How World War I Ended the Ottoman Empire Forever — Fexingo History

The Ottoman Railroad That Collapsed an Empire

8 min · 23 jun 2026
aflevering The Ottoman Railroad That Collapsed an Empire artwork

Beschrijving

The Berlin-to-Baghdad Railway was meant to be the Ottoman Empire's lifeline—a 1,600-mile iron spine that would bind Berlin to Baghdad, project German power into the Middle East, and pump modernity into the Empire's veins. Instead, it became a financial sinkhole, a strategic blunder, and a symbol of everything that went wrong in the final decades of Ottoman rule. In this episode, Lucas and Luna trace the railway's origins from Abdul Hamid II's dream of a unified caliphate to the German engineers who laid track through the Taurus Mountains. They explore how the project bankrupted the treasury, inflamed Arab nationalism, and ultimately sealed the Empire's fate by tying it to Germany's war machine. Along the way, they meet the forgotten workers—Kurdish laborers forced into tunnels that collapsed on them, Armenian deportees whose bodies lined the unfinished embankments during the genocide—and the foreign diplomats who carved up the route before it was even complete. The Berlin-Baghdad Railway didn't just fail; it helped dismantle the Ottoman world order. This is the story of how a train track helped end an empire. #BerlinBaghdadRailway #OttomanEmpire #AbdulHamidII #GermanOttomanAlliance #TaurusMountains #HijazRailway #AnatolianRailway #RailwayHistory #MiddleEastHistory #WWI #SublimePorte #KurdishLaborers #ArmenianGenocide #Imperialism #TechnologyAndEmpire #FexingoHistory #History #Podcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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Alle afleveringen

138 afleveringen

aflevering The Law of Family: How Ottoman Women Fought for Divorce Rights in 1917 artwork

The Law of Family: How Ottoman Women Fought for Divorce Rights in 1917

In 1917, as the Ottoman Empire teetered on the edge of collapse, a remarkable piece of legislation was passed: the Law of Family Rights. It granted women unprecedented access to divorce, including the right to initiate it for reasons like desertion, cruelty, or even a husband's failure to provide bread. Lucas and Luna explore how this law emerged from a tangle of Islamic jurisprudence, wartime necessity, and feminist advocacy by figures like Halide Edib Adıvar and Nezihe Muhiddin. They discuss the reaction of conservative clerics, the law's practical impact on women in Istanbul and the provinces, and its surprising afterlife in the legal codes of Turkey and other post-Ottoman states. We also look at the parallel story of the 1917 Russian 'Decree on Divorce' and how, briefly, two collapsing empires gave women more control over marriage than they'd ever had. A story of reform, resilience, and the intimate costs of empire's end. #LawOfFamilyRights #OttomanWomen #DivorceRights #HalideEdib #NeziheMuhiddin #1917 #IslamicFeminism #Istanbul #Şeyhülislam #Mecelle #OttomanEmpire #SublimePorte #WorldWarI #WomenInHistory #FexingoHistory #History #MiddleEastHistory #LegalHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

5 jul 20268 min
aflevering The Last Ottoman Census: Counting a Dying Empire artwork

The Last Ottoman Census: Counting a Dying Empire

In this episode, Lucas and Luna delve into the story of the Ottoman Empire's final census, conducted in 1914 just as the Great War erupted. They explore how the empire's last meticulous count was overseen by Mehmed Cemaleddin Bey of the Sicill-i Nüfus, the population registry. The census, which recorded some 18.5 million souls, was a desperate attempt to quantify resources for a crumbling state. Lucas explains the challenges faced by enumerators in remote regions like Yemen, where Ottoman control was nominal, and the reliance on the millet system for religious demographics. The episode also covers the role of the Düyun-u Umumiye, the Ottoman Public Debt Administration, which had a hand in funding the census, and the nascent statistics bureau, the İstatistik Encümeni. Listeners will learn how the data, imprecise but revealing, showed a young, male-heavy population already strained by Balkan wars. The discussion touches on the Hilal-i Ahmer (Red Crescent) and the Teşkilat-ı Mahsusa (Special Organization) that later used census records for conscription and deportation. Ultimately, the 1914 census stands as a poignant document of an empire on the edge of annihilation—a snapshot of a world about to vanish. #OttomanEmpire #Census1914 #MehmedCemaleddinBey #Sicill-iNüfus #Düyun-uUmumiye #İstatistikEncümeni #MilletSistemi #Hilal-iAhmer #Teşkilat-ıMahsusa #OttomanHistory #WorldWarI #BalkanWars #PopulationRegistry #Yemen #RedCrescent #PublicDebt #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Gisteren7 min
aflevering The Ottoman Empire's Last Peace Treaty: Lausanne 1923 artwork

The Ottoman Empire's Last Peace Treaty: Lausanne 1923

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the Treaty of Lausanne, the final peace settlement that formally ended the Ottoman Empire and created the modern Republic of Turkey. They discuss the key negotiators — İsmet İnönü, Lord Curzon, and Rıza Nûr — the contentious debates over the status of Mosul, the abolition of the capitulations, and the population exchange between Greece and Turkey. The episode also covers the treaty's long-term consequences for the Middle East and its legacy as a rare example of a post-World War I settlement that remains in force today. Listeners will learn about the 'Lausanne Syndrome' in Turkish political discourse, the fate of the Ottoman debt, and the unresolved issues that continued to shape regional politics for decades. #TreatyOfLausanne #LozanAntlaşması #İsmetİnönü #LordCurzon #RızaNûr #Capitulations #MosulQuestion #PopulationExchange #ModernTurkey #OttomanDebt #LausanneSyndrome #FexingoHistory #History #WorldWarI #Diplomacy #MiddleEast #PeaceTreaty #TurkishHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Gisteren7 min
aflevering The Ottoman Empire's Last Food Fight: The Sugar Crisis of 1917 artwork

The Ottoman Empire's Last Food Fight: The Sugar Crisis of 1917

In 1917, the Ottoman Empire faced a bizarre and devastating shortage of something we take for granted: sugar. This episode explores how the wartime blockade, speculation, and a government monopoly on sugar led to riots, black markets, and even a sugar-based currency in some Ottoman cities. We follow the story of the Ottoman Sugar Company (Şeker Şirketi) and the failed attempt to control the sweetener. Along the way, we meet the merchants who hoarded sugar, the soldiers who traded their rations for bread, and the ordinary people who turned to honey and molasses—only to find those supplies were also failing. We also touch on the role of the Hilal-i Ahmer (Red Crescent) in distributing what little sugar remained to hospitals. This episode sheds light on how a single commodity can reveal the crumbling infrastructure of an empire at war, and how the sweet tooth of a nation became a bitter symbol of its end. #OttomanEmpire #SugarCrisis1917 #WWI #Hilal-iAhmer #ŞekerŞirketi #Blockade #BlackMarket #Istanbul #History #FexingoHistory #OttomanHomeFront #FoodShortage #EconomicHistory #SublimePorte #CommitteeOfUnionAndProgress #DüyunuUmumiye #SugarRationing #MiddleEast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

3 jul 20266 min
aflevering The Ottoman Empire's Last Sultan: Mehmed VI's Exile artwork

The Ottoman Empire's Last Sultan: Mehmed VI's Exile

In this episode of How World War I Ended the Ottoman Empire Forever, Lucas and Luna explore the final days of the Ottoman sultanate through the tragic figure of Mehmed VI Vahdettin. After the Allied occupation of Istanbul and the rise of Mustafa Kemal's nationalist movement in Ankara, the sultan found himself caught between foreign powers and his own people. Lucas traces Mehmed VI's reluctant cooperation with the Allies, his flight from Istanbul aboard the HMS Malaya, and his lonely exile in Sanremo, Italy, where he died in 1926. The conversation touches on the abolition of the sultanate in 1922, the caliphate's end in 1924, and the fate of the Ottoman royal family. How did the last sultan's choices shape the transition from empire to republic? Tune in for a nuanced look at a ruler who lost his throne, his legacy, and his home. #MehmedVI #Vahdettin #OttomanEmpire #LastSultan #AbolitionOfSultanate #Sanremo #HMSMalaya #MustafaKemal #TurkishRepublic #Caliphate #AbdulmecidII #Istanbul #Ankara #WorldWarI #History #FexingoHistory #MiddleEastHistory #Empire Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

3 jul 20266 min