Mehmed Namık Pasha

Mehmed Emin Namık
Viceroy of Baghdad
In office
1861–1867
MonarchAbdulaziz
In office
1851–1852
MonarchAbdülmecid I
Viceroy of Jeddah
In office
1856–1860
MonarchAbdülmecid I
Ottoman Ambassador to the United Kingdom
In office
1834–1836
MonarchMahmud II
Personal details
Born
Mehmed Emin Namık

1804
Constantinople, Ottoman Empire
Died1892 (aged 88)
Constantinople, Ottoman Empire
Military service
Allegiance Ottoman Empire
Branch/service Ottoman Army
RankField marshal

Mehmed Emin Namık Pasha (1804 – 1892) was an Ottoman statesman and military reformer, who is considered to be one of the founding fathers of the modern Ottoman Army. He served under five Sultans and acted as counsellor to at least four of them. He founded the Mekteb-i Harbiye (The Ottoman Military Academy), was twice Viceroy of the province of Bagdad, was the first ambassador of the Sublime Porte at Saint-James's Court, was appointed Serasker (Supreme Commander of the Ottoman Army), he served as the Minister of War, became a Cabinet minister, and was conferred the title of Şeyh-ül Vüzera (Head of Imperial Ministers). During a long career that spanned a long lifetime (he lived to be eighty-eight), he was one of the personalities who shaped, as well as were themselves shaped by, what historian İlber Ortaylı called “the longest century” of the Ottoman state (İmparatorluğun En Uzun Yüzyılı, 1983).