Ahmad_Izzat_Pasha_al-Abid

Ahmad Izzat Pasha al-Abid

Ahmad Izzat Pasha al-Abid

Syrian politician


Ahmad Izzat Pasha bin Hawlu Pasha al-Abid (Arabic: أحمد عزت باشا بن هولو باشا العابد, romanized: Aḥmad ʻIzzat Bāshā bin Hawlū Bāshā al-ʻĀbid; Turkish: Holo[lower-alpha 1] Paşa'nın oğlu Ahmed İzzet Paşa el-Abid or Abidzade Ahmed İzzet Paşa;[1] 1851–1924), nicknamed Izzat Pasha the Arab[2] (Turkish: Arap İzzet Paşa), was a Syrian entrepreneur who became Second Secretary and confidant of Ottoman Sultan Abdulhamid II. He is considered to have been "one of the most powerful" statesmen during the last decade of Abdulhamid's rule.[3]

Quick Facts Mabeyn-i hümayun ikinci katibi, Monarch ...

Life

Ahmad Izzat al-Abid was born in Damascus. His father was Hawlu Pasha al-Abid. Ahmad Izzat was educated in Beirut. He spoke Arabic, French and Turkish. He moved to Istanbul where he served the Ottoman sultan, Abdulhamid II as an adviser. He left the Ottoman Empire following the Young Turk Revolution in 1908 and moved to London for some time before living in France and Switzerland. He then left for Egypt, where he died in 1924.[citation needed]

The Victoria Bridge and Hotel over the Barada in the 1870s

Abid accumulated great wealth during his life. He was also a businessman and owned numerous enterprises or buildings including the largest tourist hotel in Syria at the time, the Victoria Hotel in Damascus.[citation needed]

He was the father of Muhammad Ali Bay al-Abid, who served as the first president of the mandatory Syrian Republic.[2]

Notes

  1. Holo (instead of Hevlu) is a transcription of the Syrian pronunciation of the name هولو (Hawlū).

References

  1. Dünden bugüne İstanbul ansiklopedisi (in Turkish). Vol. 7. 1993. p. 393.
  2. Osmanoğlu, Ayşe (1991). Avec mon père le sultan Abdulhamid (in French). Editions L'Harmattan. p. 34. ISBN 9782296241763.
  3. Hahn, Steven Michael (1998). The Roots of Turkish Nationalism.

Bibliography


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