Showing posts with label Young Turks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Young Turks. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Wednesday, April 28, 1909. Liberating the Harem.

Deposed Ottoman Sultan Abdul Hamid II was packed up and sent to Salonika.  Francis McCullagh, the adventuresome Irish journalist, reported, further:

The instant Yildiz surrendered... All who were not women were immediately summoned to leave the Harem, and nearly all obeyed the summons voluntarily. The eunuchs hesitated but were bodily cast forth by the more energetic of the young ladies inside. On being helped to their feet by the soldiers, these unhappy Nubians manifested as much fear as if they were about to be hanged on the spot. But they were not treated harshly on the whole. A military commission, after having controlled their identity and their number according to list which they possessed, sent some of them to the above-mentioned camp and others to the Old Seraglio in Stamboul.

The harem itself was also broken up, and from the sounds of it, some of its members were happy with that result.

Executions commenced of the mutineers who had supported him.  The former Sultan would live until 1918.

River front, Parkersburg, W. Va.

Lynchburg, W. Va.

Last prior edition:

Tuesday, April 27, 1909. Fall of the Sultan.

Monday, April 27, 2009

Tuesday, April 27, 1909. Fall of the Sultan.



Ottoman Sultan Abdul Hamid II was deposed by unanimous vote of the Turkish parliament, after a fatwa was approved by Sheik ul Islam.  A fatwa was necessary as he was the Caliph and, therefore, both a civil and a religious figure.

Rechad Effendi, the Sultan's brother, a prisoner of the deposed monarch since 1876, was invited to be the new Sultan, which he became as Sultan Mehmed V.

It was quite a promotion, at least for the time being.


And folks were photographing Arizona.

University of Arizona, April 27, 1909.

Tuscon, Arizona.

Tombstone Arizona.

Last prior edition: