The Last Caliph: How the Ottoman Empire Ended. Collapse, Partition, and the End of Islamic Imperial Authority, 1908–1924

Par : Lena Voss
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  • Nombre de pages241
  • FormatePub
  • ISBN978-3-565-32288-6
  • EAN9783565322886
  • Date de parution14/03/2026
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Taille1 Mo
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurEmphaloz Publishing House

Résumé

On March 3, 1924, Abdülmecid II boarded a train from Istanbul into exile, carrying the title of Caliph - spiritual leader of the world's Sunni Muslims - for the last time in history. Mustafa Kemal's new Turkish republic had abolished the caliphate, severing a chain of Islamic imperial authority that traced itself back to the companions of the Prophet. It was the final act in a dissolution that had been unfolding for over a century, accelerated by two Balkan wars, a catastrophic World War, and the ambitions of European powers who had long treated the Ottoman Empire as a inheritance to be divided. This book reconstructs the Ottoman endgame as both an imperial collapse and a civilizational transformation.
It traces the Young Turk revolution of 1908, the catastrophic decision to enter World War I alongside Germany, the genocidal campaigns against Armenian and other Christian minorities, and the post-war partition negotiations that reduced a six-century empire to a rump Anatolian state. It follows the War of Independence that Kemal launched against occupation forces - and the radical secularist project he imposed once victory was secured. Drawing on Ottoman imperial archives, British Foreign Office records, diplomatic correspondence, and survivor testimony, this is a rigorous account of how one of history's most enduring empires dissolved - and what its ending revealed about the forces reshaping the modern Middle East.