Yıldız assassination attempt | |
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Dramatizing the Yildiz attempt |
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Location | Istanbul, Ottoman Empire |
Date | July 21, 1905 |
Target | Sultan Abdul Hamid II |
Attack type | assassination attempt |
Deaths | many (including the perpetrator) |
Perpetrator(s) | Christapor Mikaelian |
Yıldız assassination attempt (Turkish: Yıldız suikast girişimi; Armenian: Եըլտըզի Մահափորձը, translit.: Eëltëzi Mahap’orjë) was an assassination attempted on Sultan Abdul Hamid II by the Armenian Revolutionary Federation at Yıldız Mosque on July 21, 1905 in the Ottoman capital Constantinople (today Istanbul, Turkey).
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The events of the Hamidian massacres and Sultan Abdul Hamid II's had anti-Armenian policies [1]. Armenian resistance within the Ottoman Empire was planned by Armenian national liberation movement. The First Sassoun resistance of 1894, the First Zeitun Resistance in 1895, the Defense of Van in June, 1896. The 1896 Ottoman Bank Takeover was the seizure of the Ottoman Bank on August 26 by members of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation in an effort to raise further awareness with twenty-eight armed men and women led primarily by Papken Siuni and Armen Karo who took over an enterprise largely employing European personnel from Great Britain and France.
The Armenian Revolutionary Federation planned the assassination attempt on the sultan to enact vengeance. Dashnak members, led by ARF founder Christapor Mikaelian, secretly started producing explosives and planning the operation in Sofia, Bulgaria. During planning, the explosives were made at the improvised bomb-making factory in the village of Sablyar, near the Bulgarian town of Kyustendil. Kristapor Mikaelian, alongside his friend Vramshabouh Kendirian, died in an accidental explosion. Despite losing the instigators of the operation, it continued as planned.
Abdul Hamid would pray every Friday at the Yildiz mosque and would usually leave around the same time each time, creating a pattern in his movement. Taking advantage of this, the ARF planned to hide timed explosives in a carriage parked outside the mosque which were to explode at the time that Abdul Hamid would leave the mosque. It was decided that Zareh, a fedayee and participant in the Ottoman Bank takeover, would drive the carriage.
On July 21, 1905, Zareh drove the carriage in front of the mosque. He set the timer for a planned 42 seconds. Abdul Hamid failed to show up because he got caught in a conversation with the Sheikh ul-Islam. The bomb was thrown at the Sultan but he escaped injury.[2] The bomb went off killing many with it including Zareh. The Sultan arrived a few minutes later than planned.
Twenty-six members of the Sultan's service died. Fifty-eight from his service, as well as civilians in attendance, were wounded.
In the ensuing investigation other plots were unearthed.[3]
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