Mehmed VI


Mehmed VI Vahideddin, also known as Şahbaba among Osmanoğlu family, was the 36th and last Sultan of the Ottoman Empire, reigning from 4 July 1918 until 1 November, 1922 when the Ottoman Empire dissolved after World War I and was replaced by the Republic of Turkey on 29 October 1923. The brother of Mehmed V, he became heir to the throne in 1916 after the suicide of Abdülaziz's son Şehzade Yusuf Izzeddin as the eldest male member of the House of Osman. He acceded to the throne after the death of Mehmed V. He was girded with the Sword of Osman on 4 July 1918, as the thirty-sixth padishah. His father was Sultan Abdulmejid I and mother was Gülüstü Hanım She was an ethnic Abkhazian, daughter of Prince Tahir Bey Çaçba and his wife Afişe Lakerba, who was originally named Fatma Çaçba. Mehmed stepped down when the Ottoman Sultanate was abolished in 1922, and the secular Republic of Turkey was created with Mustafa Kemal Atatürk as the first president.

Early life

Mehmed VI was born at the Dolmabahçe Palace, in Constantinople on 14 January 1861. Mehmed's father died when Mehmed was only five months old, and Mehmed's mother died when he was four years old. He was raised and taught by his step-mother Şayeste Hanım. He trained himself by taking lessons from private teachers and attending some of the lessons given at Fatih Madrasa. The prince had a rough time with his overbearing stepmother, and at the age of 16 he left his stepmother's mansion with the three servants who had been serving him since childhood.
He grew up with nannies, female servants, and tutors. During the thirty-three years of his brother Sultan Abdülhamid’s reign he lived.
During his youth his closest friend was Abdulmejid II, the son of his uncle, Sultan Abdülaziz. But sadly in the years to come the two cousins became unyielding rivals. Before moving to the Feriye Palace the prince had lived briefly
in the mansion in Çengelköy owned by Kemaleddin Efendi.
During the reign of Sultan Abdul Hamid II, Mehmed was considered to be the sultan’s closest brother. In the years to come, when the young prince ascended to the throne, this closeness would greatly influence his political attitudes, such as his intense dislike of the Young Turks and the Union and Progress Party, and his sympathy for the British.

Education

As an orphan, Vahideddin Efendi had to educate himself. He took private lessons, he read a great deal, and he was interested in various subjects, including the arts, which was a tradition of the Ottoman family. He took courses in calligraphy and music and learned how to write in the naskh script and to play the kanun.
Then he became interested in Sufism, and unknown to the Palace he followed courses at the madrasa of Fatih on Islamic jurisprudence, Islamic theology, interpretation of the Quran, and the Hadiths, as well as in Arabic and Persian. He attended the dervish lodge of Ahmed Ziyaüddin Gümüşhanevi, located not far from the Sublime Porte, where Ömer Ziyaüddin of Dagestan was the spiritual leader, and he became a disciple of the Naqshbandi order.

Reign

Mehmed succeeded to the throne after the death of his half-brother Mehmed V on 3 July 1918.
The First World War was a disaster for the Ottoman Empire. British and allied forces had conquered Baghdad, Damascus, and Jerusalem during the war and most of the Ottoman Empire was divided amongst the European allies. At the San Remo conference of April 1920, the French were granted a mandate over Syria and the British were granted one over Palestine and Mesopotamia. On 10 August 1920, Mehmed's representatives signed the Treaty of Sèvres, which recognised the mandates and recognised Hejaz as an independent state.
The sultan requested the resignation of the Unionist government and assigned Ahmed Tevfik Pasha to form the government. In the speech of the opening of the new legislative year of the parliament, Wilson said that he applied for peace according to his principles, that he wanted peace in accordance with the honor and dignity of the state, that he believed that the precious places of the homeland were not occupied, and that the army would begin heroically. Mustafa Kemal Pasha, who sent a telegram to the Sultan, asked the government to establish Ahmed Izzet Pasha and make him a minister of Harbiye. The sultan assigned the task of forming the government to his son Ahmed Izzet Pasha.
The new government, consisting of members of the Liberty and Accord Party, arrested the leaders of the Committee of Union and Progress, including one of the former grand vizier Said Halim Pasha. The trial of Boğazlıyan District Governor Kemal Bey was immediately concluded, and the death penalty was executed in Beyazıt Square when the sultan's fatwa was signed by the sultan.
Meanwhile, the French General d'Esperey, who came to Istanbul, threatened to go to the palace with a battalion soldier and make what they wanted by burning the distractions of the sultan and his government. He called him to the embassy without visiting the Grand Vizier. Turkey put on a war unless undertaken harsh application of the decision would be heavily on the Ottoman Empire. The government, on the other hand, stated that the British could not give the twenty-three people they wanted to surrender. The French handed over a list of thirty-six people they wanted to arrest to the government.
Turkish nationalists rejected the settlement by the Sultan's four signatories. A new government, the Turkish Grand National Assembly, under the leadership of Mustafa Kemal was formed on 23 April 1920, in Ankara. The new government denounced the rule of Mehmed VI and the command of Süleyman Şefik Pasha, who was in charge of the army commissioned to fight for the empire against the Turkish National Movement ; as a result, a temporary constitution was drafted.
On 22 July 1920, Şurayı Saltanat was gathered in Yıldız Palace to discuss the principles of the Treaty of Sèvres which was a peace treaty. The Sevres Agreement was signed on 10 August 1920. Since he had to resign two and a half-month later, Ferid Pasha founded the last delegation of Tevfik Pasha, the last delegation of the Ottoman Empire, on 2 October 1920.

Exile and death

The Grand National Assembly of Turkey abolished the Sultanate on 1 November 1922, and Mehmed VI was expelled from Istanbul. One day before his departure, he had lunch with his daughter Ulviye Sultan and spent a night at her palace. Leaving aboard the British warship Malaya on 17 November 1922, Mehmed spent that night in Cihannümâ Mansion. He took care not to buy valuable items and jewelry other than his personal belongings. Harington himself took the last Ottoman ruler from Yıldız Palace. Ten people in the sultan and his entourage were sent off early in the morning by an English battalion. He went into exile in Malta; Mehmed later lived on the Italian Riviera.
On 19 November 1922, Mehmed's first cousin and heir Abdulmejid Efendi was elected caliph, becoming the new head of the Imperial House of Osman as Abdulmejid II before the Caliphate was abolished by the Turkish Grand National Assembly in 1924.
He sent a declaration to the Caliphate congress and protested the preparations made, declaring that he had never waived the right to reign and be caliph. The congress met on 13 May 1926. Mehmed died without the news of the congress meeting on 16 May 1926 in Sanremo, Italy. Her daughter Sabiha Sultan found money and foreclosed, so the coffin was taken to Syria and buried at the Tekkiye Mosque of Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent in Damascus.

Character

Mehmed Vahdeddin had an optimistic and patient personality according to the testimony of his relatives and employees; He was a kind family man in his palace; outside, and especially at official ceremonies, he would stand cold, frowning and serious, and would not compliment anyone; he attached great importance to religious traditions; the palace didn't know the gossip and didn't like it being spoken alongside. Even in his informal conversations, he always attracted attention with seriousness. The sources in question also state that he was intelligent and quick-grasped, but he was under the influence of his entourage and especially those he believed in, that he had a very evident, unstable and stubborn temperament.
Mehmed VI has dealt with advanced literature, music and calligraphy. His compositions were performed in the palace when he was on the throne. The lyrics of the songs he repeatedly composed while in Tâif envision the longing of the country and the pain of not getting the news that they have left behind. Sixty-three works belonging to him can be identified, but only forty works have notes. His poems, which can be an example to his poetry, are only the lyrics of his songs. He was also a good calligrapher.

Gallery

Family

Sultan Mehmed VI married five times: