Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Ceteci Abdullah Pasha

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Preceded by
  
Husayn Pasha ibn Makki

Succeeded by
  
Mustafa Pasha

Preceded by
  
Agha Mustafa Pasha

Name
  
Ceteci Pasha

Monarch
  
Mustafa III (1757-1774)

Succeeded by
  
Muhammad Pasha al-Shalik

Preceded by
  
Yazicizade Ibrahim Pasha

Ceteci Abdullah Pasha ibn Ibrahim al-Husayni al-Jarmaki (also known as Abdullah Pasha al-Jatahji) was an Ottoman statesman. He served terms as the governor of Sivas, Diyarbekir, Rakka, Adana, Van, Erzurum, Kutahya, Aleppo and Damascus. Ceteci was born in 1703 in the village of Cermik (also spelled Jarmak), hence his surname "al-Jarmaki".

Prior to his political career, Ceteci was a "distinguished field commander" according to Alexis de Tocqueville. He fought in the Ottoman campaigns in the Caucasus in the 1720s and in the war against the Safavid Empire. During those campaigns he served as a levend basagasi (commander of a mercenary battalion). He was promoted to beylerbey of Sivas in 1739. He founded the Ceteci Abdullah Pasha Medresesi, an Islamic school in his hometown of Cermik in 1756-57.

Governor of Damascus

Ceteci entered office in January 1758 after his predecessor Husayn Pasha ibn Makki failed to protect the Hajj caravan from a massive Bedouin raid. His first major action was suppressing a revolt by the Janissaries who had staged a revolt during Husayn Pasha's tenure. The revolt in the Midan district was put down, but Ceteci's troops engaged in mass killings and looting against rebellious neighborhoods. Several men, women and children were killed.

The economy in Damascus, already flailing, was severely damaged during the revolt's suppression since Midan was a major bread market for the city. Its bakeries closed as a result of the violence. The events in Midan coincided with bad grain harvest elsewhere in the province, resulting in the depletion of bread in bakeries throughout the city. According to a Damascene chronicler at the time, the empty bakeries were surrounded by "great crowds of men, women and children, from whom heart-breaking cries and wails were heard". Ceteci, wary of a repeat of the bread riots of 1757, dispatched troops to guard the bakeries.

Ceteci replaced the naqib al-ashraf (politically privileged descendant of Muhammad) Sayyid Hamza with his rival Ali al-Ajlani. Hamza was exiled to Cyprus on Ceteci's orders and Ajlani remained in the post until his death in 1778. Ceteci was reappointed as governor of Diyarbaker in January 1760. He was succeeded as governor of Damascus by Muhammad Pasha al-Shalik, who served for a few months before being replaced by Uthman Pasha al-Kurji. Ceteci died later in 1760.

References

Ceteci Abdullah Pasha Wikipedia