Tarhoncu Ahmed Pasha (Turkish: Tarhuncu Ahmed Paşa; died 21 March 1653) was an Ottoman Albanian statesman and Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire from 20 June 1652 to 21 March 1653, when he was executed because of the economic reforms he initiated.
Tarhoncu Ahmed Pasha was born in the area of modern Mat District, northern Albania in the early 17th century.[1] He was initially a tarragon salesman (tarhoncu) before joining the Ottoman administration. He served as the Governor of Egypt before attaining the vezirate. During his brief tenure in the middle of the reign of Sultan Mehmet IV (r. 1648–1687), he attempted to forestall the decline and reform the Ottoman bureaucracy. Tarhoncu Ahmed was the first grand vizier to draft an annual budget in advance of the coming fiscal year. However, his reforms threatened the conservative forces in the Ottoman elite, who secured his execution on 21 March 1653 by spreading the false rumour that he intended to depose the sultan. This effectively ended the attempts at reform for several years.[citation needed]
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edit- ^ Truhart, Peter (1985). Regents of nations: systematic chronology of states and their political representatives in past and present; a biographical reference book. Saur. p. 2179. ISBN 978-3-598-10493-0. Retrieved 27 September 2010.
- Stanford Jay Shaw, History of the Ottoman Empire and modern Turkey, vol. 1, Empire of the Gazis: The Rise and decline of the Ottoman Empire, 1280–1808 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1976), 205–206.