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Waning Power in the Middle East. The Ottoman Empire and Egypt in the Long 19 th century. The Decline of the Ottoman Empire The “Sick Man of Europe”. 1800-1922. Reasons for Ottoman Decline. Internal power struggles: Janissaries, Ulama, and government officials vied for power.
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Waning Power in the Middle East The Ottoman Empire and Egypt in the Long 19th century
The Decline of the Ottoman EmpireThe “Sick Man of Europe” 1800-1922
Reasons for Ottoman Decline Internal power struggles: Janissaries, Ulama, and government officials vied for power.
Unable to compete with the West • Ottomans failed to industrialize • Influx of Western manufactured goods led to decline of cottage industries.
Europeans took advantage of the “Sick Man.” • Austria-Hungary push Ottomans out of Bulgaria and Hungary • Russia expanded into Crimea and Caucasus. • Christian states fight for independence • Greece 1829. • Serbia 1867.
How did the Ottomans manage to survive the 19th century? • Europeans feared a shift in the balance of power; supported Ottomans against Russia. • Internal reforms preserved the empire temporarily.
Sultan Selim III attempts reform • Pushed for modernization of government bureaucracy and military. • sparked Janissary revolt in 1807. • Selim was executed in 1807.
Mahmud II attempts at reform. • Secretly built a professional army and destroyed the Janissaries. • Imitated western models and opened diplomatic relations with European powers.
Tanzimat Reforms (1839-1876) • Western-style university education introduced. • Infrastructure updated. • Newspapers established. • Constitution modeled on European states adopted. • Expanded trade hurt artisans. • Reforms had little effect on women.
Effects of these reforms • Strengthened the Empire. • Economic ties to Germany grew. • Weakened the Sultanate. • Western educated elites saw the Sultan, Ulama, and Ayan as a barriers to further reform. • Sultan Abdul Hamid (1878-1908) responded with repressive measures; restricting rights and killing dissidents.
Rise of the Young Turks • Ottoman Society for Union and Progress formed by exiled dissidents in Paris in 1889. • Young Turks came to power in 1908. • Restored Constitution and civil liberties. • Sultan retained as a figurehead.
Results of Young Turks reign • Infighting limited reform. • Arab resistance within the empire grew. • The attempt to create a “pure” Turkish state, one people, one religion led to the Armenian Genocide (nearly 1.5 million of this Christian minority was slaughtered). • Entrance into WWI as a Central Power.
The Decline of Egypt After French (Napoleon) withdrawal, Albanian-Ottoman officer, Muhammad Ali, emerged as Egypt’s ruler (1811).
Ali attempts to reform Egypt • Introduced European military reforms that freed him from dependence on the Ottomans. • Attempted, with limited success, to modernize Egypt’s economy: • Increase production of cash crops • Built up infrastructure (harbors and irrigation) • Encouraged foreign investment.
Results of Ali’s reforms • Influx of European goods discouraged industrialization • Landlords strengthened at the expense of the peasants. • Loans from European bank gave the West inroads in Egypt.
Reform ended by Ali’s successors. • Allowed the ayan to profit at the expense of the peasantry. • Turned Egypt into one-crop economy. • Tax revenues spent on extravagant pastimes for the elite, and military campaigns in the Sudan. • The regime became indebted to European banks. • Europeans invested in the building of the Suez Canal (1869).
Efforts made to save Egypt. • Muslim intellectuals and political activists looked for ways to protect Egypt from its inept khedival rulers. • University of al-Azhar became a focal center for Muslims from many lands.
Differences developed. • Some of the thinkers thought tradition and the past should serve as the model for Egypt. • Others thinkers (al-Afghani & Muhammad Abduh), pushed for Muslims to adopt Western science and technology. • emphasized the importance of rational inquiry. • Denied the idea that the single source of truth was found in a literally interpreted Qur’an • These difference damaged Muslim ability to meet the European threat.
British Influence in Egypt Grew. • The strategic importance of the Suez Canal stimulated British and French thoughts of intervention. • When army officer Ahmad Orabi led a revolt against the khedives (1882), the British intervened to save the ruler. • British consuls thereafter directed the Egyptian government through “puppet” khedives.
The Mahdi Movement. • Muslims in Sudan rallied around Muhammad Achmad, the “Mahdi” (messiah). • The Mahdi proclaimed a jihad against the Egyptians and British. • Wished to return Islam to its original purity. • The Mahdi won control of the Sudan. • Movement continued under Khalifa Abdallahi. • Mahdists built a strong state with a society closely regulated by strict Islamic norms. • The British crushed the Mahdist forces at in 1896. • Local economies became more dependent on European products and demands.
Islamic Fundamentalism • No separation between religion and government: Shari’a law NOT secular law. • Alcohol and dancing banned. • Women covered in public; men must have beards. • Theft, adultery, and apostasy severely punished. • Religious minorities (and other Muslim sects) persecuted. • Islamic rituals enforced. • Current strains: Wahhabism as practiced by the Taliban and Al-Qaeda.