Mustapha Dinguizli Explained

Mustapha Dinguizli
Birth Date:27 August 1865
Birth Place:Tunis, Beylik of Tunis
Death Place:Tunis, French Tunisia
Nationality:Tunisian
Office:Prime Minister of Tunisia
Term Start:1922
Term End:1926
Predecessor:Taïeb Djellouli
Successor:Khelil Bouhageb
Office1:Minister of the Pen
Term Start1:1914
Term End1:1922
Monarch1:Muhammad V
Predecessor1:Taïeb Djellouli
Successor1:Khelil Bouhageb
Alma Mater:Sadiki College
Relatives:Bechir Dinguizli (brother)

Mustapha Dinguizli (Arabic: مصطفى الدنقزلي), (27 August 1865 – 20 October 1926) was a Tunisian politician. He was born in Tunis; he served as the first Prime Minister of Tunisia from 1922 until his death.[1]

Biography

Dinguizli was born in Tunis to a family of Turkish origin.[2] He studied at the Collège Sadiki and then at the Ecole Normale de Versailles and the École Normale Supérieure de Fontenay-Saint-Cloud.[2] His maternal uncle, Sadok Ghileb, was the mayor of Tunis which allowed Dinguizli to climb the ranks to the post of governor of the caid suburbs of Tunis between 1900 and 1912. After Ghileb's death, Dinguizli succeeded his uncle as head of the municipality of Tunis between 1912 and 1915. He was appointed Grand Vizier of Tunis in 1922, with the agreement of the Resident General of France. Pursuing a conciliatory policy with the authorities of the French protectorate of Tunisia, Dinguizli remained at his post until his death in 1926. He is among the ministers buried in the mausoleum of Tourbet el Bey located in the medina of Tunis.[1]

His brother Bechir Dinguizli became the first Tunisian Muslim to become a doctor in the modern era.

Notes and References

  1. Adel Latrech, « Promenade dans les tourbas de Tunis », La Presse de Tunisie, 28 août 2010
  2. Paul Lambert, Dictionnaire illustré de La Tunisie : choses et gens de Tunisie, éd. C. Saliba aîné, Tunis, 1912, p. 157