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MIDHAT See also: Turkish statesman, the son of a See also: civil See also: judge, was See also: born at Constantinople in 1822
.
His See also: father, a declared See also: partisan of reform, trained him for an administrative career, and at the age of twenty-two he was attached as secretary to Falk Effendi, whom he accompanied in See also: Syria for three years
.
On his return to Constantinople Midhat was appointed chief director of confidential reports, and after a new See also: financial See also: mission in Syria was made second secretary of the See also: grand council
.
His enemies, however, succeeded in ousting him from this See also: post, and caused him to be entrusted with the apparently impossible task of settling the revolt and See also: brigandage rampant in Rumelia
.
His See also: measures were drastic and their success was startling and the See also: government made him an official of the first See also: rank and restored him to his place in the grand council
.
In similar vigorous fashion he restored See also: order in See also: Bulgaria in 1857
.
In ,.86o he was made See also: vizier and See also: pasha, and entrusted with the government of Nisch, where his reforms were so beneficial that the sultan charged him, in conjunction with Fuad Pasha and See also: Ali Pasha, to prepare the scheme for adapting them to the See also: empire which was afterwards known as the See also: law of the vilayets
.
After further administrative See also: work in his province, he was ordered to organize the council of See also: state in 1866, and was then made governor of See also: Bagdad, where his success was as decisive as at Nisch, but attended with much greater difficulties
.
In 1871 the See also: anti-reform influence of the grand vizier, Mahmoud Nedim, seemed to Midhat a danger to the country, and in a See also: personal interview he boldly stated his views to the sultan, who was so struck with their force and entire disinterestedness that he appointed Midhat grand vizier in place of Mahmoud
.
Too See also: independent, however, for the See also: court, Midhat remained in power only three months, and after a See also: short governorship of See also: Salonica he lived apart from affairs at Constantinople until 1875
.
From this See also: time forward, however, Midhat Pasha's career resolved itself into a series of See also: strange and almost romantic adventures
.
While sympathizing with the ideas and aims of the " See also: Young See also: Turkey " party, he was anxious to restrain its impatience, but the sultan's obduracy led to a coalition between the grand vizier, the war See also: minister and Midhat Pasha, which deposed him in May 1876, and he was murdered in the following See also: month
.
His See also: nephew See also: Murad V. was in turn deposed in the following See also: August and replaced by his See also: brother, Abdul Hamid II
.
Midhat Pasha now became grand vizier, reforms were freely promised, and the See also: Ottoman parliament was inaugurated with a See also: great flourish
.
In the following See also: February, however, Midhat was dismissed and banished for supposed complicity in the See also: murder of Abdul Aziz
.
He then visited various See also: European capitals, and remained for some time in See also: London, where he carefully studied the procedure in the See also: House of See also: Commons
.
Again recalled in 1878, he was appointed governor of Syria, and in August exchanged offices with the governor of See also: Smyrna
.
But in the following May the sultan again ordered him to be arrested, and although he effected his escape and appealed to the See also: powers, he shortly afterwards saw See also: fit to surrender, claiming a See also: fair hearing
.
The trial accordingly took place in See also: June, when Midhat and the others were sentenced to See also: death
.
It was, however, generally regarded as a mockery, and on the intercession of the See also: British government the See also: sentence was commuted to banishment
.
The remaining three years of his See also: life were consequently spent in exile at Taif in See also: Arabia, where he died, probably by violence, on the 8th of May 1884
.
To great ability, wide sympathies, and undoubted patriotism he added absolutehonesty, that rare quality in a vizier, for he See also: left office as poor as when he entered it
.
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