but a
gentlemen‘s discussion. The vision of diplomacy and statecraft imagined and
presented in the earliest scholarly studies on diplomacy perceived the ―art of
diplomacy‖ likewise. Diplomacy in
the 19th century cannot be reduced to the staunch
defense of state interests. It was also never a matter of
principles, beliefs and commitments. It was not Realpolitik either. Realpolitik
was yet to be invented in its Morgenthauen
definition. These premises
of the ―old diplomacy‖ began to change
gradually in the last three
decades of the 19th century as the alliances system replaced
the conventional concert of Europe. The rise of Germany triggered the
conclusion of bilateral agreements and alliances between the Great Powers.
However, others
were not enthusiasts of ―old diplomacy.‖ For them, ―old diplomacy‖ was the epitome of the decayed aristocratic order. ―In the immediate aftermath of the Great
War, impelled by revulsion at the carnage
of that conflict, generations of historians
identified 'old' or 'secret diplomacy' as a major factor leading to war.
The pre-1914 Foreign Office, in particular, appeared
to be the quintessence of 'old diplomacy'.‖1033 Mistrust
of the Foreign Office
and its dealings were already suspect in the eyes of the parliamentary
―Foreign Affairs
Group‖ of the Liberal Party,
which consisted of radicals who were
1033 Otte, T.G, ―Old Diplomacy: Reflections on the Foreign Office before
1914,‖ Contemporary British History,
Autumn 2004, Vol. 18 Issue 3, p. 31. For a ―defense‖
of
―old
diplomacy‖ against the claim that secret diplomacy was a major component of it, see Temperley. Harold, ―Secret
Diplomacy from Canning to Grey,‖ Cambridge
Historical Journal, Vol. 6, No. 1 (1938), pp. 1-32. Also, for a
contemporary critical account and assessment of ―old diplomacy‖ and ―new
diplomacy,‖ see Mowat R.B, Diplomacy and
Peace, London: Williams & Norgate Ltd., 1935. Especially see pp. 7-9,
13-17, 46-63.
heavily critical of the mandarin-like organization of the Foreign
Office.1034 Another issue of
the parliamentary group that was critical was the Foreign Office‘s defiance in
giving information to the parliament on its conduct of foreign affairs.1035
In their eyes, ―old diplomacy‖ was another name for political conspiring and
corruption. Thus, in the age of democracy, such an attitude and old diplomacy
were relics of the old bigotry and had to be eliminated.1036
Old diplomacy ended with World War I, by which time it
had become completely discredited. However, it has recently
been acknowledged that the transformation from ―old diplomacy‖
to ―new diplomacy‖ was a myth exaggerated by the champions of new diplomacy,
who were trying to legitimize their exercise of diplomacy by discrediting the
old corrupt style of diplomacy.1037 The Bolsheviks‘ revelation of
the secret treaties was the final blow to the defenders and makers of the old diplomacy. These revelations exposed
the level of corruption and insincerity of the old diplomacy. The
idealists, journalists, and radicals were advocating ―new diplomacy,‖ which
was supposed to be ―open‖ rather
than
―secret‖ and ―corrupt,‖ ―internationalist‖ rather than ―national,‖ and ―democratic‖ rather than ―aristocratic.‖ The League of
Nations was an embodiment of this new ideal. In fact, the rhetoric of ―new diplomacy‖ was a sign of the changing class character of the makers
1034 For an insider‘s account, see Ponsonby, Arthur, Democracy and Diplomacy, London: Methuen
& Co. Ltd., 1915. The book is a severe criticism of what will be known as
―old diplomacy.‖ Ponsonby, who is best known for his frequently quoted sentence ―when war is declared, truth is the first
casualty‖ and a sincere believer in this phrase, opposed World War I from the
beginning and blamed the diplomacy of a minority for sealing the fate of
millions in the war. Also see, Ponsonby, Arthur, Falsehood in War-Time, London: George Allen & Unwin, 1928.
1035 Steiner, Zara, The Foreign Office and Foreign Policy,
1898-1914, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 1969, pp. 67-8.
1036 For the
parliamentary and intellectual opposition to ―secrecy in the making of foreign policy‖ in World War I, see Swartz,
Marvin, The Union of Democratic Control
in British Politics during the First World War, Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 1972.
1037 Henig, Ruth, ―New Diplomacy
and the Old: A Reassessment of British Conceptions of a League of Nations, 1918-1920,‖ in The Paris Peace Conference, 1919: Peace without Victory?, Dockrill, M.
L., Fisher, John (ed.), Palgrave, 2001, p. 157-174. Steiner, Zara, Dockrill,
M.L, ―The Foreign Office Reforms, 1919-1922,‖ The Historical Journal, Vol. 17,
No. 1 (Mar., 1974), p. 151. For
a critique of the ―myth of the new diplomacy,‖ also see Gilbert, Felix,
―The ―New Diplomacy‖ of the Eighteenth Century,‖ World Politics, Vol. 4,
No. 1 (Oct., 1951), pp. 1-38.
of foreign policies. Middle class radicals were now replacing
aristocrats, both as makers of foreign policy and as opinion leaders with
regard to foreign policy. The 1920s epitomized the development of a new style
of diplomacy in Versailles, in Genoa1038,
and in the routine conduct of diplomacy. However, the new style of diplomacy
collapsed in the hollow decade of the
1930s, when democracies were uncertain as to how to respond to the rise of
fascist and authoritarian regimes.1039 Vansittart, the last ―old diplomat,‖1040
failed in the face of the opposition of the political elites to pursue
the ―aesthetics‖ of old
diplomacy.1041 Arguably, one of the reasons why Vansittart was one
of the British elitists who was most alarmed by the ascent of fascism and was
concerned with opposing Hitler was his ―old diplomat‖ background. Nevertheless,
the democratic world of politics and the active involvement of party
politicians did not allow him to pursue a 19th century diplomatic
game, which had been more efficient and had a more problem-solving orientation
in its understanding of conflict resolution. The diplomacy of the post-World
War II era, dominated by the ruthless
realities of the Cold War and the rise of Realpolitik, was a world apart from
the pre-1914 diplomacy. In short, the 19th century diplomatic world, with its
class character and social culturalization, was gone and had turned into a
curiosity for historians to study.
We have to situate the Ottoman Foreign Ministry within this framework. The Ottoman
Foreign Ministry is a world lost to us as well. A similar and simultaneous
transformation was observable with the coming of the republic. The Ankara
government, with the habit (out of necessity and concern for the urgency of
international bargaining and compromises that are not possible within the
practice of routine diplomacy) it gained during the War of Independence, appointed several non-career diplomats (such as army generals) to
1038 For the failed
Genoa conference, see Fink, Carol, The Genoa Conference: European Diplomacy 1921-1922, Chapel Hill:
University of North Carolina Press, 1984.
1039 For the diplomacy
of the 1930s, see Steiner,
Zara, The Lights That Failed, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005.
1040 McKercher, B.J.C, ―The Last Old
Diplomat: Sir Robert Vansittart and the Verities of British Foreign
Policy, 1903-1930,‖ Diplomacy and Statecraft, volume:
6, no: 1 (1995),
pp. 1-38.
1041 McKercher, B.C.J, ―The Foreign
Office, 1930-39: Strategy, Permanent Interests
and National Security, Contemporary British
History, Autumn 2004, Vol. 18 Issue 3, pp. 87-
109.
important positions. They were trustees and de facto personal
representatives of Mustafa Kemal. They functioned as persons in the service of
Mustafa Kemal and the political authority in Ankara rather than as
functionaries performing regular and professional diplomatic craft. Several of
them retained their diplomatic careers after the end of the War of Independence
War thanks to the prominence they acquired through the partial shift of the political and bureaucratic elite.
Nevertheless, the displacement in the diplomatic establishment was fairly
limited, - being limited to some ambassadorial posts1042. The rank
and file of the ministry retained their posts. What changed was the style and
aesthetics of diplomacy. The diplomacy of a nation-state was apparently different from the diplomacy of a retreating empire. The diplomacy of
the latter was ―old diplomacy,‖ which had its own logic, whereas the diplomacy
of the former entailed an interest-maximizing strategy of the nation state.
7.2.
The Aristocratic Worlds of the Hamidian Foreign Ministry
One of the significant signs of the transformation of
the Ottoman Empire in the 19th century was its changing perception of the
European powers. The European powers came to
be seen as equals and counterparts rather than as eternal foes of the empire.
This was more a discursive transformative than a real one given that it was a
de facto acknowledgement on the part of the Ottoman Empire. The European powers
were also considered to have legitimate claims to power and authority. Moreover
as fellow monarchies (or fellow republics as republics also had their legal
personalities), they were regarded as ―venerable.‖1043 The principle
of reciprocity was also established. The representatives of the foreign states
(ambassadors, consuls, et cetera) were welcomed with due respect.
1042 The best source on the Kemalist diplomatic service and the making
of diplomats by decree is Şimşir Bilal, Bizim
Diplomatlar, Ankara: Bilgi Yayınevi, 1996.
1043 Hurewitz, J.C, ―The Europeanization of Ottoman Diplomacy: The
Conversion from Unilateralism to Reciprocity in the Nineteenth Century,‖ Belleten, vol. 25, July 1961, pp. 455-466.
The annals of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs reflect
this emphasis on respect. In the first annal of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
published in 1885, the chapter ―Düvel-i
Ecnebiye‖ introduced the emperors, kings, and sultans with the biography of
the reigning monarchs and names and titles of
their honorable wives, sons, and brothers. The only other detail provided with regard to
these monarchies was the official religion of each monarchy.1044
Thus, we are provided with ample information on the monarchs of Hawaii,
Ethiopia, and Wurttemberg. The following chapter was entitled ―Cumhuriyyetle İdare Olunan Memalik-i
Ecnebiye” (States governed as Republics).1045 It is interesting
to observe that, at least
theoretically, according to this categorization, the republics were not
recognized as states proper given that whereas monarchies were introduced in
the chapter “Düvel-i Ecnebiye”, the
republics were introduced in a separate chapter titled as ―those governed by
Republics‖ as if they are states needing an extra adjective (Cumhuriyetle İdare Olunan). At the very least, they were not seen as
equal to those states which were monarchies. In this chapter, only the name of
the presidents and the year of their election were listed. For example, what we
learn about republic of Argentina is that its president was General Julio Roca
and that he was elected on 12 October 1880. The same limited information was
provided for republics such as France, the United States, Peru, and Haiti.
Although considerable space was allocated to monarchies, the information
provided for republics is conspicuously small. The next chapter listed the
prime ministers and certain ministers of the states regardless of whether they
were monarchies or republics1046. Therefore, here, an equality of
republics and monarchies was acknowledged. Thus, although republics and
monarchies were deemed as equal in introducing their administrative
organization, in terms of their legal personality they were not. Nevertheless, in the Ottoman diplomatic jargon,
while the emperors and kings were majestically addressed formally as ―Son Altesse
Impériale‖ and ―Son Altesse
Royale,‖ the presidents of
1044 Salname-i Nezaret-i Hariciye (1301/1885), pp. 342-396.
1045 Salname-i Nezaret-i Hariciye
(1301/1885), pp. 397-404. 1046 Salname-i Nezaret-i Hariciye (1301/1885), pp. 405-428.
the republics were merely addressed as ―Notre trés cher ami et allié.‖ The French presidents of the
republic were specifically addressed as ―Notre
Grand et Bon Ami.‖1047
The next chapter listed the former representatives of
the states in the Ottoman Empire as well as the actual personnel of the
legations from ambassadors to minor scribes1048. In short, the
annals of the Foreign Ministry were formalistic texts and clear manifestations
of the Ottoman claim to be a part of the concert of Europe.
More significantly, the annals were very meticulous in
their observations of ranks and formalities of aristocracy – so much so that a
page was allocated for the definitions and explanations of the European
aristocratic titles (―Avrupa‟da
asilzadegana mahsus unvanlar‖) such as baron, cardinal, and marquis.1049
The decorations of European orders, insignia, and merits were also seen as very
prestigious and thus worth mentioning. The biographies of the high-ranking
members of the Ottoman diplomatic service listed the merits and orders granted
by the European states. The listing of the decorations of European titles was
also mentioned in the biographies of the prominent Ottoman diplomats and
statesmen provided in the Foreign Ministry annals. It was also one of the five questions asked in the questionnaire of
the Ministry kept in the personal files in Sicil-i
Ahval. In fact, the awarding of decorations was a mechanism employed
exhaustively by Abdülhamid to maintain the loyalty of his civil servants and to
monitor them. This strategy, as well
as ―inventing a loyalist Hamidian state aristocracy‖ was one of the pillars of the Hamidian regime.1050
While Esat Cemal Paker mocked the absurdity and ridiculousness of the exhaustive decorations in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs,1051 for
1047 Hüseyin Agah
Bey, Diplomasi Usul-i Kitabeti,
Konstantiniyye: Matbaa-i Ebuzziya, 1308, pp. 15-16.
1048 Salname-i Nezaret-i Hariciye (1301/1885), pp. 429-490.
1049 Salname-i Nezaret-i Hariciye (1301/1885) , pp. 547.
1050 Georgeon, Francois, Sultan Abdülhamid, Homer, 2006, p. 178; Paker,
Esat Cemal. Kırk
Yıllık Hariciye Hatıralarım, İstanbul: Remzi Kitabevi, 2000, p. 17;
Mayakon, İsmail Müştak, Yıldız‟da Neler
Gördüm ?, İstanbul: Semih Lütfi Kitabevi, 1940, pp. 34-35.
1051 Paker, Esat Cemal, Kırk Yıllık Hariciye
Hatıralarım, İstanbul: Remzi Kitabevi, 2000,
p. 17.
Galip Kemali (Söylemezoğlu) 1052 and Hayreddin Nedim,1053
decorations were a primary institution of diplomacy and governance. In his
memoirs, Galip Kemali seriously and meticulously listed the decorations he was
awarded, as well as those given to others. We may conclude by arguing that
while the Hamidian regime sanctioned and endorsed the contemporary European formalities, codes of conduct,
and procedures, the sultan made use of them to maintain and reestablish a
traditional loyalty alongside a new mode of loyalty established based on these
new codes of conduct. In this regard, the Hamidian imperium was arguably an
idiosyncratic blend of these two diverse political traditions. This was not
different from the other 19th century Ottoman institutions that
integrated traditions imported from
Europe and those derived from the pre-modern Ottoman past and appropriated for
19th century usage.
The annals of the Foreign Ministry allocated numerous
pages to the exaltation of the glamour of the Ottoman Empire at its zenith and
during its post-classical age. The annals began with a long tribute to the
sultans. The sultans were listed with their illustrious titles in due respect, reverence, and exaltation.
Obviously, what was implied in these acclaims was that the glorious 19th
century Ottoman Empire of Tanzimat owed its magnificence to the exploits and
the splendor of the Ottoman Empire of
the previous centuries.1054 The next
entry in the annals provided brief information
regarding the full names and the definitions of the prominent Ottoman titles
beginning from the highest ranks (rütbe-i
vezaret ve müşiriyyet) to the lowest titles
(hacegan rütbesi-yüzbaşılık rütbesi).1055 The entry ―Rüteb-i
Resmiyye-i Saltanat-ı Seniyye‟nin Suret ve Keyfiyyet Te‟sissine Da‟ir İzahat-ı
Mahsusa‖ informs us that the ―modern‖
system of titles
and its regulation was introduced in 1836.1056
The annals also listed how the bearers
of certain ranks and titles were formally addressed.
1052 Söylemezoğlu,
Galip Kemali, Hariciye Hizmetinde Otuz
Sene, İstanbul: Şaka Matbaası,
1949, pp. 127-28.
1053 Hayreddin Nedim,
Vesaik-i Tarihhiye ve Siyasiyye
Tetebbuatı, Dersaadet: Ahmed İhsan
ve Şürekası Matbaası, 1326, v. I, pp. 61-69.
1054 For the
periodization of Ottoman history by 19th century Ottoman historians, see
Demiryürek, Mehmet, Tanzimat‟tan Cumhuriyete Bir Osmanlı Aydını:
Abdurrahman Şeref Efendi,
İstanbul: Phoneix, 2003.
1055 Salname-i Nezaret-i Hariciye (1306/1889), p. 30.
1056 Salname-i Nezaret-i Hariciye (1306/1889), p. 26.
It was clear that
addressing individuals in a culture
of hierarchy and ranks was not a simple procedure and was a matter of
formality. First and foremost, everybody was to be addressed differently according to their
own ranks and titles. Forms of
address revealed the relations
between the one who was addressed and the one who was addressing. Therefore,
the forms of address also changed according to the position of the person doing
the addressing. Moreover, when a bearer
of a certain title was
cited, out of respect, his title had to be used along with appropriate phrases. For example, the ulema
had to address a former prime
minister as ―ma‟lum-ı da‟ileridir ki‖
whereas members of the civil service had to address a former prime minister ―ma‟ruz-ı çakerleridir ki.‖ When the name
of a former prime minister was cited in a speech, he had to be addressed ―übbehetlü devletlü Paşa
hazretleri.”1057 The use of forms of address in a culture of aristocracy and hierarchy
was not a technicality. On the contrary, it was one of the founding pillars of
the polity. The superiority of the superiors was reproduced and reinforced
every time they were addressed with the respect they were to be afforded. It
was one of the constitutive parts of the hierarchical political order. In that
regard, cultures of aristocracies including the Ottomans were no different than
the Malaysian cockfights noted by Geertz1058
and the theater state of Negara.1059
The next
entry in the annals describes the
regulations governing the priority of the title- holders. Here, we learn who
precedes whom in a ceremony. The entry continued with the listing of names and descriptions of the four
decorations of the Ottoman imperium: Nişan-i
imtiyaz, osmani, mecidi and şefkat. Of course, all these decorations
have several degrees from first degree
to fourth or fifth degree.1060 In short,
the annals of the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs were books
of protocol observing the codes of respect between fellow monarchies and states
and reflected the ―official discourse‖ of the empire.
1057 For the list of the formal addresses, see age,
pp. 31-33.
1058 Geertz, Clifford, The Interpretation of Cultures, New York: Basic Books, 1973,
p. 412- 453.
1059 Geertz, Clifford, Negara: The Theater State in Nineteenth-Century Bali, Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 1980.
1060 age, pp. 31-32.
The appropriate and formal addressing of foreign
emperors, presidents of the states, and
other holders of various prestigious titles was crucial. Hüseyin Agah‘s
pamphlet was written to instruct the young diplomats in the European protocol
and formality of the diplomacy. The author was an official employed in the
Translation Office of the Foreign Ministry. In his tables, he provided the
Turkish and French versions of the principal forms of address. For example, he noted that the French ―Son Excellence‖ was the translation of
the Ottoman title ―devletlu,
atufetlu, saadetlu, asaletlu
efendim hazretleri..‖ The French
―Impériale Votre Majesté‖
was the Ottoman ―zat-ı hazreti
mülükhaneleri.‖1061 It is interesting to observe the
assimilation of the classical Ottoman titles and addresses into the European
titles and addresses. In this adaptation process, the long Ottoman titles and
addresses were shortened and specified.1062 Room for authenticity
was also maintained. The adjective of
―imperial‖ was Ottomanized and absorbed into the Ottoman political culture. While
―zat-ı Şahane‖ was employed
for the emperor
sultan, the term ―şahane‖
was also employed to establish the exaltedness of the imperial
institutions such as Mülkiye-i Şahane and
Tıbbiye-i Şahane. The empire was
begun to be called Memalik-i Mahruse-i
Şahane as an alternative to the conventional ―Devlet-i Aliyye." The word seniyye‖ was also
employed as the Ottoman counterpart of imperial as in saltanat-ı seniyye. The Ottoman embassies abroad were known as ―sefaret-i seniyye‖s, translated into
French in official documents as ―Ambassade Imperiale Ottomane.‖ The more traditional imperial titles were also retained and used for various and ancient
institutions as in Hassa-i Hümayun and
Mabeyn-i Hümayun-u Hazret-i Mülükane.
With localization of the European terminology, the empire created an
authenticity for itself within its accommodation to the European universalism.
In this way, the original conventional Ottoman contents and their idiosyncratic
senses of grandeur remained unchanged. The standardization and concretization of the traditional titles and addresses
was also part of the process of the
1061 Hüseyin Agah Bey, Diplomasi
Usul-i Kitabeti, Konstantiniyye: Matbaa-i Ebuzziya,
1308, p. 15.
1062 See Akyıldız,
Ali, Tanzimat Dönemi Osmanlı Merkez
Teşkilatında Reform, İstanbul: Eren,
1993, pp. 59-61.
adaptation of the Ottoman statecraft to modernity and modern
governance.1063 However, the Ottoman forms of addresses continued to
be longer (and loftier) than their European counterparts and the Ottoman
distinctiveness was articulated in these formulations. Yet, it was apparent
that there was an attempt at an accommodation of Ottoman political culture to European
political culture.
In short, the contents of these annals demonstrate an
aspiration on the part of the Ottoman polity to be recognized as a part of the
Concert of Europe. The Hamidian and Tanzimat Ottoman Empire was the
continuation of the splendid empire of the Suleiman I and Mehmed II. This
emphasis continued to be the principal legitimacy for the maintenance and advancement of the 19th
century Ottoman Empire. Although, the Tanzimat
was perceived as the birth of a new political entity replacing the obsolete
structure (an ancien régime) in terms
of administration, the magnificence of the previous Ottoman centuries was to be
hailed. The regression and
degeneration of the Empire two centuries before the Tanzimat separated the
Tanzimat-state from the glorious era of the Empire1064. However, the
imperium was refashioned not as a military superpower with militarist fervor
but an empire of cultivation and civility as a part of the empires
international (as opposed to the republics and republican international).
The de facto aristocratic nature of the Ottoman Empire
was not new, but its formalization and its open recognition, affirmation, and articulation was novel. It is also
1063 For the changes in the texts and discourses of the official
documents of the Ottoman Empire with Tanzimat, see Akyıldız, Ali, Osmanlı Bürokrasisi ve Modernleşme,
İstanbul: İletişim Yayınları, 2004, pp. 103-116.
1064 The
historiography of the Tanzimat divided Ottoman history into various parts. Devr-i istila (Age of Expansion) covered
the years between the conquest of Istanbul and the death of Sokollu Mehmed
Pasha, although the exact years change in different accounts. The following era was named in different
accounts as ―devr-i tevakkuf
ve inhitat, teşettüt,
devr-i vukuf, devr-i inhitat‖ (Age of Stagnation, Contraction,
Decline). In these accounts, with the beginning of the reign of Selim III in
1789 and subsequently with Tanzimat in 1839, the Ottomans entered into the Age
of Reorganization, Progress, and Regeneration (devr-i teceddüd, devr-i teceddüd ve inkılap, devr-i teceddüd ve
tanzimat, teceddüdat ve terakkiyat). For Ahmed Vefik Pasha, as he wrote in
his Fezleke-i Tarih-i Osmani, with
Tanzimat, “fasl-ı sadiste yine tecdid-i usul-i hükumete karar
vererek mihr-i saltanat tekrar kesb-i fer ve şevket eyledi… Demiryürek, Mehmet, Tanzimat‟tan Cumhuriyet‟e Bir Osmanlı
Aydını: Abdurrahman Şeref Efendi (1853-1925), İstanbul: Phoenix, 2003, pp. 156-161.
significant that although republics and presidents of republics had been included
in the first annals published in 1885, in the second annals, published
in 1889, there was no mention of them. Instead, the table included the Pope,
the king of Saxony, the prince of Monaco, and the grand duke of Hesse with an
entry in the table showing the dynasties to which these monarchs and princes
belonged.
The second annals published in 1889 allocated a chapter
to the decorations granted after the publication of the first annals.1065
In other words, the list was refreshed. It included
the names of the diplomats who were decorated and the insignias that had been
granted. Another list showed the members of the diplomatic service who had been
granted insignias by other states. For example, we learn that the former
Ottoman Minister of Foreign Affairs was granted the insignia of the ―Red Eagle‖ from the state of Germany.1066 As expected, the
list begins with the highest-ranking officials who had been honored with
decorations. They were also given to low-ranking officials such as Galib
Beyefendi, an assistant in the Office of Ceremonies in the Foreign Ministry who
was decorated with a second-level Vasa insignia from the state of Sweden.1067
States ranging from Montenegro to Italy had decorated several Ottoman
officials, although the two countries which decorated the Ottoman officials the
most were Iran and Romania.
The symbolism and meaning of the institutionalization of
nişans has been analyzed by Edhem
Eldem. He has demonstrated the gradual transformation of the aesthetics and the
style of the nişans from the first
insignia in 1831 (or 1832) to the end of the empire. Although Mustafa Reşid Bey
(the future Mustafa Reşid Pasha) suggested that the institutionalization of an
insignia system would increase the
prestige of the empire, it did not happen that way because the Westerners did
not feel honored by the decoration of
the insignia by the Ottoman Empire. On the contrary, they felt that it was a
degradation to be granted an insignia by a state of low prestige.1068
It was only in the later few decades that the
Europeans began to be ―honored‖
by being awarded an Ottoman insignia. For Eldem,
1065 Salname-i Nezaret-i Hariciye (1306/1889), pp. 157212-143.
1066 Salname-i Nezaret-i Hariciye (1306/1889), p. 190.
1067 Salname-i Nezaret-i Hariciye (1306/1889), p. 195.
1068 Eldem, Edhem, İftihar ve İmtiyaz, İstanbul:
Osmanlı Bankası Arşiv ve Araştırma Merkez, 2004, pp. 117-121.
the crucial decade for the institutionalization of the system was
the 1850s. This was due especially to the endorsement of a cosmopolitan
discourse created by the implications of the Crimean War and the coalition with
Great Britain and France. Nevertheless, the Crimean War only reinforced this
process. The modernization of insignias began as early as 1852 with the appearance of the Mecidiye insignia in 1852
prior to the Crimean coalition. By the 1850s, the more traditional designs and
scripts of the insignia alluding to the classical age of Ottomans
were replaced by more ―modern‖
designs and scripts
in terms of the messages
conveyed.1069 While the insignia
of the early Tanzimat reflected a
blend of the traditional discourses of the pre-modern Ottoman Empire and the
modern self-images of the 19th
century, in time this transitional phase was superseded by the complete
endorsement of 19th century imperial discourses. We may argue that,
by the 1850s, the Ottoman Empire had managed to enter the family of fellow
European monarchies in the symbolic realm.
A significant part of the operation of the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs was dedicated to ceremonies.
The ministry was responsible for celebrating and
congratulating the ―days‖
of the monarchs, which
included birthdays, anniversaries of their accessions to the throne, and weddings. Of course, national
holidays were also commemorated. The greetings of the fellow monarchs on the anniversaries of the enthronement of Abdülhamid and the religious holidays were received and
dispatched to the palace.1070 The follow-up and conduct of this
procedure was one of the tasks of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
In short, Ottoman officialdom endeavored to be incorporated
into the European family. This was not a matter of symbolism. On the contrary,
the empire‘s primary concern in its pursuit to be admitted into the European
family was to secure its territorial integrity. Ottoman officialdom believed
that the perpetual threat of partition and annihilation would be avoided by
inclusion into the European family. Tanzimat statesmen thought that they had
achieved this in 1856. ―Finally, the Ottomans had succeeded in gaining
admission, however qualified, to the European
club of powers.
The Paris Treaty
of 1856, which
1069 Eldem, Edhem, ibid., p. 169.
1070 For congratulations on the birthdays of the monarchs, see BOA,
HR.SYS 222-101, for the anniversaries of their weddings, see BOA, HR.SYS
212/98. For the congratulations of the monarchs on the anniversary of the
accession to the throne of Abdülhamid and the religious holidays, BOA, HR.SYS
211/91.
provided an unprecedented guarantee of the territorial integrity of
the Ottoman state, made the empire, in effect, a member of the European
concert. From the Ottoman perspective, this was a more important result than the
Russian surrender of southern Bessarabia or even the neutralization of the
Black Sea (.)‖1071 Nevertheless, the hopes and expectations of the
Ottoman statesmen were not to be realized. Equal terms between the Ottomans and
the European powers could not be established for apparent reasons. Realpolitik
and Machtpolitik were better means to secure territorial integrity and Ottoman
attempts at Europeanization and synchronization of its self-imagination and
self-portrayal remained futile.
7.3.
Transitions to the Cultures
of Bureaucracy
A glance at the salaries of the members of the diplomatic
service also gives some inkling as to the aristocratic and patriarchal nature
of the Ottoman culture of officialdom.1072 The disparity between the
highest-paid officials and the lower echelons of the bureaucracy is striking.
From the annals, we learn that the Foreign Minister was (supposed to be) paid
360,000 guruşes per year according to the 1889 yearbook. The undersecretary,
the highest-paid employee of the ministry, was paid 288,000 guruşes. The second
highest-paid employees were the ambassadors to London, Berlin, Paris, St.
Petersburg, and Vienna, who enjoyed an annual income of 246,000 guruşes. They
were also entitled to stipends of
186,000 guruşes each. Although the Ottoman representatives in Rome and Teheran
also held the title of ―büyükelçi‖s,
they were entitled a more modest salary of 120,000 guruşes per year (with a
stipend of another 120,000 guruşes), which was considerably lower than the
salaries paid to the holders of other more prestigious ambassadorships.
Regarding the staff in the embassies, we observe a dramatic decrease for the lower posts including
the salaries of the undersecretaries of the embassies. The
1071 Şükrü Hanioğlu, A Brief History of the Late Ottoman Empire,
Princeton: Princeton University Press, p. 82.
1072 See Salname-i Nezaret-i Hariciye
(1306/1889), p. 632-642. Discrepancy in the salaries of the pashas and the officials
was a prominent feature of the Hamidian regime. See Georgeon, Francois… p. 177.
undersecretary in London was granted only 48,000 guruşes a year. The
secretaries of the first rank, the second rank, and the third rank were
entitled to an average of 20 to 35 thousand guruşes a year. The translator of
the embassy in Teheran, who was not part of the regular staff of the diplomatic
corps in the embassy, was paid 18,000 guruşes.1073 When it came to
the porters, the salaries were even less. The porters serving in Istanbul were paid a maximum of 350
guruşes and a minimum of 150 guruşes a year.1074 That meant that the
ministerial undersecretary was paid almost two hundred times more than the
lowest paid worker, which was a conspicuous and manifest demonstration of the aristocratic/patriarchal nature of the
Ottoman polity.1075 The salary scheme of the Ministry (with regard
to diplomats) was like a steep pyramid in which the few highest ranking
diplomats were paid enormously in comparison to the modest income levels of the
low-ranking diplomats.
On the one hand, the 19th century Ottoman
Empire resembled a bureaucratic state in which the level of incomes was
determined by state fiat. On the other hand, it retained the vestiges of the
pre-modern mode of wealth distribution in which there was no concern for
egalitarianism and scales of wealth accumulation were determined by
personalized, decentralized, arbitrary, and irregular dynamics.1076
Moreover, the lack of finances of the state meant that modestly paid officials
were more likely to have their salaries curbed, something that is reminiscent of an inegalitarian mode of wealth
distribution based on
1073 Of course, these were the salaries as indicated in the yearbooks.
That does not mean that these salaries
were paid on time or in full. As is well known, the state frequently failed to pay the salaries on time and in
full. As mentioned previously, many ambassadors complained that their salaries
were not paid for months and even for years .
1074 Salname-i Nezaret-i Hariciye (1306/1889), p. 670.
1075 The hierarchy between the workers was also apparent. The ―head of
the hademes" (chief porter) was
paid 1,000 guruşes whereas the assistant to the head of the hademes was paid 500 guruşes. In short,
in the Ottoman arrangement of payments, access to reasonably high income was
endowed to the ―heads.‖.‖ The ―head,‖ the paternal position was prestigious and
privileged. This posture reflects the prevalence of paternalistic and
hierarchical thought. For a classic study on the pre-modern hierarchical and
paternalist mind, see Laslett, Peter, The
World We Have Lost, London; New York: Routledge, 2000.
1076 For a case study examining the sources of revenues and commercial
activities of a high-ranking 17th century bureaucrat, see Kunt, Metin,
―Derviş Mehmed Pasha,
Vezir and Entrepreneur: A
Study in Ottoman Political-Economical
Theory and Practice,‖ Turcica, 9,1 (1977), pp. 197-214.
prestige and power. Furthermore, they were financially more
vulnerable in case of non- payment of salaries.
The aristocratic and patriarchal nature of Ottoman
officialdom can also be deduced from the table of salaries in Findley‘s work on
the social history of the Ottoman officialdom.1077 In Findley‘s
scheme, the employees of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs were divided into three: non-Muslims, ―modernist Muslims‖, and ―traditional Muslims.
In his table, the ―modernist Muslims‖ were paid the best whereas the
non-Muslims came second. The ―traditional Muslims‖ were paid very modestly and
were predominantly employed in low-ranking posts. Considering that in Findley‘s
categorization, ―modernist Muslims‖ were those who were educated in westernized
(and therefore the best) schools, they occupied the highest and most
prestigious positions for which non-Muslims were discriminated against unless
their competence was indispensable, like the non-Muslim officials in the Office
of Legal Counsellorship. This table clearly demonstrates that a good education
secured considerably higher incomes. It also reflects the discriminatory nature of the
Ministry in favor of Muslims. Although the non-Muslims on average had better
education and skills, they were denied equal opportunity of advancement in
ranks and income.
One of the radical moves of the Tanzimat was the
inauguration in 1838 of a salary system that replaced
the old structure in which no distinction between
―public‖ and
―private‖ had been made.1078 Obviously, the pre-Tanzimat rewarding of the public
officials privileged the high-ranking officials who had better
connections and occupied better positions. However, it was ironic that the
―salary system‖ of the Tanzimat ―while (it) intended to do the opposite,
(it)... heightened officials‘ economic worries.‖1079 due to its
evasion of arbitrary and irregular sources of extra income. Although, the new
Weberian/rational system of payment seemed to serve as a relative equalizer
between officials in public
officialdom, ―a vast gap between
highest and lowest
salaries remained a
1077 Findley, Carter Vaughn,
Ottoman Civil Officialdom: A Social History, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1989, pp. 358-9.
1078 See Kırlı, Cengiz,
―Yolsuzluğun İcadı: 1840 Ceza Kanunu,
İktidar ve Bürokrasi,‖
Tarih ve Toplum Yeni Yaklaşımlar, 4, Güz 2006,
p. 49.
1079 Findley, Carter Vaughn, ibid., p. 296.
hallmark of the Ottoman official salary system, even if the gap
narrowed with time.‖1080 In this regard, the Ottoman understanding
of merit was a typical corollary of the aristocratic culture, albeit an
aristocratic culture in which state was at the center and determined
aristocratic credentials. The emerging bureaucratic state of the Tanzimat
retained several features of the pre-modern state, especially in its structures
of redistribution of wealth. Throughout the Tanzimat, (for Muslims) the state
continued to be the foremost provider of wealth, which reproduced the principal
attributes of a pre-modern polity. Although the Tanzimat acquired many features
of the modern bureaucratic state and the Hamidian era witnessed the enormous
growth of a bureaucracy with the number of civil servants employed in state
service reaching one hundred
thousand by 1900,1081 the
facets of modern and pre-modern structures coexisted before most of the
pre-modern remnants were gradually abandoned (culminating in the Hamidian era
and progressing thereafter). The substantial steps to standardize and formalize
salaries and their regular distribution were taken in the early reign of
Abdülhamid II. One significant development was the 1881 Decree on the Promotion
and Retirement of Civil Officials (Memurin-i
Mülkiye Terakki ve Tekaüd Kararnamesi), which was superseded by another
decree in 1884.1082 The decree of 1881 ―was divided into two sections,
of which the first dealt summarily with conditions of appointment and promotion, while the
second dealt with the creation of a modern kind of Retirement Fund (Tekaüd Sandığı), to be financed by the
deductions from the salaries.‖1083 The foundation of the Mülkiye was another major step in the
recruitment of officials endowed with sufficient skills and knowledge regarding
administration and (modern European) law. The new recruits were provided with
much better opportunities, rewards, and assurances compared to their older
colleagues. The conditions of employment were also standardized and regularized. ―To govern the workings of the personnel records
1080 Findley, ibid, p.
296.
1081 Georgeon, Francois… p. 177. During
the Hamidian era, the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs also expanded enormously.
The number of the officials
employed in the departments of the ministry in
Istanbul more than doubled in fifteen years. Compare the lists in the annals of
1902 and 1889. Salname-i Nezaret-i
Hariciye (1320 /1902),
p. 70-100; Salname-i
Nezaret-i Hariciye (1306 /1889), pp. 485-630.
1082 Findley, ibid.,
p. 273.
1083 Findley, ibid., p. 273.
system, there were two sets of instructions, the first being issued
in 1879, the second in 1887.‖1084
It was the porters and the lower-ranking officials, not
members of highest-ranking officialdom of the state, that benefited from the
newly emerging Weberian regulation of public
officials in which the
disparity between the salaries of the higher
and lower echelons of the bureaucracy gradually
narrowed. Although the Hamidian bureaucratic reforms established a
predominantly bureaucratic state, the higher echelons remained privileged and remained intact, insulated from
bureaucratic modernization and development of a culture of (Weberian)
bureaucracy.1085 This duality lessened with the 1908 and subsequent
purges (tensikat). The ―tensikat‖ of 1909 severely
reduced the salaries
and benefits of high-
ranking bureaucrats. Against the motions of the parliament, the ministers had
to defend the reasonableness of the level of salaries of the high-ranking
bureaucrats, including those in the diplomatic service, suggesting that with the salaries proposed by the parliament, no one would want to work
in the Foreign Ministry.1086 The motion prepared by the committee of
the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
was rejected by the parliament, so the committee
had to
1084 Findley, ibid., p. 271.
Transition to a fully standardized and salary-based system in Europe occurred
in the early 19th century. In the consular system of Britain, consuls earned their income through the fees they
charged for their services, their personal talents, connections, and commercial
activities. There was an attempt to replace this early modern system, which was
highly corrupt, inefficient, and incompatible with the premises of an imperial
modern-state, with a rational and standardized system in early 19th century.
The reforms of Canning in 1825 intended to transform consuls into ―salaried,
full-time state servants drawing a fixed income by the Parliament.‖
Nevertheless, it took half a century to implement the goals of the reform.
Platt, D.C.M, The Cinderella Service:
British Consuls since 1825, New York: Longman, 1971, p. 68.
1085 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. It also has to be said that such
a duality developed with the reign of Kaiser Wilhelm II. The highly developed
bureaucracy and the Kaiser‘s entourage coexisted and annoyed the civil
bureaucracy and middle classes. Therefore the Hamidian duality cannot be viewed
as a remnant of the past to be inevitably crushed, but a variation of the 19th century constructions of bureaucratic states.
See
―Introduction,‖
in Mombauer, Annika & Deist, Wilhelm, The
Kaiser, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 2003, pp. 2-3. Also
see the article in the aforementioned volume, ―The Kaiser‘s Elite? Wilhelm II
and the Berlin Administration, 1890-1914‖ by Katharine A. Lerman.
1086 MMZC, 1909,
v. I, pp. 3-16,
MMZC, 1909, v. III, p.49.
prepare a second motion regarding the salaries and reorganization of
the ministry to satisfy the concerns of the critical parliamentarians1087.
The scale of disparities of incomes and the gradual narrowing of these
discrepancies in the Ottoman Foreign Ministry was an indication of the
development and evolution of the modern bureaucracy and state. As observed,
this was not a linear and smooth process in which the former was repudiated and
the new was endorsed but rather an evolution in which distinctions were
retained and reproduced.
The rationalization and professionalization of the
diplomatic service, as well as other governmental offices, progressed without a
definite deadline. Nevertheless, 1908, and arguably to a lesser extent 1923, were two key turning
points in this inevitable process.
The move of the capital from Istanbul to Ankara protected Mustafa Kemal
from the predatory elite of the Old
Order. Therefore, instead
of surrendering to them, he could
demolish all the established strongholds of the aristocratic and imperial
order. What the relatively rationalized and impersonalized bureaucracy replaced
was not a pre-modern and unprofessional bureaucracy, but an institutional
culture of its own which had retained its own intimate and personalized
socialization. An institutional culture replaced another although the culture
of the Ottoman Foreign Ministry was
retained to a considerably extent in
the republican Foreign Office in Sıhhıye.
There were apparent continuities in the transition from
the Empire to the Republic. Nonetheless, the foundation of a republic also
meant dramatic changes in various areas. The relations established between the
state and its privileged servants were one of the distinctions between a Republic
and an Empire. Klinghardt, writing in 1924, just one year after the
proclamation of the republic, puts the main difference between the old times
and new times as the austerity and plainness of the style and aesthetics of the
new regime compared to the ostentation of the old regime. He contrasts these
two ―spirits‖ not with regard to architecture and ideology but predominantly
with regard to the aesthetics of governmental
offices and office
habits.1088 For Klinghardt, the new state in Ankara
1087 Tural, Erkan… p. 58.
1088 Klinghardt, Karl, Ankara-İstanbul Arası
İktidar Kavgası, İstanbul:
Profil, 2007, pp. 100-104. For the plain modernism of the republic
in architecture, see Bozdoğan, Sibel,
managed to halt the flamboyance and impudence of the imperial civil
servants and imposed the authority of a modern and effective state.
Klinghardt contrasts the toughness of the
―new men‖ with the elegance and effeminate-like courtliness and
empty pageantry of the imperial establishment. Klinghardt was mesmerized with
the end of the cosmopolitan world in
Istanbul smashed by the Prussian and egalitarian Ankara representing genuine Anatolian
Turkishness. For him, Ankara symbolized a new style of aesthetics not a world
apart from the communist aesthetics of the Bolsheviks and the European fascist
aesthetics of later years. One thing was for sure: The Ottoman pageantry, its
distinct culture, and the ethos imbued in the imperium had vanished for good or
bad.
7.4.
The Aristocratic Worlds of European Diplomatic Services
The pre-1914 diplomatic service was the most
aristocratic of all the civil services throughout Europe. ―The atmosphere within
the Habsburg foreign service was distinctly international and aristocratic.
Only 3 percent of the seventy-two senior diplomats posted outside
Austria-Hungary had no noble title. At the Balhausplatz, a prince, ten counts,
twenty-four barons, and thirty-two with simple noble predicates controlled the
bulk of the senior positions. Aristocrats, whether Austrian or Hungarian, held
the top diplomatic posts abroad and usually represented decades of familial
service to the Habsburg dynasty.‖1089 Russian diplomats ―in line with general
European practice, were from much grander social backgrounds than any of the domestic
civil servants.‖1090 ―Members
of the Swedish foreign
service were consequently recruited almost
exclusively from the high nobility
of the
Modernism and Nation Building: Turkish
Architectural Culture in the Early
Republic,
Seattle:
University of Washington Press, 2001.
1089 Williamson Jr.,
Samuel R, Austria-Hungary and the Origins
of the First World War, Basingstoke; New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 1991, p.
39. Also see Bridge, F.R, From Sadowa to
Sarajevo: The Foreign Policy of Austria-Hungary 1866-1914, London;Boston:
Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1972, p. 21.
1090 Lieven, Dominic,
Russia‟s
Rulers under the Old Regime, New Haven: Yale University
Press, 1989, p. 80.
country.‖1091 ―In Belgium, ‗(o)f the 169 diplomats that
can be accounted for in the period between 1830 and 1850, 120 were
noblemen.‘"1092 The dominance of aristocracy in the diplomatic
service prevailed throughout Europe until 1914 with the relative exception of
France, where diplomatic service was bourgeoisified to a certain extent
throughout the Third Republic, thanks to the conscious policies of Third
Republican politicians.1093 The pre-World War I years were the years
of talk of ―reform‖ to reorganize and ―modernize‖ the foreign offices and end
the aristocratic institutional culture since aristocratic cultures of
diplomatic services were not suitable for the complexities of the international
politics of the age. Although ―talk of reform‖
was in the air, the implementation of reforms remained
fairly limited1094 and foreign
offices successfully resisted
the efforts of the political
elites to reform the foreign
offices1095. Nevertheless, after World War I, diplomacy lost its blatantly aristocratic character
in all Europe to the lament of aristocrat diplomats, including a sad Galip
Kemali Söylemezoğlu writing in 1940s.1096
The typical 19th century diplomat did not
perceive his occupation as a profession but rather as an aristocratic pastime activity. The workload was far from being heavy and
1091 Calrlgren, Wilhelm, ―Sweden:
The Ministry for Foreign Affairs,‖
in The Times Survey of the Foreign Ministries of the World, Zara Steiner (ed.), Westport:
Times Books, 1982,
p. 459.
1092 Willequet,
Jacques. ―The Ministry of Foreign
Affairs: Belgium,‖ in The Times Survey of the Foreign Ministries of the World, Zara Steiner (ed.), Westport:
Times Books, 1982,
p. 78.
1093 Hayne, M.B, Ibid., p.
9-10.
1094 On the reform of the British
Foreign Office, see the articles
of Zara Steiner
below.
―The Last
Years of the Old Foreign Office 1898-1905,‖ The
Historical Journal, Vol. 6, No. 1 (1963), pp. 59-90; ―Grey, Hardinge and
the Foreign Office 1906-1910,‖ The
Historical Journal, Vol. 10, No. 3 (1967), pp. 415-439.
1095 For David Vincent, because the Foreign Office was the most elitist
office comprised of the members of
the traditional ruling class, it was the one that resisted the
professionalization and the Act of Nortcote-Trevelyan most. Vincent, David, The Culture
of Secrecy in Britain, 1832-1898, Oxford; New York: Oxford
University Press, 1998, p. 79.
1096 Söylemezoğlu,
Galip Kemali. Hariciye Hizmetinde Otuz
Sene, İstanbul: Şaka Matbaası,
1949, pp. 285-86.
―there was time for friends and visitors.‖1097 In other
words, diplomacy was a part of the aristocratic way of life. It was not seen as
a profession practiced for income and material reward but as an activity performed for prestige, glamour, and family
reputation. Naturally, given
that such an understanding of diplomacy prevailed in the foreign ministries,
the organizations of foreign ministries remained backward in the nineteenth
century in terms of their
professionalism, organizational structures, and bureaucratic efficiencies in
comparison to the other ―reforming‖ governmental offices. In the heyday
of the Concert of Europe,
diplomacy was seen as a culture of aristocratic socialization.1098
As the Concert of Europe unraveled and the complexities of international
affairs became more sophisticated, an attempt at professionalization and
―disciplining‖ of the foreign offices was undertaken.1099 However,
by the outbreak of World War I, as suggested above, the reforms had been only
partially successful.
In the British Foreign Office, diplomats and Foreign
Office officials were strictly separated. ―Diplomacy was recognized as elitist
service... By 1914, career diplomatists numbered 150, forming a closed, gilded
circle, staffed in the main by the sons of peers, landowners, and aspiring gentry, and drawn primarily from the prestige
public schools and
1097 Steiner, Zara, The Foreign
Office… p. 16. It was not different in the Ottoman embassies. See Abdülhak
Hamid… p. 351.
1098 For the intimate world of the British Office, see Henry Drummond Wolf‘s introduction of his colleagues in the Foreign
Office. He introduces most of his colleagues with reference
to their fathers, mothers, and uncles whom he personally knows and expects the
reader to know due to their public prominence. Drummond Wolf, Henry, Rambling Recollections, London:
Macmillan and Co., 1908, pp. 61-65.
1099 The Concert of
Europe was perceived as the ―classical era of diplomacy.‖ The earliest academic
studies focused on the Concert of Europe and its management by the skillful
prime ministers and foreign ministers. In these earliest accounts of diplomatic
history, diplomacy is an art mastered by the knowledgeable men of aristocratic
descent. See Temperley, Harold, England
and the East: Crimea, London:
Longmans, Green and co., 1936; Temperley, Harold, The Foreign Policy of Canning
1822-1827, London: G. Bell and Sons, 1925; Webster,
Charles, The Foreign Policy
of Castlereagh, 1815-1822 : Britain and the European
Alliance, London: G. Bell, 1925; Webster, Charles, The Foreign
Policy of Palmerston
1830-1841, London: G. Bell, 1951.
Oxbridge colleges.‖1100 In contrast, Foreign Office
officials were less aristocratic than the diplomats. The reasons were obvious.
The expenses abroad were difficult to afford, especially bearing in mind that
their salaries were comparably modest and they were paid no salary
in the first two years of their service.1101 Apparently, such a material difficulty for the recruits was established to
discourage those who lacked means of self-financing and favored those who were
financially privileged. There was a sharp criticism leveled against this
discriminatory practice. Both services cultivated prejudices against each
other. ―The Foreign Office... tended to regard diplomatists as dilettantes and
social butterflies. Quite naturally, a degree of competition, if not latent
hostility, developed between the two services... continued until 1919 when
formal amalgamation took place.‖1102 A transition between these two
services was an exception, and such a move was not seen as laudable nor was it
encouraged. For a Foreign Office official, a transfer to a diplomatic post
meant degradation. For a diplomat, a post in the Foreign Office meant
deterioration in social standing.
The idea that diplomacy is not a source of income was
well established in the French and German Foreign Offices as well. ―No requirement
was so carefully observed, as the rule formally in effect until 1908, that
candidates had to have independent incomes…The Wilhelmstrasse had first
insisted in the 1880s that candidates give evidence of private wealth, with the annual
figure set at 6,000 marks.‖1103 In Austria, ―admission to the foreign office was not in the first place
decided by the obligatory diplomatic examination but by social status;
for a leading position in the Foreign Service, proof of a fixed income, which
1100 Rose, Norman, Harold Nicolson,
London: Jonathan Cape, 2005, p. 29, also see Otte, T.G, ―Almost a Law of
Nature? Sir Edward Grey, the Foreign Office and the Balance of Power in Europe
1905-1912,‖ Diplomacy and Statecraft,
Vol. 8, No. 2 (2003), p. 79.
1101 Moreover, for a candidate to be
admitted as a diplomat, he had
to have a yearly income of € 400. See ―Steiner, Zara, ―The
Foreign Office Reforms 1919-1921,‖ The
Historical Journal, Vol. 17, No. 1 (Mar., 1974), p. 137. The conditions
were not different in czarist Russia. ―It was not easy to meet the expenses
of diplomatic life in a major European
capital without some addition to one‘s official salary.‖ Lieven,
Dominic, Ibid., p.196.
1102 ibid., p. 30
1103 Cecil, Lamar, ibid., p. 39.
made it possible to fulfill the duties of representation, was also
required.‖1104 ‖This was a common practice, enforced also in …Russia
and Italy as well.‖1105 In Italy, ―the candidate had to be
‗possessed of sufficient financial means to maintain the volunteer in the
Italian consulates abroad and, for
a diplomatic career,
a compulsory income
of 6,000 lire‘; this last figure was fairly high so as to
ensure that the number of candidates was limited.‖1106 In the Quai
d‘Orsay, ―(u)ntil 1894 candidates (applying for the Foreign Office) had to have
a private income of 6, 000 francs.‖1107The French Foreign Office was an island of
aristocracy in the sea of republicanism. ―French governments (of the Third
Republic) were prone to send aristocrats of great standing to important posts.
Moreover, even if a Republican represented the French government, he usually
made a clear distinction between internal and international
politics…(R)epublicanism was simply not
an export commodity. Like his aristocratic counterpart, the new Republican
diplomat also found parliamentary politics thoroughly repugnant (.)‖1108
In an effort to make the Quai d‘Orsay more bourgeois, ―the Republic had
attempted to upgrade salaries in the hope of attracting permanent officials of
bourgeois Republican persuasion.‖1109 This policy did not work out
primarily because the social costs of expenses of diplomatic corps were not
affordable for a state official dependent on a salary. Although in the Ottoman
Empire there was no strict separation of diplomatic posts and Foreign Office
posts and diplomats were assigned to both tracks, these two tracks had their autonomies. The diplomatic posts were
filled by men of comparably higher social origins and respectability.1110
1104 Rumpler, Helmut,
―The Foreign Ministry of Austria and Austria-Hungary 1848 to 1918,‖ in The Times Survey of the Foreign Ministries
of the World, Westport: Times Books,
1982, p. 54.
1105 ibid., p. 39.
1106 Serra, Enrico, ―Italy:
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs,‖ in The Times Survey
of Foreign Ministries of the
World, Zara Steiner (ed.), Westport: Times Books, 1982, p. 298.
1107 Hayne, M.B, ibid, p. 8.
1108 ibid., p. 10.
1109 ibid., p. 20.
1110 For the necessity of appointing diplomats coming from prosperous
and respectable families to the post of ambassador in the Ottoman Empire, see
Söylemezoğlu, Galip Kemali… p. 286.
In reaction
to the rising popularity of social and economical history and the thesis of
―Der Primat der Innenpolitik,‖
Zara Steiner argued that the making of the British foreign policy and the road
to World War I was decided primarily by the independent exploits of the Foreign
Ministry. For Steiner, although several concerns might play a role in the
making and implementation of foreign policy, the determining force was the
closed world of diplomacy.1111 ―They operated in a closed
circuit and tended mainly to hear each other‘s
voices.‖1112 Denying a prominent role to social and economic forces
in determining foreign policy orientations, Steiner maintains that states and
―official minds‖ had an immense power to shape foreign policy orientations.
Moreover, the world of diplomacy was a socially exclusive world closed to the
worlds and minds of the non-official elites (such as industrialists)1113 and, therefore, the secluded ―diplomatic mind‖ strictly hindered
other
1111 Steiner, Zara
& Neilson, Keith, Britain and the
Origins of the First World War, Basingstoke; New York: Palgrave Macmillan,
2003 (original publication in 1977 authored by Steiner alone) Other studies
also developed balanced conclusions as to whether social forces or imperatives
of the states had been decisive in the making of World War I. For such
accounts, see Bosworth, Richard, Italy
and the Approach of the First World War, London: Macmillan, 1983; Keiger,
John, France and the Origins of the First
World War, London: St. Martin‘s
Press; 1983; Wilson,
Keith, The Policy of the Entente, Cambridge,
U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 1985.
1112 Steiner, Zara, The Foreign
Office… p. 210.
1113 For a criticism of the ―economist‖ of the aristocratic antipathy of the diplomats towards the commercial world, see
Steiner, Zara, ―The Foreign Office Reforms 1919-1921,‖ The Historical Journal, Vol. 17, No. 1 (Mar., 1974), p. 138. For a
general assessment of the closed world and mentality of the Foreign Office, see
Steiner, Zara, The Foreign Office and Foreign Policy, 1898-1914,
Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 1969. Also see the classic
work of Robinson
and Gallagher in which they argued that imperialism
erupted from the ―official mind‖ of the British state denying that imperialism
was an outcome of the amalgamation of the complex dynamics of economics and
militarism. Gallagher J. & Robinson, R. & Deny, A., Africa and the Victorians: The Official Mind
of Imperialism, Macmillan, 1961. Erik Goldstein, one of the leading scholars
of British diplomacy, employs the idiom of ―official mind‖ to define a
particular tendency and culture to investigate British diplomacy. Among his
articles, see Goldstein, Erik, ―The
British
Official Mind and the Lausanne Conference, 1922-23,‖ Diplomacy & Statecraft, 1557-301x, Volume
14, Issue 2, 2003, pp. 185-206; Goldstein, Erik. ―Neville Chamberlain, the British
Official Mind and the Munich Crisis,‖ Diplomacy & Statecraft, 1557-301x, Volume 10, Issue 2, 1999,
pp. 276-292; Goldstein, Erik. ―The British
Official Mind and Europe,‖ Diplomacy
& Statecraft, 1557-301x, Volume 8, Issue 3, 1997, p. 265-278. Also see
Goldstein, Erik, Winning the Peace,
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1991.
alternative visions and perspectives from contributing to the
molding of foreign policy, avoiding any external influence of any sort.
Apparently, the diplomats shared a common educational
background besides a common social background. A comparison between education
systems and universities of various countries is illuminating.1114
Britain was the country where institutions of
education were most strictly exclusive to non-aristocracy. In fact,
Oxbridge functioned to sustain the social, political, and cultural superiority
of the aristocracy. The Oxbridge and public schools were strictly
nonegalitarian, class conscious, and class-based.1115 The Prussian
gymnasiums were state institutions launched to recruit and educate future
knowledgeable bureaucrats trained
in a Humboldtian neo-humanist culture
and imbue them with Bildung,1116 In gymnasiums, nobles and non-nobles were
trained together without discrimination, especially in the late 19th century. In Russia, in contrast, education
was overtly non-aristocratic. It was the sons of the poor, the lower middle
classes, and the non- privileged who crowded the best universities in St.
Petersburg and Moscow and cultivated contempt and hatred against the
philistine, indolent, and unproductive aristocracy during their education.
Lieven notes that in the Russian universities (and in the Moscow University in particular), it was the
scions of aristocracy who were discriminated against.1117 In
contrast to the Prussian case, the Russian state failed to absorb and assimilate the university students. As a result, a grave and insurmountable social
1114 For a general survey of the 19th century European universities and
national traits of the university
systems, see Rüegg, Walter (ed.), Universities
in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century (1800-1950), Cambridge, U.K.
: Cambridge University Press, 2004; Jarausch, Konrad, The Transformation of Higher Learning 1860-1930:, Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1983.
1115 Anderson. R.D, European Universities from the Enlightenment
to 1914, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004, p. 191. Also see Soffer,
Erba, Discipline and Power: The
University, History and the Making of an English Elite, 1870-1930,
Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1994; Deslandes, Paul, Oxbridge Men, Bloomington: Indiana
University Press, 2005.
1116 For the 19th century
German universities, see Anderson. R.D. Ibid., pp. 51-65.; Ringer, Fritz, Education and Society in Modern Europe, Bloomington: Indiana
University Press, 1979.
1117 See Lieven,
Dominic, The Aristocracy in Europe,
1815-1914, New York: Columbia
University Press, 1993, pp.161-180.
contradiction emerged between the aristocracy and the new class of razhnochintsy.1118 The
Hamidian graduates of the Ottoman Empire demonstrated a similar pattern in
which the state‘s establishment of a
modern and fine education system created an undesired outcome. As the education
system paved the way to a communist takeover in Russia with the alienation of
the university graduate intellectuals, the egalitarian and relatively non-class
conscious Ottoman education system facilitated a Young Turk takeover against
which the Hamidian establishment and aristocracy remained helpless. The
constructions of the education systems were significant factors in determining
the evolution of national paths. In
the Ottoman and Russian cases, they became dysfunctional and worked against the
establishment.1119 The Hamidian graduates of imperial colleges
became adversaries of the system (although unlike their Russian peers, they
were employed within the state administration and thus perceived their
prospects in the state). Most of the upstarts cultivated resentment towards the
beneficiaries of the ―unproductive‖ establishment and were in favor of a more
efficient, productive, and meritocratic one.
Evidently, the diplomats in all the Great Powers of
Europe were graduated from privileged and secluded schools of aristocracy and
officialdom. The typical educational background of a British diplomat was
schooling in Eton and university training in Oxford. A few graduates of
Cambridge at the university level and graduates of other prestigious aristocratic public schools besides
Eton such as Harrow, Rugby,
and Wellington at the high school level were also observable.
Career in diplomacy was certainly closed to any outsider.1120 In
France, recruitment favored elite schools.1121 Austro-Hungarian
diplomats were predominantly graduates
of Theresianum, the school founded by Maria Theresa as a
1118 Alston, Patrick
L, Education and the State in Tsarist
Russia, Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1969.
1119 The two major
studies on Ottoman education are Somel, Akşin, The Modernization of Public Education in the Ottoman Empire 1839-1908:
Islamization, Autocracy and Discipline, Leiden; Boston; Köln: Brill, 2001;
Fortna, Benjamin, Imperial Classroom,
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002.
1120 For the lists and tables, see Steiner, Zara, ibid, pp. 217-221.
1121 Hayne, M.B, ibid., p. 22. For the elite schools in France training middle
class youth (as well as the promising youth of lower classes) and preparing
them for state service, see Bourdieu, Pierre,
The State Nobility: Elite Schools in the Field of Power, Cambridge, U.K.:
Polity Press, 1998.
center of patriotic imperial officialdom.1122 In a
republic with strong anti-aristocratic prejudices, over 60 percent of the
diplomats of the United States in the late 19th century were graduates of
Harvard, Yale, or Princeton.1123
In the Ottoman Empire, given that there were only a few
university level institutions, apparently the diplomats came predominantly from
Mülkiye and Mekteb-i Sultani. We observe that the graduates of Mülkiye and Mekteb-i Sultani who opted for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs came
from relatively conformist backgrounds in comparison with those graduates who
opted for other governmental offices. According to the list prepared by Ali
Çankaya, 8 percent (124 men) of the graduates of the Mülkiye joined Ministry of Foreign Affairs.1124 This
minority was comprised of the privileged graduates of Mülkiye. As pointed out
previously, this was seemingly due to the costliness of the life of a diplomat.1125
7.5.
The End of the World of Aristocracy and Gentlemanly Diplomacy
The aristocratic culture
of public administration enabled the 19th century configuration
of the foreign offices to prevail, creating very limited
friction until World War I. In
France, prior to World War I, new recruits who were dubbed ―Young Turks‖
reacted to the conservative style of conduct of diplomacy. The French Young Turks were nationalists and Germanophobes.1126 Whereas the ambassadorial elite, comprised of men of aristocratic
1122 Williamson Jr., Samuel R., ibid., p. 39.
1123 Ilchman, Warren
Frederick, Professional Diplomacy in the
United States 1779-1939, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1961, p. 78.
This educational elitism was retained after the early 20th century reform. See
p. 95.
1124 Çankaya, Ali, Yeni Mülkiye Tarihi ve Mülkiyeliler,
Ankara: Mars Matbaası, 1968- 1971, v. 8, page opposing 164. For a discussion,
see Findley, Carter, Ottoman Civil…
pp. 157-58.
1125 For a comparative survey of the graduates of Mülkiye, see the
impressive documentation of Ali Çankaya. Çankaya,
Ali, Yeni Mülkiye Tarihi ve Mülkiyeliler, Ankara: Mars Matbaası, 1968-1971, 8
volumes.
1126 Hayne, ibid., p. 199. For the rise of anti-German sentiment in the
British Foreign Office, see Corp,
Edward T, ―Sir Charles Hardinge
and the Question
of Intervention in the
background, held on to the alliances system to maintain peace, the
Young Turks advocated an aggressive policy toward Germany and were willing to
risk a war if necessary. The disagreements between the ambassadorial elite
consisted of the ambassadors appointed to St. Petersburg, London, Berlin, and
other old guards who advocated pursuing delicate diplomatic negotiations and
Young Turks in the Centrale, who
advocated a tougher and uncompromising stance and created mischief in the
Moroccan Crisis in 1909. The crisis was finally resolved with a Franco-German
agreement thanks to the workings of the old guard.1127 The Austrian
historian Fritz Fellner argued that ―the unleashing of the war (World War I-DG)
could be attributed in no small part to the activities of younger diplomats in
the Viennese foreign office.‖1128 The ―old diplomacy,‖ which not
only referred to the method and conduct of the craft of diplomacy, but also to
the aristocratic culture, paved the way to a new culture of diplomacy
determined by competing nationalisms and unilateralist postures in contrast to
the premises of the old diplomacy. The
old diplomacy was based on a mutual understanding of the shared interests of
the aristocratic ruling classes.1129
―However
self-enclosed or socially exclusive, this was a professional elite whose
interests went beyond national borders. Because, with few exceptions, the same
kind of men staffed the departments of all the states, they understood each
other, they spoke the same language,
read the same books. Members of the diplomatic establishment were the
multinationals of their time. William Tyrell, Sir Edward Grey‘s pre-war private secretary spent his vacations from 1900 to 1910 at the home of Prince
Hugo von Radolin, the German ambassador in Paris, whose mother-in-law was in
turn a Talleyrand. Members of the profession, despite the occasional
chauvinist, thought of themselves as members of a cosmopolitan, culturally homogenous,
Boer War: An
Episode in the Rise of Anti-German Feeling in the British Foreign Office,‖ The Journal of Modern History, Vol. 51,
No. 2, On Demand Supplement (Jun., 1979), p. D1071-D1084
1127 Hayne, ibid., p. 143.
1128 Fellner, Fritz,
―Die ‗Mission Hoyos‘‖ in Deutschlands Sonderung von Europa 1862- 1945, Wilhelm
Alf (ed.), 1984, pp. 283-316 quoted in Mombauer, Annika. The Origins of the First World War: Controversies and Consensus, New
York: Longman, 2002, p. 188.
1129 For some
―masters‖ of old diplomacy, see Busch, Briton Cooper, Hardinge of Penhurst: A Study in the Old Diplomacy, Hamden, Conn:
Archon Books, 1980; Nicolson, Harold, Portrait
of a Diplomatist: Being the Life of Sir Arthur Nicolson, First Lord Carnock, London: Houghton
Mifflin, 1930.
European
family…They were the defenders of the same institutions, national and
international. They were conscious of the common lines that kept the peace
between them and had a vested
interest in their preservation. There were unspoken
assumptions about the way diplomacy should be conducted that influenced
behavior at home and abroad.‖1130
In old diplomacy, the diplomats met not to maximize their own
party‘s interest to the disfavor of the other party, but to reach a compromise
on common ground to protect and advance their shared
class-based interests. ―Europe‘s elite was more closely tied by culture and concrete interests to an
international class than to the classes below them.‖1131 It was so
much so that the Danish foreign minister Christian Bernstorff, who was an
ethnic German like most of the Danish diplomats1132 and whose father
was a Danish foreign minister as well, was transferred to Prussia as the new
Prussian foreign minister to serve from 1818 to 18321133. This class-based multilateralism under the tutorship of Great Britain became
unfeasible after the rise of Germany and
emergence of rival alliances and camps in the last decades of the 19th
century.
The responsibility for World War I is a matter of
controversy, both as a political issue and as an academic debate. Fischer, in
the 1960s, argued that Germany bore the sole responsibility for World War I.1134
Moreover, for Fisher it was not the German Foreign Office but the Chiefs of Staff that intentionally opted for a
war. According to Fisher, it
was the deliberate calculation of the militarist elite that had instigated the Armageddon.1135
1130 Steiner, Zara,
―Introduction,‖ in The Times Survey of
Foreign Ministries of the World, Westport: Times Books, Zara Steiner (ed.),
1982, pp. 16-17.
1131 Halperin,
Sandra, War and Social Change in Modern
Europe, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 2004, pp. 30-31.
1132 Kjolsen, Klaus,
―The Royal Danish Ministry of Foreign
Affairs,‖ in The Times Survey of Foreign
Ministries of the World, Westport: Times Books, Zara Steiner (ed.), 1982,
p. 166.
1133 Baack, Lawrence
J, Christian Bernstorff and Prussia,
New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1980, p. 21.
1134 Fischer, Fritz, Germany‟s Aims in the First World War,
New York: W.W. Norton, 1967 (original German publication 1961)
1135 For such an
interpretation also see Geiss, Imanuel, German
Foreign Policy 1871-1914, London; Boston: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1976;
Berghahn, Volker, Germany and the
Approach of War in 1914, London: St. Martin‘s
Press, 1973. For a recent
critique of the
However, others questioned the argument for the sole responsibility
of Germany and suggested that the escalation of tensions, the irreconcilable
nature of the Great Power aggressions and many other structural factors
rendered a great war possible if not inevitable. Examining the change of
attitudes, perceptions and the ideologies within the foreign offices of Britain
and France as well as Germany supports such a claim.1136 The new
cadres of diplomats were more nationalistic (even chauvinistic), and they were
eager to demolish the international
gentlemanly diplomacy.1137 Realpolitik
and national interest became the catchwords of the new generation of the
diplomatic service. These catchwords replaced the hegemonic discourses of
―balance of powers‖ and reciprocity.1138 Furthermore, every single
incident and clash of interests began to be taken as ends in themselves instead
of being seen as parts
of a whole. Therefore, trying to maximize
Fischer thesis,
see Mombauer, Annika, The Origins of the
First World War: Controversies and Consensus, New York: Longman, 2002, pp.
127-164; Mombauer, Annika, Helmuth Von
Moltke and the Origins of the First World War, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge
University Press, 2001, pp. 1-6.
1136 With regard
to Italy, C.J. Lowe and F. Marzari
note that the right was able
to determine the course of foreign
policy thanks to the right-wing nature of the diplomatic corps. See Lowe, C.J.
& Marzari, F, Italian Foreign Policy
1870-1940, London; New York: Routledge, 2002, p. 8. They also note that the
lack of any substantial ideas on the part of the Italian left with regard to
foreign policy (with the exception of Crispi) facilitated the control of
foreign policy by the right-wing diplomatic establishment.
1137 For a parallel observation regarding the shift of the making of the
Russian foreign policy, Lieven D.C.B, Russia
and the Origins of the First World War, London: Macmillan,
1984, p. 64. For the depiction of the Russian
diplomatic corps, see Lieven, Ibid.,
pp. 84-
102. Also see
the pro-German disposition in the makers of Russian foreign policy originated
from an ideological position defending authoritarianism as an ideology, see
Lieven, D.C.B, ―Pro-Germans and Russian Foreign Policy 1890-1914,‖ International History Review, 11 (1980).
1138 For a literature
of ―war aims‖ developed by the political elites, the military and the
diplomatic establishments in the years before the world war and revision
of the ―war aims‖ in the heat
of the war; see Gooch, John, Plans of War, London; New York: Routledge
& K. Paul, 1974; Stone,
Norman, The Eastern Front: 1914-1917,
London: Penguin, 1998; Kennedy, Paul (ed.), The
War Plans of the Great Powers 1880-1914,
Boston: Allen & Unwin, 1979; French, David, British Economic and Strategic Planning 1905-1915, London; Boston:
Allen & Unwin, 1982; French, David, British
Strategy and War Aims 1914-1916, London; Boston: Allen & Unwin, 1986.
All these works attest the changing military, political and strategic planning
and maneuvers of the European powers in a transforming political world as a whole that had
prepared the ground for the upcoming
war.
national interest on every occasion naturally triggered the
escalation of tensions and the irreconcilability of interests.
It was also the beginning of the 20th century when
ideology and politics made their way into the Foreign Offices. Ideological and
political preferences and inclinations began to influence and shape the
advising and implementation of the foreign policy there. At this particular
time, national and ideological orientations became decisive in the making of
foreign policy as the old cosmopolitan and aristocratic cultures of the foreign
offices were collapsing. The rising antipathy towards Germany in the British Foreign Office, which was a manifestation of
these nationalistic and conservative inclinations, was a remarkable factor in the making of the anti-German
alliances with France and Russia, which prepared the ground for World War I.
Although the issue of responsibility for the outbreak of the war has been a controversy since 1914 and the culpability of Germany has been
maintained by many scholars. This
group of scholars includes not only Fritz Fisher and his followers (Imanuel
Geiss, Berghahn), but also other respected scholars, such as Albertini in
1940s, and Taylor, Steiner, and Lieven since then. However, it seems more
accurate to argue for common guilt with different levels of culpability. In an
era of ideological escalation, the outbreak of World War I cannot be regarded
as an accident or a consequence of the overreaching of one of the parties.
7.6.
Institutionalization, Modernization and Bureaucratization of Foreign Offices
The British Foreign Office evolved from being a small
bureau predominantly preoccupied with the deskwork of diplomacy to a
sophisticated office responsible not only for the coordination and conduct but
also the making of foreign policy throughout the second half of the 19th century, albeit very gradually. It was only on the eve of World War I that the Foreign Office was acknowledged as the
primary office responsible for foreign policy. In the 19th century, foreign policy was mainly the
domain of the foreign minister. ―Castlereagh completely ignored his staff,
Canning did all his own drafting... Palmerston wrote all important dispatches
himself and left only minor administrative details to his clerks.
He wanted abstracts
made, dispatches copied,
queries answered and
papers properly circulated, but he did not wish for or seek advice.‖1139
The Foreign Office grew in size and in its tasks throughout the second half of
the century. The number of dispatches handled by the Foreign Office increased
steadily (6,000 in 1829; 30,000 in 1849,
111,000 in 1905), but on the eve of World
War I, the staff of the Foreign Office numbered only 176, including doorkeepers
and cleaners.1140
In this era, a crucial development was the rise of the
permanent under-secretary. The traditional duties and responsibilities of the
permanent undersecretary (writing first drafts, preparing abstracts
of incoming dispatches, and even copying and ciphering) were replaced
by the advising and active coordination of the implementation and conduct of
foreign policy.1141 By the turn of 20th century, the permanent
undersecretary was perceived and regarded as the primary expert regarding
international politics and the most prominent counselor in the conduct of
foreign policy. Nevertheless, this transformation was not a linear and smooth
process. On the contrary, many Foreign Office staff, including permanent
under-secretaries, resisted the imperatives of the modernization of the Foreign
Office. The conventional perception of the task of the Foreign Office was
sustained in the minds of the officials. Many permanent undersecretaries
avoided assuming political powers.1142 In short, the Foreign Office
lagged behind the other governmental offices in assuming the responsibilities
of a modern bureaucratic state, predominantly due to its aristocratic
character.
The reforms of 1905 determined the character of the
modern Foreign Office and signaled the end of the old order.1143
While many continued to question as late as the Cold War if the British Foreign
Office had ever been reformed to adapt to the needs of 20th century, it became a nostalgic icon for those who remembered it at a later time within a
1139 Steiner, Zara, The Foreign Office and Foreign Policy,
1898-1914, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 1969, p. 3
1140 Steiner, Zara, ibid., p. 4
1141 Steiner, Zara, ibid, p.7
1142 Steiner, Zara, ibid, pp. 4-10.
1143 Steiner, Zara, ibid, p. 210.
much more professionalized profession of diplomacy.1144
The 1907 reforms in Quai d‘Orsay were less drastic and radical given that its
aristocratic character had already been considerably effaced1145.
However, the most radical reform, which was in fact no less than a revolution,
was undertaken by Schüler just after World War I in Weimar Germany. The German
foreign office was also Weimarized/republicanized by the eradication of its
aristocratic heritage and its commercialization and bourgeoisification under the supervision of Schüler.1146
These reforms, which were undertaken in all major European countries,
significantly curtailed the cultural characteristics and distinctions of
foreign offices. Although all the foreign offices continued to retain their own
cultures and characteristics,1147 they began to look alike more than
ever and transformed (at least) into semi-Weberian bureaucracies. It was the
strange death of the Old Order.
It is also striking to observe that such a small number
of people played such a fundamental and determinative role in the making of
world politics, especially regarding the advent of World War I. ―Ministries
remained tight organizations right until the First World War. Russia was the
outstanding exception (.) Elsewhere, few foreign offices, even among the great
powers, employed more than 50 officials at mid-century, or between 100 and 150
men on the eve of the Great War. The French, for instance, increased the number
of their officials from 80 in 1870 to 170 (excluding doorkeepers, typists,
etc.) in 1914. The Danish Foreign Ministry
increased from nine officials in 1848 to 21 in 1914, the Dutch
1144 See reminiscences of the pre-reform Foreign Office by Sir Hughe
Knatchbull- Hugessen, Diplomat in Peace
and War, London: J. Murray, 1949, p. 11.
1145 Hayne, M.B, ibid, p. 170.
1146 Doss, Kurt, ―The
History of the German Foreign Office,‖ in The
Times Survey of Foreign Ministries of the World, Zara Steiner (ed.),
Westport: Times Books,
1982, pp. 235- 40.
1147 For example the American State Department resisted all efforts at
reform and retained its own informal culture. See Scott, Andrew M,
―Environmental Change and Organizational Adaptation: The Problem of the State
Department,‖ International Studies
Quarterly, Vol. 14, No. 1 (March 1970), pp. 85-94; Scott, Andrew M, ―The Department of State: Formal Organization and Informal
Culture,‖ International Studies Quarterly,
Vol. 13, No. 1 (March, 1969), pp.
1-18. For the partial success of the reform in the State Department in the late 19th and early 20th century, see Werking,
Richard Hume, The Master Architects: Building the United
States Foreign Service 1890-1913, Lexington: The University Press of
Kentucky, 1977.
from 23 in 1849 to 45 in 1914.‖1148 It is also striking
to observe how limited the level of professionalism was in offices which had
immensely influenced, shaped, and designed the modern world. The secluded
worlds of Foreign Offices led the course of history. Given the smallness of
these offices, the role these individuals and small groups of men played in the
shaping of the modern world order is striking.
7.7.
The Bismarckian and Wilhelmine German Foreign Office
Among the Foreign offices throughout Europe, the German
Foreign Office was arguably the one that resembled the Hamidian Foreign Office
most in terms of its incorporation of loyalty, subservience to the throne, and
high level of professionalism. The German foreign office was the foreign office
with the least institutional autonomy vis-à-vis
its political superiors, compared to its British and French counterparts.
During the chancellorship of Bismarck, the foreign office was completely
subservient to him. Bismarck controlled the ministry via his son, whom he
appointed as the foreign minister. The subservience of the foreign office
prevailed after the downfall of Bismarck. In spite of his disregard of the
diplomatic service, Bismarck was held in esteem by the diplomatic service,
whose exceptional level of knowledge of international affairs, skill in
conducting foreign relations, and political genius were acknowledged and
revered. ―Under Bismarck, if diplomats were allowed only a limited initiative,
they could at last be confident that they were serving Europe‘s preeminent
statesman and the policies they would be expected to implement would be
reasoned and coherent.‖1149 In contrast, Wilhelm II was seen as a
reckless and unreliable amateur, if not a charlatan. However, although the
destructive intrusions of the Kaiser were resented by the diplomats and his
damage to the professionalism of the diplomatic service infuriated them, from
1890 to 1914, there was not a single resignation from the service in reaction to these arbitrary and coarse
1148 Steiner, Zara,
―Introduction,‖ in The Times Survey of
Foreign Ministries of the World, Steiner, Zara (ed.), Westport: Times
Books, 1982, p. 13.
1149 Cecil, Lamar …p. 256
intrusions.1150 Apparently, in the clash between
professionalism and aristocratic loyalties, the aristocratic loyalties
determined the deeds of the officials. In fact, these two attributes do not
necessarily contradict. They may coexist. Nonetheless, what we observe is that
aristocratic ethics came first since professionalism was an aptitude to be
acquired and practiced whereas the culture of aristocracy was a habitus, a code
of conduct, and a merit.
The only exception to the total subservience of the
foreign office was the immense control Holstein exerted over the ministry
during his tenure as the senior counselor of the Political Division.1151
Holstein was a figure that Bismarck had to take into consideration during his
chancellorship; but Holstein‘s power reached its zenith during the ministry of
Caprivi, who was inexperienced in foreign affairs and, therefore, in this
period, Holstein reigned over the ministry de facto. With the exception of
Holstein, the highest-ranking positions lacked prominence and never played major
roles in policy making. ―The under-
secretary was completely subservient to the state secretary, and it was,
therefore, a post to be avoided‖1152 for the German diplomats.
The German diplomatic service was one of the clearest
examples of the European- wide practice of diplomacy as a game involving
gentlemen. It was strictly elitist. The German diplomatic service was
predominantly Protestant. Only a few Jews ever served in the office.1153
Sixty-nine percent of the Foreign Ministry officers bore titles of nobility.1154
Moreover, most of these officials came from certain families which were closely
related and affiliated with others operating within a closed circle.1155
It is not surprising that for Bismarck what a diplomat should know and do best was socialize
in aristocratic salons and
1150 Cecil, Lamar p. 256.
1151 For Holstein, the éminence gris of
German diplomatic service, see Rich, Norman, Friedrich von Holstein: Politics and Diplomacy in the Era of Bismarck
and Wilhelm II, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 1965 (2 vols); Rich, Norman & Fisher, M.
H. (ed.), The Holstein Papers, Cambridge, U.K. :
Cambridge University Press, 1955 (4 vols).
1152 Cecil, Lamar, ibid, p. 158.
1153 Röhl, John, ―The Splendour and Impotence of the German Diplomatic Service,‖ in The Kaiser and His Court, Cambridge,
U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 1996, p. 154.
1154 Cecil, Lamar, ibid, p. 66.
1155 For the prominent families who recruited their scions into diplomacy and their political and social connections, see Cecil, Lamar, ibid, p.
67.
display the best manners.1156 Nevertheless, the
aristocratic nature of German diplomacy went hand-in-hand with an aggressive and fervent foreign
policy conducted both by Bismarck
and Wilhelm II. German diplomatic aristocratic culture
did not hinder the uncompromising tone of German foreign policy which, in the end, destroyed ―Old Europe‖ and its
political order. On the contrary, it
perceived aggression as a manifestation of the ethos of the aristocratic
culture and upbringing of its members.
Apparently, aristocratic distinctions in the original medieval era were distinguished
by military vigilance and maintained with military honor. What the Wilhelmine German aristocratic culture did was uphold this militarized
ethos and exercise it within
modern militarist politics
and culture.1157 Together
with the fact that
Germany was seeking a place under the sun, German aristocratic culture did not
become a bastion of order and status quo in the international arena but an
anti-status quo force that was forced
in the end to bow to the non-aristocratic radicals. This is not surprising given the fact that the German
old regime had developed its own ―peculiarities‖ and had not followed the path of the liberal/conservative credo of the British
old regime. No two old regimes
resemble each other. In that regard, the Ottoman Hamidian
Foreign Ministry oscillated between
subterranean radicalism and anti-status quo intentions, and pro-status
quo conservatism. In time, it gravitated from the latter
to the former as the ―ancien régime‖
generation passed away and international developments increasingly obliged it to change.
7.8.
The Hamidian Ministry of Foreign Affairs
in Comparative Perspective
The political division of the Ottoman Ministry of Foreign
Affairs was formed after the Revolution of 1908. The institution of the political
division was a sign of the relative
1156 Cecil, Lamar, ibid, pp. 238-239.
1157 Vagsts, Alfred, A History of Militarism, New York: The
Free Press, 1967, pp. 62-64, 65-74, 175-79. For the pivotal role of military
honor and spirit in the German aristocratic tradition, see also Craig, Gordon, The Politics of the Prussian Army, 1640-1945,
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1964; Brose, Eric Dorn, The Kaiser‟s Army, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001. For this
ethos in Austria, see Barker, Thomas, Army,
Aristocracy, Monarchy; Essays on War, Society and Government in Austria,
1618-1780, Boulder: Social Science
Monographs, 1982.
―autonomization‖ and institutionalization of the ministry
after the Hamidian
yoke had been lifted and a further step toward
professionalization, distancing itself from its aristocratic culture.
Nevertheless, the workings of the ―political divisions‖ in Britain and Germany
show that the political divisions work not within a Weberian bureaucratic ethos
but within an aristocratic ethos and worldview. The ―myth of professionalism‖ does not apply to these bureaus. The bureaus based on
geographical specialization were formed only after the proclamation of the
republic. This was one more step toward professionalization,
institutionalization, and bureaucratization in the Weberian sense.
Interestingly, geographical bureaus based on geographical specialization were
formed in the Western foreign offices after World War I at the same time as
their Turkish counterpart as one of the
reforms undertaken to professionalize these offices.1158
To recap, as a continent-wide trend, foreign offices
reached the zenith of their institutional power on the eve of World War I. This
period was characterized by the meteoric expansion of bureaucracy and the
development of bureaucratic professionalism. It was followed by the advent of the
democratization of politics and governments following the devastating world
war. The democratization and the middle-class takeover of the governments and
administrations would bring about the imposition of political infringement on
the bureaucracy.1159 The bureaucracy and the political elites no
longer came from the same cultural and social class. The change of the class
character of the political elites destroyed the coherence of the bureaucracy
and political decision-makers in favor of the new political elites. The
antipathy and distrust of Lloyd George towards the diplomatic service is well known. The liberal Lloyd George, who liked to expose his lower
1158 For the postbellum introduction of the regional bureaus in the
French and German foreign offices, see Lauren, Paul Gordon, Diplomats and Bureaucrats, Stanford:
Hoover Institution Press, 1976, p. 93, p. 128.
1159 For Britain,
among many other valuable narratives, see Cannadine, David, The Decline and Fall of the British
Aristocracy, New Haven: Yale University Press, 1990; Cannadine, David, Aspects of Aristocracy, New Haven: Yale
University Press, 1994. Also see the classic work, Dangerfield, George, The Strange Death of Liberal England,
Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1998 (originally published in 1935). The
destruction of the Old Regime in Germany
was incomparably ruthless. Germany had transformed and became the
―first truly modern
experiment‖ from being the bastion of conservatism and hierarchical political
society. See Peukert, Detlev, The Weimar
Republic: The Crisis of Classical Modernity, London: Penguin, 1993.
class origins on various occasions, disdained the snobbery of the
diplomatic service and made foreign policy decisions with minimal coordination
with the Foreign Office.1160 While he ignored the Foreign Office, he
made his decisions in consultation with his informal ―garden cabinet.‖ From the
prime ministry of Lloyd George onwards, the British Foreign Office was
sidelined and lost its centrality in the decision-making process.1161
Its monopoly in shaping foreign policy was taken away, and some of the
components of the foreign policy-making process were distributed to various
governmental offices. This process destroyed the self-perception of the
exceptionalism that the privileged foreign policy establishment enjoyed and the
idea that foreign policy had to be conducted and implemented behind closed
doors by knowledgeable experts, thus rendering the political elites‘ position
stronger vis-à-vis the bureaucratic establishment.
The reign of Vansittart in the British Foreign Office (and his
failure to lead foreign policy due to
the opposition of the political elite) was the
last case of the éminence grises and
a swan‘s song, thus bringing to a
close the generation of the great
diplomats that had begun in early 20th century. The ―golden age of the diplomats‖ contained such impressive names as Holstein and Schüler in Germany, and
Hardinge, Eyre, and Crowe in Britain. These ―grey eminences,‖ who exerted
immense power and controlled the implementation and making of foreign policy
from the back of desks owing to their professionalism, erudition and respectability, were the product
of a particular and idiosyncratic era. With the end
of the ―old order‖ in diplomacy, enigmatic and thundering grey eminences disappeared and gave the floor to the
dreary Weberian desk worker bureaucrats. The ―old diplomacy‖ in which
personal skills and interpersonal relations were decisive and which
was part of the
conduct of business gave way to a depersonalized diplomacy in which
personalities mattered less. The new mode of diplomacy hindered and limited the
role of individuals in favor of the preponderance of the structural and political dynamics. Regarding the
1160 Maisel, Ephraim,
The Foreign Office and Foreign Policy
1919-1926, Brighton: Sussex Academic Press, 1994, p. 68.
1161 For the efforts of the Foreign Office to adapt to the new
circumstances, see Sharp, Alan, ―Adapting to a New World? British Foreign
Policy in the 1920s.‖Contemporary British
History, Autumn 2004, Vol. 18 Issue 3, pp. 74-86. Also see Sharp, Alan,
―The Foreign Office in Eclipse, 1919-1922,‖ History,1976,
61, pp. 198-218; Warman, Roberta M, ―The Erosion of Foreign Office Influence in
the Making of Foreign Policy, 1916- 1918,‖ Historical
Journal, 15, 1 (1972), pp. 133-159.
Ottoman/Turkish case, a similar pattern is observable with one
difference. The zenith of the
institutional power of the ministry, not in terms of exerting influence on the
making of foreign policy but in terms of developing an institutionalized role
in the conduct of coordination of foreign policy and establishing its
institutional autonomy, was reached (after the collapse
of ―old diplomacy‖ and in the age of Weberian
bureaucratization) by the 1950s just after the end of the
single party rule1162.
However, this institutional power was a legacy of a process of decades. One
figure that may be seen as the master architect of the institutional power of
the ministry during the single party regime was Numan Menemencioğlu, the
general secretary of the Ministry between 1933 and 1942 and the Minister of Foreign Affairs
between 1942 and 1944, a figure
who is comparable to the grey
eminences of the pre-World War I of European diplomacies and embodying the
institutional power of the ministry in his persona. Apparently, this process was related with the
development of the institutionalization of bureaucracy in general. In Turkey,
the democratization of the political scene (not only in terms of the emergence
of an electoral democracy but also) in terms of the background of the
politicians was observed in 1950s which brought an end to the parliaments and
cabinets composed of ex-bureaucrats and weakened the institutional powers of
the bureaucratic offices.1163 Although, in Turkey, the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs retained its institutional culture, privilege and relative autonomy due
to the peculiarities of Turkey, the post-1950 was a new era for the Turkish
diplomatic service as well1164.
1162 The Ministry of Foreign Affairs
became much more influential in the making of foreign policy during the rule of Democrat Party (1950-1960) than the Kemalist
single
party period in which the
presidents (Atatürk and then İnönü) were decisive in the making of the foreign policy.
During the rule of Democrat
Party, the inexperienced Prime Minister Adnan
Menderes and Minister of Foreign Affairs Faud Köprülü ensued the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs to shape the foreign policy.
See Uzgel, İlhan, ―TDP‘nin Oluşturulması‖, in Oran, Baskın (ed.), Türk
Dış Politikası, İstanbul: İletişim Yayınları, 2001, v. I, p. 74, pp.
76-77.
1163 For the social
portrait of the Kemalist single-party period political elite,
see Frey, Frederick W., The Turkish Political Elite, Cambridge,
Mass. : M.I.T. Press, 1965.
1164 The democratically elected
governments continued to acknowledge a considerable autonomy to the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs seeing the international affairs as supra- political and conducted by the imperatives of state interests. However, the transformation
There is no evidence that the structuring of the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs was consciously modeled on any European example.
―There is no documentary evidence that the officials of the Ottoman Foreign
Ministry made any close study of the organization of the corresponding agencies
of European governments before 1908.‖1165 Yet, to conclude, we
observe a similar/parallel pattern and trajectory regarding the evolutions and
transformations of the Ottoman/Turkish Foreign Office and its Western
counterparts. This is not due to emulation but due to the fact that Ottoman 19th
century bureaucratic culture demonstrated a
similar path of evolution and transformation sharing the same
premises and externalities. One major difference is the time lag within
which change occurred in the Turkish Foreign Office.
The institutional zenith
of bureaucracy in Turkey was reached with the Kemalist regime, building upon
the institutional reforms already undertaken during the Hamidian and
post-Hamidian eras and the premises taken from the Hamidian establishment.
of the social
character of the political elites
had an impact on the relations between
the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the political authorities.
1165 Findley, Carter E, ibid, p.
262.
POSTSCRIPT: PASSAGES
OF THE DIPLOMATIC SERVICE FROM THE EMPIRE TO THE REPUBLIC
From 1908 onwards, the pace of change accelerated. The
―new men‖ came to power with an entirely new political agenda, vision of
politics, and social order. This transformation was not unique to the Ottoman
framework. A similar transition and transformation was visible in the European
scene as Europe approached World War I. The European mental structures were
evolving in a direction in which ideologies such as fascism, communism, and
Republicanism would later be able to flourish. This was not the world of
Metternich, Castlereagh, or Bismarck anymore. This was not the world of Âli
Pasha, Fuad Pasha, or Abdülhamid II either. The Ottoman Foreign Ministry which
mastered the ―balance of power politics‖ became out of fashion in the new world
of Machtpolitik. The Ministry was
less at home and therefore less influential in the coordination of policymaking in the post-1908
world of Machtpolitik. The aging diplomats belonging to the age of
Metternich-Castlereagh in Europe, who had faith in the traditional order and
inclined towards France and Britain (i.e., Europe), were alienated and
marginalized although they were also partially capable of adapting to the new
cultural and intellectual milieu and radicalizing in pursuit of the ―spirit of
the times‖.1166
Given that Ministry of
Foreign Affairs was part of the Tanzimat/Hamidian bureaucracy and its informal
culture, it cannot be separated and isolated from the attitudes and culture of the Tanzimat bureaucracy in general.
This elite encountered an unprecedented crisis
with the 1908 Revolution. The Kamil Pasha government which assumed
office after the Revolution due to the lack of experience
of the Young Turks may be regarded
as the ―last
1166 For an insight and comparison, see the observation of Lieven on the
gradual alteration of the making
of foreign policy from the
pragmatic style of the
―established elite‖ towards the ideologically committed (nationalist, panslav, rightist) new generation. Apparently,
this was not a linear shift from one style to another but a constant
struggle between different dispositions. Lieven, D.C.B, Russia and the Origins of the First World War, London: Macmillan,
1984, p. 64. Apparently, a similar vista is observable for the Ottoman context.
stand of the old/established Tanzimat bureaucracy. The Kamil Pasha
Cabinet was ousted from office by the Unionist parliament after a tense period
during which parliament, seeing itself as the representative of ―new
forces‖ against the ancien régime (devr-i sabık), clashed on various occasions severely with the Kamil Pasha cabinet. Kamil
Pasha‘s cabinet was ousted by
the parliament with a vote of no confidence1167, the first in the
Ottoman constitutional period.
The expectation of the Tanzimat bureaucracy in the first
years of the Second Constitutional Period was that it would regain the position
it had largely lost during the Hamidian era. This expectation did not
materialize. On the contrary, with 1908 it lost its power and influence
forever. This was true for the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs as well. The ministerial staff was scrutinized harshly by a
skeptical parliament. The salaries of its personnel were curtailed.1168
Many were dismissed from office in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs after the
conclusion of tensikat (purge). Many
parliamentarians expressed their dissatisfaction with the diplomats and
questioned their skills. The parliament was apparently distrustful of the
Ministry, seeing it as a hub of ancien
régime corruption and decadence.1169
If the
conventional assumption that the
Ottoman 19th century was characterized by the rule of the
state is true, then the Foreign Ministry like all the other imperial offices
should had been satisfied with the conduct of state affairs. The idea that
raison d‘état was the decisive motivation for Ottoman statecraft is simplistic and conceals the complex dynamics and particular interests that
pushed the 19th century transformation. Governance, underneath its claims to
objectivity and dispassionate appraisal, is never free of ideological/political
dimensions. There is inevitably always room for ideological preferences. The
conducting of state affairs was never a technocratic and professional business
even in non-representative authoritarian regimes. There was certainly room for
ideology at the high tides of both the Tanzimat
and the Hamidian eras. Nevertheless, their
1167 Tural, Erkan, Son Dönem Osmanlı Bürokrasisi: II Meşrutiyet Dönemi‟nde Bürokratlar, İttihatçılar ve Parlamenterler, İstanbul:
Türkiye ve Orta Doğu Amme İdaresi Enstitüsü, 2009, p. 34, pp. 130-147.
1168 Tural, Erkan, ibid, p.
58,68.
1169 MMZC, 1909, v. III, pp.
47-50.
ideological disposition was state-centered and unless it was
adamantly opposed, there was no self-recognition of its
ideological nature. Its ideological attributes became
manifest only when it was attacked by the Unionists at a time when
Unionist ideology was powerful enough to take control of the state and cleanse
the imperial offices from the traditional imperial powerhouses.
The post-1908
era was the transitional period from an imperial language to a
―national‖ one although this transition was not a linear and
inevitable path with the discourse of the nation replacing the failed discourse
of Empire. It may be formulated that, in many aspects ―the Empire was already
national and the Nation still imperial.‖1170 The Young Turks, although they were ardent
Turkish nationalists, did not denounce the Empire and the imperial idea. On the
contrary, they aimed to build their nationalist project on the top of the
imperial grandeur. Rather than abandoning Ottomanism, they Turkified
Ottomanism. They tried to retain and even strengthen the imperial idea while
trying to enact their national(ist) project. They had to reconstitute the
Empire along with their worldview and render the imperial and national
discourses compatible.
However, it has to be said that there was no one
identifiable and concrete Young Turk worldview.1171 It is even hard to argue that any individual ―Young Turk‖ had a consciously developed, proper, consistent,
and comprehensive worldview. The era can be characterized by a huge cloud of
ambivalence. The acts and moves of the Young Turks developed spontaneously. It
is clear that the Young Turk era and its disruption set the ground for the
Kemalists to take over. The
Kemalists managed to assume the control of the state thanks to the Young Turks‘
purge of the Tanzimat bureaucracy (or rical-i
Tanzimat). The continuity was an ideological one as well. We can establish
a link from the Young Turks to the Kemalists, especially in terms of
constructing a nationhood. But there were very strong discontinuities between
the two as well. In a sense, Kemalism was closer to the Hamidian view in its glorification and sacralization of the state
than the Young Turks‘ attempt
to
1170 For a book demonstrating the imperial characteristics of Republican
Turkey and Turkish nationalism, see Meeker, Michael, A Nation of Empire, Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002.
1171 Kayalı, Hasan, Young Turks
and Arabs, Berkeley: University
of California Press, 1997,
p. 3.
ideologize the state. Kemalism reestablished the ―primacy of the
state‖ which had been destroyed by the Young Turk zealots.
As the Ottoman government in Istanbul was abolished by
the leadership of the War of Independence on 1 November 1922, the Ottoman
Foreign Ministry was also abolished. With that decision, hundreds of officials
serving in the Ministry became unemployed. In two weeks time, all the foreign
representations of the Ottoman Empire were assigned to Ahmed Ferid (Tek), the
Paris representative of the Ankara government. Ahmed Ferid sent circulars to
the undersecretaries or other assigned officials to take over the
administration of the relevant embassies and representations.1172
For example, the man in charge in the London
embassy was no longer Mustafa Reşid Paşa, but Şefik Bey. In Stockholm, the head
of the representation became Esad Bey replacing the ambassador Galip Kemali
(Söylemezoğlu). However, decisions with regard to other heads of representations were not unambiguous.
Although Ahmed Ferid Bey assigned the second secretary, Numan Rifat Bey (Menemencioğlu), in place of the head
official, Reşat Nuri Bey, he informed Reşat Nuri Bey that this decision was
temporary and that he should stay in Berne and take a rest while waiting for
the final decision. It seems that some prominent diplomats with connections and
affiliations with the ancien régime were
eliminated and others who were not associated with the ancien régime were retained.1173
Before the proclamation of the Republic in 1923, like
all other Ministries, the Foreign Ministry in Ankara took
over the responsibilities of the Ottoman Foreign Ministry although a representation in Istanbul continued to function
until 1927. The transfer of the Ministry
to Ankara was completed by 1928 with the opening of the new building of
the Foreign Ministry at Sıhhiye.1174 We do not observe a Republican
policy of purging the cadres. The ones who were eager to move to Ankara from
their comfortable houses and mansions in Istanbul were all welcome to continue
their careers with the exception of the ones who were thought to have been disloyal to the National Struggle during the War of
1172 I thank Gül İnanç for drawing my
attention to the process of establishment and of the Republican Ministry of Foreign Ministry in November 1922.
1173 For this process, see Şimşir, Bilal, ibid, pp.
166-170.
1174 Girgin, Kemal, Osmanlı ve Cumhuriyet Dönemleri Hariciye
Tarihimiz, Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu Basımevi, 1992, p. 130.
Independence.1175 That was not an ideological purge, but
a retribution for misdeeds. It is true that the Republic recruited many of its
ambassadors from the Kemalist loyalists who had committed themselves to the
Kemalist cause during the War of Independence.1176 Many military
officers turned into career diplomats. Although some of the military officers terminated their diplomatic careers
after one posting, others became
professional diplomats serving the Republic for some two decades like
Ahmed Ferid (Tek) and Hüsrev Gerede (who was ironically the son-in-law of Galip
Kemali Söylemezoğlu, whose career was terminated by the Republic due to his service to the Istanbul government
during the War of Independence) or
more than one decade like Kemalettin Sami Paşa. However, the transplantation of
the loyalists into the diplomatic service occurred only at the ambassadorial
level. The cadres below the ambassadorial posts continued to serve as
Republican loyalists who were promoted to more prominent posts in time.
Although in the first ten years of the Republic, the Republican Ministry of
Foreign Ministry, reluctant to fill
the diplomatic posts with the sympathizers of Britain, France, and imperial
loyalists found difficulty in recruiting qualified younger people due to the
unattractiveness of Ankara and the limited prospects
such a career promised, the Foreign Ministry
reacquired
1175 For the purge of those who opposed the National Struggle, see
Koçak, Cemil, Heyet-i Mahsusalar,
İstanbul: İletişim Yayınları, 2005. The purge was not an ideological cleansing, but only retribution against
those individuals who did not act ―appropriately‖ during the War of
Independence. The purges punished individual misbehaviour. It may be useful to
compare/contrast the Republican handling of the incumbent bureaucracy with the
actions spurred by French 19th century regime changes.
1176 For example, Fahreddin Reşad, who served in diplomatic posts such
as charge d‘affaires in St. Petersburg, ambassador to Cetinje, undersecretary
of the embassy to Berlin, and who
participated in the Şura-yı Saltanat ratifying
the Treaty of Sevrés in 1920 representing the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, was
listed among the ―hundred and fiftiers‖ and exiled in 1923. Çankaya, Ali, ibid,
p. 276. Some others were examined before their transfer from the administration
to the new administration in Ankara. Although Mehmed Şefik was temporarily
discharged from the Ministry of Foreign Ministry on 1 November 1922 with the
abolition of the government in Istanbul, the investigation concluded that he
did not participate in any anti-national activity and he continued his
diplomatic career in the Republican
Foreign Ministry. Çankaya, Ali, ibid, p. 448. Mehmed Kadri was also temporarily
discharged from office with the end of the Istanbul government. The
investigation concluded that he did not participate in any anti-national
activity, and he continued his diplomatic career. Çankaya, Ali, ibid, p. 780.
The investigations conducted after the abolition of the government in Istanbul
enabled the members of the Istanbul bureaucracy to continue their careers in
Ankara.
its earlier prestige and became a niche of prestige and high esteem,
attracting the descendants of the aristocratic/imperial families of Istanbul
and the sons of high-ranking bureaucrats and the new political elite in Ankara.1177
With the appointment of Numan
Menemencioğlu as the general secretary of the Ministry, the Ministry became
professionalized and ―admission to the Ministry was now conditional on the
candidate passing an entrance examination.‖1178 The
internationalization of politics, the escalation of tensions in Europe, and
diplomacy‘s increase in importance from the early 1930s onwards should have
played a role in the professionalization of the Ministry. In short, the
Republic took over the imperial cadres and the Ministry became one of the most
prestigious offices of the Republic following ten years of negligence.
However, this does not mean that the Republic continued
with conventional policies. On the contrary, the Republican leadership was at a
distance with the traditional Ottoman diplomacy. The Republic had a clear
change of policy in foreign relations. It rejected the old style of ―balance of
power1179‖ politics and turned to isolationism.1180 The
Republic and the republican historiography demonized the Tanzimat declaring it
a sellout of the Empire. It was also highly critical of the Tanzimat diplomacy.
The Tanzimat was associated with capitulation and submission to the Western
powers. It was perceived as
1177 Dikerdem, Mahmut, Hariciye Çarkı, İstanbul: Cem Yayınları, 1989, pp. 22-24.
1178 Kuneralp, Sinan, ―Turkey:
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Under the Ottoman
Empire and the Turkish Republic‖, in The
Times Survey of Foreign Ministries of the World, Steiner, Zara (ed.), Westport: Times Books, 1982, p. 506.
1179 It has to be said that ―balance of power politics‖ was discredited
continent wide. The old-style ―balance of power‖ was heavily criticized, and the alleged
―new diplomacy‖ was introduced. Although, the ―New Europe‖
group in Britain had aspired for ―open diplomacy‖ and ―Wilsonism‖, the Republic
opted for isolationism, which was seen as a viable alternative after observing
the successful Soviet example. It was such an environment that made the Kemalist
reformulation of foreign policy orientation possible. It is meaningless
to assess the Kemalist foreign policy within a noncomparative historiography.
1180 For the changing parameters of the early Republic‘s diplomacy and its new orientation, see Koçak,
Cemil, Türk-Alman İlişkileri (1923-1939), Ankara: Atatürk
Kültür, Dil ve Tarih
Yüksek Kurumu, 1991. Also see Oran, Baskın (ed.), Türk Dış Politikası, İstanbul: İletişim Yayınları, 2001, v.
I; Krüger, Karl, Kemalist Turkey
and the Middle East, London:
Allen & Unwin Ltd., 1932.
effeminate and naïve in contrast to the vigilance and Spartan nature
of the Republic.1181 The
Republic took Turkey away from the predatory webs of European diplomacy. The
Republic consciously disowned Tanzimat diplomacy. The resistance and delay by
foreign diplomatic legations in Istanbul in moving to Ankara was symbolic in
the sense that they symbolically resisted the change of the Turkish
government‘s new diplomatic course and abandonment of the Ottoman ―old diplomacy‖. The Republican
Foreign Ministry declined any
request by an ambassador to meet with the foreign minister because such moves
were reminiscent of the Tanzimat diplomacy in which the ambassadors were acting
like semi- colonial governors.1182
The good news was that the Republic
did not have a heavy
workload (before the 1930s).
The European powers were not interested in Turkey and the ―Eastern Question‖ anymore. The ―Eastern Question‖ had
expired with the post-1918 settlement in the Middle East and Anatolia in which
every party was forced to accept its share. Every country had its own problems
at home to which they all had to turn. From being the hub of international
diplomacy and the venue of military espionage and battles for world domination
before World War I, the strategic assets of Turkey deteriorated, and Turkey became
a remote land on the margins of world diplomacy after 1923 (to the satisfaction
of the Republican elite). The British representatives‘ spare correspondence and
remaining classified files (predominantly limited to technical and commercial
matters rather than political concerns) sent from Turkey in the second half of
the 1920s and the early 1930s in contrast to the heavy files containing
extensive correspondence and reports before 1914 illustrates a drastic
contraction in the diplomatic involvement and a distinct lack of interest.1183
The number of Turkish representatives abroad
and foreign representations in Turkey shrank
1181 For some
interpretations and representations of Tanzimat by the Republican discourse,
see Bayur, Yusuf Hikmet, Yeni Türkiye
Devletinin Harici Siyaseti, İstanbul: Akşam Matbaası, 1934, p. 1-3;Türk Tarihinin Ana Hatları, İstanbul:
Kaynak Yayınları, 1999, p. 460, 465-66; Ankara:
T.T.T. Cemiyeti, Tarih III
(Yeni ve Yakın Zamanlar), Ankara: Devlet Matbaası, 1933, pp. 188-310;
Bayur, Yusuf Hikmet, Türk İnılabı Tarihi,
Türk Ankara: Tarih Kurumu, 1991, v. I, p. II, p. 149.
1182 Derin, Haldun, Çankaya Özel Kalemini Anımsarken 1933-1951,
İstanbul: Tarih Vakfı Yurt Yayınları, 1995, pp. 48-49.
1183 The correspondence from the embassy to Ankara (and earlier to
Istanbul from the 1906) are kept in
the British archives under the catalogue PRO, FO 371.
drastically disregarding the new representations opened in the
post-1918 new independent states1184. This was the end of the age of
diplomacy (and age of imperialism) in which the Ottoman Empire was a grand
chessboard for the diplomats and on which the Ottoman Empire was always in a
defense position. Instead of being entangled and trapped in the niceties of
international diplomacy and forced to make new ―concessions‖ every time, the
Republic, in the aftermath of the collapse of the old ―European order,‖ could
manage to break with the past and Europe.1185 Hence, the Treaty of
Lausanne was rendered mythical, the very symbol of being freed from former
bonds and the founding moment of the revival/resurgence emerging from a
disgraceful legacy.
In fact, in spite of the republican claim to disown the
diplomacy of the ancien régime,
continuity was also visible with regard to the conduct of foreign policy. The
Republican stubbornness of the Republican/Kemalist foreign policy establishment
observable during the negotiations in Lausanne, in the conduct of foreign
policy throughout the 1920s and 1930s, and in the resilient neutrality of
Turkey in World War II1186 was inherited from the Tanzimat and
Hamidian way of conducting foreign policy. The Republican foreign policy‘s pragmatism, conservative
attitudes with regard to the protection of status quo, and low profile
diplomacy were also retained from the Tanzimat and Hamidian conduct of foreign
policy.1187
The Republic willingly renounced any claim to grandeur.
Instead, the Republic happily espoused
the role of being a small nation-state, not interested in what was
1184 See Girgin,
Kemal, ibid, pp. 123-27.
1185 Temperley, one of the doyens of the history of diplomacy, wrote just one year after the Treaty of Lausanne
that this treaty ―seemed destined, in all human probability, to inaugurate a
more lasting settlement, not only than the Treaty of Sévres, but than the
Treaties of Versailles, St. Germain, Trianon and Neuilly.‖ Temperley‘s
prediction turned out to be impressively accurate.
Quoted in Anderson, M.S, The Eastern
Question, London; Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1972, p. 376.
1186 For the ―active
neutrality‖ of Turkey
in the World War II, see Deringil, Selim, Turkish Foreign
Policy During the Second World War: An “Active” Neutrality, Cambridge, U.K.
: Cambridge University Press, 1989.
1187 Oran, Baskın, ―Türk Dış Politikasının (TDP) Teori ve Pratiği‖, in Oran, Baskın (ed.),
Türk Dış Politikası, İstanbul: İletişim Yayınları, 2006, v.
I, p. 23.
happening beyond its borders.1188 Lost territories were
gone. It was not the time to weep for
what had been lost. Macedonian melodies and the memories of lost Macedonia
saddened Republican cadres, but they never dreamed of regaining what had been lost,
even though it had been the homeland of many. They educated themselves to come
to terms with this loss forever. They
endorsed non-revisionism in international politics. Anatolia was the new
Macedonia, the new El Dorado. It was
the site where the Republic aimed to build its utopia. ―Peace at home, peace in
the world‖ was the motto of the new understanding of international politics. Turkey did not interfere with foreign developments and expected the same
attitude from the other countries regarding its ―resolution‖ of domestic
problems. Suppressing the Kurdish insurgency from the 1920s to 1938 was an easy
job because, especially after the settlement of the Mosoul problem, no one in
Europe was interested in these policing maneuvers, unlike the ―Armenian
problem‖ of the 1890s. Apparently, no one cared as well.
The Republic consciously denied imperialism whether in
the Islamist or Turkist form. Many of the formal symbols of legitimacy of the
Empire were abandoned.1189 The new discourse of legitimacy was
constructed through a very different language. Turkishness became the only
source of legitimacy.1190 This perception was in many ways a
complete reversal of the Ottoman self-representation. However, all these were
one side of the coin. The Republic retained and reformulated many practices and
mental structures of the Empire. Arguably, the new Empire was in Ankara, and
Turkishness was the new source of legitimacy functionalized to establish the
imperial tradition in Republican/national garb. Many features and peculiarities
of the Empire were retained in the Republic. Its political cosmology and its vision
of social order
were taken over from the imperial legacy.
Its
1188 For the outline and vision of foreign policy of the Republic, see Bayur, Yusuf Hikmet,
Yeni Türkiye Devletinin Harici Siyaseti, İstanbul: Akşam Matbaası, 1934.
1189 For example (with the exception of İstiklal Madalyası), as a
reaction to the imperial flamboyance of the Ottoman imperial culture, the
Republic did not designate any insignia or medallions. The introduction of
insignia and medallions came only after the military coup of 1980, and they
were predominantly given only to foreigners and in a very limited fashion.
Eldem, Edhem, İftihar ve İmtiyaz: Osmanlı Nişan ve Madalyaları Tarihi, İstanbul: Osmanlı Bankası
Arşiv ve Araştırma Merkezi, 2004, p. 491.
1190 Çagaptay, Soner, Islam, Secularism and Nationalism in Modern Turkey: Who is a Turk
? London; New York: Routledge, 2006.
imagination of the ―people‖ was arguably more imperial rather than
nationalist in many aspects. The relation it established with its citizens also
retained the Ottoman pattern. The state retained its mythical and supra-social
attributes. It continued to be elitist. Its assimilative nationalism was also
partially inherited from the Empire and Ottomanism.1191 As shown by
recent studies, it was assimilationist and inclusive as long as its premises were endorsed and internalized.1192
It was exclusivist otherwise.
A valid question to be posed is with regard to the level
of the endorsement of the new Republican line by the imperial diplomats. In the
absence of archival sources, we cannot make any conclusive observation.
However, it is safe to observe that many Ottoman intellectuals and diplomats
became sycophants of the Kemalist regime throughout the 1920s in the absence of
any alternative political center. We do not observe any significant ideological
opposition or criticism leveled against the regime leveled by the imperial and
bureaucratic elites. On the contrary, many turned into Kemalist Republicans
overnight. Some preferred to stay silent in their later life in Istanbul, but
almost none of them leveled an ideological
assault on the Republic even after
1950. Their criticisms remained
mild, and they were
respectful of the ―achievements‖ of the Republic.
What is interesting is that the Republic developed its isolationist ―new
course‖ with the
―old cadres‖. The experiences,
frustrations, and disillusionments of the imperial
diplomats may have reoriented their political and ideological outlooks.
The pupils of the Republic, who studied in the Republican Mülkiye (in İstanbul and later in Ankara) instead of the imperial Mülkiye in İstanbul1193,
started to take office in the Foreign Ministry by the 1930s. Interestingly,
the generation trained by the Republic began to take high office by the late
1191 For a general assessment and overview of ―a nation of Empire‖
argument, see Meeker, Michael, A Nation of Empire, Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002
1192 For the
assimilationist nationalism of the Kemalist Republic, see Yeğen, Mesut, Devlet Söyleminde Kürt Sorunu, İstanbul:
İletişim Yayınları, 2006; Yeğen, Mesut, Müstakbel
Vatandaş‟tan Sözde Vatandaşa: Cumhuriyet ve Kürtler, İstanbul: İletişim Yayınları, 2006; Yıldız, Ahmet,
Ne Mutlu Türküm Diyebilene, İstanbul:
İletişim Yayınları, 2004. Bali, Rıfat,
Cumhuriyet Yıllarında Türkiye Yahudileri:
Bir Türkleştirme Serüveni (1923-1945), İstanbul: İletişim Yayınları, 1999;
Aktar, Ayhan, Varlık Vergisi ve
“Türkleştime” Politikaları, İstanbul: İletişim Yayınları, 2000.
1193 It should be borne in mind that the Republic could intervene and
reshape higher education much later than 1923. The critical moment for this move
was the ―University Reform‖ of 1933, which had purged many undesired professors
of Darülfünun.
1940s as the Republican isolationist policy gave way to a new
internationalism within the alignments of the Cold War. Ironically, the first
generation of Republican-trained cadres had, from the late 1940s onwards,
established and directed the pro-Western policy, which was a divergence from
the isolationist Republican foreign policy.
Taking over the imperial legacy, the Republic tried to
establish its distinct and not-so- distinct ideology. It adopted various tenets
of the imperial ideology and modified some others. In many ways, the Empire had
already established a ―nation-state ideology‖ through a process that began in
the early 19th century and escalated in the Unionist imperialism. As argued above, Ottomanism in its various
practices and manifestations resembled the prospective Kemalist nationalism of
the Republic. In that regard, staying away from romanticizing Empires (as
opposed to the cruelties of the 20th century nation- states), we may argue that
the Ottoman Empire may not be seen as an Empire in the universal sense if any
of the other Empires (British, Habsburg, Russian) may be seen as such1194although
it also has to be said that the
Ottoman Empire took its Ottomanism
and its claim to universalism seriously. The course of the late Ottoman Empire
can be seen as the process of gradual transformation into a nation-state in the
form of an Empire.1195 On the other
hand, the Republic
took over and retained many facets of the imperial
ideology.1196
1194 For ―Empire‖ and
―imperial ideology‖, see Howe, Stephen, Empire,
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002; Pagden, Anthony, Peoples and Empires, New York: Modern Library, 2003; Armitage,
David, The Ideological Origins of the
British Empire, Cambridge, U.K.:
Cambridge University Press, 2000.
1195 The continuity of the ideological discourse has been studied both
in a theoretical framework and within a local setting and has been discussed
and shown by Michael Meeker. See Meeker, Michael, A Nation of Empire, Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002.
1196 Of course, it is a debate what we should expect from an Empire. It
is certainly not possible to dissociate
nationhood from Empire. Every Empire
has its core constituency and
―original
nation‖. The new turn in the study of nationalism emphasizes the early modern
origins of nationalism especially in the English case. The very first
nationalism of Europe had derived from the British imperium and Protestantism.
See Colley, Linda. Britons: Forging the
Nation, New Haven: Yale University Press, 1992, Greenfeld, Liah, Nationalism: Five Paths to Modernity,
Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 1992, Pincus, Steven, Protestantism and Patriotism, Cambridge,
U.K.: Cambridge University Press, 1996; Newman, Gerald, The Rise of English Nationalism, New York: St. Martin‘s Press, 1997. We now know that nationalism is not simply a modernist
construct forged in
The Republic tried to establish the primacy of the state and raison d‘état
against the primacy of ―politics‖ and ―ideology‖ which brought about the destruction of the Empire
at the hands of the Unionists. In this regard, Kemalist nationalism
differed from Unionist nationalism. Kemalism was the domination of raison d‘état and suppression of the
―political‖ in the aftermath of 1908 and its costly consequences.
The Republic tried to create loyalty to the state by consecrating the state as
the embodiment of the nation and rendering the nation subservient to the state.
The ―Republic‖ repressed the non-official alternative interpretations of the ―nation‖. It rendered ―nation‖
subordinate to the state and defined it only in its submissive
relation to the state. This perception was also a derivative of the imperial
ideology.1197
The working assumption here is that Kemalism can be
interpreted as statism (or nation-statism)
rather than ―nationalism proper‖. This derived from the heritage it had
received from the culture of Empire. In other words, as has been demonstrated
in many other studies, there was a visible continuity from the Empire to the Republic.
The transition was rather a step
function. The considerably smooth adaptation and transition of political,
intellectual, cultural, and bureaucratic elites to the new environment, and
their impressive capacity and eagerness to adapt to the new ideological formations
and the new ideological milieu is illustrative. The Republican bureaucracy
which was crucial in the establishment, institutionalization, and consolidation
of the Republic was taken over from the Empire. Even prominent men of the late
Ottoman Empire who were sidelined and lost their positions in the Republic
never leveled ideological criticism. They acquiesced in their retirement days in their mansions in Istanbul. This was partially
due to the surveillance of
the 19th
century. Instead, nationalism is an amalgam of different dynamics developing
from early modernity onwards.
1197 Russian czardom‘s
blend of monarchism and national principle which gave birth to the
―official nationality‖ resembles both the Ottoman ―official nationality‖ and the Republican
idea of nationhood and thus arguably illustrates the linkage between the
Ottoman background and the Republican notion of Nation in a comparative
perspective. Richard Wortman, one of the foremost authorities on 19th century
czarist Russia, writes; ―After 1825, nationality was identified with
absolutism, ‗autocracy‘ in the official lexicon. Russian nationality was
presented as a nationality of consensual subordination, in contrast to
egalitarian Western concepts. The monarchical narrative of the nation described
the Russian people as voluntarily surrendering power to their Westernized
rulers.‖ Wortman, Richard, Scenarios of
Power, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1995, v. II, p. 12.
the Republican authorities. However, it may be argued that it was
more due to the culture of loyalty
and the (emotional) relations they had established with the intimitized state.
Therefore, it was easier for the old cadres to switch their loyalties without
contradicting themselves. It was the state upon which they bestowed their
allegiance, regardless of the specific ideological dispositions of the state to
which they adhere. Thus, the Republican transition may be dubbed as a quiet
revolution in which the old culture and habitus was retained and rehabilitated.
The Turkish Foreign Ministry with its radical Westernism
and nationalism was an ideal place
where we can observe this cooptation. Here it can be argued that the Turkish
Foreign Ministry as an institution exemplifies the Kemalist vision at its best.
Moreover, it may be argued that Turkish Foreign Ministry is the quintessential
prototype of institutionalized Kemalism. Kemalism
was not nationalism in its conventional sense (nationalism with a reference to
ethnicity) but was a discourse of elitism that utilized the nationalist
rhetoric to serve other ends. The nation was defined in the image of the
habitus and culture of the elite. The national attributes and qualities were
imagined and defined in line with the culture and socialization of this class.
The nation was supposed to be secular, modern, and pure as a replica and
extension of the ―cultural intimacy‖ of the late Ottoman and Republican
bureaucratic elite which was constituted based on the absorption of a shared
ethos and cultural intimacy.
A very prominent and universally accepted axiom of the Turkish
diplomatic establishment is that foreign policy is a supra-political issue not
to be interfered with by amateurish and irresponsible politicians.1198 This was also a dictum arguably
retained from the Ottoman
pre-political world in which the state was the chief object of allegiance and
politics was not seen as legitimate, but viewed as corrupting (fitna). Thus, the Turkish Ministry of
Foreign Affairs‘ elitism and its culture of detachment from the outside world
were also arguably derivations/remnants of the imperial heritage it holds onto.
1198 This perception is not peculiar to Turkey. David Vincent writes
that, in 19th century Britain, because the diplomatic service was the most
elitist one and it had most access to the state secrets,
it was perceived as most privileged (and most assosiated
with the supreme interests of the state) office and thus, it was the
office most resilient to reform and democratization of civil service. It was
the service which was most disturbed from interference from outside. Vincent,
David, The Culture of Secrecy in Britain,
1832-1898, Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press, 1998, p. 79.
The social portrait and characteristics of the
Republican diplomatic service are also worth an assessment. With its élitist
background, it continued to constitute a Bourdieuian state nobility.1199
We may argue that, it retained the old Ottoman premise of the complete
separation of the masses from the ruling class (askeri versus reaya) and
developed its own askeri class (based
on assimilation into its value system as well as genealogical continuity) with
distinct qualities. The Tanzimat‘s new bureaucratic class‘s peculiarities
rendered this separation even more tenable. Coming from distinctive and
privileged backgrounds (education in Mekteb-i
Sultani and the imperial high schools), experiencing their political and
cultural socializations in their habitus, and cultivated as a la franga, they developed an exclusivist perception of the people. This elite
also reserved the state their privilege and continued to intimitize it. In
other words, they owned it rather than vice versa.
The persistence of the diplomatic establishment and its elitist characteristics can also be observed examining the biographical
data of the diplomatic service as of 1967. By 1967, Istanbul continued to be
the main source for recruiting diplomats. Of the 474 career diplomats serving
as of 19671200, 191 were born in Istanbul1201. 52
diplomats were born in Ankara, 19 were born in Izmir, and 24 were born in
foreign countries, including the lost territories of the Ottoman Empire.
Furthermore, 265 of the 474 career diplomats graduated from high schools in
Istanbul. Given that 47 of the career diplomats graduated from high schools abroad and 94 of the career diplomats
graduated from high schools in Ankara (84)
1199 See Bourdieu,
Pierre, State Nobility, Cambridge,
U.K.: Polity Press, 1998. Also see Suleiman, Ezra, Politics, Power and Bureaucracy in France: The Administrative Elite,
Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1974, Suleiman, Ezra, Elites in French Society: The Politics of
Survival, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1998. Also see a more
sophisticated discourse on the emergence of the Egyptian modern bureaucracy and
the modern bureaucratic mind in, Mitchell, Timothy, Rule of Experts : Egypt, Techno-politics, Modernity, Berkeley:
University of California Press, 2002.
1200 See Tamkoç,
Metin, The Warrior Diplomats, Salt
Lake City: Utah University Press, 1976, pp. 256-8.
1201 Ergun Sav, who joined the diplomatic service in 1962, finds it
necessary to emphasize that he was born and grew up in Ankara (as opposed to
being born and growing up in Istanbul). ―Don‘t think
when I joined the diplomatic service, I was imprisoned in the circle of diplomats. I am a native of the
capital, Ankara. I had social contacts in Ankara. I was not from the Galatasaray-Mülkiye line.‖ Sav, Ergun, Cumhuriyet Bebeleri, Ankara: Bilgi
Yayınevi, 1998, pp. 9-10.
or Izmir (10), only 56 of the career diplomats graduated from
provincial high schools1202. Not surprisingly, forty percent of the
diplomats graduated from a French-language school such as Galatasaray (the Ottoman Mekteb-i
Sultani), Saint-Benoit, and Saint Joseph. Around fifteen percent of the
diplomats were graduates of both Galatasaray
and Mülkiye.1203 These statistics display the portrait of a ―typical‖ Turkish diplomat. It also
has to be remembered that Mülkiye moved
to Ankara only in 1937, and before the Republican purge of the faculty of the
University of Istanbul in 1933, literally the Ottoman Mülkiye continued to provide diplomats to the Republic.
In this study, the Foreign Ministry was not only taken as a governmental body, but also as a manifestation of
the making of the modern Turkish state elite. Given that the Ministry assumed
an unprecedented, prominent role in the turbulent (and long) Ottoman 19th
century, it is hoped that this study of the Ministry reveals that in the
development of the discourse of modern Turkishness, modernity and nationalism
were intertwined and inseparable from each other. The case of the
Ottoman/Turkish Foreign Ministry provides us
some insights concerning how Turkish Euroskeptic nationalism was an inherent
part of the Turkish modernization project itself and how Turkish modernization,
contrary to the established Kemalist and pseudo-Kemalist discourse, was not an attempt to renounce the
―old‖, but instead
was an endeavor to revive
and restore it in a brave new world. The study
has tried to highlight that the very discourse
from Mahmud II onwards had a lasting
impact on the 20th century official/private Turkish
discourse.
In his book, Yücel Bozdağlıoğlu evaluates Turkish
foreign policy from a constructivist perspective and argues that Turkish
foreign policy is a function of the identity and identity politics of the
Kemalist elite.1204 Taking Kemalism as ―Westernism‖ and the ideology
of Westernization, he argues that
Turkish foreign policy priorities
are determined by Turkey‘s effort to be involved within ―Western civilization‖. He takes Turkey‘s Cold War
1202 Data on 12 career
diplomats are unavailable.
1203 According to Mahmut Dikerdem, until the end of the World War II,
only ―sons of Istanbuliot families, especially those who were graduates of
Galatasaray and the American College, could dare to take the entrance
examination of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.‖ Dikerdem, Mahmut, Hariciye Çarkı, İstanbul: Cem Yayınları,
1989, p. 74.
1204 Bozdağlıoğlu,
Yücel, Turkish Foreign Policy and Turkish
Identity, London; New York:
Routledge, 2003.
diplomacy and alignments as Kemalist foreign
policy orientation per se. However, I would argue that Kemalism is
something very different from Westernism. Though Westernism is an indispensable
and pivotal component of it, Kemalism is a much more complex amalgam. Contrary to Bozdağlıoğlu‘s assumption, here Kemalism‘s basic premise is
taken as nation-statism, which is understood as isolationism and a rejection of
any Western (international) interference along with an intense distrust of the
―West‖. Here, it is argued that, Bozdağlıoğlu fails to take Kemalism in its
complexity and in its ambivalence. Furthermore, he overlooks the complex
build up of Kemalism and merges
the Kemalism of the single-party period and the Kemalism that had been
reformulated, softened, and rendered compatible with democracy and the Cold War
environment (and therefore reinvented) with the collapse of the single-party
regime. In fact, Kemalism was reinvented with the collapse of the single-party
regime.1205 Taking Kemalism as an evolution of the late Ottoman souveranisme, this
study has tried to establish that Kemalism fits into the mindset of the late Ottoman Ministry
of Foreign Affairs (and the Ottoman
bureaucracy as a whole). This also
explains the conservatism of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in its perception
of the dynamics of globalization and the process of accession to the European
Union (especially before the Summit of Copenhagen in 2002) in the post-Cold War
world and its becoming trapped in the arguably insoluble issues of Cyprus1206
and coming to terms with the Armenian massacres in 1915.1207
1205 Koçak, Cemil, Belgelerle İktidar
ve Serbest Cumhuriyet Fırkası, İstanbul: İletişim Yayınları, 2006, pp. 633-692.
1206 For the
discourses, views and approaches of Turkish diplomats regarding the Cyprus
dispute, see İnanç, Gül, Türk
Diplomasisinde Kıbrıs, 1970-1991: Büyükelçiler Anlatıyor, İstanbul : Türkiye İş Bankası
Kültür Yayınları, 2007.
Also see Yavuzalp, Ercüment, Kıbrıs Yangınında Büyükelçilik, Ankara:
Bilgi Yayınevi, 1993.
1207 Another book on Turkish foreign policy written by one of the
eminent scholars of the foreign policy of contemporary Turkey that may be
considered as ―constructivist‖ and suffers from the same bias is William Hale‘s
study on the Ottoman/Turkish foreign policy from the late 18th century onwards.
One of the principal premises of this book with regard to Kemalism
underestimates the very complexities of the nature of the Ottoman/Turkish
modernity and the Republican ideology.
William Hale argues that ―in foreign policy,
their (Republican elite –DG) primary aim was to see their country
recognized as a respected European power‖ and ―to raise Turkey to the ‗level of contemporary
civilisation‘ ― besides
―safeguard the hard-won security
which they had achieved in 1923‖. Hale, William,
Turkish Foreign Policy 1774-2000, London;
Portland: Frank Cass, 2000, p. 57. However,
That is, observing the continuity of a certain discourse
espoused by the Ministry not only from the Empire to the Republic, but also
from the early 19th century to the 21st century, may open
vistas in reinterpreting the ideological and mental structures of contemporary
Turkey, and the crises faced by Turkey as manifested in its perceptions of the EU, Cyprus, the United States, and
global liberalism. It is crucial to observe how this perpetual discourse of souverainisme was created at a time of
imperial retreat and dissolution and was perpetuated and transmitted to the
Turkish nation-state which continued to live with Sevrophobia as if time was
frozen at a particular moment of the course of history.
We also should bear in mind that Sevrophobia does not simply
refer to the Treaty of Sevrés signed in 1920 which rendered Turkey a small
state confined to the interior of Anatolia and which delivered vast territories
with Turkish populations to Armenians and Greeks. Sevrophobia goes back in time
before the Republic and before the Sevrés Treaty. It is as much about St. Stephanos, the Balkan War treaties, and
the other humiliating treaties the Ottomans had to sign as it is about Sevrés.
Nevertheless, it may be argued that Sevrésphobia or the Sevrés syndrome, a
concept introduced by liberal political scientists1208
to define a certain attitude, perception, and reflex is an apt label given that the Republic also strove
to obliterate the pre-Republican traumas, subsumed the previous
disillusionments under the bogeyman of Sevrés (republicanization of the
traumas), and established a dichotomy between Lausanne and Sevrés.
Nevertheless, it is important to reiterate that the trauma of Sevrés was not
generated by Sevrés. On the contrary, the traumatic perception towards Sevrés
was constructed upon the previous memories and experiences such as the loss of
Crete, the unkept promises of the Western powers after the Balkan Wars, et cetera.
What Sevrés did was to eternalize and transcendentalize the
here it has been
argued that this was the Cold-War reinterpretation of Kemalism, concealing many
other aspects of ―original Kemalism‖ which became more visible after the end of
the Cold War. For a more subtle constructivist interpretation of Turkish
foreign policy, see Robbins, Philip, Suits
and Uniforms: Turkish Foreign Policy Since the Cold War, London: Hurst
& Company, 2003.
1208 Piccoli,
Wolfango & Jung, Dietrich, Turkey at
the Crossroads: Ottoman Legacies and a
Greater Middle East, London: Zed Books, 2001, pp. 115-18; Kirişçi, Kemal
& Winrow, Gareth, The Kurdish
Question and Turkey, London, Portland: Frank Cass, 1997, p. 184, 193;
Robins, Philip, Suits and Uniforms:
Turkish Foreign Policy Since the Cold War, London: Hurst & Company,
2003, pp. 102-104.
mundane and Realpolitik, transmit
them to the realm of universals, and amalgamate several traumatic experiences into one
single overarching and encompassing traumatic experience which subsumed and reinforced
all the others. With such disillusionment, it was the transcendentalized
imagery of the state which the elite always turned to and espoused.1209
The transcendental state was not only a haven against external attacks, but
also a shelter from the ignorant masses that had to be reeducated, civilized,
and incorporated into the habitus and cultural intimacy of the state elite.
1209 For some memoirs
written by prominent Turkish diplomats exposing such a relation established
with the state, see Gürün, Kamuran, Fırtınalı
Yıllar: Dışişleri Müsteşarlığı Hatıralarım, İstanbul: Milliyet Yayınları,
19995; Yavuzalp, Kamuran, Liderlerimiz ve
Dış Politika, Ankara: Bilgi
Yayınevi, 1996; İnan, Kamran, Cenevre
Yılları, İstanbul: Timaş, 2002.
CONCLUSION
This study investigates the cultural, intellectual, and
ideological formations of the Ottoman diplomatic service in the late Ottoman
Empire with an emphasis on the
Hamidian era. The study attempts to describe the basic contours and premises of
the culture of the late Ottoman
bureaucratic culture (culture in its ―thick description‖) as well as the social
origins of the late Ottoman state elite by examining the diplomatic service as
a microcosm of the late Ottoman bureaucratic elite. The study also aims to highlight
the prominent role the late Ottoman bureaucratic establishment played in the
development of the modern Turkish national identity
and Turkish nationalism as well as the ideological premises of the
republic.
The Ottoman diplomatic service was the most elitist
governmental office of the late Ottoman Empire. This elitism becomes even more
apparent in the social backgrounds of the ambassadors. The elitist nature of
the diplomatic service was not peculiar to the Ottoman Empire. On the contrary,
this was a European continent-wide pattern. It has been argued that the
Tanzimat was an era of the consolidation of a state elite or nobility. In
contrast to the European nobilities, the late Ottoman nobility was constructed
on its relation to the state and
based on serving in the state bureaucracy (which had some resemblance to the
Russian nobility which was
based on both blood lines and service to
the state). The Ottoman state elite was welded around the state and developed a
loyalty to the state which also served the self-interest of this class cluster.
The Tanzimat elite was an amalgamation of different elites. It was consolidated
by the marriage of the aristocracies
of the center and the elite resident in Istanbul. It has been argued that the
late Ottoman diplomatic service is a
good place to observe the
recruitment patterns, structures of
loyalty, and other prominent characteristics and peculiarities of the ancien régime of the late Ottoman Empire
because it is where we can observe the sons of grand viziers, ulema, and lower-ranking officials working alongside the sons of Kurdish mirs, Turcoman tribal
chieftains, and Turkish, Caucasian, Albanian, and Arab provincial dignitaries as well as the
sons of the elites within the non-Muslim communities. The Ottoman diplomatic service was an amalgamation of modern,
meritocratic professionalism with the traditional aristocratic service. This
world of the Ottoman ancien régime came
to an end with the Revolution of 1908. As education
became a prominent factor in advancement in career and the accumulation of
material and social capital, a new political and bureaucratic elite emerged.
The new Unionist generation, predominantly coming from lower middle-class
backgrounds and the families of lower-ranking civil servants, curtailed the
privileged world of the Ottoman ancien régime. The mental and ideological structures of the ancien régime were abandoned in favor of
a new radical stance. This was not only the end of the Ottoman ancien régime
and the emergence
of the Turkish nouvelle regime, but also the end
of the Metternichean-Castlereaghian Concert of Europe and Bismarckian diplomacy
and therefore the end of the late Ottoman diplomats and their diplomatic culture.
Nevertheless, the Ottoman ancien régime,
its culture, and its ideological underpinnings were constitutive in the Young
Turk and Republican nouvelle regimes
in terms of their cultural and ideological structures as well as their elite
recruitment.
The continuities (as well as modifications and changes)
from the Empire to the Republic are
also emphasized. It has been argued that the notion of ―Nation‖ in the Republic
was very much influenced by the image of ―Nation‖ created and developed by the
Ottoman imperial center, which imagined ―Nation‖ in a subservient relation to
itself. Although it is a very complicated process, studying the dispatches sent
from the Ottoman embassies and legations to European and Balkan capitals, it
had been suggested that the self-identity of the Ottoman imperial elite was
constituted in the process of encountering (and opposing) perceived threats.
These threats, unlike the perceived threats of earlier centuries, were diffuse
and abstract, which rendered them not only less predictable but
also more threatening. They were not clearly identifiable; thus, they were not
only more dangerous, but also more treacherous. These enemies, as observed in
the correspondence from European and Balkan capitals, included seditious
non-Muslims, the expansionist and imperial aims of the Great Powers, ambitious,
small Balkan powers, and other unreliable elements and ideas. Furthermore,
these threats were envisaged as potentially acting in concert and coordination with each other. These perceived constant threats and dangers
ensued the emergence of a defensive and reactive statism. Within
this environment, it has been argued that an intimate relation with the state
was forged. It was the state and the imagery of the state that was aggressively
protected, and simultaneously it was this state where these people could take
refuge in the midst of constant danger.
It has been proposed that over time non-Muslim
communities and eventually even Muslim ethnic groups (such as Albanians, Arabs)
would come to be seen as unreliable and disloyal to the imagery of the imperial
center, leaving only those of Turkish ethnicity as a reliable force. Thus, although an interest in Turkish
ethnicity emerged, this derived less from ethnic awareness and more from the
concerns of the state and the imperial center. As pointed out above, this
nation was defined with regard to the (subservient) relation it established
with the state. Nevertheless, what was radical and novel in the nouvelle regime was the renunciation of
the multiple objects of loyalty in the Empire and the monopolization of one
single object of loyalty, the Nation.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Archives
Hariciye Siyasi (HR.SYS) Hariciye Sicil-i
Ahval (HR.SAID)
Hariciye Hukuk Müşavirliği İstişare Odası Belgeleri (HR.HMŞ.ISO) Hariciye Mektubi Kalemi (HR.MKT)
Yıldız Perakende Elçilik
Şehbenderlik Ateşemiliterlik (Y.PRK.EŞA) Dahiliye, Sicil-i Ahval
(DH.SAID)
Yıldız Hariciye
Maruzatı (Y. PRK. HR)
Public Records
Office, Foreign Office,
Catalogues 78, 371
Primary Sources
Abdülhak Hamid, Abdülhak Hamid‟in Hatıraları, İstanbul: Dergah Yayınları, 1994
Açıkalın,
Cevat. ―Cevat Açıkalın‘ın Anıları: 2. Dünya Savaşı‘nın Ilk Yılları‖, Belleten, No. 217 (Dec. 1992)
Ahmed Cevdet Paşa, Ma‟ruzat, İstanbul: Çağrı Yayınları, 1980 Ahmed Cevdet
Paşa, Tezakir, Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu,
1986
Ahmet
İhsan, Avrupa‟da Ne Gördüm ? İstanbul:
Tarih Vakfı Yurt Yayınları, 2007 Aras, Tevfik Rüştü, Atatürk‟ün Dış Politikası, İstanbul: Kaynak Yayınları, 2003 Arseven, Celal Esad, Sanat ve Siyaset Hatıralarım, İstanbul: İletişim Yayınları, 1993 Aşçı İbrahim Dede, Aşçı
Dedenin Hatıraları, İstanbul: Kitabevi Yayınları, 2006
Bayur, Yusuf Hikmet, XX
Yüzyılda Türklüğün Tarih ve Acun Siyaseti Üzerindeki Etkileri, Ankara: Türk
Tarih Kurumu, 1989
Bayur, Yusuf Hikmet, Yeni
Türkiye Devletinin Harici Siyaseti, İstanbul: Akşam Matbaası, 1934
Biren, Mehmet Tevfik, Mehmet
Tevfik Bey‟in Abdülhamid, Meşrutiyet ve Mütareke Dönemi Hatıraları,
İstanbul: Arba Yayınları, 1993
Blunt, Fanny Janet
Blunt & Poole, Stanley Lane, The
People of Turkey: Twenty Years‟ Residence Among Bulgarians, Greeks, Albanians,
Turks and Armenians, London: John Murray, 1878
Burnaby, Fred, On
Horseback Through Asia Minor, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996
Çankaya, Ali, Yeni Mülkiye Tarihi
ve Mülkiyeliler, Ankara:
Mars Matbaası, 1968-9 Canning, Stratford, Eastern Question, London: John Murray,
1881
Canning,
Stratford, Lord Stratford Canning‟in
Türkiye Anıları, İstanbul: Tarih Vakfı Yurt Yayınları, 1999
Cebesoy, Ali Fuad, Moskova Hatıraları, İstanbul: Vatan
Neşriyatı, 1955
Derin,
Haldun, Çankaya Özel Kalemini Hatırlarken,
İstanbul: Tarih Vakfı Yurt Yayınları, 1995
Dikerdem, Mahmud, Hariciye Çarkı, İstanbul: Cem Yayınları, 1989
Ebüzziya, Tevfik,
Yeni Osmanlılar Tarihi, İstanbul: Hürriyet Yayınları, 1973
Einstein, Lewis,
Inside Constantinopole, London: J. Murray, 1917 Elliot, Charles, Turkey in Europe, London: Frank Cass,
1965
Elliot, Henry,
Some Revolutions and Other Diplomatic Experiences, London: John Murray,
1922
Erkin, Feridun Cemal, Dışişlerinde 34 Yıl, Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu Yayınları, 1987 (2 volumes)
Ertuğrul,
Muhsin, Benden Sonra Tufan Olmasın ! İstanbul:
Dr. Nejat F. Eczacıbaşı Vakfı Yayınları,
1998
Gazi Ahmed Muhtar
Paşa, Sergüzeşt-i Hayatım, İstanbul: Tarih Vakfı Yurt Yayınları, 1996 (2 volumes)
Grew, Joseph, Turbulent Era: A Diplomatic Record of Forty Years, 1904-1945,
Boston:Houghton Mifflin, 1952.
Halil Halid, A Study in English Turcophobia, London: Pan-Islamic Society,
1904
Hayreddin
Nedim, 1270 Kırım Muharebesinin Tarih-i
Siyasiyesi, Dersaadet: Ahmed İhsan ve Şürekası, 1324
Hayreddin
Nedim, Vesaik-i Tarihhiye ve Siyasiyye
Tetebbuatı, Dersaadet: Ahmed İhsan ve Şürekası Matbaası 1326
Hayrullah Efendi,
Avrupa
Seyahatnamesi, Ankara: Kültür
Bakanlığı, 2002
Hüseyin Agah,
Diplomasi Usul Kitabı, Konstantiniyye, Matbaa-ı Ebüzziya, 1308
İnal, Ibnülemin
Mahmud Kemal, Osmanlı Devrinde
Son Sadrazamlar, Ankara:
Maarif Matbaası, 1945
İnal, İbnülemin Mahmud Kemal, Son Asır Türk Şairleri, Ankara: Devlet Kitapları, 1969-70
İsmail
Kemal Bey, The Memoirs of İsmail Kemal
Bey, London: Constable and Company, 1922
Kamil Paşa, Kamil Paşa‟nın Siyasi Hatıratı, Konstantiniyye:Matbaa-i Ebuzziya,
1329 Karaosmanoğlu, Yakup Kadri, Zoraki
Diplomat, İstanbul: İletişim Yayınları, 1998
Knatchbull-Hugessen, Hughe, Diplomat in Peace and
War, London: J. Murray,
1949
Kuneralp, Sinan, Son Dönem Osmanlı
Erkan ve Ricali (1839-1922): Proposografik Rehber, Istanbul: Isis,
1999
Kuneralp,
Zeki, Sadece Diplomat, İstanbul: İstanbul Matbaası, 1981
Lütfi Simavi,
Sultan Mehmed Reşad Hanın ve Halifenin
Sarayında Gördüklerim, Dersaadet: Kanaat Kütübhanesi, 1340
Mahmud Celalettin Paşa, Mirat-ı Hakikat,
İstanbul: Berekat Yayınları, 1983
Mayakon, İsmail
Müştak, Yıldızda Neler Gördüm
? İstanbul: Semih Lütfi Kitabevi, 1940 Mehmed Memduh Paşa,
Mi‟rat-i Şuunat, İstanbul: Nehir Yayınları, 1990
Mehmed
Süreyya Bey, Sicil-i Osmani,
İstanbul: Tarih Vakfı Yurt Yayınları, 1996 Menteşe, Halil, Halil Menteşe‟nin Anıları, İstanbul: Hürriyet Vakfı
Yayınları, 1986
Mordtmann, Andreas
David, Istanbul ve Yeni Osmanlılar, İstanbul: Pera Yayıncılık, 1999
Morgenthau, Henry,
Ambassador Morgenthau‟s Story, New York: Doubleday, Page & Company,
1918
Moüy,
Comte Charles de, Souveniers et Casueries
d‟un Diplomate, Paris: Nouirret et Cie, 1909
Münir Süreyya
Bey, Ermeni Meselesinin Siyasi
Tarihi, Ankara: Devlet
Arşivleri Genel Müdürlüğü,
2001
Mustafa Sami Efendi, Avrupa Risalesi,
İstanbul: Kitabevi, 1996
Namık Kemal, Bütün Makaleleri 1, Nergiz Yılmaz Aydoğdu & İsmail Kara (ed.), İstanbul: Dergah Yayınları, 2005
Pakalın, Zeki, Son Sadrazamlar ve Başvekiller,
İstanbul: Ahmet Sait Matbaası, 1940-48
Paker, Esat Cemal, Siyasi Tarihimizde Kırk Yıllık Hariciye
Hatıraları, İstanbul: Remzi Kitabevi, 1952
Pears, Edwin, Forty
Years in Constantinople, London: H. Jenkins, 1916
Reid, John,
Turkey and the Turks Being the Present
State of the Ottoman Empire, London: Robert Tyas & Paternoster Raw,
1840
Rey, Ahmed
Reşid, Gördüklerim Yaptıklarım, İstanbul: Türkiye Yayınevi, 1945 Ryan, Andrew, The Last of the Dragomans, London: Geoffrey Bles, 1951
Sadullah Paşa, Sadullah Paşa yahut Mezardan Bir Nida, İstanbul:
Dergah Yayınevi, 2003 Safveti Ziya, Adab-ı Muaşeret Hasbihalleri, Ankara: Türk Ocağı Merkez Heyeti,
1927 Said Bey, Sefirler ve Şehbenderler, Konstantiniyye, 1307
Said Paşa, Hatırat, Konstantiniyye, 1328 (3 volumes)
Salih Münir Paşa, La Politique Orientale de la Russie, Istanbul: Isis, 2000
Salname-i Nezaret-i Hariciye (1301/1885, 1306/1889, 1318/1900, 1320/1902)
Söylemezoğlu, Galip Kemali, Atina Sefareti
1913–1916, İstanbul: Türkiye
Yayınları, 1946
Söylemezoğlu, Galip Kemali, Hariciye Hizmetinde 30 Yıl, (4 volumes), İstanbul:
Şaka Matbaası, 1949-1955
Sykes, Mark,
Dar-ul-Islam: A Record of a Journey
Through Ten of the Asiatic
Provinces of Turkey,
London: Darf, 1988
Tahsin Paşa, Yıldız Hatıraları, İstanbul:
Boğaziçi Yayınları, 1990 Tepeyran, Hazim, Hatıralar, İstanbul: Pera, 1998
Tepeyran, Hazim,
Zalimane Bir İdam Hükmü, İstanbul: Pera, 1997
Türkgeldi, Ali Fuad, Görüp İşittiklerim, Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu Yayınları, 1984
Türkgeldi, Ali Fuad, Mesail-i Mühimme-i
Siyasiyye, Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu Yayınları,
1957 (3 volumes)
Ülkümen, Selahattin, Bilinmeyen Yönleriyle Bir Dönemin Dışişleri, İstanbul: Gözlem, 1993 Uşaklıgil, Halid Ziya, Kırk Yıl, İstanbul: Matbaacılık ve
Neşriyat T.A.Ş., 1936
Secondary Sources
Abou-El-Hajj, Rifa‘at, ―The Ottoman
Vezir and Pasha Households, 1683-1703: A Preliminary Report‖, JAOS
94 (1972)
Abou-El-Hajj, Rifa‘at,
The Reisülküttab and the Ottoman Diplomacy
at Karlowitz, unpublished
dissertation, Princeton University, 1963
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, Istanbul: Nederlands
Historisch-Archaeologisch Instituut te Istanbul,1984
Abu-Lughod,
Lila, Dramas of Nationhood: The Politics
of Television in Egypt, Chicago: University
of Chicago Press, 2005
Agoston, Gabor,
Guns for the Sultan, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 2005 Ahmad,
Feroz, The Young Turks, Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 1969
Akarlı, Engin Deniz,
The Long Peace: Ottoman
Lebanon, 1861-1920, Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1993
Akarlı, Engin Deniz (ed.), Osmanlı Sadrazamlarından Ali ve Fuad Paşaların Siyasi Vasiyyetnameleri,
İstanbul: Boğaziçi Üniversitsi Yayınları, 1978
Akarlı, Engin Deniz, ―Daughters and Fathers: A Young Druze
Woman‘s Experience (1894-1897), in Identity
and Identity Formation in the Ottoman World, Baki Tezcan, Karl Barbir
(ed.), Madison: The University of Wisconsin Press, 2007
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, Vol. 26 No. 3 (July 2006)
Akarlı, Engin Deniz, The
Problems of External Pressures, Power Struggles, and. Budgetary Deficits in
Ottoman Politics under Abdülhamid II (1876-1909), Princeton University,
unpublished dissertation, 1976
Akbayrak, Hasan,
Milletin Tarihinden Ulusun Tarihine, İstanbul: Kitabevi, 2009 Akçura, Yusuf, Üç Tarz-ı Siyaset, Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu, 1976
Aksan, Virginia, ―Ottoman
Political Writing, 1768-1808‖, IJMES 25
(1993)
Aksan, Virginia, An Ottoman Statesman in War & Peace: Ahmed
Resmi Efendi, Köln; Leiden; Boston: Brill, 1995
Aksan, Virginia, Ottoman
Wars, Harlow: Longman,
2007
Akyıldız, Ali, Tanzimat
Dönemi Osmanlı Merkez
Teşkilatında Reform, İstanbul:Eren, 1993 Akyıldız, Ali. Osmanlı
Bürokrasisi ve Modernleşme, İstanbul: İletişim Yayınları, 2004 Alakom.
Ruhat, Şerif Paşa: Bir Kürt Diplomatının
Fırtınalı Yılları, İstanbul: Avesta, 1998 Albrow, Martin, Bureaucracy, New York: Praeger, 1970
Anderson,
Benedict, Imagined Communities, London;
New York: Verso,
2003
Armstrong,
John, Nations Before Nationalism,
Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press,
1982
Ayalon, Ami, Language and Change in the Arabic Middle East, Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 1987
Aylmer,G.E, The King‟s
Servants: The Civil
Service of Charles
I, 1625-1642, London: Routledge & K. Paul, 1961
Azak, Umut, Myths and Memories
of Secularism in Turkey (1923-1966), Leiden University,
unpublished dissertation
Baack,
Lawrence J, Christian Bernstorff and
Prussia, New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1980
Bacqué-Grammont, Jean-Louis, Représentants Permanents de la France
en Turquie (1536- 1991) et de la Turquie en France
(1797-1991), Istanbul: Editions Istanbul: Isis, 1991
Baer, Marc David, The Dönme: Jewish Converts,
Muslim Revolutionaries and Secular
Turks, Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2010
Bakhash, Shaul, Iran:
Monarchy, Bureaucracy & Reform under the Qajars 1858-1896, London:
Ithaca Press, 1978
Barsoumian, Hagop, ―The Dual Role of the Armenian Amira Class within
the Ottoman Government and the Armenian Millet (1750-1850)‖, in B. Braude &
B. Lewis (ed.), Christians and the Jews
in the Ottoman Empire, New York: Holmes & Meier Publishers, 1982, v. I.
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
Bein, Amit, The Ulema,
Their Institutions and Politics in the Late Ottoman Empire (1876- 1924),
unpublished dissertation, Princeton University, 2006
Berger, Stefan,
The Search for Normality, Providence: Berghahn, 1997
Berghahn, Volker,
Germany and the Approach
of War in 1914, London: Macmillan, 1973.
Berkes,
Niyazi, The Development of Secularism in
Turkey, London: Hurst and Company, 1998
Birinci, Ali, Tarihin Gölgesinde: Meşahir-i
Meçhuleden Birkaç Zat,
İstanbul: Dergah Yayınları,
2001
Blackbourn,
David & Eley, Geoff, The
Peculiarities of German History, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1984
Blackburn,
David & Evans, Richard J, ―Preface‖ to The German Bourgeoise, David Blackbourn &,Richard J. Evans (ed.), London; New York: Routledge, 1991
Bosworth,
Richard, Italy and the Approach of the
First World War, London: Macmillan, 1983
Boyar, Ebru, Ottomans,
Turks and the Balkans, London:
Tauris Academic Studies,
2007 Brass, Paul, Theft of an Idol,
Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1997
Brewer, John, The Sinews of Power: War, Money and the English
State 1688-1783, Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press,
1990
Bridge, F.R, From Sadowa to Sarajevo:The Foreign
Policy of Austria-Hungary 1866- 1914, London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1972
Brummett, Palmira,
Image and Imperialism in the Ottoman
Revolutionary Press 1908- 1911, New York: State University
of New York Press, 2000
Budak, Ali, Münif Paşa, İstanbul: Kitabevi, 2004
Busch, Briton Cooper, Hardinge
of Penhurst: A Study in the Old Diplomacy, Hamden: Archon Books, 1980
Butrus Abu-Manneh, ―The Sultan and the Bureaucracy: The
Anti-Tanzimat Concepts of Grand Vizier Mahmud Nedim Paşa, in Studies on Islam and the Ottoman Empire in
the 19th Century, Istanbul: Isis Press, 2001
Buzpınar, Tufan, ―The Question of Caliphate Under the Last
Ottoman Sultans‖, in Ottoman Reform and
Muslim Regeneration, Itzchak
Weismann & Fruma Zachs (ed.), London: I.B. Tauris
Cannadine, David,
Aspects of Aristocracy, New Haven: Yale University Press,
1994 Cannadine, David, Ornamentalism,
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001
Cannadine, David, The Decline and Fall of the British
Aristocracy, New Haven: Yale
University Press, 1990
Çark,Y, Türk Devleti Hizmetinde Ermeniler, İstanbul: Yeni Matbaa, 1953
Carlgren, Wilhelm, ―Sweden: The Ministry for Foreign
Affairs‖, in The Times Survey of the
Foreign Ministries of the World, Zara Steiner (ed.), Westport: Times Books,
1982
Cecil, Lamar, The
German Diplomatic Service, 1871-1914, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1976
Chadwick, Owen, The
Secularization of the European Mind in the Nineteenth Century, Cambridge,
U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 1975
Chambers, Richard, ―The Civil Bureaucarcy: Turkey‖, in Political Modernization in Japan and Turkey,
Robert E. Ward & Dankwart A. Rüstow (ed.), Princeton: Princeton University
Press, 1962
Chatterjee, Partha, The
Nation and its Fragments, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1993
Chaussinand-Nogaret, Guy, The
French Nobility in the Eighteenth Century: from Feudalism to Enlightenment,
Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 1985
Christoph K. Neumann, ―Political and Diplomatic Developments‖, in The Cambridge History of Turkey Vol.
III, Suraiya N. Faroqhi (ed.), Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press,
2006
Cihan, Ahmet, Reform Çağında Osmanlı
İlmiyye Sınıfı, İstanbul: Birey Yayıncılık, 2004
Cleveland, William, The
Making of an Arab Nationalist: Ottomanism and Arabism in the Lif and Thought of
Sati‟ al-Hus, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1971
Collins, Randall, Macrohistory, Stanford: Stanford
University Press, 1999
Confino, Michael, ―On Intellectuals and Intellectual Tradition in
Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century Russia‖, Daedalus,
101-3 (1972)
Corp, Edward T, ―Sir Charles
Hardinge and the Question of Intervention in the Boer War:
An Episode in the Rise of Anti-German Feeling in the British
Foreign Office‖, The Journal of Modern
History, Vol. 51, No. 2 (June 1979)
Cunningham, Alan, Eastern
Questions in the Nineteenth Century, London; Portland: Frank Cass, 1993
Dangerfield, George,
The Strange Death of Liberal
England, Stanford: Stanford
University Press, 1997
Danışman, Basri, Artçı
Diplomat: Son Osmanlı Hariciye Nazırlarından Mustafa Reşit Paşa, İstanbul:
Arba Yayınları, 1998
Davison, Roderick, Essays
in Ottoman and Turkish History 1774-1923: Impact of the West, Auustin: University of Texas, 1990
Davison, Roderick, Nineteenth
Century Ottoman Diplomacy and Reforms, Istanbul: Isis Press, 1999
Davison,
Roderick, Reform in the Ottoman Empire
1856-1876, New York: Gordian Press, 1973
Demirci,
Aliyar, İkinci Meşrutiyet‟te Ayan Meclisi
1908-1912, İstanbul: Bilgi Üniversitesi Yayınları, 2006
Demirel,
Fatmagül, Adliye Nezaretinin Kuruluşu ve
Faaliyetleri (1876-1914), unpublished ph.d. thesis, Istanbul University,
2003
Demiryürek, Mehmet,
Tanzimat‟tan Cumhuriyet‟e Bir Osmanlı Aydını:
Abdurrahman Şeref Efendi, İstanbul: Phoenix, 2003
Deringil,
Selim, ―They Live in a State of Nomadism and Savagery‖, Comparative Studies in Society and History Vol. 45, No. 2, (April
2003)
Deringil,
Selim, Simgeden Millete, İstanbul: İletişim Yayınları, 2007
Deringil, Selim, The
Ottomans, The Turks and World Power Politics, Istanbul: Isis Press, 2000
Deringil, Selim, The
Turkish Foreign Policy During the Second World War: An “Active” Neutrality,
Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 1989
Deringil, Selim, The
Well-Protected Domains: Ideology and Legitimation of Power in the Otoman
Empire: 1876-1909, London; New York: I. B. Tauris, 1998
DeSantis, Hugh; Heinrichs, Waldo. ―The Department of State
and American Foreign Policy‖, in The
Times Survey of the Foreign Ministries of the World, Zara Steiner (ed.),
Westport: Times Books, 1982
Doss, Kurt, ―The History of the German Foreign Office‖, in The Times Survey of Foreign Ministries of
the World, Zara Steiner (ed.), Westport: Times Books, 1982
Dreyfus, Richard,
Bürokrasinin İcadı, İstanbul: İletişim
Yayınları, 2007
Drummond Wolf, Henry, Rambling Recollections, London: Macmillan and Co., 1908,
Eisenstadt, Shmuel N. & Schluchter, Wolfgang &
Wittrock, Björn (ed), Public Spheres
& Collective Identities, New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers, 2001
Eisenstadt, Shmuel,
From Generation to Generation: Age Groups and Social Structure, London; New York:
Routledge, 1956
Eksteins, Modris, Rites of Spring,
Boston:Houghton Mifflin, 2000
Eldem, Edhem (prep.), Iftihar ve İmtiyaz, İstanbul: Osmanlı Bankası Arşiv ve Araştırma Merkezi, 2004
Eley,
Geoffrey, Reshaping the German Right,
Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1991
Elias, Norbert, The Civilizing Process, part 2 (State Formation
and Civilization), Cambrisge, Mass. : Blackwell, 1994
Emil, Birol, Mizancı Murad Bey, İstanbul:
İstanbul Üniversitesi Edebiyat
Fakültesi Yayınları, 1979
Epstein, Klaus, ―Stein
in German Historiography‖, History and Theory vol:
5, no:3, 1966,
Erdem, Hakan, Slavery
in the Ottoman Empire and its Demise, Basinstoke: Macmillan, 1996
Erdem, Hakan Y, ―Do
Think of Them as Agricultural Laboureres‖: Ottoman
Responses to the Greek War of
Independence‖, in Thalia Dragonas & Faruk Birtek (ed), Citizenship and the Nation-State in Greece and Turkey, London; New
York: Routledge, 2005
Erol, Mine. Osmanlı İmparatorluğu‟nun Amerika Büyük Elçisi
A. Rüstem Bey,
İstanbul, no publishing
house, 1972
Evans, Richard
J, Rereading German
History, London; New York:
Routledge, 1997
Findley, Carter
Vaughn, ―The Advent of Ideology
in the Islamic Middle East (Part I)‖,
Studia Islamica, No. 55 (1982)
Findley, Carter Vaughn, ―The Advent of Ideology in the Islamic Middle East (Part II)‖,
Studia Islamica, No. 56 (1982)
Findley, Carter, Bureaucratic
Reform in the Ottoman Empire: The Sublime Porte 1789- 1922, Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 1990
Findley, Carter, Ottoman Civil Officialdom, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1989
Fink, Carol, The Genoa Conference: European Diplomacy 1921-1922, Chapel Hill:
University of North Carolina Press, 1984.
Fischer, Fritz,
Germany‟s Aims in the First World War, New York: W.W. Norton, 1967 Fortna, Benjamin,The Imperial Classroom, Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2000
Foucault, Michael. ―Governmentality‖, in The Foucault Effect:
Studies in Governmentality, Graham Burchell
& Colin Gordon, & Peter Miller (ed.), Chicago:University of Chicago
Press, 1991
French, David, British
Economic and Strategic Planning 1905-1915, London; Boston: Allen &
Unwin, 1982
French, David, British
Strategy and War Aims 1914-1916, London; Boston: Allen & Unwin, 1986
Fromkin, David, A Peace to End All Peace, New York: H. Holt, 1989
Fujitani, Takashi,
Splendid Monarchy, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1998
Geiss, Imanuel, German
Foreign Policy 1871-1914, London; New York: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1976;
Gellner, Ernest, Nations and Nationalism, Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1983
Gellner, Ernest,
Plough, Sword and Book: The Structure
of Human History, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1990
Georgeon, Francois, Des Ottomans
Aux Turcs, Istanbul: Les Editions Isis, 1995
Georgeon, Francois, Sultan Abdülhamid,
İstanbul: Homer, 2006
Gilbert,
Felix, ―The ―New Diplomacy‖ of the Eighteenth Century‖, World Politics, Vol. 4,
No. 1 (Oct., 1951)
Girgin, Kemal, Osmanlı ve Cumhuriyet Dönmlerinde Hariciye Tarihimiz: Teşkilat ve Protokol, Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu,
1994
Glasner, Peter
E, The Sociology of Secularisation, London;
New York: Routledge & Kegan Paul,
1977
Göçek, Fatma Müge, Rise of the Bourgeoise, Demise of Empire, Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1996
Goffman, Daniel,
The Ottoman Empire and Early Modern Europe, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge
University Press, 2002
Gökay, Bülent,
A
Clash of Empires:
Turkey Between Russian
Bolshevism and English Imperialism 1918-1923, London:
Tauris Academic Studies, 1997
Goldstein, Erik, ―The British
Official Mind and the Lausanne
Conference, 1922-23‖,
Diplomacy & Statecraft, 1557-301x, Volume 14, Issue 2, 2003
Goldstein, Erik, Winning the Peace, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1991
Goldstein, Erik. ―Neville Chamberlain, the British Official
Mind and the Munich Crisis‖,
Diplomacy & Statecraft, 1557-301x, Volume 10, Issue 2, 1999
Goldstein, Erik. ―The British
Official Mind and Europe‖, Diplomacy & Statecraft, 1557- 301x,
Volume 8, Issue 3, 1997
Gooch, John, Plans of War, London;
New York: Routledge
& K. Paul,
1974
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
Gouldner, Alvin,
Patterns of Industrial Bureaucracy, New York: Free Press, 1964
Grant, Jonathan. ―Rethinking the Ottoman ‗Decline‘: Military Technology Diffusion in the Ottoman
Empire, Fifteenth to Eighteenth Centuries‖, Journal
of World History, vol. 10, n. 1
(Spring 1999)
Grant, Samuel Becker, Modern
Egypt and the Turco-Egyptian Elite, unpublished dissertation, University of
Michigan, 1968
Green, Abigail, Fatherlands:
State-Building and Nationhood in Nineteenth-Century Germany, Cambridge,
U.K. : Cambridge University Press
Greenfeld, Liah, Five Roads
to Modernity, Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 1992
Griffiths, Merwin
Albert, The Reorganization of the Ottoman
Army Under Abdülhamid (1880-1897), unpublished
dissertation, University of California, 1968
Güçlü,
Yücel, Eminence Grise of the Turkish
Foreign Service: Numan Mememencioğlu, Ankara, no publishing house, 2002
Güçlü,Yücel, The Life and Career of a Turkish Diplomat:
Cevat Açıkalın, Ankara,
no publishing house, 2002
Gül, Murat, The Emergence of Modern Istanbul, London; New York: I.B.Tauris, 2009 Günver, Semih, Fatin Rüştü Zorlu‟nun Öyküsü, Ankara: Bilgi Yayınevi, 1985
Gürel, Nazlı Rana,
İbrahim Edhem Pertev Paşa, İstanbul: Berikan Yayınevi, 2004
Habermas, Jurgen, The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere, Cambridge,
Mass.
: MIT Press,
1991
Hagen, Gottfried, ―The Prophet Muhammed as an Exemplar in War:
Ottoman Views on the Eve of World War I‖, in New Perspectives on Turkey, Spring 2000, no: 22
Halperin, Susan, War
and Social Change in Modern Europe, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 2004
Hamerow, Theodor S, Restoration,
Revolution, Reaction: Economics and Politics in Germany 1815-1871,
Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1966
Handler, Richard, ―Is ‗Identity‘ a Useful Cross-Cultural Concept
?‖ in Commemorations: The Politics of
National Identity, John R. Gilllis (ed.), Princeton: Princeton University
Press, 1994
Hanioğlu, Şükrü, A
Brief History of the Late Ottoman Empire, Princeton: Princeton University
Press, 2008
Hanioğlu, Şükrü, Preparing
for a Revolution, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001
Hanioğlu, Şükrü, Young Turks in Opposition,
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995
Hastings, Adrian,
The Construction of Nationhood, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge
University Press, 1997
Hathaway, Jane,The
Politics of Households in Ottoman Egypt, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge
University Press, 1997
Hayes, Carlton, A
Generation of Materialism 1871-1900, New York; London: Harper &
Brothers, 1941
Hayne, M.B, The French
Foreign Office and the Origins of the First World War, 1898- 1914, Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 1993
Headlam-Morley, James, A
Memoir of the Paris Peace Conference, London: Methuen & Co Ltd, 1972
Heinrichs, Waldo, American
Ambassador: Joseph C. Grew and the Development of the United States Diplomatic
Tradition, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1986
Heinzelman, Tobias, Osmanlı
Karikatüründe Balkan Sorunu, İstanbul: Kitap Yayınevi, 2004
Heinzelmann, Tobias, ―Die Konsruktion eines Osmanischen Patriotismus‖
in Aspects of the Political Language in
Turkey, Hans-Lukas Kieser (ed.), Istanbul: Isis Press, 2002
Henig, Ruth, ―New Diplomacy and the Old: A Reassesment of
British Conceptions of a League of Nations, 1918-1920‖, in The Paris Peace Conference, 1919: Peace Without
Victory ?, Dockrill, M. L. & Fisher, John (ed.), New York: Palgrave,
2001
Heper, Metin (ed.), The
State and Public Bureaucracies: A Comparative Perspective, New York:
Greenwood Press, 1987
Herbette, Maurice, Fransa‟da
İlk Daimi Türk Elçisi “Moralı Esseyit Ali Efendi” (1797- 1802), İstanbul:
Pera Turizm ve Ticaret A.Ş., 1997
Herf, Jeffrey, Reactionary
Modernism, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 1986
Herzfeld, Michael, Cultural Intimacy,
London; New York: Routledge, 1997
Herzfeld, Michael, The Social Production of Indifference: Exploring the Symbolic Roots of Western
Bureaucracy, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1993
Higgs, David, Nobles in
Nineteenth Century France, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1987
Hobsbawm, Eric, Nations
and Nationalism since 1780, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press,
1992
Hroch, , Miroslav, Social
Preconditions of National Revival in Europe, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge
University Press, 1985
Hroch, Miroslav. ―From National Movement into the Fully-formed
Nation: The Nation- Building Process in Europe‖, in Mapping the Nation, Gopal Balakrishnan & Benedict Anderson
(ed.), London; New York: Verso, 1996
Ilchman, Warren Frederick, Professional Diplomacy in the United States 1779-1939, Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1961
Itzkowitz, Norman & Shinder, Joel, ―The Office of Şeyh-ül Islam
and the Tanzimat-A Prosopographic Enquiry‖, Middle
Eastern Studies, Vol. 8, No. 1 (Jan., 1972),
Itzkowitz, Norman,
―Eighteenth Century Realities‖, Studia Islamica, No. 16 (1962)
Itzkowitz, Norman, Mehmed
Raghib Pasha: The Making of an Ottoman Grand Vizier, unpublished
dissertation, Princeton University, 1959
Jedlicki, Jerzy,
A Suburb of Europe,
Budapest: CEU Press,
1988
Jusdanis, Gregory, Belated
Modernity and Aeesthetic Culture, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota
Press, 1991
Jusdanis, Gregory, The Necessary Nation, Princeton: Princeton University Press,
2001
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
Kahan, Alan S, Liberalism
in Nineteenth-Century Europe: The Political Culture
of Limited Suffrage,
Basingstoke; New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2003
Karpat, Kemal, The Politicization of Islam, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001
Kautsky, John, The Politics of Aristocratic Empires, New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers, 1997
Kayalı, Hasan, Young Turks and Arabs, Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1997 Kaynar,
Reşat, Mustafa Reşit Paşa ve Tanzimat,
Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu, 1991 Kedourie, Elie, Nationalism, London: Hutchinson & Co, 1966
Keiger, John,
France and the Origins
of the First World War,
New York: St. Martin‘s
Press; 1983
Kertzer, David,
―Generation as a Sociological Problem‖, Annual Review of Sociology, Vol. 9, (1983)
Kidd, Colin, British Identities Before Nationalism, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge
University Press, 1999
Kidd, Colin,
The Forging
of Races, Cambridge, U.K. :
Cambridge University Press, 2006.
Kırlı, Cengiz,
―Yolsuzluğun İcadı: 1840 Ceza Kanunu,
İktidar ve Bürokrasi‖, Tarih ve Toplum Yeni Yaklaşımlar, 4, Güz 2006
Kırlı, Cengiz, Sultan ve Kamuoyu,
İstanbul: Türkiye İş Bankası Kültür Yayınları, 2008
Kırmızı, Abdülhamid. “Osmanlı Bürokrasisinde Gayrımüslimler”, unpublished MA thesis,
Hacettepe University,1998
Kırmızı, Abdülhamit, Abdülhamid‟in Valileri, İstanbul: Klasik Yayınları, 2007
Kitromilides, Paschalis M, ―The Enlightenment East and West: A Comparative Perspective on the Ideological Origins of the Balkan Political
Traditions‖, in Canadian Review of
Studies in Nationalism 10, no: 1, 1983
Kitromilides, Paschalis M, ―The Enlightenment East and West:
A Comparative Perspective on the Ideological Origins of
the Balkan Political Traditions‖, Canadian
Review of Studies in Nationalism 10, no: 1, 1983
Kjolsen, Klaus, ―The Royal Danish Ministry of Foreign
Affairs‖, in The Times Survey of Foreign
Ministries of the World, Westport: Times Books, Zara Steiner (ed.), 1982
Koçak, Cemil,
Heyet-i Mahsusalar, İstanbul: İletişim
Yayınları, 2005
Kocka, Jurgen,
―German History Before Hitler: The Debate About the German Sonderweg‖,
Journal of Contemporary History, Vol.
23, No. 1 (Jan., 1988)
Kodaman,
Bayram, Les Ambassades de Moustapha
Réchid Pacha a Paris, Ankara: Türk Tarih
Kurumu, 1991
Köksal,
Yonca & Erkan, Davut, Sadrazam
Kıbrıslı Mehmet Emin Paşa‟nın Rumeli Teftişi, İstanbul: Boğaziçi
Üniversitesi Yayınları, 2007
Krikorian,
Mesrob, Armenians in the Service of the
Ottoman Empire 1860-1908, London; New York: Routledge, 1977
Krüger,
Karl, Kemalist Turkey and the Middle East,
London: Allen & Unwin Ltd., 1932
Kuneralp, Sinan (ed.), Studies on Ottoman
Diplomatic History, Istanbul:
Isis Press, 1987
Kuneralp,
Sinan, ―Tanzimat Sonrası Osmanlı Sefirleri‖, in Çağdaş Türk Diplomasisi: 200 Yıllık Süreç, Ankara: Türk Tarih
Kurumu Yayınları, 1997
Kurat, Yuluğ Tekin, Henry Layard‟ın
Türkiye Elçiliği 1877-1880, Ankara: Ankara
Üniversitesi, 1968
Kushner, David, The Rise of Turkism 1876-1908, London: Cass, 1977
Lambton, Ann K.S, State and Government in Medieval Islam, London; New York: RoutledgeCurzon, 1991
Lauren, Paul Gordon, Diplomats and Bureaucrats, Stanford:
Hoover Institution Press, 1976
Levy, Avigdor. "Military Reform and the Problem of Centralization in the Ottoman
Empire in the Eighteenth Century‖, Middle
Eastern Studies, Vol.18 (Jul 1982), pp. 227-249
Lewis,
Bernard, The Political Language of Islam,
Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991
Lieven D.C.B,
Russia and the Origins
of the First World War,
New York: St. Martin‘s
Press, 1983
Lieven, D.C.B, ―Pro-Germans and Russian Foreign
Policy 1890-1914‖, International
History Review, 11 (1980).
Lieven, Dominic,
Russia‟s Rulers Under the Old Regime, New Haven: Yale University
Press, 1989
Lieven, Dominic,
Russia‟s Rulers Under the Old Regime, New Haven: Yale University
Press, 1989
Lieven,
Dominic, The Aristocracy in Europe,
1815-1914, New York: Columbia University Press, 1993
Lincoln,
Bruce, ―The Ministers
of Nicholas I: A Brief Inquiry into Their Backgrounds and Service Careers‖, Russian
Review, Vol. 34, No. 3, (Jul., 1975)
Lincoln, W.
Bruce, In the Vanguard of Reform:
Russia‟s Enlightened Bureaucrats 1825- 1861, DeKalb: Northern Illinois
University Press, 1986
Lincoln, W. Bruce, The Great Reforms: Autocracy, Bureaucracy and the Politics of Change
in Imperial Russia, DeKalb: Northern Illinois University Press, 1990
Lloyd George, David, The Truth About Peace Treaties, London: Gollancz, 1938
Lorenz, Chris, ―Beyond
Good and Evil ? The German Empire of 1871 and Modern German Historiography‖, Journal of Contemporary History, Vol.
30, No. 4 (Oct., 1995)
Lowe, C.J. & Marzari,
F, Italian Foreign Policy 1870-1940, London;
New York: Routledge, 2002
MacKenzie,
John, Orientalism, Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1995 Macmillan, Margareth, Peacemakers, London: John Murray, 2003
Maisel, Ephraim,
The Foreign Office and Foreign Policy
1919-1926, Brighton: Sussex Academic Press, 1994
Makdisi, Usama.
―Ottoman Orientalism‖, The American
Historical Review, June 2002,
Vol. 107, No:3, p. 27
Makdisi,
Ussama, The Culture of Secterianism,
Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000
Mann,
Michael, Sources of Social Power,
Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 1986
Mann,
Michael, The Dark Side of Democracy, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 2005
Mann, Micheal, Fascists, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge
University Press, 2004)
Mannheim, Karl, ―The Problem
of Generations‖, in Essays on the Sociology of Knowledge,
London; New York: Routledge & Paul, 1952
Mardin, Şerif,
Continuity and Change in the Ideas of the Young Turks, İstanbul: Robert
College, 1969
Mardin, Şerif, The Genesis of Young Ottoman
Thought, Syracuse: Syracuse
University Press, 2000
Martin, Terry, The Affirmative Action Empire: Nations
and Nationalism in the Soviet Empire, 1923-1939, Ithaca:
Cornell University Press, 2001
Mayer, Arno J, The Persistence of the Old Regime, New York: Pantheon, 1982
Mayer, Arno, Political
Origins of the New Diplomacy, 1917-18, New York: Vintage, 1973 Mayer, Arno, Politics and Diplomacy of
Peacemaking, New York: Alfred A. Knopf,
1967
Maza,
Sarah, The Myth of the French Bourgeoise,
Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press,
2003
Mazower, Mark, Dark Continent, London: Penguin,
1999
McClintock,
Anna, Imperial Leather: Race, Gender and
Sexuality in the Colonial Context, London; New York: Routledge, 1995
McKercher,
B.C.J, ―The Foreign
Office, 1930-39: Strategy,
Permanent Interests and National Security, Contemporary
British History, Autumn 2004, Vol. 18 Issue 3
McKercher,
B.J.C, ―The Last Old Diplomat: Sir Robert Vansittart and the Verities
of British Foreign Policy, 1903-1930‖, Diplomacy and Statecraft, volume :6, no:1 (1995)
McLean, Roderick
R. Royalty and Diplomacy
in Europe 1890-1914, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 2007
Meeker, Michael,
A Nation
of Empire, Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002
Meyer, Marshall
W, Changes in Public Bureaucracies, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 1979
Mitchell, Timothy,
Rule of Experts: Egypt, Techno-Politics, Modernity, Berkeley: University
of California Press, 2002
Mitu, Sorin, National
Identity of Romanians in Transylvania, Budapest:
CEU Press,
Mombauer, Annika,
Helmuth Von Moltke and the Origins
of the First World War, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge
University Press, 2001
Mombauer, Annika.
The Origins of the First World War: Controversies and Consensus,
London; New York:
Longman, 2002
Mommsen, Wolfgang, Imperial Germany
1867-1918, London; New York: Arnold,
1995 Mowat R.B, Diplomacy and
Peace, London: Williams & Norgate Ltd., 1935
Neilson, Keith, Strategy
and Supply: The Anglo-Russian Alliance 1914-1917, London; Boston: George
Allen & Unwin, 1984
Neumann, Christoph K, ―Whom Did Ahmed Cevdet Represent ?‖, in The Late Ottoman Society, Elizabeth
Özdalga (ed.), London; New York: RoutledgeCurzon, 2005
Neumann, Christoph, ―Bad Times and Better Self: Definitions of
Identity and Strategies for Development in Late Ottoman Historiography
1850-1900‖, in Ottomans and Balkans: A Discussion of Historiography,
Farouqi, Suraiya, Adanır, Fikret (ed.), Köln; Leiden; Boston: Brill, 2002
Neumann, Christoph, Amaç
Tarih, Amaç Tanzimat, İstanbul: Tarih Vakfı Yurt Yayınları, 2000
Nicolson, Harold,
Peacemaking 1919, London: Constable
& Co Ltd, 1933
Nicolson, Harold, Portrait
of a Diplomatist: Being the Life of Sir Arthur Nicolson, First Lord Carnock, London: Houghton
Mifflin, 1930
Nord, Philip,
The Republican Moment, Cambridge, Mass: Harvard
University Press, 1995
Okday, Şefik, Büyükbabam
Son Sadrazam Ahmet Tevfik Paşa, İstanbul, no publishing house, 1986
Orlovsky, Daniel T, ―Recent Studies on the
Russian Bureaucracy‖, Russian Review, vol. 35, no. 4 (October
1976)
Orlovsky, Daniel, Limits of Reform, Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 1981
Ortaylı, İlber, ―II. Abdülhamid Devrinde Taşra
Bürokrasisinde Gayrımüslimler‖, in Sultan
II. Abdülhamid ve Devri Semineri, İstanbul: Edebiyat
Fakültesi Basımevi, 1994
Otte, T.G, ―Almost
a Law of Nature ? Sir Edward Grey, the Foreign Office and the Balance of Power in Europe 1905-1912‖,
Diplomacy and Statecraft, Vol. 8, No.
2 (2003)
Otte, T.G, ―Old Diplomacy: Reflections on the Foreign Office Before 1914‖,
Contemporary British
History, Vol. 18 Issue 3 (Autumm 2004)
Özbilgen, Erol, Süleyman Hüsnü Paşa ve Dönemi, İstanbul: İz Yayıncılık, 2006
Özcan, Abdülkadir, ―II. Mahmud‘un Memleket
Gezileri‖, in Prof. Bekir
Kütükoğlu‟na Armağan, İstanbul: İstanbul Edebiyat Fakültesi
Yayınları, 1991
Özoğlu,
Hakan, Kurdish Notables and the Ottoman
State, New York:State University of New York Press, 2004
Pamukçıyan, Kevork,
Biyografileriyle Ermeniler, İstanbul: Aras Yayınları, 2000
Panaite, Viorel, The Ottoman Law of War and Peace, Boulder: East European Monographs,
Boulder, 2000
Parris, Henry, Constitutional Bureaucracy, London: George
Allen & Unwin Ltd., 1969 Parsons, Talcott, Politics and Social Structure, New York:
The Free Press, 1969
Plamenatz, John.
―Two Types of Nationalism‖, in Nationalism: The Nature and Evolution
of an Idea, Eugene Kamenka (ed.), London: Edward Arnold, 1976
Platt, D.C.M. The Cinderella Service:
British Consuls Since 1825, London:
Longman, 1971
Pollard, Lisa, Nurturing
the Nation, Berkeley: University of
California Press, 2005 Ponsonby, Arthur, Democracy and Diplomacy, London:
Methuen & Co. Ltd., 1915 Ponsonby, Arthur, Falsehood in War-Time, London: George Allen & Unwin, 1928
Quataert, Donald,
Ottoman Reform and Agriculture in Anatolia 1876-1908, unpublished dissertation, UCLA, 1973
Raeff, Marc, ―The Bureaucratic Phenomena of Imperial
Russia 1700-1905‖, The American Historical Review, vol. 84,
no.2 (Apr. 1979)
Raeff,
Marc, Origins of the Russian
Intelligentsia: The Eighteenth-Century Nobility, San Diego: Harcourt Brace & Company, 1966
Raeff, Marc, The Well-Ordered Police State, New
Haven: Yale University Press, 1983
Reid, James, Crisis of
the Ottoman Empire: Prelude to Collapse 1839-1878, Stuttgart: F. Steiner,
2000
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.), Köln; Leiden; Boston: Brill, 2005
Repp, Kevin, Reformers,
Critics and the Paths of German Modernity, Cambridge, Mass: Harvard
University Press, 2000
Riasanovsky, Nicholas, A
Parting of Ways: Government and Educated Public in Russia 1801-1855,
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1976
Riasanovsky, Nicholas,
Nicholas
I and Official Nationality in Russia 1825-1855, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1959
Rich, Norman, & M.H. Fisher (ed.), The Holstein Papers, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press,
1955
Rich, Norman, Friedrich
von Holstein: Politics and Diplomacy in the Era of Bismarck and Wilhelm II,
Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 1965
Röhl, John, The Kaiser
and His Court, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 1996
Rose, Norman, Harold Nicolson,
London: Jonathan Cape,
2005
Rosenberg, Hans, Bureucracy,
Aristocracy and Autocracy: The Prussian
Experience 1660- 1815,
Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 1958
Rumpler,
Helmut, ―The Foreign Ministry of Austria and Austria-Hungary 1848 to 1918‖, in The Times Survey of the Foreign Ministries
of the World, Westport: Times Books, 1982
Salzmann,
Ariel, Tocqueville in Ottoman Empire:
Rival Paths to the Modern State, Köln; Leiden; Boston: Brill, 2004
Scott, Andrew M, ―Environmental Change
and Organizational Adaptation: The Problem of the State Department‖, International Studies Quarterly, Vol.
14, No. 1 (March 1970)
Scott, Andrew M, ―The Department of State: Formal Organization and
Informal Culture‖,
International Studies
Quarterly, Vol. 13, No. 1 (March, 1969)
Şen, Adil, Osmanlıda
Dönüm Noktası: III. Selim Hayatı ve Islahatları, İstanbul: Fecr
Yayınları, 2003
Serra,
Enrico, ―Italy: The Ministry of Foreign Affairs‖, in The Times Survey of
Foreign Ministries of the World,
Zara Steiner (ed.), Westport: Times Books, 1982
Seyitdanlıoğlu, Mehmet, ―Sadık Rıfat
Paşa ve Avrupa Ahvaline Dair Risalesi‖, Liberal
Düşünce, no.2 (Summer 1996)
Seyitdanlıoğlu, Mehmet,
Tanzimat Devrinde Meclis-i Vala (1838-1868), Ankara:
Türk Tarih Kurumu Yayınları, 1994
Sharp, Alan, ―Adapting to a New World ? British Foreign
Policy in the 1920s‖.
Contemporary British History, Autumn 2004, Vol. 18 No. 3
Sharp, Alan, ―The Foreign Office
in Eclipse, 1919-1922‖, History,1976, Vol.61
Shaw, Stanford, Between Old and
New, Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 1971
Shaw, Stanford, History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge
University Press, 1976
Shinder, Joel. ―Mustafa
Efendi: Scribe, Gentleman and Pawnbroker‖ , IJMES,
Vol. 10, No.
3. (Aug., 1979)
Smith, Anthony
D, The Ethnic Origins
of Nations, Cambridge, Mass: Blackwell Publishers, 198
Smith, Anthony, Myths
and Memories of the Nation, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999
Smith, Colin, The Embassy
of Sir William White, Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1957
Somel, Akşin, The Modernization of Public Education
in the Ottoman Empire, 1839-1908
: Islamization, Autocracy, and Discipline, Köln; Leiden; Boston: Brill, 2001
Somel, Selçuk Akşin, ―Osmanlı Reform Çağında Osmanlıcılık Düşüncesi (1839-1913), in Tanzimat
ve Meşrutiyet‟in Birikimi, Mehmet Ö. Alkan (ed.), İstanbul: İletişim
Yayınları, 2001
Sonyel, Salahi, Türk
Kurtuluş Savaşı ve Dış Politika, Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu, 1973 Spitzer, Alan,
The French Generation of 1820, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1987
Steiner, Zara & Neilson,
Keith, Britain and the Origins of the First World War, Basingstoke; New York: Palgrave
Macmillan, 2003
Steiner, Zara, ―Introduction‖, in The Times Survey
of Foreign Ministries of the World, Westport: Times Books, Zara
Steiner (ed.), 1982
Steiner,
Zara, ―The Foreign Office Reforms 1919-1921‖, The Historical Journal, Vol. 17, No. 1 (Mar., 1974)
Steiner, Zara, Dockrill, M.L, ―The Foreign Office Reforms, 1919-1922‖, The Historical Journal, Vol. 17, No. 1
(Mar., 1974)
Steiner, Zara, Grey, Hardinge and the
Foreign Office 1906-1910‖, The Historical
Journal, Vol. 10, No. 3 (1967)
Steiner, Zara, The Foreign Office and Foreign
Policy, 1898-1914, Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge
University Press, 1969
Steiner, Zara, The Last Years of the Old Foreign
Office 1898-1905‖, The Historical Journal, Vol. 6, No. 1 (1963)
Steiner, Zara,
The Lights That Failed, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005 Stoye,
John, Marsigli‟s Europe, New Haven:
Yale University Press, 1994
Suleiman, Ezra, Politics,
Power and Bureaucracy in France: The Administrative Elite, Princeton: Princeton University
Press, 1974
Suleiman, Ezra,
Elites in French Society:
The Politics of Survival, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1998
Swartz, Marvin,
The Union of Democratic Control in British
Politics During the First
World War, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1972
Tamkoç, Metin, The
Warrior Diplomats, Salt Lake City: Utah University Press, 1976
Taylor, Charles, Sources of the Self: The Making of the Modern Identity, Cambridge, U.K.
: Cambridge University Press, 1992
Temperley. Harold,
―Secret Diplomacy from Canning to Grey‖, Cambridge Historical Journal, Vol. 6, No. 1
(1938)
Tevetoğlu,
Fethi, Büyük Türkçü Ahmed Hikmet, Ankara:
Milli Eğitim Bakanlığı, 1951
Tevetoğlu, Fethi, Enis Behiç Koryürek:
Hayatı ve Eserleri, Ankara: Kültür ve Turizm
Bakanlığı, 1985
Tilly, Charles, ―War Making and State Making
as Organized Crime‖,
in Bringing the State Back in, Peter B. Evans & Theda Skocpol, Dietrich Rueschemeyer (ed.), Cambridge, U.K.
: Cambridge University Press, 1985
Tilly,
Charles, Coercion, Capital and European
States AD 990-1992, Cambridge, Mass. : Blackwell, 1990
Tulça, Enis, Atatürk, Venizelos
ve Bir Diplomat: Enis Bey, İstanbul: Simurg, 2003
Tural, Erkan, Son Dönem
Osmanlı Bürokrasisi: II Meşrutiyet Dönemi‟nde Bürokratlar, İttihatçılar ve
Parlamenterler, İstanbul: Türkiye ve Orta Doğu Amme İdaresi Enstitüsü, 2009
Uçarol, Rifat,
Gazi Ahmet Muhtar Paşa, İstanbul: Milliyet Yayınları, 1976
Urbach, Karina. Bismarck‟s Favourite Englishman: Lord Odo Russell‟s Mission
to Berlin, London; New
York: I.B.Tauris, 1999
Van Der Veer, Peter & Lehmann,
Harmut (ed.), Nation and Religion: Perspectives on Europe and Asia, Princeton: Princeton University Press,
1999
Vincent, David, The Culture of Secrecy, Oxford;
New York: Oxford University Press, 1998
Warman, Roberta M, ―The Erosion of Foreign
Office Influence in the Making of Foreign Policy, 1916-1918‖, Historical Journal, 15, 1 (1972),
Wasti, Tanvir. ―Halil
Hamid: An Anti-Imperialist Muslim Intellectual‖, Middle Eastern Studies, Vol. 29, no.3, (May
1993)
Weber, Eugen, Peasants
into Frenchmen, Stanford:
Stanford University Press,
1978 Weber, Max, Economy and
Society, New York: Bedminster Press, 1968
Weeks,
Theodore R, Nation and State in Late
Imperial Russia, De Kalb III: University of North Illinois Press, 1996
Wehler, Hans-Ulrich, The German Empire 1871-1918, Leamington Spa; Dover: Berg,
1985
Werking, Richard
Hume, The Master Architects: Building the United States Foreign
Service 1890-1913, Lexington: The University Press of Kentucky, 1977
Wien, Peter, Iraqi Arab Nationalism: Authoritarian, Totalitarian and Pro-Fascist Inclinations 1932-1941, London; New
York: Routledge, 2006
Wiener, Martin,
The Decline and the Decline of the Industrial Spirit 1850-1980,
Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 1981
Willequet,
Jacques. ―The Ministry of Foreign Affairs: Belgium‖, in The Times Survey of the Foreign Ministries of the World, Zara
Steiner (ed.), Westport: Times Books, 1982
Williamson Jr., Samuel R, Austria-Hungary and the Origins
of the First World War, Basingstoke; New York: Palgrave
Macmillan, 1991
Willis, John, The Prussian Bureaucracy in Crisis 1840-1866, Stanford: Stanford University
Press, 1971
Willis, John. ―Aristocracy and Bureaucracy in Nineteenth Century
Prussia‖, Past and Present, No. 41
(Dec 1968)
Wilson,
Keith, The Policy of the Entente,
Cambridge, U.K. : Cambridge University Press, 1985.
Wohl, Robert,
The Generation
of 1914, Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 1979
Wortmann,
Richard, The Scenarios of Power: Myth and
Ceremony in Russian Monarchy, Princeton: Princeton University Press,
1995-2000
Yasamee,
F, Abdülhamid II and the Great Powers,
Istanbul: Isis Press, 1996 Zilfi, Madelaine C, The Politics of Piety, Minneapolis: Biblioteca İslamica, 1988
Zürcher,
Erik J, ―The Young Turks- Children
of the Borderlands ?‖, International Journal of Turkish Studies,
9/1-2 (2003)