Why the Ottoman Empire Slowly Collapsed — Fexingo History
Between the Hamidiye massacres and the Young Turk Revolution, a brief war with Greece in 1897 revealed the Ottoman Empire's deepening military and diplomatic fragility. Lucas and Luna examine the thirty-day conflict over Crete, focusing on the Ottoman victory at the Battle of Domokos, the role of German-trained officers like Colmar von der Goltz, and how European great powers forced a settlement that gave Crete autonomy under Greek prince George. They explore why the Sublime Porte's last successful military campaign was also a strategic defeat, and how the war accelerated the empire's financial dependence on the Düyûn-ı Umûmiye. Listeners learn about Edhem Pasha's cautious advance, the performance of the Hamidiye regiments, and the diplomatic intervention that robbed Istanbul of its gains. The conversation ties this forgotten war to the broader pattern where Ottoman reforms created capable armies but could not overcome great-power politics or internal decay. #OttomanEmpire #GrecoTurkishWar1897 #Crete #BattleOfDomokos #EdhemPasha #ColmarVonDerGoltz #Hamidiye #DuyunuUmumiye #SultanAbdulHamid #GreatPowerPolitics #Thessaly #GreeceHistory #19thCenturyWar #OttomanMilitary #TreatyOfIstanbul #History #FexingoHistory #MediterraneanHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
153 episodios
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