ʿAbbās I
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- Also called:
- ʿAbbās Ḥilmī I
- Born:
- 1813
- Also Known As:
- ʿAbbās Ḥilmī I
- Title / Office:
- khedive (1848-1854), Egypt
ʿAbbās I (born 1813—died July 13, 1854, Banhā, Egypt) was the viceroy of Egypt under the Ottomans from 1848 to 1854. Despite his relatively peaceful and prosperous reign as viceroy of Egypt, ʿAbbās was largely vilified as selfish, secretive, cruel, and a reactionary. Nevertheless, some scholars have since noted that ʿAbbās’s much-blackened image may have owed a great deal to exaggerated or fabricated accounts put forth by his opponents in light of disputes among the elite and other motivating factors.
Prepared for government service from a young age by his grandfather, Muḥammad ʿAlī (viceroy 1805–48), ʿAbbās served in several other administrative and military positions prior to his reign as viceroy, including as a military commander in Syria. As viceroy, ʿAbbās responded unfavourably to the sweeping administrative and economic reforms initiated by Muḥammad ʿAlī by closing down or neglecting the public and military schools and factories. He reduced the armed forces, stopped the construction of the Delta Dam, and opposed the construction of the Suez Canal, which had been proposed by the French. Nevertheless, the road from Cairo to Suez was much improved under ʿAbbās’s reign, and he allowed for the construction of the Alexandria-Cairo Railway by the British, who in return assisted him in his dispute with the Ottoman government over the application of the Western-inspired reforms (Tanzimat) in Egypt. Although he was opposed to the Tanzimat, ʿAbbās showed his loyalty by sending an expeditionary force to assist the Ottomans in the Crimean War (1853); he also abolished the state trade monopolies, which had defied Ottoman treaties with the European powers.
ʿAbbās’s curtailment of government spending benefited the poorer classes, who received tax remissions and suffered less from compulsory labour and conscription into the army. A private man, ʿAbbās lived in isolation in his palace at Banhā, where in July 1854 he was found dead. Although the official report listed his cause of death as apoplexy (stroke), he was believed by many to have been strangled by his servants.