Abdülkerim Nadir Pasha
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Abdulkerim Nadir Pasha (1807-1883) was an Ottoman Turkish soldier, born in Chirpan, Stara Zagora Province, Ottoman Bulgaria. He graduated from the military academy in Istanbul and was sent to Vienna in to continue his education (1836-1841). He was the commander of the Ottoman forces based in eastern Anatolia during in the Crimean War where he led many assaults against the Russian forces based in Gyumri. He assumed the command of the fortress at Kars and won the Battle of Bayandir.[1] But after a military failure by Ahmet Pasha, he was blamed and subsequently discharged from his position and replaced by Ahmet Pasha in January 1854.[1] After the war he was appointed as the governor of Thessaloniki.
He was elected to the constitutional parliament in 1876 as a senator, though he remained in his position in the army and dealt with several riots in Serbia in 1877. Because of his success in dealing with these riots, he was appointed as the commander of a division of the Danube forces during in Russo-Turkish War. After several command failures in this war, he was court martialed and exiled to the island of Rhodes, where he died.
[edit] Notes
- ^ a b Sandwith, Humphry (1856) A narrative of the siege of Kars, and of the six months' resistance by the Turkish garrison under General Williams to the Russian army: together with a narrative of travels and adventures in Armenia and Lazistan; with remarks on the present state of Turkey J. Murray, London, p. 92-94 OCLC 4797867