Why the Ottoman Empire Slowly Collapsed — Fexingo History
In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the Ottoman Empire's system of capitulations — a series of trade privileges granted to European powers that slowly crippled Ottoman industry and sovereignty. They trace the history from the first capitulations under Süleyman the Magnificent in 1536 to the humiliating 1740 Treaty of Capitulations with France, the impact of the 1838 Anglo-Ottoman Convention, and the empire's growing economic dependence on European loans. The conversation highlights key figures like Mehmed Cavid Bey, the finance minister who tried to reform the system, and examines how foreign control over customs revenues and the Ottoman Public Debt Administration turned the empire into a semi-colonial economy. Specific examples include the silk industry in Bursa, the tobacco monopoly of the Reji Company, and the devastating effects of free trade on local manufacturing. The episode also touches on the legal extraterritoriality that made Ottoman citizens second-class in their own land. A focused look at how economic agreements became tools of imperial control, setting the stage for collapse. #Capitulations #OttomanEmpire #EconomicHistory #MehmedCavidBey #RejiCompany #Düyûn-ıUmûmiye #AngloOttomanConvention #SüleymanTheMagnificent #TreatyOfCapitulations #FreeTrade #SemiColonialism #BursaSilk #Extraterritoriality #Tanzimat #OttomanDebt #19thCentury #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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