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However, Abdullah Cevdet and Ibrahim Temo cut their ties with the CUP soon after 1902, as the CUP began to advocate a Turkist nationalist policy. [16] Instead he promoted his secular ideas in his magazine İctihat, where he published articles in support of several policies, which later were part of Atatürk's Reforms like the shutting down of ...
Abdullah Pasha Bajalan (18th century) Elî Teremaxî (17th century or 18th century) Haydar Khan Zanganeh (18th century) Ibrahim Pasha al-Dalati (18th century) Nalî (1800–1856) Salim (1800–1866) Bedir Khan Beg (1803–1869) Mastoureh Ardalan (1805–1848) Mawlawi Tawagozi (1806–1882/3) Kurdî (1806/12–1850) Jafar Qoli Khan Donboli (d. 1814)
Abdulla Kurd (sometimes Abdullah Kurd, and also known as Abdullah al-Kurdi or Salahuddin), (born Cevdet Döğer; 1977–2011), was a Kurdish Islamist militant who was a commander of the Mujahideen in Chechnya. Kurd was the top deputy to Saudi-born field commander Abu al-Walid.
İctihad frequently published articles on Westernization or Europeanisation which were mostly written by Abdullah Cevdet and Celal Nuri. [9] However, the latter became anti-European in 1914 and left İctihad. [9] The magazine featured articles on Bahaism in the late 1921 and in the early 1922 which adopted a positive stance towards it.
The Committee of Ottoman Union (İttihad-ı Osmanî Cemiyeti) was established as a secret society on 2 June 1889 by Ibrahim Temo, Dr. Mehmed Reşid, Abdullah Cevdet, and İshak Sükuti, all of whom were medical students of the Imperial Military School of Medicine in Constantinople.
Along with Abdullah Cevdet, he published a CUP newspaper Osmanlı Gazetesi (Ottoman Gazette) in Geneva and at times both were assisted by Tigrane Zaven, an Armenian intellectual. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] Sükuti contributed to the publication with anonymous articles and Osmanli was published through his financial assistance.
Bir siyasal düşünür olarak Doktor Abdullah Cevdet ve Dönemi, Istanbul, 1981; Bir siyasal örgüt olarak Osmanlı Ittihad ve Terakki Cemiyeti ve Jon Türklük, Istanbul, 1986; Young Turks in Opposition, Oxford University Press, 1995; Preparation for a Revolution: The Young Turks, 1902–1908, Oxford University Press, 2001
Cevdet is a Turkish form of the Arabic name Jawdat and may refer to: Given name ... Abdullah Cevdet (1869–1932), Ottoman intellectual and medical doctor;