Hayreddin Pasha | |
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Portrait of Khair al-Din Pasha on horseback
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Grand Vizier of the Beylik of Tunis | |
In office October 22, 1873 – July 21, 1877 |
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Monarch | Sadok Bey |
Preceded by | Mustapha Khaznadar |
Succeeded by | Mohamed Khaznadar, Mustafa bin Isma'il (1878) |
Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire | |
In office December 4, 1878 – July 29, 1879 |
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Monarch | Abdülhamid II |
Preceded by | Mehmed Esad Saffet Pacha |
Succeeded by | Ahmed Ârifi Pacha |
President of the Majlis al-Akbar Beylik of Tunis |
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In office 1861–1862 |
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Monarch | Sadok Bey |
Preceded by | first in new office |
Succeeded by | Mustapha Saheb Ettabaâ |
Minister of Marine, Beylik of Tunis | |
In office 1857–1862 |
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Monarch |
Mohammed Bey Sadok Bey |
Preceded by | Mahmoud Khodja |
Succeeded by | Ismaïl Kahia |
Personal details | |
Born |
c. 1820 Circassia |
Died | 30 January 1890 Istanbul, Ottoman Empire |
Resting place | Tunisia |
Hayreddin Pasha (Tunisian Arabic: خير الدين باشا التونسي Khayr ed-Din Pasha et-Tunsi; Ottoman Turkish: تونسلى حيرالدين پاشا; Turkish: Tunuslu Hayreddin Paşa; c. 1820 – 30 January 1890) was a Tunisian-Ottoman politician who was born to a Circassian family. First serving as Beylerbeyi of Ottoman Tunisia, he later achieved the high post of Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire. He was an Ottoman Tunisian political reformer during a period of growing European ascendancy.
Of Abkhaz origin, Hayreddin was born in Abkhazia into "a family of warrior notables". His father Hassan Leffch, a local chieftain, died fighting against a Russian attack on the city of Sukhum. Thereafter as a young orphan Hayreddin was sold into slavery, then still a familiar event for Circassian youth. At Istanbul, however, he was eventually traded into a prestigious household, that of the notable Tahsin Bey, a Cypriot Ottoman who was the naqib al-ashraf (head of the Prophet's descendants) and qadi al-'askar (chief judge of the army) of Anatolia, and a poet.
Tahsin Bey moved the boy to his country palace at Kanlıca near the Bosporus, where he became the childhood companion of the Bey's son for a span of years. Khayr al-Din received a "first-rate education" which included the Islamic curriculum, also the Turkish language, and perhaps French; yet he was not raised as a mamluk. Following "the son's tragic premature death" Khayr al-Din was again sold, in Istanbul by Tahsin Bey to an envoy of Ahmed Bey of Tunis. This new uprooting would obviously provoke emotional turmoil in Khayr al-Din, then about 17 years old. Soon he was on board a ship bound for Africa.