President Mustafa Kemal Ataturk President Mustafa Kemal Ataturk Preceded by Ahmet Ferit Tek Succeeded by Fethi Okyar | Preceded by Refik Birgen President Mustafa Kemal Ataturk Name Munir Ertegun | |
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President Mustafa Kemal Ataturk,Ismet Inonu Died November 11, 1944, Washington, D.C., United States Children Ahmet Ertegun, Nesuhi Ertegun, Selma Goksel Resting place Sultantepe, Istanbul, Uskudar Similar People Ahmet Ertegun, Nesuhi Ertegun, Mica Ertegun |
Turkey's Ambassador to the U.S. Mehmet Münir Ertegün Dies newsreel PublicDomainFootage.com
Mehmet Munir Ertegun (1883 – 11 November 1944) was a Turkish legal counsel in international law to the "Sublime Porte" (imperial government) of the late Ottoman Empire and a diplomat of the Republic of Turkey during its early years. Ertegun married Emine Hayrunnisa Rustem in 1917 and the couple had three children, two of whom were Nesuhi and Ahmet Ertegun, the brothers who founded Atlantic Records and became iconic figures in the American music industry.
Contents
- Turkeys Ambassador to the US Mehmet Mnir Ertegn Dies newsreel PublicDomainFootagecom
- Bykeli MMnir Ertegn Cenaze Treni 1944ABD 5 Nisan1946stanbul
- Life and career
- References
Büyükelçi M.Münir Ertegün-Cenaze Töreni 1944(A.B.D.)-5 Nisan1946(İstanbul)
Life and career
Born in Istanbul to a civil servant father, Mehmet Cemil Bey, and a mother Ayse Hamide Hanim, who was a daughter of Sufi shaykh Ibrahim Edhem Efendi, he studied law at Istanbul University and graduated in 1908. He was a legal counsel for the Ottoman Ministry of Foreign Affairs, when he saw the birth of his first son, Nesuhi, on 26 November 1917, in Istanbul, during the First World War. Taking part in an Ottoman delegation with a mission to search reconciliation with the Nationalists in Ankara, by the end of 1920, changed his destiny. While the two Ottoman Ministers heading the delegation returned to Istanbul after not achieving an understanding with the revolutionaries led by Mustafa Kemal Pasha he chose to join the National Struggle and remained in Ankara, leaving behind his young wife and three-year-old son, Nesuhi. He became an aide to Mustafa Kemal during the Turkish War of Independence and the chief legal counsel of the Turkish delegation to the resulting Treaty of Lausanne in 1923.
After the Western powers recognized the newly founded Republic of Turkey in 1923, he was sent to Geneva to the League of Nations as an observer for the Turkish Republic. During this assignment, he frequently went to Paris for the Ottoman public debt negotiations. Following this posting to the League of Nations, he was appointed ambassador to Switzerland (1925–1930), France (1930–1932), the United Kingdom (1932–1934) and the United States (1934–1944). As the Republic's ambassador to Washington, Ertegun opened his embassy’s parlors to African American jazz musicians, who gathered there to play freely in a socio-historical context which was deeply divided by racial segregation at the time. He held this last post until he died in Washington, D.C., of a heart attack in 1944. In April 1946, a year after World War II had ended, his body was carried back to Istanbul by the USS Missouri and buried in the garden of Sufi tekke, Ozbekler Tekkesi in Sultantepe, Uskudar. near his shaykh grandfather Ibrahim Edhem Efendi, who was once the head of the Tekke. (His two sons Nesuhi and Ahmet Ertegun also rest there.)
When Ertegun died, there was not yet a mosque in Washington, D.C., at which his funeral could be held. The Islamic Center of Washington was built as a result.