(Redirected from Ahmed Pasha)'Claude Alexandre, Comte de Bonneval' (
14 July 1675 -
23 March 1747)
was a
French army officer who later went into the service of the
Ottoman Empire, eventually converting to
Islam and becoming known as 'Humbaracı Ahmet Paşa'.

Claude Alexandre de Bonneval as ''Humbaracı Ahmet Paşa''
He was the descendant of an old family of
Limousin; at the age of thirteen he joined the
Royal Marine Corps. After three years he entered the army, in which he rose to the command of a
regiment. He served in the Italian campaigns under
Catinat,
Villeroi and
Vendôme, and in the
Netherlands under
Luxembourg, giving proofs of indomitable courage and great military ability. His insolent bearing towards the minister of war was made matter for a
court martial (1704). He was condemned to death, but saved himself by fleeing to
Germany.
Through the influence of
Prince Eugene of Savoy he obtained a general's command in the
Austrian army, and fought with great bravery and distinction against France, and afterwards against
Turkey. He was present at the
Battle of Malplaquet, and was severely wounded at
Peterwardein. The proceedings against him in France were then allowed to drop, and he visited
Paris, and married a daughter of
Marshal de Biron. He returned, however, after a short time to the Austrian army, and fought with distinction at
Belgrade.
He might now have risen to the highest rank, had he not made himself disagreeable to Prince Eugene, who sent him as master of the ordnance to the
Low Countries. There his ungovernable temper led him into a quarrel with the
Marquis de Prié, Eugene's deputy governor in the Netherlands, who answered his challenge by placing him in confinement. A court martial was again held upon him, and he was condemned to death; but the emperor commuted the sentence to one year's imprisonment and banishment. Bonneval was returned to Vienna, stripped of his rank, titles and honours, and exiled to Venice.
Soon after his release, Bonneval offered his services to the Turkish government, professed Islam, and took the name of Ahmed. He was made a ''
pasha'', and appointed to organize and command the Turkish artillery, eventually contributing to the Austrian defeat at
Niš and the subsequent end of the
Austrian-Ottoman war marked by the
Treaty of Belgrade, where Austria lost Northern
Serbia with
Belgrade, Lesser
Wallachia, and territories in northern
Bosnia.
He rendered valuable services to the
sultan in his war with
Russia, and with the famous
Nadir Shah. As a reward he received the governorship of
Chios, but he soon fell under the suspicion of the
Porte, and was banished for a time to the shores of the
Black Sea. He was meditating a return to Europe and Christianity when he died at
Constantinople in March 1747.
The ''Memoirs'' published under his name are spurious. See
Prince de Ligne, ''Mémoire sur le comte de Bonneval'' (Paris, 1817); and
A. Vandal, ''Le Pacha Bonneval'' (Paris, 1885).
References
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The Dictionary of Phrase and Fable (
External link)
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