Why the Ottoman Empire Slowly Collapsed — Fexingo History
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]
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