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Abbas I of Egypt

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Predecessor
  
Parents
  
Tusun Pasha

Successor
  
Sa'id Pasha

Arabic
  
عباس حلمي الأول

Uncles
  
Name
  
Abbas of


Abbas I of Egypt httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons55

Reign
  
10 November 1848 – 2 August 1849 (as Regent of Egypt and Sudan)2 August 1849 – 13 July 1854 (as Wali of Egypt and Sudan)

Wives
  
MahivechChazdilHawayaHamdamPerlanet

Issue
  
Ibrahim IlhamiMustafaHavvaMehmed SadikAyse Sadika

Died
  
July 13, 1854, Banha, Egypt

Cousins
  
Isma'il Pasha, Mustafa Fazl Pasha, Ahmad Rifaat Pasha, Muhammad Bey

Similar People
  
Sa'id of Egypt, Ibrahim Pasha of Egypt, Tusun Pasha, Tewfik Pasha, Hussein Kamel of Egypt

Grandparents
  
Muhammad Ali of Egypt

Abbas I (Arabic: عباس الأول ‎‎, Turkish: I. Abbas Hilmi Paşa 1 July 1812 – 13 July 1854), also known as Abbas Hilmi I Pasha or Abbas Pasha was the Wāli of Egypt and Sudan. He was a son of Tusun Pasha, and a grandson of Muhammad Ali, founder of the reigning Muhammad Ali Dynasty of Egypt and Sudan. The Chambers Biographical Dictionary says of him: "[b]igoted and sensual, he did much to undo the progress made under Muhammad Ali."

Contents

Early years

Abbas was born on 1 July 1812 in Jeddah and was brought up in Cairo. Being the grandson of Muhammad Ali, he succeeded his uncle Ibrahim Pasha in ruling Egypt and Sudan in 1848.

According to al-Jabarti, the leading historian of this time period, Abbas I was born in Cairo while his father, Tusun Pasha, was in the Hejaz fighting against the Wahabist movement. As a young man, he fought in the Levant under his uncle Ibrahim Pasha in the Syrian War. Muhammad Ali Pasha was removed from office on 1 September 1848, on account of mental weakness. He was replaced by his son Ibrahim Pasha, who reigned briefly as Regent of Egypt and Sudan from 1 September 1848 until his death on 10 November 1848. The death of Ibrahim made Abbas I, in turn, Regent of Egypt and Sudan from 10 November 1848 until 2 August 1849 (the date of Muhammad Ali Pasha's death), at which time Abbas became the reigning Wali of Egypt and Sudan until 13 July 1854.

Ruler of Egypt

Abbas has been often described as a mere voluptuary, but Nubar Pasha spoke of him as a true gentleman of the "old school". He was seen as reactionary, morose, and taciturn, and spent nearly all his time in his palace. He undid, as far as lay in his power, the works of his grandfather, both good and bad. Among other things he abolished trade monopolies, closed factories and schools, and reduced the strength of the region's army to 9,000 men. He also shut down construction of the Delta Dam and opposed the construction of the Suez Canal.

He was inaccessible to adventurers bent on plundering Egypt and Sudan of riches, and kicked out all foreign business; however at the insistence of the British government, he allowed the construction of a railway from Alexandria to Cairo, in return the British assisted him in a dispute with the Ottoman Empire. due to his policies to Europeans and their influence, he was not liked by them and in time his reputation was exaggerated and demonized to portray him as worse than he actually was. After he died the number of Europeans in Egypt rose drastically from 3,000, in 1850, to 90,000, in 1882, and 200,000 by 1900.

During the Crimean War he gave the Sultan of Turkey use of his naval fleet and 15,000 soldiers.

Horse breeding

Among his personal interests was the breeding of Arabian horses, said to be the overriding passion of Abbas' life, and his development and acquisition of quality bloodlines was of immense influence upon the modern horse breed. He continued a breeding program begun by Muhammad Ali. Muhammad Ali and Abbas I both recognized the unique characteristics and paid careful attention to bloodlines of the horses bred by the Bedouin. At age 23, Abbas had been put in charge of the horse breeding program of his grandfather. Upon becoming Wali, Abbas I accumulated additional horses and carefully documented the histories of the animals and their bloodlines in writing, records which have been preserved into the present day. Through a connection with Faisal Ibn Saud, for whom Abbas was said to have engineered an escape from a prison where he had been held, Abbas obtained a number of horses from the Nejd. He also paid very high prices for mares of the best bloodlines from the Anazeh people. He built extensive stables for these horses in three different locations, including a stud farm said to have cost £1,000,000 to build, and hired native Bedouin caretakers to oversee the care of the horses and to maintain information on their bloodlines. He also spared no expense in the care of horses, at one farm keeping 300 camels available to provide extra milk for the young foals.

Death

On 13 July 1854, Abbas was murdered in Benha Palace by two of his slaves, It was said that his cruelty to his servants was a motive. As an example, a story conveyed to Arabian breeder Lady Anne Blunt, told that Abbas I had once ordered a hot horseshoe to be nailed to the foot of a horse groom who had neglected the farrier care of a horse. He was later succeeded by his uncle (who was actually younger than him), Said Pasha.

Following his assassination, his Arabian horses were inherited by his eighteen-year-old son Damad Prince Ibrahim Ilhamy Pasha (aka El Hami Pasha), who had little interest in them, giving away several and putting the rest up for auction. In 1861, a distant relative, Ali Pasha Sherif purchased approximately 40 horses of the original Abbas Pasha stock and rebuilt the horse breeding program.

References

Abbas I of Egypt Wikipedia