Simple Page Options

Add Site to Favorites
Add Page to Favorites
Make Homepage
Print Page

Change Language

mod_vvisit_counterToday:63
mod_vvisit_counterYesterday:94
mod_vvisit_counterThis week:350
mod_vvisit_counterThis month:2364
mod_vvisit_counterFrm 13.10.08:59707

We Are Listed On


biber hap?
ac? biber hap?
Top Travel blogs
Travel Blogs

photo blogs, top photoblogs
Top Blogs
Travel (Tours) - TOP.ORG
Clicky Web Analytics
istanbul hotels, istanbul hotel, cheap hotels istanbul, small hotels istanbul, istanbul turkey hotels, istanbulhotels, istanbulhotel, hotels in istanbul, istanbul hotels reservation, travel to istanbul, travelling istanbul, budget hotels, laleli hotels, sirkeci hotels, taxim hotels, pera hotels, istanbul lodging, istanbul accommodation, istanbul hostels, istanbuls hotels, luxury hotels, hotel in istanbul, sultanahmet hotels, taksim hotels, airport hotels, historical hotels istanbul, boutique hotels istanbul, turkey hotels, turkey hotels, istanbul hotels directory, istanbul hotels list, 4 star, 5 star, 3 star, 2 star, car rental istanbul, rent a car istanbul, airport transfer istanbul, airport shuttle, travel agency

Other Links
www.turkeyphototour.com www.come4photo.com
www.tr-sites.com
www.bysaka.com
www.eskipazarci.com
www.maskeizolasyon.com



The Young Turks

The repressive policies of Abdül Hamid II fostered disaffection, especially among those educated in Europe or in Westernized schools. Young officers and students who conspired against the sultan's regime coalesced into small groups, largely outside Istanbul. One young officer, Mustafa Kemal (later known as Atatürk), organized a secret society among fellow officers in Damascus and, later, in Thessaloniki (Salonika) in present-day Greece. Atatürk's group merged with other nationalist reform organizations in 1907 to form the Committee of Union and Progress (CUP). Also known as the Young Turks, this group sought to restore the 1876 constitution and unify the diverse elements of the empire into a homogeneous nation through greater government centralization under a parliamentary regime.

In July 1908, army units in Macedonia revolted and demanded a return to constitutional government. Appearing to yield, Abdül Hamid II approved parliamentary elections in November in which the CUP won all but one of the Turkish seats under a system that allowed proportional representation of all millets . The Young Turk government was weakened by splits between nationalist and liberal reformers, however, and was threatened by traditionalist Muslims and by demands from non-Turkish communities for greater autonomy. Abdül Hamid II was forced to abdicate and was succeeded by his brother, Mehmet V, in 1909. Foreign powers took advantage of the political instability in Istanbul to seize portions of the empire. Austria annexed Bosnia and Herzegovina immediately after the 1908 revolution, and Bulgaria proclaimed its complete independence. Italy declared war in 1911 and seized Libya. Having earlier formed a secret alliance, Greece, Serbia, Montenegro, and Bulgaria invaded Ottoman-held Macedonia and Thrace in October 1912. Ottoman forces were defeated, and the empire lost all of its European holdings except part of eastern Thrace.

The disasters befalling the empire led to internal political change. The liberal government in power since July 1912 was overthrown in January 1913 in a coup engineered by Enver Pasha, and the most authoritarian elements of the Young Turk movement gained full control. A second Balkan war broke out in June 1913, when the Balkan allies began fighting among themselves over the division of the spoils from the first war. Taking advantage of the situation, Ottoman forces turned on Bulgaria, regaining Edirne and establishing the western boundary of the empire at the Maritsa River.

After a brief period of constitutional rule, the leadership of the CUP emerged as a military dictatorship with power concentrated in the hands of a triumvirate consisting of Mehmet Talat Pasha, Ahmet Cemal Pasha, and Enver, who, as minister of war, was its acknowledged leader in the war.

Source: U.S. Library of Congress

 

Login Form

Sign up for get more.