Background
Mahmud Pasha was born in 1864 in Kobuleti, then part of the Ottoman Empire known by its Turkish name Çürüksu, in the present-day Adjara region of Republic of Georgia.
Mahmud Pasha was born in 1864 in Kobuleti, then part of the Ottoman Empire known by its Turkish name Çürüksu, in the present-day Adjara region of Republic of Georgia.
After 1909, Mahmud Pasha took part in the modernization of the Ottoman army under the auspices of German High Command. He served as the Minister of Public Works in the Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom government. When World War I broke out in 1914, Mahmud Pasha opposed the Ottoman participation in view of the unpreparedness of the armed forces.
He was known as an outspoken but a respected figure in the Committee of Union and Progress (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom).
Later in the war, Mahmud Pasha served as the Minister of Navy in the Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom cabinet of Talaat Pasha. In 1914, Mahmud Pasha"s candidacy was put forward by the Sultan to serve in the Ottoman Senate (Ayan Meclisi).
After the defeat of the Ottoman Empire in World War I, Mahmud Pasha led the commission to negotiate peace. Mahmud Pasha"s support for territorial concessions to reach an agreement with Armenians in 1919 drew criticism from Mustafa Kemal Atatürk.
On March 22, 1920, Mahmud Pasha was among the few Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom members arrested and sent by the British authorities for a tribunal in Malta.
Upon their repatriation in 1921, he returned to Turkey. Mahmud Pasha died in Istanbul on July 31, 1931.