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Kheireddine Pacha

Hayreddin Pasha
Kheireddine Pacha high.JPG
Portrait of Khair al-Din Pasha on horseback
Grand Vizier of the Beylik of Tunis
In office
October 22, 1873 – July 21, 1877
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
Monarch Abdülhamid II
Preceded by Mehmed Esad Saffet Pacha
Succeeded by Ahmed Ârifi Pacha
President of the Majlis al-Akbar
Beylik of Tunis
In office
1861–1862
Monarch Sadok Bey
Preceded by first in new office
Succeeded by Mustapha Saheb Ettabaâ
Minister of Marine, Beylik of Tunis
In office
1857–1862
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 التونسيKhayr 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.


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