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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Veli_PashaVeli Pasha - Wikipedia

    Veli Pasha (Albanian: Veli Pasha; c. 1770–1822; fl. 1787–1822) was an Ottoman Albanian ruler and the second born of Ali Pasha of Ioannina of the increasingly independent Pashalik of Yanina. As an Ottoman commander, he is known for his participation in military actions against the Souliotes, the Septinsular Republic, and the ...

  2. Veli Mahmud Paşa (1420 – 18 de julio de 1474) fue Gran Visir del Imperio Otomano en el período 1456-1466 y nuevamente en 1472-1474, el primero en este cargo proveniente de la institución Devşirme.

  3. Mahmud Pasha Angelović ( Serbian: Махмуд-паша Анђеловић/Mahmud-paša Anđelović; Turkish: Veli Mahmud Paşa; 1420–1474) was the Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire from 1456 to 1466 and from 1472 to 1474. He also wrote Persian and Turkish poems under the pseudonym Adni (the "Eden-like"). [1]

  4. Veli Pashas experiences in Crete shows how Austrian and French opportunism played out in one province. Britain’s role in late Ottoman history is an ambiguous and shifting one. Diplomacy is never altruistic.

    • David Barchard
  5. On 3 September 1803, the troops of Ali Pasha, led by his son Veli Pasha, gained possessions of the village of Kakosuli, after the treachery of a Souliote named Pylios Gousis. Gousis admitted 200 soldiers into his house after being paid for that by Veli Pasha, the second son of Ali.

  6. Barchard D. Veli Pasha And Consul Ongley. An Anglo-Ottoman Diplomatic Relationship That Got Too Close. In: Kuneralp S (ed.) A Bridge between Cultures: Studies on Ottoman and Republican Turkey in Memory of Ali Ihsan Bagis. Piscataway, NJ, USA: Gorgias Press; 2010. p.69-122. https://doi.org/10.31826/9781463225971-006

  7. 19 de jul. de 2022 · Antonis Katsarakis. 236 Accesses. Explore all metrics. Abstract. Veli Pasha Mosque, located outside the walls of Réthymnon, Crete, Greece, was built around 1651 as the focal point of a Kadiri dervish convent, almost immediately after the capture of the town in 1646 by the Ottomans.