Ibrahim Pasha Qataraghasi

Ibrahim Pasha Qatarağasi (nisba also spelled Qattar Aghasi or Qataraghasi) was an Ottoman statesman who served as wali (governor) of Aleppo, Damascus, Diyarbekir and Tripoli eyalets (provinces) in the early 19th century.

Ibrahim Pasha Qataraghasi
Wali of Aleppo
In office
1807–1808
MonarchMahmud II
Preceded byMüftizâde Ahmed Pasha
Succeeded byKör Yusuf Ziyaüddin Pasha
In office
1802  1804 (or 1805)
MonarchMahmud I
Preceded byNasuh Pasha al-Azm
Succeeded byMuhammad Hameed Pasha
Wali of Damascus
In office
1804–1805
MonarchMahmud I
Preceded byAhmad Pasha al-Jazzar
Succeeded byAbdullah Pasha al-Azm
Military service
AllegianceOttoman Empire
CommandsAmir al-hajj (1805)
Commander of Aleppo's Hajj caravan (1770s–1780s)

Early career

Most Likely of Albanian origin, there is scarce information about Ibrahim Pasha's early life. However, in the 1770s and 1780s,[1] he served as a trusted retainer of Muhammad Taha (Mehmed Effeni Tahazade), the naqib al-ashraf (head of the order Muhammad's descendants) of Aleppo.[2] Muhammad Taha served the office for 25 years (in 1747–1767 and 1782–1786), and was able to unify the city's ashraf into a political and military force that confronted Aleppo's powerful Jannisary faction.[3] Taha charged Ibrahim Pasha (then known as "Ibrahim Agha") with collecting taxes in Aleppo's rural hinterland (Taha owned several tax farms in this area), enabling Ibrahim to accumulate significant wealth.[1]

During his career, Ibrahim Pasha commanded the armed guard of Aleppo's Hajj pilgrim caravan, known as the qatar, which connected with the much larger Damascus caravan before its departure for Mecca. He was thus given the nisba Qataraghasi (agha of the qatar). Following Taha's death in 1786, Ibrahim Pasha succeeded him as the virtual leader of Aleppo's ashraf faction, but not as naqib al-ashraf.[3] Between 1788 and 1798, he served as mutasallim (chief tax collector, district governor) of Aleppo. In 1799, he served a brief assignment as wali (governor) of Damascus Eyalet.[2] That year, he also led a contingent of Aleppan ashraf forces against the French invasion of the empire's Egyptian and Syrian lands.[3]

Governorship of Aleppo and Damascus

In 1802, he was appointed wali of Aleppo Eyalet by the Sublime Porte (Ottoman imperial government).[3] In 1804, while the longtime wali of Sidon and Damascus, Jazzar Pasha, was on his deathbed, the Porte quietly appointed Ibrahim Pasha his successor in both provinces. Jazzar Pasha died in April–May 1804, and Ibrahim Pasha subsequently entered Damascus to assume office there.[4] He then besieged Jazzar Pasha's headquarters in Acre, where an officer named Isma'il Pasha barricaded himself as governor of the city in defiance of the Porte. Ibrahim Pasha could not continue the siege himself because he had to begin a tax collection tour in the Syrian districts to fund the upcoming Hajj caravan. Instead, he entrusted the siege to Jazzar Pasha's senior mamluk, Sulayman Pasha, who was subsequently appointed wali of Sidon and ultimately defeated Isma'il Pasha. As wali of Damascus, Ibrahim Pasha was also amir al-hajj (commander of the Hajj caravan) and led the caravan to Mecca in January 1805.[4]

While Ibrahim Pasha was serving his Damascus assignment, he was still wali of Aleppo and installed his son Muhammad (Hameed) pasha to administer the province's affairs on his behalf. However, a revolt in Aleppo in 1804 by the Jannisaries, the ashraf and the Christians against his son's heavy-handed rule. The rebels ousted Ibrahim Pasha's son, who returned two months later but with only ceremonial leadership. In 1805, Ibrahim Pasha rallied the ashraf to his side and entered into heavy street battles with the Jannissaries for a week before being dismissed from the governorship.[3]

Ibrahim Pasha's first term in Damascus was relatively short and he was succeeded by Abdullah Pasha al-Azm later in 1805.[5] He then served assignments as wali of Tripoli Eyalet and Diyarbekir Eyalet,[2] until being reappointed to Aleppo in 1807–1808.[3][2] Sultan Mahmud II came to power in July 1808 and dismissed Ibrahim Pasha from Aleppo.[3]

Later life and legacy

Thereafter, Ibrahim Pasha retired or was forced to retire from politics.[2] Ibrahim Pasha's dismissal paved the way for the Jannissaries' domination of Aleppan politics until 1813 when their commanders were trapped and massacred by Aleppo's wali at the time, Jelal al-Din Pasha.[3] Ibrahim Pasha's descendants, known as the "Qatarghasi Zade", became a prominent political family in Ottoman Aleppo.[1][6]

gollark: Thing is, what I'm attempting to say is: what sort of bad things do you think people or companies could do with leaked or bought or whatever data?
gollark: Google does, if not much else, have, as far as I know, a good track record for not letting other people get their precious datas.
gollark: I was asking Solar, but yes, that's actually sensible I guess.
gollark: Anyway, what I'm saying is, outside of selling of data to other companies (which basically just spreads it more widely, which I guess you might be against in itself?), what particular bad things are you worried non-Google companies might do with your data?
gollark: Initiate orbital laser strike!

References

  1. Meriwether, p. 97.
  2. Meriwether, p. 61.
  3. Hathaway and Barbir, p. 93.
  4. Philipp 2001, p. 78.
  5. "Aleppo". The World Statesmen. Ben Cahoon.
  6. Meriwether, p. 67.

Bibliography

Political offices
Preceded by
Nasuh Pasha al-Azm
Wali of Aleppo
1802–1805
Succeeded by
Hamid Hamud Mehmed Pasha
Preceded by
Ahmad Pasha al-Jazzar
Wali of Damascus
1804–1805
Succeeded by
Abdullah Pasha al-Azm
Preceded by
Müftizâde Ahmed Pasha
Wali of Aleppo
1807–1808
Succeeded by
Kör Yusuf Ziyaüddin Pasha
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.