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Description
They set out to save the Ottoman Empire through modernization - and ended up replacing it with something none of them had originally planned to build. In July 1908, a constitutional revolution forced the Ottoman sultan to restore parliamentary government - and the men who led it believed they had saved an empire. Within fifteen years, that empire was gone, replaced by a republic they had not intended to create, built on ruins they had helped produce. The Young Turks remain one of history's most consequential and contested revolutionary movements: modernizers who embraced ethnic nationalism, reformers who presided over genocide, and empire-savers who became nation-builders by necessity.This book examines the Committee of Union and Progress - the Young Turk organization - as a political and ideological movement navigating an empire in terminal crisis. It traces their intellectual formation in European exile, their seizure of power in 1908, and the increasingly authoritarian trajectory that followed: the suppression of minority populations, the catastrophic alliance with Germany in 1914, and the wartime deportations and massacres of Armenians, Assyrians, and Greeks that would define their historical legacy. It follows the movement's fragmentation after defeat - and how one of its junior officers, Mustafa Kemal, salvaged Turkish sovereignty from the wreckage.Drawing on Ottoman parliamentary records, CUP internal correspondence, European diplomatic archives, and survivor testimony, this is a rigorous account of how revolutionary ambition, nationalist ideology, and imperial collapse combined to produce the modern Turkish state. Author of English-language books on personal growth, business strategy, and historical insights. With a focus on practical wisdom from the past and present, Alex helps readers unlock their potential through transformative ideas.



