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IBRAHIM PASHA (1789–1848)

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Originally appearing in Volume V14, Page 224 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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IBRAHIM
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PASHA (1789–1848)
  ,
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Egyptian general, is some-times spoken of as the adopted son of Mehemet
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Ali,
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pasha of
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Egypt . He is also and more commonly called his son . He was born in his
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father's native
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town, Kavala in
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Thrace . During his father's struggle to establish himself in Egypt,
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Ibrahim, then sixteen years of age, was sent as a hostage to the
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Ottoman capitan pasha (
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admiral), but when Mehemet Ali was recognized as pasha, and had defeated the
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English expedition under General A . M . Fraser, he was allowed to return to Egypt . When Mehemet All went to
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Arabia to prosecute the war against the
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Wahhabis in 1813, Ibrahim was
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left in command in Upper Egypt . He continued the war with the broken power of the Mamelukes, whom he suppressed . In 1816 he succeeded his
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brother Tusun in command of the Egyptian forces in Arabia . Mehemet Ali had already begun to introduce
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European discipline into his army, and Ibrahim had probably received some training, but his first
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campaign was conducted more in the old
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Asiatic style than his later operations . The campaign lasted two years, and terminated in the destruction of the Wahhabis as a
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political power . Ibrahim landed at Yembo, the
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port of Medina, on the 3oth of September 1816 .

The

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holy cities had been recovered from the Wahhabis, and Ibrahim's task was to follow them into the
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desert of
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Nejd and destroy their fortresses . Such training as the Egyptian troops had received, and their artillery, gave t hem a marked superiority in the open field . But the difficulty of
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crossing the desert to the Wahhabi stronghold of Deraiya, some 400 M. east of Medina, and the courage of their opponents, made the
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conquest a very arduous one . Ibrahim displayed
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great energy and tenacity, sharing all the hardships of his army, and never allowing himself to be discouraged by failure . By the end of September 1818 he had forced the Wahhabi leader to surrender, and had taken Deraiya, which he ruined . On the rrth of December 1819 he made a triumphal entry into Cairo . After his return he gave effective support to the Frenchman, Colonel Seve (
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Suleiman Pasha), who was employed to
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drill the army on the European model . Ibrahim set an example by submitting to be drilled as a recruit . When in 1824 Mehemet Ali was appointed governor of the Morea by the sultan, who desired his help against the insurgent Greeks, he sent Ibrahim with a
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squadron and an army of 17,000 men . The expedition sailed on the loth of
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July 1824, but was for some months unable to do more than come and go between Rhodes and Crete . The fear of the Greek fire
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ships stopped his way to the Morea . When the Greek sailors mutinied from want of pay, he was able to
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land at Modon on the 26th of
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February 1825 .

He remained in the Morea till the

capitulation of the 1st of
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October 1828 was forced on him by the intervention of the Western powers . Ibrahim's operations in the Morea were energetic and ferocious . He easily defeated the Greeks in the open field, and though the siege of Missolonghi proved costly to his own troops and to the
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Turks who operated with him, he brought it to a successful termination on the 24th of
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April 1)826 . The Greek guerrilla bands harassed his army, and in revenge he desolated the country and sent thousands of the inhabitants into
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slavery in Egypt . These
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measures of repression aroused great indignation in
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Europe, and led first to the intervention of the English, French and
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Russian squadrons (see NAVARINO,
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BATTLE oF), and then to the landing of a French expeditionary force . By the terms of the capitulation of the 1st of October 1828, Ibrahim evacuated the country . It is fairly certain that the
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Turkish government, jealous of his power, had laid a plot to prevent him and his troops from returning to Egypt . English
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officers who saw him at Navarino describe him as short, grossly fat and deeply marked with smallpox . His obesity did not cause any abatement of activity when next he took the field . In 183r, his father's
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quarrel with the Porte having become flagrant, Ibrahim was sent to conquer
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Syria . He carried out his task with truly remark-able energy . He took Acre after a severe siege on the 27th of May 1832, occupied
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Damascus, defeated a Turkish army at Horns on the 8th of July, defeated another Turkish army at Beilan on the 29th of July, invaded
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Asia Minor, and finally routed the
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grand
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vizier at
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Konia on the 21st of December .

The

convention of Kutaiah on the 6th of May left Syria for a time in the hands of Mehemet Ali . Ibrahim was undoubtedly helped by Colonel Seve and the European officers in his army, but his intelligent docility to their advice, as well as his
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personal hardihood and energy, compare most favourably with the
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sloth, ignorance and arrogant conceit of the Turkish generals opposed to him . He is entitled to full credit for the
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diplomatic
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judgment and tact he showed in securing the support of the inhabitants, whom he protected and whose rivalries he utilized . After the campaign of 1832 and 1833 Ibrahim remained as governor in Syria . He might perhaps have administered successfully, but the exactions he was compelled to enforce by his father soon r wined the popularity of his government and provoked revolts . In 1838 the Porte felt strong enough to renew the struggle, and war broke out once more . Ibrahim won his last victory for his father at Nezib on the 24th of
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June 1839 . But Great Britain and Austria intervened to preserve the integrity of
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Turkey . Their squadrons cut his communications by sea with Egypt, a general revolt isolated him in Syria, and he was finally compelled to evacuate the country in February 1841 . Ibrahim spent the rest of his
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life in peace, but his
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health was ruined . In 1846 he paid a visit to western Europe, where he was received with some respect and a great
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deal of curiosity . When his father became imbecile in 1848 he held the regency till his own
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death on the loth of November 1848 .

See Edouard Gouin, L'Egypte au XIXo siecle (

Paris, 1847) ; Mine Vingtrinier, Soliman-Pasha (Colonel Seve) (Paris, 1886) . A great deal of unpublished material of the highest
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interest with. regard to Ibrahim's personality and his
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system in Syria is preserved in the
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British
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Foreign Office archives; for references to these see Cambridge Mod . Hist. x . 852, bibliography to
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chap. xvii .

End of Article: IBRAHIM PASHA (1789–1848)
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