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See also: Turkish statesman and See also: man of letters, was See also: born in Stambul in 1819
.
He was the son of Rouheddin Effendi, at one See also: time See also: charge d'affaires in See also: Paris, an accomplished French See also: scholar, who was, therefore, attached, in the capacity of secretary-interpreter, to Reshid See also: Pasha's See also: diplomatic See also: mission to Paris in 1834
.
Reshid took Ahmed with him and placed him at school, where he remained about five years and completed his studies
.
He then returned to Constantinople, and was appointed to a See also: post in the bureau de traduction of the See also: ministry for See also: foreign affairs
.
While thus employed he devoted his leisure to the See also: translation of See also: Moliere's plays into Turkish and to the compilation of educational books—dictionaries, See also: historical and See also: geographical manuals, &c.—for use in Turkish See also: schools, with the See also: object of promoting cultivation of the French language among the rising generation
.
In 1847 he brought out the first edition of the Salnameh, the official See also: annual of the See also: Ottoman See also: empire
.
Two years later he was appointed imperial See also: commissioner in the Danubian principalities, and held that office till early in 1851 when he was sent to See also: Persia as ambassador—a post which suited his temperament, and in which he rendered See also: good service to his goverment for more than four years
.
Recalled in 1855, he was sent on a mission to inspect the eastern frontiers, and on his return was appointed member of the See also: Grand Council of See also: Justice, and was entrusted with the revision of the penal See also: code and the code of procedure
.
This See also: work occupied him until the beginning of 186o, when he was sent as ambassador to Paris, for the See also: special purpose of averting the much-dreaded intervention of See also: France in the affairs of See also: Syria
.
But Ahmed Vefik's abrupt frankness, irascibility and abhorrence of compromise unfitted him for See also: European See also: diplomacy
.
He offended the French See also: government; his mission failed, and he was recalled in See also: January, 1861
.
None the less his integrity of purpose was fully understood and appreciated in Paris
.
On his return he was appointed See also: minister of the Evkaf, but he only retained his seat in the See also: cabinet for a few months
.
He was then for a brief See also: period president of the See also: Board of See also: Audit, and subsequently inspector of the Anatolian provinces, where he was engaged for more than three years
.
His next See also: appointment was that of director-general of customs, whence he was removed to the office of musteshar of the grand vizierate, and in the following See also: year entered the cabinet of Midhat Pasha as minister of public instruction, but very soon retired to his seat in the Council of See also: State and remained out of office until 1875, when he represented See also: Turkey at the See also: International Telegraphic See also: Conference in St Peters-See also: burg
.
He was president of the See also: short-lived Turkish parliament during its first session—March 19 to See also: June 28, 1877—and at its close was appointed vali of Adrianople, where he rendered invaluable aid to the Rgd See also: Cross Society
.
On his recall, at the beginning of 1878, he accepted the ministry of public instruction in the cabinet of Ahmed Hamdi Pasha, and on the abolition of the grand vizierate (See also: February 5, 1878) he became See also: prime minister and held office till about the See also: middle of See also: April, when he resigned
.
Early in the following year he was appointed vali of See also: Brusa, where he remained nearly four years, and rendered admirable services to the province
.
The drainage of the pestilent marshes, the See also: water-supply from the mountains, the numerous roads, the suppression of See also: brigandage, the multiplication of schools, the vast development of the See also: silk industry through the substitution of mulberry plantations for See also: rice-See also: fields, the opening out of the See also: mineral
springs of Chitli, the introduction of See also: rose-trees and the production of See also: otto of roses—all these were Ahmed Vefik's work; and he became so popular that when in 1882 he was recalled, it was thought advisable that he should be taken away secretly by See also: night from the konak in Brusa and brought to his private residence on the Bosporus
.
A few days after his return he was again appointed prime minister (See also: December 1, 1882), but Ahmed Vefik demanded, as the condition of his acceptance of office, that he should choose the other members of the cabinet, and that a number of persons in the sultan's entourage should be dismissed
.
Upon this, the sultan, on the 3rd of December, revoked the irade of the 1st of December, and appointed Said Pasha prime minister
.
For the rest of his See also: life Ahmed Vefik, by the sultan's orders, was practically a prisoner in his own See also: house; and eventually he died, on the 1st of April 1891, of a renal complaint from which he had long been a sufferer
.
Ahmed Vefik was a See also: great linguist
.
He spoke and wrote French perfectly, and thoroughly understood See also: English, See also: German, See also: Italian, See also: Greek, Arabic and Persian
.
From all these See also: languages he translated many books into Turkish, but wrote no See also: original work
.
His splendid library of 15,000volumes contained priceless See also: manuscripts in many languages
.
In his lifetime he appreciably aided the progress of See also: education; but, as he had no following, the effects of his labour and influence in a great measure faded away after his See also: death
.
In all his social and See also: family relations Ahmed Vefik was most exemplary
.
His charity knew no See also: bounds
.
He was devoted to his aged See also: mother and to his one wife and See also: children
.
To his See also: friends and acquaintances he was hospitable, courteous and obliging; his conversation was intellectual and refined, and in every See also: act of his private life he manifested the spirit of a true gentleman
.
At home his habits, attire and mode of life were quite Turkish, but he was perfectly at his ease in European society; he had strong English proclivities, and numbered many English men and See also: women amongst his intimate friends
.
In public life his gifts were almost sterilized by peculiarities of temperament and incompatibility with official surroundings; and his mission as ambassador to Persia and his administration of Brusa were his only thorough successes
.
But his intellectual See also: powers, See also: literary erudition and See also: noble character made him for the last See also: forty years of his life a conspicuous figure in eastern See also: Europe
.
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