When The Ottomans Tried To Reform | Ottoman History

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  • Опубликовано: 8 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 415

  • @HikmaHistory
    @HikmaHistory  Год назад +33

    Do you think it was possible to reverse Ottoman decline? And if so, how?
    For more Early Modern History of the Islamic world: ruclips.net/p/PLiPhmAD3I2JwdVOt4lI39d3XENLktUgP5

    • @SignsBehindScience
      @SignsBehindScience Год назад +3

      Yes. If the Ottomans reached Americas before Spain and Portugal. If they advanced more in weaponry and technology than their european counterparts. If the Young Turks - in lieu of forsaking their religion and Ottomans - united with the Ottomans and fought _for_ Islām, Caliphate, and the Sultanate, not _against_ it.

    • @AL-lh2ht
      @AL-lh2ht Год назад +8

      @@SignsBehindSciencenice historical revisionism. Imagine thinking they failed because they were not extremist enough.

    • @bernardkealey6449
      @bernardkealey6449 Год назад +3

      I have not had the opportunity to formally study the vast intricacies of Ottoman history, but it has long held a fascination for me.
      The understanding I had developed from my own unstructured and fractured readings was that their were too many court/harem structures and institutions which like the Jannisaries had simultaneously thrived in their privilege, but at the same time atrophied real progress because any reformation was by definition a threat to them.
      This video gave me a more cohesive overall timeline of some of the developments and reform attempts in the 19th C.
      I’ve often wondered “what if” the Ottomans had managed to stay neutral in 1914, or even allied with the Triple Entente instead of the Triple Alliance. But regardless of any “what-ifs” around that I think the Empire was doomed to be broken up by external forces as much as internal forces.
      I love your vids, and will check out Sultan Sunny now :-)

    • @zakback9937
      @zakback9937 Год назад +1

      @@AL-lh2ht Imagine claiming they were extremist lmao

    • @zakback9937
      @zakback9937 Год назад

      @@SignsBehindScience They'd have to get through and dominate the Alaouite to get access to the Atlantic which is far off from their central control.

  • @dshock85
    @dshock85 Год назад +212

    So the Jennisaris became the corrupt praetorian guard for the Ottomans.

    • @4th_Disciple
      @4th_Disciple Год назад +8

      its pronounced jaan-nisaa-ree
      Jaan-nisaari
      Life-sacrificer.

    • @3381-c5v
      @3381-c5v Год назад +53

      ​@@4th_Disciplelol nope yeni çeri in turkish (new soldier)

    • @thorpeaaron1110
      @thorpeaaron1110 Год назад +2

      Basically

    • @bcvetkov8534
      @bcvetkov8534 Год назад

      The Praetorians are worse imo.
      I mean can you blame the Janissaries?
      Abducted as children to be slaves and forcibly forsake your religion.

    • @4th_Disciple
      @4th_Disciple Год назад +4

      @@3381-c5v oh really i totally had it all wrong. could you please explain etymology of Yeni and Ceri?

  • @qernanded8161
    @qernanded8161 Год назад +111

    This is a good introduction to the Tanzimat, but policy making in this era was primarily driven by the Grand Viziers during this period. Mahmud II and Abdulhamid II (to some extent Abdulaziz as well) were more autocratic, while Abdulmecid had his ministries do most of the work. The most influential of these grand viziers were Mustafa Reşid Pasha, Mehmed Emin Âli Pasha, Mehmed Fuad Pasha, and Ali Şefik Midhat Pasha. Another important point to be mentioned is that Rousseau style government was not an inevitability in the Empire, and reform was an excuse bureaucrats used to gain power and influence or fight each other for. The Tanzimat era central government was fluid and confusing because of this.

  • @mehmetalipasa
    @mehmetalipasa Год назад +108

    You missed some crucial points.
    1. The Economy of the Ottoman Empire, didn’t shrink, it grew through out the 19th century, but it couldn’t keep up the pace with Britain, France and Germany.
    2. Sultan Abdulhamid, didn’t indebt the empire further, to the contrast he paid off most of the debt.
    3. The ultimative problem for the empire were the Russians, waging war, that’s the reason, otherwise the Ottoman Empire still would exist.
    4. The main problem with the economy were the infrastructure cost.
    Whilst you could build railways relative cost effective in northern Germany, France and England, where you had sizeable populations, the Ottoman heartland of Anatolia was sparsely populated, the distances were long and the topology mountainous.

    • @kronoxodus319
      @kronoxodus319 Год назад +6

      excellent points brother, could you recommend me a few good books on ottoman history

    • @Patir_Sigma
      @Patir_Sigma Год назад +3

      The last great Ottoman sultans after Sultan ahmed was Abd-ul-Hamid han.

    • @randomhuman5525
      @randomhuman5525 Год назад

      2. Abdülhamit 33 yılda 13 kez borç aldı ve ödeyemediği borcun karşılığında Kıbrıs Adasını İngilizlere kiraladı. Ödenmeyen borçlar nedeni ile borç veren ülkeler tarafından Duyunu Umumiye adlı bir kurul oluşturuldu ve bu kurul Osmanlı maliyesini yönetiyordu. Osmanlı kendi maliyesini bile dış güçlere teslim etmiş durumdaydı.

    • @MH-jg6vk
      @MH-jg6vk Год назад

      @@kronoxodus319yes, “Arming the sultan” Naci yorulmaz
      “Ottoman endgame” Sean mcmeekin

    • @hungerquest7862
      @hungerquest7862 Год назад +1

      I am pretty historical sources lean more towards sultan abdul hamid put the entire in debt to Britain and France who had great degree of influence in the economy which was very much hated by the wazirs it was coz of war with Russians and expensive infrastructure projects.

  • @ΚωνσταντίνοςΚυριάκου-λ1υ

    Excellent video. As a greek it is very interesting for me to learn history from the ottoman side. It creates a complete understanding of the facts. In my opinion, the biggest problem the ottomans and their subjects faced was that they started the reforms too late, as such they did not have time to develop their own modern society and they tried to follow too much what the europeans did. Especially in Greece after the independence their distain for anything anatolian was so great that they destroyed every previous structure in the society just to become more european. The people however, did not feel like that. After centuries under ottoman rule they were more anatolian than european. Their new society should have reflected that.

    • @CruWiT
      @CruWiT Год назад +13

      Actually Tanziman reforms were quite different from Europe because many reforms implemented by Europe were not suitable for the Ottoman Empire, which had multi-ethnic groups and people from three religions living spreaded this vast lands, they were not confined to a particular region. But what you say is true, the biggest problem of the Tanziman reforms was that they were too late to start. These reforms that needed to be initiated before the nationalist movements spread to Ottoman lands. Apart from the western modernization steps like industry, army etc, the biggest aim of the Tanzimat was to carry out a cultural reform in the Ottoman Empire, because it was realized Ottoman Empire did not have a clear cultural code like Roman Empire was a big problem. In the long term, an attempt was made to create a civilization that separated the Ottoman society from the rest of the world in matters such as education system, urbanization, dress code, architecture, music, art etc. but they could only be completed in Istanbul, it did not spread in the rest of the Empire or maybe litle spread some cities such as Izmir. In the remaining lands, major ethnic and religious conflicts couldn't be prevented.

    • @vsgapturk
      @vsgapturk Год назад +3

      Actually, Turks still use “Rum” for the indigenious Greeks in Anatolia and in Cyprus. Modern nation building indeed had changed many perceptions and definitions but some persisted. Still feel astonished that the there was a Roman nation until the 19th century even though modern historians tended to defime them as Greeks.

    • @joeb5080
      @joeb5080 Год назад +4

      Just curious, what "structure in society" was destroyed after independence? And the "people felt that way?" What exactly is "European" anyways? A gender non-binary resident of 2023 London? There's a lot of myths on both sides of this debate. "We were more Anatolian than European" is as much an unsubstantiated myth as "the Ottomans were always bad" and "we were slaves for 400 years". BTW not all of Greece was under Ottoman control all the time, and we were not isolated from the rest of Europe; there was no passport control back then, or visas. Just as it's not true the Ottomans were always bad, never attempted to reform, and "enslaved" us. The problem is that we don't learn much history between 1453 and 1821, so every Greek just makes things up as we go along. The Ottoman Empire was multicultural, and in 400 years, they didn't actually try to change/influence us much, believe it or not. Their biggest fault is just being economically incompetent.

    • @valentin_marin
      @valentin_marin Год назад

      Must to be stupid to think they deserve your atención

    • @eminderindeniz1959
      @eminderindeniz1959 Год назад

      @@joeb5080I think that the the Greek independance hurt both the greeks and us

  • @oquanghiep8535
    @oquanghiep8535 Год назад +29

    Great video btw but I think you missed that Sultan Selim III had already acknowledged the Empire's backdrops when he came to the throne and made initial attempts to reform before the arrival of Napoleon on Egypt, namely the formation of Nizam-i Cedid, which outperformed the conventional troops during the Siege of Acre in 1799. Its initial results and the influence of Alemdar Mustafa along with the rise in power of Muhammad Ali during the war in Greece that convinced Mahmud II to continue the reforms.

  • @miloshp7399
    @miloshp7399 Год назад +49

    I'm a Serb from Bosnia and I find this interesting and relevant to my history (Serbian uprisings and Bosnian).

  • @elzem1388
    @elzem1388 Год назад +11

    I was prejudiced at first, but when I watched the video, I realized that the video was prepared as a result of good research.

  • @yunusemresansar3391
    @yunusemresansar3391 Год назад +9

    This was a very educational and mesmerising video. Thanks a lot!

  • @AlwaysGrowAndLearn
    @AlwaysGrowAndLearn Год назад +5

    Thank you for this excellent channel. Each video is like an expertly delivered scholarly essay.

  • @mammuchan8923
    @mammuchan8923 Год назад +11

    Great video, first time I have come across your channel. I had to do an eye roll when you mentioned the British. They were just relentless at interfering with anything they could.

  • @TSmith-yy3cc
    @TSmith-yy3cc Год назад +2

    Outstanding! Thank you for your work.

  • @Atvor
    @Atvor Год назад +40

    Pretty good. Though I would argue that the main reason why the French and British stepped in to stop Muhammad Ali's march on Istanbul was not that they feared a rapidly modernizing Egypt, but rather that they feared a sudden collapse of Ottoman power would lead to Russia gobbling up what remained. Russia taking the Dardanelles was a particular concern of the British at the time, so much so that they considered the issue a mater of major national security.

    • @randomhuman5525
      @randomhuman5525 Год назад +4

      👍

    • @angusarmstrong6526
      @angusarmstrong6526 Год назад +4

      Yeah I agree, probably reckoned it would achieve both outcomes.

    • @tacomuncher
      @tacomuncher Год назад +4

      i think its both, 2 birds with one stone

    • @HikmaHistory
      @HikmaHistory  Год назад +2

      Couldn't agree more and it's one of the things I regret not adding to this video.

  • @sersipahi
    @sersipahi Год назад +24

    The British navy under the command of Nelson arrived at the Abukir bay of the Nile, following the French navy on 1 August 1798. In the Battle of the Nile, which took place on the same date, the British navy won a brilliant victory and destroyed the French navy.
    There was also a force belonging to the newly established Nizâm-ı Cedîd military to defend Akka. In addition, new military forces were sent from Istanbul with the navy. Napoleon dreamed that he would capture Acre in a few days and thus open the road to Damascus, Baghdad and India. He was probably dreaming of Alexander the Great.
    Napoleon advanced to Cairo after the Battle of the Nile. This destruction of the navy, Napoleon's only connection with France, put him in a difficult situation. He marched his army towards Palestine and started to march towards the Akka Castle. The French Army, which came here on March 18, 1799, suffered a heavy defeat against Bosnian Cezzar Ahmed Pasha. On May 21, he lifted the siege and retreated to Cairo (Defense of Acre). After a short time, he left his army in Egypt and returned to France.
    Egypt, which was under French occupation for three years, was taken back in 1801 with the efforts of the Ottoman and British allied forces, and the French left Egypt with two evacuation agreements signed in Cairo and Alexandria.

  • @masahibbhatti4088
    @masahibbhatti4088 Год назад +22

    Bro these videos are amazing. Your video production has gotten so good I’m so proud !

  • @kutukteyiz408
    @kutukteyiz408 Год назад +34

    Still sick man of Europe survived longer than Austrian, German and Russian Empires. (By 4 years only but I think it counts) 😅

    • @SunioPrakash
      @SunioPrakash Год назад +2

      4 years not a big deal plus they were aloved to be survived

    • @kutukteyiz408
      @kutukteyiz408 Год назад +6

      @@SunioPrakash The other guys were allowed by invaders too, their subjects didn’t let them. Ottomans outlived all those arrogant tsars and could live even longer because their remaining subjects didn’t give a damn 👍🏻

  • @mohamednazirbasharat913
    @mohamednazirbasharat913 Год назад +3

    Another great piece of work.

  • @StoicHistorian
    @StoicHistorian Год назад +4

    Great vid dude, the ottomans definitely had a chance to put it together

    • @HikmaHistory
      @HikmaHistory  Год назад +4

      Thanks my man, and I agree (if it had been started just 50 years earlier)

    • @rickyyacine4818
      @rickyyacine4818 6 месяцев назад

      @@HikmaHistory .the problem started in 1500s after lopanto and fail Morocco invasion it was all over from naval supremacy sure it still strong but cracks start to show up the fail to capitalize on new world conquest they did take Philippines but what the point spain toke it later the Mediterranean has become a small lake compares to Atlantic and Indian and Pacific seas thier foot army still good however thier is alot of backward in the ottoman the fails to use new printing press and ban it
      And most importantly not separating islam from state Vienna was final straw after that 1700s zzzz ottoman still using sword when eroupe only use for Calvary and officers most of Europe musket with baonite

  • @zhcultivator
    @zhcultivator 8 месяцев назад +2

    Cool video, 😎 I wish the Ottoman Empire had a Corporatist* parliament and Georgist* Policies tbh to have a Land value tax and Class Collaboration instated but alas it's too late now.....

  • @portalovodguides
    @portalovodguides Год назад

    This period needs more coverage. Mistakes are another source of knowledge, above all.

  • @brokenbridge6316
    @brokenbridge6316 Год назад +16

    How different Ottoman history would've been had they succeeded at reforming themselves.

    • @Patir_Sigma
      @Patir_Sigma Год назад

      Mehmed v pasha's = hold my key.....

    • @subutaynoyan5372
      @subutaynoyan5372 Год назад +2

      Not much, more they reformed, the more the empire turned into it's original Turkic identity actually.
      Atatürk was the ultimate reformer, and one of his biggest lines was ''No longer shall the sons of Turks will die defending Arabian deserts''

    • @brokenbridge6316
      @brokenbridge6316 Год назад +1

      @@subutaynoyan5372---How interesting. Thanks for replying.

    • @abdulrafay1664
      @abdulrafay1664 10 месяцев назад +4

      ​@@subutaynoyan5372k*malist spotted opinion rejected

    • @mohammadshamail7732
      @mohammadshamail7732 6 месяцев назад

      @@subutaynoyan5372Kemalist filth

  • @MuhammadalSayf1
    @MuhammadalSayf1 Год назад +23

    10:47 Successor of Sultan Abdulmecid, Sultan Abdulaziz was Abdulmecid's brother. Not his son.

    • @HikmaHistory
      @HikmaHistory  Год назад +17

      WOW I can't believe I missed that! I knew that and yet I still did not pick up on it despite multiple rounds of video/script editing - thanks for flagging it.

  • @aasemahsan
    @aasemahsan Год назад +11

    2:00 The Bashi Bouzaks & Muhammad Ali in Egypt
    7:12 Reformation in the Ottoman empire under Mahmud II
    9:42 Tanzimat reforms under Abdulmejid

  • @d.c.8828
    @d.c.8828 Год назад +5

    Grateful for your content and excellent narration!

  • @l-zerbnaiva7786
    @l-zerbnaiva7786 Год назад +28

    Didn't Sultan Abdul Hamid II decreased the national debt up to 90 percent?

    • @zakback9937
      @zakback9937 Год назад +4

      Based

    • @zxera9702
      @zxera9702 Год назад +19

      Yeah after he ignored all developments in favor of just paying the Europeans off,yeah. He established Ottoman Public Debt Administration which essentially handed of Ottoman finances to European hands,a major reason for Ottoman decline.

    • @kermi4654
      @kermi4654 Год назад

      public wide censorship.Even for goverment officals.Empires second biggest border loss.Politicazed army.Building unnecessary palaces.Ofcourse he did developed education and expanded railways systems.But even Thedor Heltz asked to the "Padishah" to give him land.Even this describes the collapse of an empire.

    • @sherko1187
      @sherko1187 Год назад +21

      ​​@@zxera9702as far as I remember he put a lot of effort in renewing The Ottoman military and navy inspired by the Germans and building railroads. the debts were the so-called modern Sultans faults that he had to repay and clean their mess and the state and his reforms were doing fine until the Young Turks showed up. his Hamidiye regiment saved thousands of of lives of especially Kurds from the Raids of the Armenian supporters of Russia And for that The Kurds Called Him "Babê Kurdan" meaning "The Father of The Kurds" most of the things written about him are pure lies!

    • @sherko1187
      @sherko1187 Год назад

      ​​@@zxera9702
      This is a Great explanation by an Economist On what the Ottoman Economy was like because of the sultans before Abdul Hamid II
      ruclips.net/video/18FJgXjqW0w/видео.htmlsi=McbYcHu5nDutvT5O

  • @SignsBehindScience
    @SignsBehindScience Год назад +12

    Mā shā' Allāh, this is a well-researched presentation from you, as always!

  • @daemonofdecay
    @daemonofdecay Год назад +6

    Another fine piece of work. Had to share in a few history discords Im in - your channel is criminally under-subscribed.

    • @HikmaHistory
      @HikmaHistory  Год назад +1

      Big thanks, dw the future should be promising Inshallah!

  • @SafavidAfsharid3197
    @SafavidAfsharid3197 Год назад +17

    Please make a video explaining relationship between Ottomans, safavids, Bukhara and Mughals. If possible a video on mughal invasion of central asia and kabul during Akber'reign or Shah Jahan's reign.

    • @sagagis
      @sagagis Год назад +11

      I don't think Ottoman-Safavid relation is needed to be covered in here, it has been covered somewhere else (I couldn't remember who did it though). Though, Ottoman-Mughal relation is underrated, I don't think I have ever seen someone covering this relation

    • @SignsBehindScience
      @SignsBehindScience Год назад +3

      @@sagagis yeah there should be a detailed presentation on the Ottoman-Mughul Relations

  • @Dbstarwastaken
    @Dbstarwastaken Год назад +1

    Top notch work

  • @akramkarim3780
    @akramkarim3780 Год назад +18

    The modernization carried out by Muhammad Ali did not continue after him, and his successors were concerned with extravagance and pleasures, with few exceptions. This is the problem of one-man rule, even if he was a good ruler. Everything is linked to him, and in his absence, things return to their previous state. Institutions are what guarantee Continuous progress, as was the case in Europe
    Also, I do not understand why those who want to modernize always import from Europe things that have nothing to do with modernization, such as European clothing styles and European customs. Does wearing a turban make the information unable to enter your brain, but wearing a European hat allows it to enter?

    • @zakback9937
      @zakback9937 Год назад +7

      It's inferiority complexes

    • @billisultan6224
      @billisultan6224 Год назад

      Democracy is unstable. A ruler cannot continue their plans because of term limit and is hindered by the parliament. In a way, autocracy is like betting. If you win, you win it all. Democracy on the other hand is somewhat of a scam to keep the people deluded.

    • @HikmaHistory
      @HikmaHistory  Год назад +8

      Love the point about institutions guaranteeing continued progress!

    • @akramkarim3780
      @akramkarim3780 Год назад +1

      @@billisultan6224 Democracy has its drawbacks, and many Western thinkers have spoken about it, but it ensures that the country does not fall into oppression and corruption, which often ends in revolutions and chaos. As for its being unstable, it is because it accepts mild instability so that the country does not go into major instability due to dictatorship. Which leads to revolution and chaos
      democracy is a s:cam , this is a bit of an exaggeration if you are talking about the West, but in underdeveloped countries it is truly like that , and the matter goes back, as I said, to the institutions

    • @Omar-sn1uy
      @Omar-sn1uy Год назад +8

      Wearing western dress , relaxation on Alcohol , copying the mechanism of Europe government....these are inferiority complex not progress or modernization.
      Actual modernization and progress would have been industrialisation , opening schools , science , engineering and research ..these are actual progression and modernization not that wearing Europian clothes ..

  • @ilovemesomme
    @ilovemesomme Год назад +15

    This might be your best video yet, thank you for sharing your knowledge and expertise on history that is often untold in “the West.”

    • @HikmaHistory
      @HikmaHistory  Год назад +2

      Appreciate that big time! I'm quite proud of this one - it will determine a benchmark for future videos.

    • @devyanilimaye8560
      @devyanilimaye8560 Год назад +1

      ​@@HikmaHistoryreally well done! Never understood the backdrop of Ottoman reforms..now I know it kinda sparked off in Egypt ..explains many a things of today

    • @heavent883
      @heavent883 Год назад

      why it should be told in the West when Muslim countries don't teach the history of the Islamic empires, In Muslim countries they don't teach any Islamic empire history, Ottoman is looked at as Turk history and the other is looked at as Arab and Iranian history, they don't question how the economy worked, and how society worked,

  • @Shining237
    @Shining237 Год назад +2

    I love your videos 👍💞🕊️

  • @sethleoric2598
    @sethleoric2598 9 месяцев назад +1

    Famous Warrior Bodyguards trying not to end up forgetting their job and/or becoming corrupt : *CHALLENGE IMPOSSIBLE*

  • @serkangunduz9005
    @serkangunduz9005 Год назад +2

    before 1826 ,janissary system blocked reformation (janissary soldiers designed many times coup and kill padishah) after 1826 British Empire blocked reformation.(british navy blocade bhosporus assasinate important ministers etc.)

  • @unusualhistorian1336
    @unusualhistorian1336 Год назад +6

    Keep it up with the excellent documentaries!

  • @youngimperialistmkii
    @youngimperialistmkii Год назад +4

    This reminds me of the Meiji restoration in Japan. During the same era.

    • @HikmaHistory
      @HikmaHistory  Год назад +11

      The same thing that motivated the Ottomans also motivated the Japanese to modernise. Funnily enough, Japan's success story of modernisation actually inspired a generation of reformers in the Islamic world (e.g. Afghanistan & Egypt) during the first half of the 20th century.

    • @Onewildandcrazyguy
      @Onewildandcrazyguy Год назад

      On the way to modernization in western Europe the masses were in on the discussion of enlightenment ideals for decades before the reforms. Especially the ideas of full emancipation for Jews. Although much of the masses were resistant and disagreed with these ideas much of the masses did in fact embrace these ideas. While in the Ottoman empire these edicts seemed to the masses to come out of nowhere from the top and there hadn't been a ground level discussion of these ideas before reforms were implemented. Have I missed the mark on this?

  • @babaxanqacar8062
    @babaxanqacar8062 Год назад +8

    For more than 400 years middle east lived in peace during the Ottoman era, but now 💀

  • @javidiqbal7359
    @javidiqbal7359 Год назад

    Interesting video

  • @sourweed9818
    @sourweed9818 Год назад +3

    actually ottomans doing pretty good till the coup of young turks againist Abdulhamid II. The number of schools reached tens of thousands. thousands of girls-only schools and thousands more mixed schools. Higher schools opened in every province center. Railway connecting Berlin to Medina. An improvement in the military field. The defeat of Greece in the war of 1897 in just a few weeks. In fact, in the Russian embassy reports from this period, it is mentioned that the empire was about to recover and get rid of its sick man state. Also a working constitution. At that time, it still did not exist in many European countries. abolished slavery. Nationalism suppressed regardless of nationality. The caliphate begins to regain its former prestige. But the fruits of all these sown seeds could not be collected. The Young Turks, World War I, Arab Revolt and the subsequent evil of Kemal destroyed everything.

    • @turkishgamer23453
      @turkishgamer23453 Год назад

      Yeah keep believing that, Empire was already dead after the 1877-78 Russian war. Only Britain's interests kept it alive for 50 more years. Im Turkish and Ottomans are my ancestors and Im proud of them but we have to see the reality here, the empire had its time up. No need to keep running a rump state. Revolution is a must when you are that fucked up

  • @redjournals2817
    @redjournals2817 Год назад +2

    Ottoman economic prosperity depended on the trade from east to the west. They acted as middlemen in exchange of goods between China, India, Indonesia and Europe.
    Once that trade dried up due to maritime trade routes, Ottoman decline set in.
    No amount of reforms could undo that economic decadence.

    • @CruWiT
      @CruWiT Год назад

      What you said is true, one of the biggest reasons for the collapse of the Ottoman Empire was the discovery of new trade routes in the seas, but with the opening of the Suez Canal, Ottoman Empire had an important opportunity to become a main trade route again and especially the province of Egypt began to become rich this period. The increase in the trade volume passing through the Ottoman lands, especially through Suez, disturbed many Western states, especially the British, and considering that almost all oil fields were in the Ottoman lands, the outbreak of the First World War became inevitable.

    • @redjournals2817
      @redjournals2817 Год назад +2

      @@CruWiT True. I agree with you. If Ottoman Empire survived another 50 years, it would have discovered oil and would have become richest country in the world. That scenario would have made the Middle East stable.

    • @crispusallen3865
      @crispusallen3865 5 месяцев назад

      Ww1 was because of oil.. finishing the ottomans was a sideeffect​@@redjournals2817

  • @subutaynoyan5372
    @subutaynoyan5372 Год назад +3

    Seriously, Muhammed Ali was nothing but an umjumped pasha seizing the oppurtunity. His era was in Civil War times in America, so Egyptian cotton was in high demand so he found a rapid amount of money to invest in things. It's not like he had a vision that others were blind to
    Ottomans were boiling from within, it took Mahmud II more than a decade to violently end Jannissary institution, which were supposed to be Royal Bodyguards only, but became a military elite class throughout the years.
    These ideas that drove Muhammed Ali were common in Konstantiniyye as well, but it was very difficult to do some political menuevers there, wheras in Egypt, you're half a world away from the capital so you get to do whatever you want

  • @Wakobear.
    @Wakobear. Год назад +12

    If only Muhammad Ali Pasha worked with the Ottomans instead of against them.
    Helping Mahmud ii in implementing the Egyptian reforms empire wide.
    Using the Egyptian army to help his sovereign in ending the Janissaries over a decade earlier, then helping to reform the entire empire's military through Egyptian wealth.
    Thus the army would have over a decade of modernisation during the Greek rebellion. With even more assistance from Egypt, thereby preventing Greek independence, maintaining hegemony over the eastern Mediterranean.
    While a more modernised ottoman empire would be able to push back the French conquest of Algeria.
    Instead he chose to try to create a hereditary Khedivate. Which was disastrous for Egypt since everyone of them was useless and frivolous spenders. Even during the cotton boom of the American civil war they managed to get the country in so much debt and bankruptcy that they were occupied by the Brits.....

    • @thegoatforallHumanity
      @thegoatforallHumanity Год назад

      Your pure evil

    • @harry-matakios1344
      @harry-matakios1344 Год назад +3

      That would be horrible for everyone but the Turks though, why would the Egyptian Arabs for example just hand over such powers to the Turks to rule over them?

    • @shamsishraq6831
      @shamsishraq6831 Год назад +3

      ​@@harry-matakios1344You could also argue that by being the only credible army (for quite some time) in the Ottoman Empire, the Egyptian army would have outsized influence. It may well have been that in this new Ottoman army Egyptian officers would have been overrepresented at the top.

    • @billisultan6224
      @billisultan6224 Год назад +2

      @@harry-matakios1344 For the same reason hungarians worked with the austrians.

    • @Wakobear.
      @Wakobear. Год назад +5

      @@harry-matakios1344 Egyptian Arabs???? They were ruled by an immensely oppressive Albanian warlord, who couldn't speak Arabic.
      Arabs weren't allowed positions within the government or high roles in the military. That was reserved for Turks, Albanians, Circassians and western Europeans and the administrative language remained Turkish.
      Egyptians only started ruling their country in 1952. Since the Achaemenids conquest in 525BC until 1952 it was ruled by foreigners.
      This was one of the worst times ever for the Egyptian peasantry. Reading what they did to escape conscription is horrible.
      Fleeing their lands and run away to the Bedouin or to Syria. If they couldn't do that they they would maim themselves to be ineligible for conscription, such as chopping of their own limbs. But most common was blinding one eye.
      But even that didn't stop Muhammad Ali, since he made a corps of one eyed conscripts.
      The corvée (forced labour) was probably the worst, in its entire thousands of years history, under Muhammad Ali. With hundreds of thousands dying in his projects. But these projects are what allowed Egypt to modernize.
      He did build modern schools and literacy increased among the Arabs, which eventually led to the nahda.
      After his death, his son's relaxed the conscription and corvée, and Arabs started gaining higher positions.
      Allowing for the native Egyptian Urabi revolt, a by product of the nahda, in the 1880s, an attempt to end 2500 years of foreign rule. But they were defeated and the British took over.
      Muhammad Ali was extremely oppressive. But he managed to undo the century of destruction wrought by the 18th century Mamluks, who devastated the irrigation system so much that the population was a mere 2.5 million on the eve of French invasion. 300 years earlier at ottoman conquest it was 5 million. Making it one of the lowest points in Egypt's history in millennia.
      He changed that, so that only 30 years later he was marching on Constantinople itself. Which is remarkable.

  • @slacaglar4035
    @slacaglar4035 5 месяцев назад

    thank you for your work, what's the name of the music in the background? With the turkish kanun?

  • @Т1000-м1и
    @Т1000-м1и Год назад +1

    Very cool

  • @khurmiful
    @khurmiful Год назад

    It makes me chuckle when people talk about the glory of certain civilisations before the scientific and industrial Revolutions. Guys, wake up, there was no scientific or glorious empires in the past. You live in the best of times.

  • @jean-francoislebroch9171
    @jean-francoislebroch9171 Год назад +1

    With all my respect, there is only one way to stay on top : detect and nurture the talents, whatever their origins. Peace

  • @DontFeedTheTrolls
    @DontFeedTheTrolls Год назад +1

    I really like this channel. Very interesting!!

  • @ibnaamir9915
    @ibnaamir9915 Год назад +2

    Abdulhamid was one of best Sultans of the Empire , He had almost stopped the decline of the Empire , his reforms were doing fine and he paid off most of the Empires debts. The young turk revolution would overthrow him and the new incompetant government would doom the Empire and drag it into collapse. Look man , if youre going to make historical videos atleast get your facts right.

  • @ruggedindividual708
    @ruggedindividual708 Год назад

    Hikma your getting good at this shit!

  • @McVaySwifty
    @McVaySwifty Год назад +1

    Top notch stuff!

  • @expensivemercenary5647
    @expensivemercenary5647 Год назад +6

    If you have played Victoria iii then you would know how difficult the tanzimat reforms were

  • @bigsarge2085
    @bigsarge2085 Год назад

    Always learn something.

  • @nahumhabte6210
    @nahumhabte6210 Год назад +1

    They should have done this 50 years before perhaps they would be here today😢

  • @Zeezoro
    @Zeezoro Год назад +1

    Sultan abdulaziz was the son of sultan mahmud II and the brother of sultan abdulmejid. You wrongly mention him as the son of sultan abdulmejid.

  • @SithStudy
    @SithStudy Год назад

    the U.S. needs one of these

    • @HikmaHistory
      @HikmaHistory  Год назад

      In what ways?

    • @Chada-uNîzam-îCedîd
      @Chada-uNîzam-îCedîd 6 месяцев назад

      USA needs to stop funding and training terrorists ın Syrıa and Iraq YPG-PYD-PKK terrorists agaınst us cant forget Miserable failed coup attempt in 2016 What an ally lol Snakes and they ask us why everybody hate U.S

  • @nasigorengpecelesteh1506
    @nasigorengpecelesteh1506 Год назад +4

    Subhanallah
    Corrupt is one of the most reason for decline for any nation

  • @blablableh724
    @blablableh724 Год назад +5

    Demographics is destiny.

    • @user-iu4dq6wm1t
      @user-iu4dq6wm1t Год назад

      I’ve heard that quote before but what makes you say it here?

  • @fazrieisa6654
    @fazrieisa6654 Год назад +1

    Ottoman should reform and modernized earlier, at least during aftermath battle of vienna 1683

    • @widodoakrom3938
      @widodoakrom3938 Год назад +2

      Nope they should did that aftermath the battle of Lepanto in 1571

  • @Captain.Abu_Bakr
    @Captain.Abu_Bakr Год назад +5

    Once and once again we see where secularism replaces Islam the country initially thrives but then inevitably fails hard

  • @torceridaho
    @torceridaho Год назад +13

    correction, the Ottomans inherited the administrative advances and sophistication of the Byzantine Empire. Some very good books on this subject.

    • @oday215
      @oday215 Год назад +4

      Makes sense, they did call themselves the Sultanate of Rome with the goal of acquiring Constantinople. Even the star and moon turkey came from the Roman’s

    • @akramkarim3780
      @akramkarim3780 Год назад +3

      they took alot from the Byzantine empire but also from the former Muslim empires especially the Iranian ones

    • @ahmedsuleman8528
      @ahmedsuleman8528 Год назад

      What is the name of the book?

    • @CruWiT
      @CruWiT Год назад +1

      ​@@oday215 This crescent comes from the ancient religious belief of the Turks Tengrism, and somehow this symbol continued among the Turks, it is not related to Islam or Rome. In fact, no Arab state has a crescent on its flag, but all Turkish states have a crescent their flag.

    • @oday215
      @oday215 Год назад

      @@CruWiT the city of Constantinople did have a symbol of the crescent moon before the Turkish conquest, maybe both can be true

  • @MrBoliao98
    @MrBoliao98 Год назад

    Egypt needs reform like those days. You cant continue the economy in the current trajectory.

  • @osopenowsstudio9175
    @osopenowsstudio9175 Год назад +2

    After failure at Vienna, Ottoman should do the reforms already as it's a turning point, prevention is better than cure. Their reforms also woke the nationalist even more, instead of Europeanism, it should exploit it's own strength and use Egypt's reform especially military and economy (but of course less harsher)

  • @jamesmurphy9426
    @jamesmurphy9426 Год назад +1

    Wouldn't this economic system be called
    State Capitalism or Socialism

  • @kallex7741
    @kallex7741 11 месяцев назад

    So that's the beginning of the end then, oh Mahmud...

  • @dohminkonoha3200
    @dohminkonoha3200 9 месяцев назад

    What if Ottoman Empire succeeded reformation and became Prussia of Middle East?

  • @LuisAldamiz
    @LuisAldamiz Год назад +1

    Glad to discover Muhammed Ali (I only had vague references before). As soon as you mentioned the Albanian "crazy" mercenaries, I thought they were called to great things. Not disappointed.

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Год назад

      @keno2285 - Right, Muhammad Ali was a boxer, what's this guy's name: Ali Pasha?

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Год назад

      @keno2285 - 2:25 - "replacing the Ottoman pasha was an Albanian commander known as Mohammed Ali".
      So I got it right from the beginning, at least per this video. Wikipedia also agrees: "Muhammad Ali[a] (4 March 1769 - 2 August 1849) was the Ottoman Albanian[3] governor and de facto ruler of Egypt from 1805 to 1848, considered the founder of modern Egypt".
      He was born in Kavala, now Greece but within an Albanian family and he was the commander of an Albanian troop.

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Год назад

      @keno2285 - Better than random Internet troll for sure.

  • @poil8351
    @poil8351 Год назад

    ironically they were in many ways alot less unstable than the austro Hungarian or russian empires.

  • @DrFit96
    @DrFit96 Год назад

    Mate ottomans knew about all europeon advancement before the invasion for years , ths idea of ottoman isolation is a funny joke
    The ottoman higher hierarchy was full of Europeon converts

  • @kallex7741
    @kallex7741 11 месяцев назад

    I guess they're pros and cons with everything

  • @ercaner_buzbey
    @ercaner_buzbey 9 месяцев назад

    "Başıbozuk" should be read as "Bashy Bozyk"

  • @nailachou1174
    @nailachou1174 9 месяцев назад +1

    Disappointing to see the video portraying Abdul Hamid 2nd in a negative light

    • @teukufadel8293
      @teukufadel8293 6 месяцев назад

      It's a "neutral" History channel

    • @augustulus1277
      @augustulus1277 2 месяца назад

      I mean hey, his reign saw the ottoman's harsh brutality towards minorities going up to 11. The army was known to commit massacres towards them and the sultan doesn’t do anything about it which culminates into their war with Russia.
      Even if you see him as pious, Abdul Hamid ii never perform the hajj, allowed gay rights in the empire (which pissed off the majority conservative Muslim population), established a secret police force to spy on anyone, etc…

  • @Merle1987
    @Merle1987 Год назад +7

    The reforms were a great idea, but they were implemented two hundred years too late.

    • @HikmaHistory
      @HikmaHistory  Год назад +13

      200 yrs is a bit harsh but I agree - had they started a century before (when military contests with European powers was still competitive), it could have the time needed to work.

    • @Merle1987
      @Merle1987 Год назад +3

      @@HikmaHistory one hundred to remain competitive, two hundred to have maintained dominance.

    • @HikmaHistory
      @HikmaHistory  Год назад +1

      @@Merle1987 If they did it 200 years prior, absolutely they could've maintained dominance. But that's very ambitious, many European states hadn't even started widespread modernising reforms by then.

    • @RayshiaRoman
      @RayshiaRoman Год назад

      The Ottomans were still competitive with the other European states in the 18th century. The 1800s was when they were left behind in the dust. Alas, if the Ottomans didn't let Peter I go they wouldn't have to deal with a modernized Russia but well hindsight is 20/20

    • @TheRebelliousPrince77
      @TheRebelliousPrince77 Год назад

      I'm sorry, but care to explain how dressing like Europeans would save an empire from collapse?

  • @holkholkman
    @holkholkman Год назад +6

    Nation states are the best. Thanks to Ataturk, we Turks live in a secular Turkish nation state. We have neither oil nor great underground resources, but we are a G20 member, NATO's 2nd largest army, and a powerful state in the West and Asia. Ummahism and multinationalism are completely collapsed ideas. If there is no harmony within the society, if the nation does not embrace the state, then problems arise. You will take intelligent minds from the world and assimilate them into your own nation.

    • @Crafty_Spirit
      @Crafty_Spirit Год назад +4

      Nationalism was also a key ideology motivating the expulsion of Greeks and Armenians and sidelining Kurdish autonomy. Most countries outside Europe are multi-ethnic anyway, I would not recommend for them to follow the same bloody path

    • @axethrowing1801
      @axethrowing1801 Год назад

      you had a corrupt government secularism is a failed concept. I live in the most secular country in the world i give it less then 50 yrs. The Ottoman chalaipha lasted over 600 yrs America wont even make 300 yrs.

    • @mehmetkayraozer9164
      @mehmetkayraozer9164 Год назад

      ​​@@Crafty_Spiritgiving Kurds autonomy is a treason to the constitution which defines Turkey as a unitary state.

  • @umaraziz8274
    @umaraziz8274 Год назад +5

    Love from 🇵🇰.

  • @crescentwarriors2503
    @crescentwarriors2503 Год назад

    Abdul aziz was brother of Abdul majid

  • @Royal3441
    @Royal3441 Год назад

    Abdülaziz was't son of Abdülmecid. He was his brother.

    • @HikmaHistory
      @HikmaHistory  Год назад

      I’m amazed that I didn’t spot this with all the rounds of editing I did! 😅 But yes you’re absolutely right

  • @54032Zepol
    @54032Zepol Год назад +5

    Ooohh so close ottomans! Better luck next time maybe Turkiye!

  • @Itsover..866
    @Itsover..866 2 месяца назад

    10:48 Abdulaziz was his brother not son

  • @Irene-m9n8b
    @Irene-m9n8b Год назад

    Sir,remember Ottomans were warriors and invaders most of the time. Present Turikye was Byzantine Christian country called Anatolia.

    • @randomhuman5525
      @randomhuman5525 Год назад

      Nah. Byzantine (Romans) occupied Anatolia. Seljuk Turks defeated Byzantine.

  • @semregob
    @semregob Год назад +2

    Probably the most important aspect that you didn't mention is that Turks were Heavy on sufism. and Sufism is basically separation of religion and complex life matters -like politics for example-. it is perfect for autocrats sine they can be the ultimate authority while their subjects dance and do other trivia.
    Even today Sufism-influenced countries keep falling in the secularist loop.

  • @lerneanlion
    @lerneanlion Год назад +2

    Between the Ottoman Empire during the Tanzimat period and Muhammad Ali's Egypt, which one has more chance of success? The point is that is it better to let Egypt under the dynasty of Muhammad Ali to become the new major power instead of the Ottoman Empire?

    • @moskaumaster1594
      @moskaumaster1594 Год назад +8

      The western powers would have never allowed a strong independent Egypt. The Ottoman Empire on the other hand they were happy to allow to exist and strengthen to counterbalance Russia.

    • @HikmaHistory
      @HikmaHistory  Год назад +5

      It all depended on what Europe decided - they held the power.

    • @lerneanlion
      @lerneanlion Год назад +2

      @@HikmaHistory Before Britain decided to preserve the Ottoman Empire to ensure the control over India, Britain did come up with a plan to orderly dismember the Ottoman Empire as well when the inevitable happened. So the point is why did they choose to preserve the Ottoman Empire despite that it is clearly falling apart instead of rallying Greece and Egypt under Britain's sphere of influence?

    • @moskaumaster1594
      @moskaumaster1594 Год назад +2

      @@lerneanlion
      Because the Ottoman Empire is more effective as a counter balance to the Russians geographically than Egypt (greece is irrelevant and would easily buckle to Russian pressure).
      They also knew the Ottoman reforms were less effective than the Egyptian ones. The Ottoman Empire could be kept stagnant whereas Muhammad Ali marched a modern army fuelled by burgeoning industry and a modern state aparatus almost to Constantinople.

    • @TheRebelliousPrince77
      @TheRebelliousPrince77 Год назад

      ​@@HikmaHistoryAre you a Muslim? You speak like a secularist liberal

  • @Alruwaili11
    @Alruwaili11 Год назад +4

    When Nationalism spread in the Ottoman government everything was over

  • @SignsBehindScience
    @SignsBehindScience Год назад +88

    Everyone, please make Du‘ā’ for Palestine 🇵🇸 and all other oppressed Muslims (such as Uyghurs, Indians, etc.)

    • @AL-lh2ht
      @AL-lh2ht Год назад

      “Guys raping women and children is ok”
      - average Hamas supporter.

    • @TeethToothman
      @TeethToothman Год назад +18

      *and give your thoughts for ex-muslims.

    • @zakback9937
      @zakback9937 Год назад +4

      @@TeethToothman no

    • @TeethToothman
      @TeethToothman Год назад +12

      ​@@zakback9937why not, Zak?

    • @zakback9937
      @zakback9937 Год назад +2

      @@TeethToothman Why should such failures be looked upon when they denied the truth jimbo?

  • @Patir_Sigma
    @Patir_Sigma Год назад

    If in ww1 Ottoman under Sultan Abd-ul-Hamid 2 i believe that ottoman never thrown by idiot pasha that led to dissolution of Ottoman, yes Ottoman was sickman during that time. But under Sultan Abd-ul-Hamid 2 at least Ottoman will be the same like japan during taisho era and never put empire to the stupid way.

  • @und3rcut535
    @und3rcut535 Год назад +1

    bro how do you not know the Tanzimat reforms which started before Muhammed Ali's ones. some of the perspectives in your video is just so one sided it makes no sense.

    • @HikmaHistory
      @HikmaHistory  Год назад

      How so?

    • @und3rcut535
      @und3rcut535 Год назад +1

      @@HikmaHistory tp start with Muhammed Ali’s soldiers were not called Başı Bozuk. Başı Bpzuk were literally ill-disciplined and a unit that was only raised only in times of war in the Ottoman army and in 18th and 19th century they were not even called Başı Bpzuk and they were not raised as an unit in that time frame. Also your take on Tanzimat reforms is wrong because Ali did not came up with them he implemented them and then he rebelled. Muhammed Ali had foreign officers even from the US war of independence. By just these three facts I can assure your take on this topic is flawed. Just search for Halil İnancık’s lectures on the topic he was a professor in U of Chicago and U of London on Ottoman history.

  • @Pandacous
    @Pandacous Год назад

    Should never gone into ww1

  • @abcd9283
    @abcd9283 Год назад +10

    Ottomans needed modernisation, But they did Europeanization.
    sickman became comatose due to mismatched blood transfusion.

    • @billisultan6224
      @billisultan6224 Год назад +2

      This! I am so glad someone pointed it out. Ottomans needed to understand that they were different than the europeans. They needed to exploit their strength. Nationalism introduced by europe was one of the reason of their downfall. Their rouge elements really bit hard on the opium for third world countries (Westernization)

    • @HikmaHistory
      @HikmaHistory  Год назад

      Dang check you out with the analogy!

    • @Hasanbas-rv3vm
      @Hasanbas-rv3vm Год назад

      @@billisultan6224what is the ottomans strength a arab religion called islam?

    • @teukufadel8293
      @teukufadel8293 6 месяцев назад +1

      There are people that still believe Islam as an Arabic religion? 😅

  • @Bakwana
    @Bakwana Год назад +2

    Fake Channels and info's...

  • @2pock
    @2pock Год назад

    I threw up in my mouth so many times every I hear this narrator say “Muhammad Ali” in his Pakistani accent. Let’s worry less about the ottomans and Muhammad Ali and I guess more about India? Pakistanis played 0% role in all of Islamic history. 0%. Never forget.

  • @merxho95
    @merxho95 Год назад

    Albanians ruled Egypt & made modern Egypt.

    • @merxho95
      @merxho95 Год назад

      @keno2285Yes.

    • @merxho95
      @merxho95 Год назад

      @keno2285Albanians ruled & pawed the way to modern Egypt this is an fact open your ears when you listen to videos.
      Boshnjak

    • @Spartan_Disiplin
      @Spartan_Disiplin Год назад

      ​@@merxho95 Mehmet Ali Pasha was a Turk whose native language was Turkish and had no ethnic ties with the Albanians other than commanding some Albanian militia. His grandfather Osman Agha came to Kavala from Konya.

    • @Spartan_Disiplin
      @Spartan_Disiplin Год назад

      @@merxho95 Albanians did not rule anything in egypty. Mehmet Ali Pasha got rid of the Albanian bası bozuks with Wahabi campaigns and established a new army which Arabs were soldiers and Turks from anatolia/balkans their officers.

  • @kimimiey2206
    @kimimiey2206 Год назад

    Ottoman empire come back

  • @LimeyRedneck
    @LimeyRedneck Год назад

    🤠💜

  • @batuhansarp313
    @batuhansarp313 Год назад

    Did they ?

  • @shaifunnessa7816
    @shaifunnessa7816 Год назад +1

    Michael the brave biography please make video

  • @sulaimation6253
    @sulaimation6253 Год назад +1

    Its fall was inevitable. Today, all land empires have fallen. The British, French, German, and Russian empires have fallen as well. There will never be an empire like the Ottoman Empire again. More empires are and will rise, but they will take new forms.

    • @TheRebelliousPrince77
      @TheRebelliousPrince77 Год назад +1

      We have the American empire today.

    • @sulaimation6253
      @sulaimation6253 Год назад +1

      @@TheRebelliousPrince77 Its supremacy is in its military and its monopoly on the dollar. It does not conquer territory and expand its borders to acquire resources. It performs military operations and partakes in embargoes to achieve its foreign policy goals. I did not say there were no more empires, but that they now take a different form.

    • @Crafty_Spirit
      @Crafty_Spirit Год назад +1

      There are many large states in which an ethnic or religious minority oppresses the rest of society, such as Myanmar, Indonesia, and Ethiopia. Often times, postcolonial states exhibit some imperial features. Also, Russia is still a land empire, it occupies territories in the space of at least three sovereign states

  • @ayushgupta4376
    @ayushgupta4376 Год назад +4

    Modernization doesn't mean Westernization. Japan & China proved it nicely.

    • @kutukteyiz408
      @kutukteyiz408 Год назад +9

      Japan is extremely westernized and obsessed with European features. They are literally a colony of the USA after WW2. China got all its new stuff from the west as well. Modernization means westernization in this world. Sorry but they are superior due to their efforts putting them a few centuries ahead of rest of us. This is changing nowadays but it won’t be that quick…

    • @subutaynoyan5372
      @subutaynoyan5372 Год назад

      Are you serious? Name one more westernised country than Japan. China's entire culture is westernised.
      Westernisation was the way, Turkey today still is giving that fight, a shit ton of neo islamists try to islamise and turn the country to their old ways because the law of reason basically causing cults and tariqats to loose their grip within socio economical structure.

  • @bosbanon3452
    @bosbanon3452 Год назад +1

    Rice production?? Wasn't Egyptians produced wheat and millet ??

  • @Brot_ist_geil
    @Brot_ist_geil Год назад +7

    Abdülhamit han hold the empire together without his diplomacy the ottoman empire would fall in 1878

    • @simulacrumpilot2777
      @simulacrumpilot2777 Год назад +6

      No he didn't. It was the Germans who didn't want Russia to get too much Ottoman land and become too powerful who saved the Ottomans. Not Abdulhamit II who was a cruel incompetent disaster.

    • @Brot_ist_geil
      @Brot_ist_geil Год назад +2

      @@simulacrumpilot2777 yes Germany intervened with UK in the crimean wars but the empire had many inner struggles and with Diplomacy Abdülhamit saved the empire. Only 10 years after his depiction the ottoman empire fall

    • @simulacrumpilot2777
      @simulacrumpilot2777 Год назад +7

      @@Brot_ist_geil Abdulhamit didn't save shit. A lot of the diplomatic victories attributed to him aren't actually his success but success of others. Like for example it was Otto Von Bismarck who made a softer treaty after the Russo-Turkish war of 1878. But despite that a lot of people falsely credit Abdulhamit II for it.
      Also the reason empire fell in the first place was Abdulhamit's stubborn refusal to implement any kind of reforms stagnated the empire. He would for example go out of his way to sabotage the army so that they couldn't stage a voup on him. Which also made army weak and it was because of Abdulhamit that Ottomans lost against the Italians and also the First Balkan War.
      Abdulhamit was an incompetent paranoid power hungry tyrant. Nothing more, nothing less.

    • @mandeeqbarre
      @mandeeqbarre Год назад +1

      @@simulacrumpilot2777 what did he kill your parents? What’s the strong use of words and your completely wrong

    • @subutaynoyan5372
      @subutaynoyan5372 Год назад +2

      That guy lost half the empire to other nations, but sure, why not

  • @Spartan_Disiplin
    @Spartan_Disiplin Год назад

    2:27 Its false information. Mehmet Ali Pasha was a Turk whose native language was Turkish and had no ethnic ties with the Albanians other than commanding some Albanian militia. His grandfather Osman Agha came to Kavala from Konya

    • @persianguy1524
      @persianguy1524 7 месяцев назад

      Dont cry please. Most ottomans were not torkic

    • @SerkanCiftcioglu-c3l
      @SerkanCiftcioglu-c3l Месяц назад

      Well more than 60 percent of Persia are Turkish and Persia were ruled by Turks for centuries until Shah family took over.​@@persianguy1524

  • @Salim-wr2wk
    @Salim-wr2wk Год назад

    One thing that's extremely evident from the methodologies of the Ottomans is that they never had a real love for the Prophetic Traditions and Methods of the Prophet Muhammad, salalalu alahi wa salaam. The Prophet Muhammad's methods of government implementation were never a focal point of their existence in any of their various forms of governments. Adopting Western European Christian styles of governments was just a natural progression of their societal mentality. I don't see it as a decline but rather a progression of what their descendants would become today. It was completely inevitable. Thank you for sharing these important historical facts.