Honorific-Prefix: | Kemankeş Kara |
Mustafa | |
Honorific-Suffix: | Pasha |
Office1: | Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire |
Monarch1: | Murad IV İbrahim |
Term Start1: | 23 December 1638 |
Term End1: | 31 January 1644 |
Predecessor1: | Tayyar Mehmed Pasha |
Successor1: | Semiz Mehmed Pasha |
Office2: | Kapudan Pasha |
Term Start2: | 17 October 1635 |
Term End2: | 22 December 1638 |
Predecessor2: | Gazi Hüseyin Pasha |
Successor2: | Gazi Hüseyin Pasha |
Birth Date: | 1592 |
Birth Place: | Vlora, Albania |
Death Date: | 31 January |
Death Place: | Istanbul, Ottoman Empire |
Branch: | |
Rank: | Kapudan Pasha (grand admiral; 1635–1638) Janissary commander (1635) |
Battles: | Ottoman–Safavid War (1623–39) |
Kemankeş Kara Mustafa Pasha (Turkish, Ottoman (1500-1928);: ﻛﻤﺎﻧﻜﺶ قره مصطفى پاشا |lit=Mustafa Pasha, the Archer, the Courageous; 1592 – 31 January 1644) was an Ottoman Albanian military officer and statesman who served as Kapudan Pasha and Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire.
Mustafa was born to an Albanian family in Avlonya (present-day Vlorë in Albania) in 1592.[1] He was an officer in the Janissary corps. His epithet, , refers to his talent as an archer. He was the deputy (Turkish: sekban başı|label=none) of the Janissary commander in 1634 and was promoted to the post of Agha of the Janissaries (Turkish: yeniçeri ağası|label=none) in 1635. On 17 October 1635, he was appointed Kapudan Pasha (Grand Admiral of the Navy).[2] Nevertheless, he participated in the 1638 Capture of Baghdad far from the sea. On 24 December 1638, following the death of the then-Grand Vizier Tayyar Mehmet Pasha during the siege, Sultan Murad IV appointed Kemankeş Mustafa as the new Grand Vizier, the highest post of the empire after the Sultan.
Following the Ottoman conquest of Baghdad, Kemankeş Mustafa represented the Ottoman side in the consequent peace talks. The resulting Treaty of Zuhab, signed on 17 May 1639 between the Ottoman and Safavid Empires, provided the outline for the border between Iran and the states of Turkey and Iraq that continues to be the basis of present-day borders between the three nations.
Murad IV died on 9 February 1640, and Kemankeş Mustafa continued as a Grand Vizier during Ibrahim's reign. Ibrahim was a weak sultan, and Kemankeş Mustafa became the de facto ruler of the empire.[3] Using severe methods, he ended the rebellions, balanced the budget, and reduced the number of soldiers. He also used his power to subdue and cause the death of other able statesmen whom he considered to be potential competitors for his post.[4]
Kemankeş Mustafa made many enemies. His most important opposition was a kind of triumvirate in the palace, formed by Kösem Sultan (the sultan's mother), Turhan Sultan (the sultan's haseki), a charlatan named Djindji Khodja, and a vizier named Semiz Mehmed Pasha. They began to criticize Kemankeş Mustafa vehemently. Although he gave his resignation several times, it was not accepted by the Sultan. However, the Sultan, who was initially pleased with Kemankeş Mustafa, finally dismissed him on 31 January 1644.[5] A few hours later, he was executed.[6]
In 1640, Mustafa Pasha converted a Roman Catholic church in Istanbul into a mosque named Odalar Mosque. According to architectural historian Semavi Eyice, the original church, a Byzantine one, was probably the Monastery of Philanthropos[7] but was converted to the Latin cult and renamed Santa Maria di Constantinopoli during the reign of Mehmed II.[8]
Around the same time, Mustafa Pasha commissioned another mosque, the eponymous Kemankeş Kara Mustafa Paşa Mosque, to be built in Karaköy, a former Genoese trading colony. The site of the mosque was previously occupied by the Genoese Saint Antonio Church, which was appropriated in 1606 and demolished thereafter. The mosque was mostly rebuilt in 1771.[9]
In Istanbul, the present-day administrative neighborhood division encompassing Karaköy is named after him.