Ali Kılıç

{{short description|Turkish politician}}

{{For|other Ali Bey|Ali Bey (disambiguation)}}

{{Infobox military person

|name= Ali Kılıç

|birth_date= {{Birth-date|1890}}

|death_date= {{Death date and age|df=y|1971|07|14|1890}}

|birth_place= Constantinople, Ottoman Empire

|death_place= Istanbul, Turkey

|placeofburial= Zincirlikuyu Mezarlığı

|placeofburial_label=

|image= Kilic Ali Bey.jpg

|caption=

|nickname=

|allegiance=22px Ottoman Empire
{{flag|Turkey}}

|branch=

|serviceyears= Ottoman Empire: March 3, 1906-April 2, 1919
Turkey: October 28, 1919-June 7, 1934

|rank= Colonel

|commands= Aide-de-camps of Nuri Pasha in the Army of Islam (Ottoman Empire)
Kuva-yi Milliye of Marash, Aintab and its area

|unit=

|battles= First World War
Turkish War of Independence

|awards=

|laterwork= Member of the GNAT (Gaziantep)
Member of the administrative board of the Türkiye İş Bankası

}}

Ali Kılıç or Kılıç Ali Bey (born as Suleiman Asaf, 1890; Constantinople – July 14, 1971; Istanbul) was a Turkish officer of the Ottoman Army and Turkish Army. He was also a politician of the Republic of Turkey.Türk Parlamento Tarihi Araştırma Grubu, Türk Parlamento Tarihi, Millî Mücadele ve T.B.M.B. I. Dönem 1919-1923 - III. Cilt: I. Dönem Milletvekillerin Özgeçmişleri, Türkiye Büyük Millet Meclisi Vakfı Yayınları, Ankara, 1995, {{ISBN|975-7291-06-4}}, p. 423. He married with Füreya Koral, one of the first Turkish ceramicists. He was appointed a judge of the Independence Tribunal in the mid 1920s.{{Cite book|last=Göçek|first=Fatma Müge|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xHcRDAAAQBAJ&dq=ali+cenani&pg=PA613|title=Denial of Violence: Ottoman Past, Turkish Present, and Collective Violence Against the Armenians, 1789-2009|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=2015|isbn=978-0-19-933420-9|pages=310|language=en|author-link=Fatma Müge Göçek}} Football coach Gündüz Kılıç was his son.

Medals and decorations

See also

References