Why the Ottoman Empire Slowly Collapsed — Fexingo History
In early 1914, as the Ottoman Empire teetered on the brink of World War I, a European-brokered reform package for the Armenian provinces was signed in Istanbul. Known as the Yeniköy Accord or the February 1914 Armenian Reforms, it appointed two European inspectors-general for the six eastern vilayets and created a supervised administrative framework. Lucas and Luna explore the negotiations between the Great Powers and the Young Turk government, the role of the Armenian Patriarchate and the Dashnak and Hunchak parties, the appointment of the Dutch and Norwegian inspectors L.C. Westenenk and Nicolai Hoff, and why the reforms never took effect—derailed first by Ottoman resistance and then by the outbreak of war. They also touch on the 1913 Ottoman coup, the loss of Edirne in the Balkan Wars, and how the reform question became a flashpoint for nationalist tensions that would soon spiral into catastrophe. #YenikoyAccord #ArmenianReforms1914 #YoungTurks #OttomanEmpire #Dashnak #Hunchak #Westenenk #Hoff #OttomanArmenians #BalkanWars #WorldWarI #Istanbul #Erzurum #Van #Bitlis #History #FexingoHistory #OttomanDecline Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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