Why the Ottoman Empire Slowly Collapsed — Fexingo History

How the Ottoman Empire's Coffeehouses Brewed Rebellion

7 min · 26. kesä 2026
jakson How the Ottoman Empire's Coffeehouses Brewed Rebellion kansikuva

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Long before the Young Turks, before the Committee of Union and Progress, the Ottoman Empire's coffeehouses were the real threat to the sultan's power. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how the humble kahvehane became a hotbed of gossip, dissent, and political organization from the 16th century onward. They trace the origins of Ottoman coffee culture from Yemen to Istanbul, the fierce opposition from religious authorities who saw coffee as an intoxicant, and the successive sultans who tried—and failed—to shut down the coffeehouses. Key figures include Murad IV, who banned coffee and tobacco under pain of death, and the 17th-century historian İbrahim Peçevi, who documented the coffeehouse's rapid spread. The conversation also covers the role of coffeehouses in the 1908 Young Turk Revolution, where they served as informal meeting spaces for revolutionaries. Along the way, Lucas and Luna discuss the social leveling that happened in coffeehouses—where a janissary could debate a scholar—and how the state's attempts to control these spaces backfired, turning casual drinkers into political actors. A surprising look at the beverage that helped bring down an empire. #OttomanCoffee #Kahvehane #CoffeehouseRebellion #MuradIV #İbrahimPeçevi #YoungTurks #OttomanHistory #CoffeeCulture #Janissary #Sultan #YemenCoffee #Istanbul #HistoryOfCoffee #SocialRevolt #Empire #MiddleEastHistory #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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jakson How the Ottoman Empire's Coffeehouses Brewed Rebellion kansikuva

How the Ottoman Empire's Coffeehouses Brewed Rebellion

Long before the Young Turks, before the Committee of Union and Progress, the Ottoman Empire's coffeehouses were the real threat to the sultan's power. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how the humble kahvehane became a hotbed of gossip, dissent, and political organization from the 16th century onward. They trace the origins of Ottoman coffee culture from Yemen to Istanbul, the fierce opposition from religious authorities who saw coffee as an intoxicant, and the successive sultans who tried—and failed—to shut down the coffeehouses. Key figures include Murad IV, who banned coffee and tobacco under pain of death, and the 17th-century historian İbrahim Peçevi, who documented the coffeehouse's rapid spread. The conversation also covers the role of coffeehouses in the 1908 Young Turk Revolution, where they served as informal meeting spaces for revolutionaries. Along the way, Lucas and Luna discuss the social leveling that happened in coffeehouses—where a janissary could debate a scholar—and how the state's attempts to control these spaces backfired, turning casual drinkers into political actors. A surprising look at the beverage that helped bring down an empire. #OttomanCoffee #Kahvehane #CoffeehouseRebellion #MuradIV #İbrahimPeçevi #YoungTurks #OttomanHistory #CoffeeCulture #Janissary #Sultan #YemenCoffee #Istanbul #HistoryOfCoffee #SocialRevolt #Empire #MiddleEastHistory #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

26. kesä 20267 min
jakson The Ottoman Empire's 1908 Young Turk Revolution kansikuva

The Ottoman Empire's 1908 Young Turk Revolution

In 1908, a rebellion within the Ottoman army in Macedonia forced Sultan Abdülhamid II to restore the 1876 constitution and recall parliament after three decades of autocratic rule. This episode follows the chain of events from the formation of the Committee of Union and Progress (CUP) in secret, to the mutiny of Third Army officers in Selanik (Thessaloniki), to the sultan's capitulation. We discuss the role of the exiled Young Turk intelligentsia in Paris, the symbolic power of the constitutionalist demand, and the tragic irony that the revolution's initial euphoria soon gave way to the 31 March Incident, the 1909 countercoup, and the tightening grip of the CUP's central committee. This is the story of a moment when the Ottoman Empire seemed to reinvent itself — and of how that hope unraveled. #YoungTurkRevolution #CommitteeOfUnionAndProgress #AbdulhamidII #1908 #OttomanEmpire #ConstitutionalRevolution #31MarchIncident #Selanik #MahmudŞevketPaşa #EnverBey #TalatBey #İttihatVeTerakki #KanunEsasi #BalkanHistory #MiddleEastHistory #FexingoHistory #History #Podcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Eilen9 min
jakson The Hijaz Railway and the Ottoman Collapse kansikuva

The Hijaz Railway and the Ottoman Collapse

In 1908, the Hijaz Railway reached Medina, a feat of engineering and politics that aimed to bind the Ottoman Empire's crumbling Arab provinces more tightly to Istanbul. But the railway, championed by Sultan Abdülhamid II and funded by donations from Muslims worldwide, inadvertently accelerated the forces pulling the empire apart. This episode explores how the railway's construction strained Ottoman finances, deepened German influence, and ignited Arab nationalism. We discuss the role of German engineer Heinrich Meißner, the strategic calculus behind bypassing the Suez Canal, and how the line became a target during the Arab Revolt. Lucas and Luna also touch on the railway's legacy in the modern Middle East, where it remains a symbol of Ottoman ambition and fragility. #HijazRailway #AbdulhamidII #HeinrichMeißner #OttomanEmpire #ArabRevolt #Medina #Damascus #SuezCanal #GermanInfluence #PanIslamism #TELawrence #Aqaba #Maan #1908 #MiddleEastHistory #FexingoHistory #OttomanCollapse #RailwayHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Eilen7 min
jakson Sultan Abdülhamid II's Secret Police and the Collapse of Ottoman Intelligence kansikuva

Sultan Abdülhamid II's Secret Police and the Collapse of Ottoman Intelligence

In episode 118, Lucas and Luna explore a rarely discussed factor in the Ottoman Empire's long decline: the transformation of its intelligence and policing systems under Sultan Abdülhamid II. After the 1876 constitutional experiment was crushed, Abdülhamid built an extensive network of spies, informants, and censorship — the Yıldız İstihbarat Teşkilatı — to monitor dissidents, exiles, and even his own ministers. Lucas traces how this secret police force, staffed by figures like the notorious Fehim Paşa, created a climate of fear that stifled reform and alienated the empire's brightest minds. He also contrasts it with the earlier, more effective intelligence operations of the Köprülü era, and shows how the overreliance on surveillance over genuine political integration weakened the state from within. The episode ties this internal decay to the empire's inability to respond to external crises — the Balkan wars, the Arab revolt, and the final collapse in 1918. Listeners will encounter the Yıldız Palace archives, the role of the Teşkilât-ı Mahsusa's precursor networks, and the tragic story of the reformer Midhat Paşa, whose assassination in Taif was orchestrated by Abdülhamid's spies. A nuanced look at how the Ottoman 'panopticon' backfired. #OttomanEmpire #AbdülhamidII #YıldızİstihbaratTeşkilatı #SecretPolice #IntelligenceHistory #OttomanSpies #FehimPaşa #MidhatPaşa #Taif #YıldızPalace #TeşkilâtıMahsusa #Censorship #OttomanDecline #19thCentury #MiddleEastHistory #Empire #SurveillanceState #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

24. kesä 20267 min
jakson The Ottoman Public Debt Administration and the Empire's Financial Surrender kansikuva

The Ottoman Public Debt Administration and the Empire's Financial Surrender

This episode dives into the creation and impact of the Ottoman Public Debt Administration (Düyûn-ı Umûmiye), established in 1881 after the empire defaulted on its loans. We explore how this European-controlled agency took over major revenue streams—salt, tobacco, silk, stamps—and effectively turned the Ottoman government into a debt collector for foreign bondholders. Lucas and Luna discuss the 1875 default, the Muharram Decree, the role of the Galata bankers, and how the Düyûn-ı Umûmiye became a symbol of lost sovereignty. They also touch on the Reji tobacco monopoly, the resistance it sparked, and how this financial stranglehold contributed to the empire's slow collapse. Along the way, they examine the human cost: farmers forced to sell crops at fixed prices, smuggling networks, and the quiet humiliation of a state that could no longer control its own budget. A nuanced look at how economics, not just battles, doomed the Ottoman Empire. #Düyûn-ıUmûmiye #OttomanDebt #MuharremKararnamesi #GalataBankers #Reji #TobaccoMonopoly #Capitulations #OttomanFinance #AbdülhamidII #1881 #SickManOfEurope #OttomanEmpire #EconomicHistory #FexingoHistory #Podcast #History #MiddleEast #EmpireCollapse Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

24. kesä 20267 min