Osman Nuri Paşa

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Photograph of Gazi Osman Pasha,  made by Abdullah Frères of Constantinople around 1895.
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Photograph of Gazi Osman Pasha, made by Abdullah Frères of Constantinople around 1895.

Osman Nuri Paşa also Gazi Osman Pasha (1832-1900) was an Ottoman Turkish field marshal and the hero of the Siege of Pleven in 1877. He was awarded the title 'Gazi' ('Victorious') as a result of that siege.

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[edit] Early life

Osman was born into a prominent family (Yağcıoğulları) of the city of Tokat in Central Anatolia. His father was a civil servant. Soon after Osman birth, his father was appointed to a position in the Ottoman capital, and the family moved to Istanbul, where Osman did his studies. He graduated from the Military Academy in 1852, and entered the cavalry at the beginning of the Crimean War, where he showed such distinction that he was rapidly promoted.

In 1861 Osman skillfully dealt with the Cretan rebels and the Yemen troubles in 1864. He returned from Yemen bearing the title of "pasha". He was then assigned as the military commander of the İşkodra (Shkodër) region and of Bosnia. Because of his success in quelling the Serbian rebellion of 1876, he was raised to the rank of field marshal (musir).

[edit] Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878)

Main article: Siege of Pleven

After the Russo-Turkish War was declared (24 April), Russian troops under the command of the Czar's brother Nicholas marched south toward the Danube. The only well-manned Ottoman fortress opposing them was at Vidin, where Osman’s forces were garrisoned having just defeated the Serbs.

While Osman's forces were in Vidin, his erstwhile commander Suleiman Pasha was on the Montenegro border, and Abdülkerim Pasha, the other divisional commander, was in Greece. There were only 186,000 Ottoman troops in the Balkans, of which Osman had less than 20,000. When the Russians crossed the Danube and invaded Bulgaria at Svishtov in July, the Turkish high command sent Osman to reinforce the city of Nikopol. Before Osman could reach Nikopol, the Russian vanguard had taken the city in the Battle of Nikopol (16 July) and Osman settled on Plevna to the south. Plevna was a more strategic location being the center of transport and communication lines in northern Bulgaria. Osman started by ordering trenches dug around the city. These trenches are considered an early example of modern bastion defensive works. He literally took his artillery and men under the ground. While Osman was still constructing these fortifications, the Russian forces began to arrive (19 July). However, the Russians were used to warfare in open territory, and sent columns of infantry to directly attack the fortifications. Osman’s defence repelled two Russian attacks with huge casualties on the Russian side. Most analysts agree that a counter-attack at this point would have allowed the Turks to gain control and destroy the bridge at Svishtov. However, Osman had explicit orders to stay fortified in Plevna, and so did not take advantage of the opportunity.

The Russians continued to bring in troop across the Danube, including a contingent of Romanian troops; while Osman was only reinforced by the troops retreating from the Battle of Lovcha which had cut the Ottoman supply lines.

The death-toll was high in the trenches as well as among the Russians. The city of Plevna itself partially burned from artillery fire. Indeed, as time passed, starvation began in Plevna and munitions were running out. With no help was coming from the outside, Suleyman Pasha's attempts to open a breach for the Ottoman forces in the key Shipka Pass of the Balkan Mountains having failed several times, Osman finally decided in October to end the siege and retreat. Osman requested permission to abandon Plevna, but the Ottoman high command refused him (24 October). After another month, with supplies exhausted, Osman finally made an attempt to breakout from the Russian siege, together with the civilian Turkish population of the city (9 December). The siege had lasted 145 days (about five months).

Osman managed to cross the Vid River, and attacking along a 2-mile front broke through the first line of the Russian trenches. However, the Russians turned their artillery and the Ottomans were driven back. Osman himself was wounded in the left leg by a splinter of an artillery shell and was taken to a mill where his injury was bandaged. The next day two Romanian officers came to the mill and requested his "unconditional surrender". Osman surrendered his sword to the Romanian colonel Mihail Cerchez, who nevertheless refused to accept it waiting for orders from the commander of the Romanian expeditionary corp - the Romanian prince Carol I. Osman and his aide-de-camp Talat Bey were being taken back to Plevna city in a cart when they came across Russian commander, General Nicholas, on the way. General Nicholas said to Osman Pasha: "I congratulate you for your success in defending Plevna. This defense is one of the brightest military occurrences in defensive history." The next day when Osman was taken before Czar Alexander II he was asked why he had not surrendered sooner. Osman replied: "My state gave those weapons to me for fighting, not to drop them at the sight of the enemy. They sent me here to fight." The Czar returned Osman’s sword as a mark of esteem. [1] [2]

Fifteen days later, the Russians took Osman to Harkov where he remained in captivity for the duration of the war. Upon Osman’s return to Istanbul, he was acclaimed by large crowds. Soon afterwards, Sultan Abdul Hamid II appointed him as Marshal of the Palace. Osman wrote a book about the Siege of Plevna entitled Défense de Plevna, d'après les documents réunis par Mouzaffer Pasha et Taalet Bey (Paris, 1889).

[edit] Aftermath

Over the next 20 years Osman served the Ottoman Empire four times as the Minister of War. He died on 5 April 1900 at the age of 67. He was buried in the garden of the Fatih Mosque as he had requested.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Kremnitz, Mite (1899) Reminiscences of the King of Roumania Harper & Bros., New York, pp. 293-294;
  2. ^ Hozier, Henry Montague (1879) The Russo-Turkish War: including an account of the rise and decline of the Ottoman power and history of the Eastern Question W. Mackenzie, London, p.722;

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