Thursday, November 7, 2019
Ismail Pasha essays
Ismail Pasha essays    Interpretive Research Paper-Egyptian Ruling Elite	     	The country I studied during this project was Egypt, and the character I     was assigned to was Ismail Pasha, who was part of the Ruling Elite. Ismail was     the son of Ibrahim Pasha, who took the throne after Said Pashas death. He ruled     Egypt from 1863 to 1879. He began his rule halfway through the American Civil     War, when Egypt experienced an immense growth in cotton trade, due to the     unavailability of American cotton. Ismail did not control his money well. He was     concerned with making Egypt seem attractive to surrounding countries and     nations. Which would help migration to Egypt. His attempts included throwing     magnificent parties on just about any occasion he could come up with. Although     he was the darling of Europe, (social class profiles, 1) he did not handle his     money responsibly. Ismail spent lavishly, and was very unwise about handling his     financial affairs, thus leaving himself open for criticism. He was committed to the     Suez Canal project, which he changed in two major ways: First of all, he     constructed a freshwater canal, and second of all, he refused to provide an infinite     amount of peasant labor. In 1866, he changed the manner in which the leaders     successors were chosen in Egypt. This caused controversy between himself and     the Sultan Abdulaziz around the time when the Suez Canal opened, in 1869. The     two later reconciled, but it cost Ismail heavy expenditure, which did not help his     already growing debt. The debt was eventually too much for Ismail to overcome,     or even come close to paying back. He spent extravagantly, and borrowed the     money he needed, but he could never pay it back. He desperately tried to relieve     himself of the burden he carried, by several methods. He stopped paying interest     on Egypt's loans, stopped paying his officials, and doubled the taxes on his     people. But the debt was just too overwhelming. In...     
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