Why the Ottoman Empire Slowly Collapsed — Fexingo History
In 1897, the Ottoman Empire fought a short war against Greece over Crete, winning decisively on the battlefield. But the victory was hollow—European powers forced a settlement that gave Crete autonomy under a Greek prince, humiliating the sultan. Lucas and Luna explore how this war revealed both Ottoman military reforms and the empire's diplomatic weakness. They discuss the Battle of Domokos, the role of German-trained officers, and the war's aftermath in Ottoman public opinion, including the rise of nationalist societies. The conversation also touches on the 1896 Ottoman Bank takeover and the Hamidian massacres, connecting these events to earlier episodes. This episode offers a fresh angle on Ottoman decline—not a collapse but a slow unraveling, where even victories couldn't stop the empire's loss of control. #GrecoTurkishWar1897 #OttomanEmpire #Crete #BattleOfDomokos #AbdulhamidII #EdhemPasha #TimoleonVassos #GreatPowers #Autonomy #OttomanMilitary #HamidianEra #MegaliIdea #BalkanHistory #1897War #OttomanDecline #FexingoHistory #History #Podcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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