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An Economics Reading of the Ottoman Constitution of 1876

Hristiyan Atanasov ()
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Hristiyan Atanasov: State University of Library Studies and Information Technologies, Sofia, Bulgaria

Proceedings of the Centre for Economic History Research, 2022, vol. 7, 90-102

Abstract: On 3 November 1839, the Grand Vizier Mustafa Resid Pasha solemnly read out a sultan’s order (Hatt-? Serif) marking the beginning of significant transformations in the Ottoman Empire. Thus began the Tanzimat (from tanzimat – reorganisation, reconstruction), or the period of reforms. A period marked by the extreme polarisation of the Ottoman political elite, which would divide itself into a pro-Western liberal group and one that defended religious traditions and opposed change in the empire. The struggle between these antagonist groups would be fought with variable success. The liberals would seemingly win – they would provide the ideological inspiration for the next great reformist decree, the Sultan's Firman (Hatt-i Humayun) of 1856, and especially the Constitution (Kanun-i Åsasi) promulgated in late 1876. Ultimately, however, they would come to lose after a series of vicissitudes. Sultan Abdul Hamid II put an end to the constitutional reforms, dissolved the convened Ottoman parliament, and established an authoritarian regime until the Young Turk Revolution of 1908. The purpose of this article is to present and analyse, using an economic point of view, the three main acts of the Tanzimat – the Hatt-? Serif, the Hatt-? Humayun and to emphasize on the Constitution. The latter, although ambiguously assessed in scholarly literature, appears as a logical conclusion of the reform period. Despite its short duration, it presents the ideology of reforms in terms of property, finance and economics. The constitution secured the most important principles of liberalism and capitalism and this should be considered as an undoubted achievement and significant breakthrough for such traditional society like the Ottoman. First of all, it guaranteed private property, ensured freedom of religion, freedom of the press, freedom of association and freedom of expression. Ottoman state finances became public and were placed under the control of deputies elected by the subjects, a significant step in the direction of modern budgeting and auditing.

Keywords: Tanzimat; Reforms; Ottoman Constitution; economics; finances; liberalism; capitalism (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: B15 N13 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2022
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