Event

IOWC Winter Speaker Series - Dr. Veysel Şimşek

Wednesday, March 12, 2025 15:00to17:00
Peterson Hall Room 116, 3460 rue McTavish, Montreal, QC, H3A 0E6, CA
Poster with event details and historical map of the eastern Mediterranean.

The Ottoman-Egyptian War of 1831-33: An Assessment

Dr. Veysel Şimşek
Institute of Islamic Studies

This talk will examine the first armed conflict between central Ottoman forces and armies of Mehmed Ali Pasha, the ambitious and skillful governor of Egypt. After establishing his unchallenged authority in the province, Mehmed Ali Pasha (d. 1848) gradually expanded his military and fiscal power in the early 19th century. His relations with Ottoman sultan Mahmud II (r. 1808-1839), whose concurrent European-inspired administrative-military reforms had been underway since 1826, deteriorated after the conclusion of the Greek Revolution. Subsequently, Ottoman central authority and Mehmed Ali Pasha fought two successive wars in 1831-33 and 1839-41. Both conflicts were rapidly “internationalized” by the Great Powers’ direct and indirect involvement, and they decisively re-shaped the Middle East for the next century and beyond.
The diplomatic aspects of “First Ottoman-Egyptian War” and Great Powers’ involvement have arguably been better studied by the historians of the “Eastern Question”. By using multi-lingual and multi-archival sources, this paper, however, will attempt to provide a detailed political and military account for the conflict. It will also offer a closer examination on the pivotal battles of Homs, Beylan, and Konya that ended disastrously for the Ottomans by studying indigenous historical material as well as the physical geography of the conflict zones.

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