Pargalı Ibrahim Pasha
{{Short description|Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire from 1523 to 1536}}
{{about||the later (1604) governor of Egypt, also named Ibrahim Pasha and also known by the epithet Maktul ("the Slain")|Maktul Hacı Ibrahim Pasha|other people|Ibrahim Pasha (disambiguation)}}
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{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2022}}
{{Infobox officeholder
| name = Ibrahim
| honorific-suffix = Pasha
| image = Arolsen Klebeband 01 463 1 (cropped).jpg
| image_size = 280px
| caption = Engraving of Ibrahim Pasha
| office1 = 28th Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire
| term_start1 = 27 June 1523
| term_end1 = 5 March 1536
| monarch1 = Suleiman I
| predecessor1 = Piri Mehmed Pasha
| successor1 = Ayas Mehmed Pasha
| office2 = Ottoman Governor of Egypt
| term_start2 = 1525
| term_end2 = 1525
| monarch2 = Suleiman I
| predecessor2 = Güzelce Kasım Pasha
| successor2 = Güzelce Kasım Pasha
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| birth_date = {{circa}} 1495
| birth_place = Parga, Republic of Venice
| death_date = {{death date and age|1536|3|5|1495|df=yes}}
| death_place = Constantinople, Ottoman Empire
| nationality = Ottoman
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| children = Mehmed Şah Bey
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Pargalı Ibrahim Pasha{{efn|also known as Frenk Ibrahim Pasha ("the Westerner"), Makbul Ibrahim Pasha ("the Favorite"), which later changed to Maktul Ibrahim Pasha ("the Executed") after his execution in the Topkapı Palace.}} ({{circa}} 1495–5 March 1536), was the first Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire appointed by Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent.
Ibrahim, born as Orthodox Christian, was enslaved during his youth. He and Suleiman became close friends in their youth. In 1523, Suleiman appointed Ibrahim as grand vizier to replace Piri Mehmed Pasha, who had been appointed in 1518 by Suleiman's father, the preceding Sultan Selim I. Ibrahim remained in office for the next 13 years. He attained a level of authority and influence rivaled by only a handful of other grand viziers of the Empire, but in 1536, he was executed on Suleiman's orders and his property (much of which was gifted to him by the Sultan) was confiscated by the state.
Biography
=Origin=
Ibrahim was born to Orthodox Christian parents in Parga, Epirus, then part of the Republic of Venice. His ethnicity is unknown, but he probably originally spoke a Slavic dialect and also knew Greek and Albanian. His father was either a sailor or a fisherman.{{cite journal |last=Turan |first=Ebru |title=The Marriage of Ibrahim Pasha (ca. 1495-1536): The Rise of Sultan Süleyman's Favorite to the Grand Vizierate and the Politics of the Elites in the Early Sixteenth-Century Ottoman Empire |journal=Turcica |volume=41 |date=2009 |pages=5–6 |doi=10.2143/TURC.41.0.2049287 |quote=Originally, he probably spoke a Slavic dialect; sources mention that during the peace negotiations with the Habsburgs in 1533 he conversed in his mother tongue with Ferdinand I's representative Jerome of Zara, who was a Croatian... Venetian sources indicate that the pasha could also speak Greek and Albanian.}} Some time between 1499 and 1502, during the Ottoman–Venetian War, he was captured in a raid by Iskender Pasha, the Ottoman governor of Bosnia, and became a slave. He first met Prince Suleiman while residing at Iskender Pasha's estate near Edirne, most likely in 1514. It was then that he was taken into Suleiman's service.{{cite journal |last=Turan |first=Ebru |title=The Marriage of Ibrahim Pasha (ca. 1495-1536): The Rise of Sultan Süleyman's Favorite to the Grand Vizierate and the Politics of the Elites in the Early Sixteenth-Century Ottoman Empire |journal=Turcica |volume=41 |date=2009 |pages=6–9|doi=10.2143/TURC.41.0.2049287 }}
=Political career=
After his rival Hain Ahmed Pasha, the governor of Egypt, declared himself independent of the Ottoman Empire and was executed in 1524, Ibrahim Pasha traveled south to Egypt in 1525 and reformed the Egyptian provincial civil and military administration system. He promulgated an edict, the Kanunname, outlining his system.{{cite book|last=Raymond|first=André|others=Translated by Willard Wood|title=Cairo: City of History|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=W8CVAAAACAAJ|edition=Harvard|year=2001|publisher=American University in Cairo Press|location=Cairo, Egypt; New York|isbn=978-977-424-660-9|page=191}}{{cite journal|last1=Holt|first1=P. M.|last2=Gray|first2=Richard|editor1-last=Fage|editor1-first=J.D.|editor2-last=Oliver|editor2-first=Roland|title=Egypt, the Funj and Darfur|journal=The Cambridge History of Africa|location=London, New York, Melbourne|publisher=Cambridge University Press|volume=IV|year=1975|pages=14–57|doi=10.1017/CHOL9780521204132.003|isbn=9781139054584}}
In a lavish ceremony in 1523, Ibrahim Pasha was married to Muhsine Hatun, the granddaughter of the same Iskender Pasha who had captured him more than two decades previously. This marriage appears to have been politically motivated as a method of integrating Ibrahim, an outsider, into the Ottoman elite. While Muhsine was initially skeptical about her new husband, they eventually formed a loving relationship. Although historians once believed that the woman Ibrahim married was Hatice Sultan, the sister of Sultan Suleiman, this had been based on scanty evidence and conjecture. As a result of research carried out by the historian Ebru Turan, including the discovery of multiple references to Muhsine in Venetian and Ottoman texts as well as a signed letter from her to Ibrahim, it is now accepted that Ibrahim's wife was Muhsine and not Hatice. They had at least one child, a son named Mehmed Şah Bey (dead in 1539).{{cite journal |last=Turan |first=Ebru |title=The Marriage of Ibrahim Pasha (ca. 1495-1536): The Rise of Sultan Süleyman's Favorite to the Grand Vizierate and the Politics of the Elites in the Early Sixteenth-Century Ottoman Empire |journal=Turcica |volume=41 |date=2009 |pages=3–36|doi=10.2143/TURC.41.0.2049287 }}
- {{Cite book |last=Şahin |first=Kaya |title=Empire and Power in the reign of Süleyman: Narrating the Sixteenth-Century Ottoman World |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2013 |isbn=978-1-107-03442-6 |pages=51}}
- {{Cite book |last=Peirce |first=Leslie |title=Empress of the East: How a European Slave Girl Became Queen of the Ottoman Empire |year=2017 |publisher=Basic Books |page=157 |quote=Muhsine, granddaughter of an illustrious statesman, is now largely accepted as Ibrahim's wife.}}
File:Turkish and Islamic Arts Museum 01.jpg in Sultanahmet, Fatih, now the Turkish and Islamic Arts Museum.]] His palace, which still stands on the west side of the Hippodrome in Istanbul, has been converted into the modern-day Turkish and Islamic Arts Museum.
File:Draft of the 1536 Treaty negotiated between Jean de La Forest and Ibrahim Pacha expanding to the whole Ottoman Empire the privileges received in Egypt from the Mamluks before 1518.jpg and Ibrahim Pasha, a few days before his execution, expanding to the whole Ottoman Empire the privileges received by France in Egypt from the Mamluks before 1518.]]
On the diplomatic front, Ibrahim's work with Western Christendom was a complete success. Portraying himself as "the real power behind the Ottoman Empire", Ibrahim used a variety of tactics to negotiate favorable deals with the leaders of the Catholic powers. The Venetian diplomats even referred to him as "Ibrahim the Magnificent",Jenkins, H. D. (1970). Chapter 5L Ibrahim's Fall. In Ibrahim Pasha: Grand Vizir of Suleiman the Magnificent, 38-39. Essay, AMS Press. a play on Suleiman's usual sobriquet. In 1533, he convinced Charles V to turn Hungary into an Ottoman vassal state. In 1535, he completed a monumental agreement with Francis I that gave France favorable trade rights within the Ottoman Empire in exchange for joint action against the Habsburgs. This agreement would set the stage for joint Franco-Ottoman naval maneuvers, including the basing of the Ottoman fleet in southern France (in Toulon) during the winter of 1543–1544.
Although Ibrahim Pasha had long since converted to Islam, he maintained some ties to his roots, even bringing his parents to live with him in the Ottoman capital, where they also converted to Islam. His father took the name Yusuf and joined the Ottoman elite, becoming a governor in Epirus.{{cite journal |last=Turan |first=Ebru |title=The Marriage of Ibrahim Pasha (ca. 1495-1536): The Rise of Sultan Süleyman's Favorite to the Grand Vizierate and the Politics of the Elites in the Early Sixteenth-Century Ottoman Empire |journal=Turcica |volume=41 |date=2009 |pages=6|doi=10.2143/TURC.41.0.2049287 }}
As he attained increasing wealth and power, he also attained enemies; such as the famous Hürrem. After a dinner with the Sultan on 5 March 1536, Ibrahim Pasha went to bed. Upon arrival to his room, he was seized, and killed. Thus, Hürrem became the chief political advisor to her husband, the Sultan.Roger Bigelow Merriman, Suleiman the Magnificent 1520-1566 (1944) pp 184–185.Jenkins (1911), 109-125.
In popular media
- In the internationally popular Turkish television series Muhteşem Yüzyıl, Pargalı Ibrahim Pasha is portrayed by actor Okan Yalabık.
- He appears as a unique Ottoman governor in the video game Civilization 6 in the Gathering Storm expansion.
See also
- Turkish and Islamic Arts Museum, formerly Pargalı Ibrahim Pasha's palace
- List of Ottoman grand viziers
- List of Ottoman governors of Egypt
Notes
{{notelist}}
References
{{reflist}}
Bibliography
{{refbegin}}
- Jenkins, Hester Donaldson. Ibrahim Pasha: grand vizir of Suleiman the Magnificent (1911) [https://archive.org/details/39020024820097-ibrahimpashagra/page/n69/mode/2up online]
- {{Cite book |last=Şahin |first=Kaya |title=Empire and Power in the Reign of Süleyman: Narrating the Sixteenth-Century Ottoman World |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2013 |isbn=978-1-107-03442-6}}
- {{cite journal |last=Turan |first=Ebru |title=The Marriage of Ibrahim Pasha (ca. 1495-1536): The Rise of Sultan Süleyman's Favorite to the Grand Vizierate and the Politics of the Elites in the Early Sixteenth-Century Ottoman Empire |journal=Turcica |volume=41 |date=2009 |pages=3–36|doi=10.2143/TURC.41.0.2049287 }} {{usurped|1=[https://web.archive.org/web/20210408012400/http://onser.info/uploads/files/Marriage_of_Ibrahim_Pasha.pdf pnline]}}
{{refend}}
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{{succession box|title=Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire|before=Piri Mehmed Pasha|after=Ayas Mehmed Pasha|years=27 June 1523 – 14 March 1536}}
{{succession box|title=Ottoman Governor of Egypt|before=Güzelce Kasım Pasha|after=Güzelce Kasım Pasha|years=1525}}
{{s-end}}
{{Grand Viziers of_Ottoman Empire}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Ibrahim, Pargali}}
Category:16th-century grand viziers of the Ottoman Empire
Category:16th-century Ottoman governors of Egypt
Category:16th-century executions by the Ottoman Empire
Category:Converts to Sunni Islam from Eastern Orthodoxy
Category:Executed people from the Ottoman Empire
Category:Suleiman the Magnificent
Category:Grand viziers of Suleiman the Magnificent
Category:Ottoman governors of Egypt
Category:Ottoman people of the Ottoman–Persian Wars
Category:Former Greek Orthodox Christians
Category:16th-century slaves in the Ottoman Empire
Category:16th century in Egypt