The Ottoman Empire was economically dependent on foreign countries (though loans and the investment of western capital in the East, the
introduction of new technologies and the undertaking by European construction companies of the construction of
important works such as the railway and cable networks). This situation meant a high degree of economic and political intervention
from the West. The claims of the newly-established national states, which undermined even more
the antiquated mechanism of the Empire, should be placed against this background. The Empire's imminent disintegration and the problem of the distribution
of its territories constituted the so-called 'Eastern Question'.
Against this situation, as early as the late nineteenth century, a wave of discontent
began in the Empire, expressed in many different forms,
ranging from liberal intellectual developments (Muslim or otherwise) that sought freedom and equality
among different nationalities through the grant of political and individual liberties after the
western European fashion, to nationalist Turkish claims for the reinforcement
of the state through the projection of its Turkish identity. The crisis of the Macedonian Question,
with the Greco-Bulgarian confrontation in the Ottoman Empire and the likelihood of
European intervention to resolve the problem, alarmed the Ottoman army officers of Macedonia who belonged
to the 'Committee of Union and Progress' (CUP). In June 1908 they captured Thessaloniki, from where
they claimed and imposed immediate institutional and constitutional changes and, later, in 1909, replaced the Sultan
Abdul Hamid with Mehmed V, who apparently lost the right to dissolve the Parliament.
With the outbreak of the revolution, the Bulgarian Principality declared its full independence,
abolishing the status of Turkish sovereignty, whereas the Austro-Hungarian Empire annexed
Bosnia-Herzegovina. These facts were accepted by the Young Turks, who naturally asked
for reparations.
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These developments created a remarkable
precedent in Balkan diplomacy.
Regarding the fate of the Christian populations in the Ottoman dominion, it is
certain that the Young Turk revolution was of great importance. The promise of liberty and
equality among all citizens, regardless of their religion or nationality, created a sense of positive
acceptance of the new status quo. Greeks, Bulgarians, Serbs, Armenians and Jews participated in the new
parliament. Among the Greeks of Constantinople there were discussions about a joint Greek-Ottoman state.
Such views were upheld by the 'Organization of Constantinople' founded by Ion Dragoumis and Athanassios
Souliotis Nikolaidis. Quite soon these plans proved unrealizable, as the main objective of the Young
Turks was the formation of a unified national Turkish state rather than respect for the rights
and freedoms of minorities. The treatment of non-Turkish populations by the Young Turks
became harsher compared to that of the traditional Ottoman authority, as it was
seeking the assimilation of various nationalities to the new national Turkish body, a fact
that very soon eliminated the universal consent which the revolution had enjoyed
in the first place.
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