Title: The Sick Man of Europe
1The "Sick Man of Europe" 1600s - 1938
2The Ottoman Empire Expands
3The Luxurious Lifestyle of the Sultans in Topkapi
Palace
4Topkapi Palace Model
5The Actual Topkapi Palace
6(No Transcript)
7(No Transcript)
8Topkapi Harem
9Its Good to Be the Sultan!
10Topkapi Fruit Room
11Topkapis GreatCraftsmenship
12The Gradual Loss of Territory 18c 19c
13The Decline of the Empire 18c
14From Empire (Ottoman) to Nation (Turkey)
- Ottomans weakened by internal strife
- Succession of weak rulers (sultans)
- Power struggles (Janissaries, officials, elite
factions) - Corrupt provincial officials and ayan
- Position of artisans declines as a western goods
flood the markets (wide scale urban riots) - Armies lack important resources
- Foreign empires (exRussian) make grabs at
outlying territory
15Reform and Survival
- The Sick Man of Europe
- managed to stave off total decline
- series of reforms--move into the 20th c.
- European nations concerned about potential
collapse could impact the balance of power in
Europe.
16Reform and Survival
- The Sick Man of Europe, as the Ottoman Empire
comes to be known, managed to stave off total
decline through a series of reforms that allowed
it to move into the 20th century under its own
regime. - European nations are concerned about how the
potential collapse of the Ottomans could impact
the balance of power in Europe. - Ex. Great Britain props up Ottomans to keep
Russia from controlling the strategic port city
of Istanbul (Constantinople)
17Reform Comes From Within (in stages)
- Stage 1 Modest Reform (18th century)
- Sultan Selim III
- Stage 2 Reforms Continue (1826)
- Sultan Mahmud II
- Stage 3 The Tanzimat Reforms (1839-1876)
18Reform Comes From Within (in stages)
- Stage 1 Modest Reform (18th century)
- Sultan Selim III introduces new tech. (printing
press) seeks greater bureaucratic efficiency - Result Angers Janissaries factions within the
bureaucracy - Stage 2 Reforms Continue (1826)
- Sultan Mahmud II creates a rival army to break
Janissary power and also breaks ayan power - Farther-reaching reforms are based on western
precedents - Stage 3 The Tanzimat Reforms (1839-1876)
- Reorganizes large sections of society on along
western lines
19Greek War for Independence 1821-1832
20Crimean War 1854-1856
The Sick Man of Europe!
21The Sick Man Dies
- 1908 coup
- immediate problems
- Ottoman Empire ends in 1914
22The Sick Man Dies
- 1908 coup is supported by the military, who
introduce many reforms (education, status of
women, etc.) but there are immediate problems - Factional fighting
- Outbreak of WWI
- Continued subjugation of Arab portions of the
empire - Ottoman Empire ends in 1914
23Crisis in Arab Islamic Heartlands
- Crisis in Arab portions of the empire was the
same - preferred rule by fellow Muslims to control by
Western powers - crisis creates fears about staving off the West
24Crisis in Arab Islamic Heartlands
- Crisis in Arab portions of the empire was the
same rejection or adoption of western ways? - While Arabs resented Ottoman Turkish rule, they
preferred rule by fellow Muslims to control by
Western powers. - Ottoman crisis creates fears about staving off
the West
25Video
- http//www.archive.org/details/TheFallOfTheOttoman
Empire
26The Ottoman Empire in 1914
27Sultan Abdul Hamid II 1876-1909
The Last Ottoman Emperor!
28Repression Revolt
- New reforms dont appease westerners and their
supporters while also upsetting conservative
ulamas and ayans. - SO.Sultan Abdul Hamid (1878-1908) attempts to
create order through absolute rule - His rule ends in a bloodless coup supported by
the Ottoman Society for Union Progress (Young
Turks) whose goal was to restore the 1876
constitution
29The Young Turks Revolt 1908
- The Committee of Union and Progress (CUP).
- Enver Pasha
- Minister of War
- Ottoman Commander- in-Chief
- Mehmet Talaat
- Grand Vizier, 1917-1918
30The Young Turks Program
- Pushed for reforms ? basic democratic rights
- freedom of speech.
- freedom of assembly.
- freedom of the press.
- Problem of nationalism within (heterogeneous
empire).
31Two Armed Camps
Central Powers
Allied Powers
32World War I Alliances 1914-1918
33Europeans Carve Up the Ottoman Empire After WW1
34Mustafa Kemal Atatürk (1881-1938)
- Republican Peoples Party Goals
- 1924 ? abolished the caliphate
35Mustafa Kemal Atatürk (1881-1938)
- Republican Peoples Party Goals
- republicanism (National Assembly).
- nationalism (Turkification).
- populism (for the benefit of the people).
- statism (state-controlled economy).
- secularism (free from religious control).
- reformism.
- 1924 ? abolished the caliphate.
36Atatürks Reforms
- Turkify the Islamic faith
- Western-style clothing
37Atatürks Reforms
- Turkify the Islamic faith
- Translate the Quran into Turkish.
- Secular education.
- Ministry of Religious Affairs abolished.
- Sharia courts closed ? newsecular courts.
- Western-style clothing
- Forbid the wearing of the fez ?
- Western-style mens suits.
- Attacked the veiling of women.
38Atatürks Reforms
- Language Reform
- State Socialism
- Adoption of a Surname
39Atatürks Reforms
- Language Reform
- Roman alphabet replaced theArabic script.
- Literacy in new alphabet required for government
positions. - State Socialism
- State banks established to finance
government-controlled businesses. - Adoption of a Surname.
40Eastern Responses to Western Pressure
Responses ranged across a broad spectrum
Radical Reforms (Taiping Mahdist Rebellions)
designed to bring down the existing social order
Western educated dissidents who attempted to
build new states along Western lines
41Muhammad Ali/Fail of Westernization in Egypt
- Mamluks (Murad) to underestimate the power of
Napoleon - Muhammad Ali (not the boxer!) emerges as a ruler
- Descendants of Ali (khedives) rule until 1956
42Muhammad Ali/Fail of Westernization in Egypt
- Ignorance of the European world causes the
Mamluks (Murad) to underestimate the power of
Napoleon - Resounding defeat of Mamluks reveals that Muslim
armies are seriously overmatched - After French withdrawal, Muhammad Ali (not the
boxer!) emerges as a ruler - Westernizes the military and attempts to
industrialize Egypt - Reforms are blocked by European powers who want
to remain dominant in the Egyptian market - Descendants of Ali (khedives) rule until 1956
43Bankruptcy, Intervention Resistance
- Khedives prove to be terrible rulers
- One important exception Suez Canal
- intellectuals/religious leaders debate the best
way to keep Europe out
44Bankruptcy, Intervention Resistance
- Khedives prove to be terrible rulers (wasteful,
inept and elitist) - One important exception Suez Canal
- Makes Egypt an important strategic area to
competitive European countries - Weak Muslim rulers prompt Muslim
intellectuals/religious leaders to debate the
best way of staving off European control - One side al-Afghani Muhammad Abduh stressed
borrowing from the West to innovate - Other side religious scholars said the Quran
was the source of all truth no answers could be
found in the West
45Jihad Mahdist Revolt
- Sudans Arabs
- Muhammhad Achmad (The Mahdi)
- Mahdi army wins control of Sudan
46Jihad Mahdist Revolt
- Sudans Arabs resent Egyptian control (centered
in Khartoum) and later, British control - Muhammhad Achmad (The Mahdi) leads a jihad with
the following goals - Purging Islam of its corrupt beliefs carried on
by the Egyptians - Fending off western pressure in the area
- Mahdi army wins control of Sudan
- Khalifa Abdallahi continues the fight
- British defeat the mahdi in1896