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Ibrahim Pasha (Arabic: إبراهيم باشا Ibrāhīm Bāshā; 1789 – 10 November 1848) was an Egyptian general and politician; [1] he was the commander of both the Egyptian and Ottoman armies and the eldest son of Muhammad Ali, the Ottoman Wāli and unrecognized Khedive of Egypt and Sudan.
Suspicious of Abdullah, the Wahhabi Emir, the Ottomans resumed the war in 1816, with the assistance of French military instructors. The Egyptian troops were led by Muhammad Ali's elder son, Ibrahim Pasha, and penetrated into the heart of Central Arabia, besieging the chief centres of Qasim and Najd. Waging a war of extermination between 1816 ...
Seized power in the Eyalet of Egypt — Ibrahim Pasha (1789–1848) 15 April 1848 20 July 1848: 96 days Muhammad Ali: Regent For Muhammad Ali Pasha: 2 20 July 1848 10 November 1848 113 days Presumed son of Muhammad Ali Pasha: 3 Abbas Helmi I Pasha (1812–1854) 10 November 1848 13 July 1854 (Assassinated) 5 years, 245 days Muhammad Ali: Nephew ...
Ibrahim Ilhami Pasha (Arabic: إبراهيم إلهامي باشا; 3 January 1836 – 9 September 1860) was the only surviving son of Abbas I of Egypt and his wife Mahivech Hanim. Ibrahim Ilhami was circumcised in 1849. [1] In July 1854, following his father Abbas's death, his loyalists unsuccessfully attempted to raise him to the throne. [2]
After the conquest of Egypt in 1517, the Ottoman Sultan Selim I left the country. Grand Vizier Yunus Pasha was awarded the governorship of Egypt.However, the sultan soon discovered that Yunus Pasha had created an extortion and bribery syndicate, and gave the office to Hayır Bey, the former Mamluk governor of Aleppo, who had contributed to the Ottoman victory at the Battle of Marj Dabiq.
Muhammad ibn Abd al-Malik ibn Marwan: 724 2 May 724 Hisham: Resigned after witnessing an epidemic 17 Al-Hurr ibn Yusuf: 2 May 724 27 April 727 Unseated. Egypt under the de facto rule of Ubayd Allah ibn al-Habhab. 18 Hafs ibn al-Walid ibn Yusuf al-Hadrami: 27 April 727 16 May 727 Unseated. Egypt under the de facto rule of Ubayd Allah ibn al ...
Mohammed Ali Tewfik (Arabic: محمد علي توفيق, romanized: Muḥammad ʿAlī Tawfīq; 9 November 1875 – 18 March 1955), also referred to as Mohammed Ali Pasha (محمد علي باشا, Muḥammad ʿAlī Bāshā), was the heir presumptive of Egypt and Sudan in the periods 1892–1899 and 1936–1952.
It is of Ottoman architecture and located in the Sharia Al-Saray area in the El-Manial district of southern Cairo, Egypt. The palace and estate has been preserved as an Antiquities Council directed historic house museum and estate, reflecting the settings and lifestyle of the late 19th- and early 20th-century Egyptian royal prince and heir ...