CONCLUSION
In
the
foregoing
examination,
the
amira
class
emerges
as
a
fairly
homogeneous
and
highly
enterprising
group
of
people.
All
the
members
of
the
class
were
wealthy
and
had
connections
with
the
government,
in
one
way
or
another.
As
a
class,
they
were
the
descendants
of
hocas
and
çelebis
whose
social
and
political
roles
they
amalgamated
and
continued
to
perform.
Amiras,
whether
sarraf
or
technocrat,
lived
in
two
different
worlds:
they
had
a
complex
and
vital
function
in
the
financial
and
economic
administration
of
the
Ottoman
Empire,
but
lacked
any
real
power
in
that
sphere.
Conversely,
they
had
both
an
important
function
and
enormous
power
in
the
Armenian
millet,
but
these
were
at
the
service
of
the
state
and
did
not
enable
them
to
generate
policy
on
their
own.
In
the
sphere
of
government,
amiras
served
as
tools
in
the
hands
of
Ottoman
administrators
and
policy-makers;
their
function
within
the
state
apparatus
was
well-defined
and
delineated.
In
their
turn,
amiras
turned
the
officially
recognized
and
titular
head
of
the
millet
and
his
subordinates,
namely
the
Patriarch
and
the
prelates,
into
tools
that
enabled
them
to
become
the
effective
and
true
leaders
of
the
nation.
As
leaders
they
became
increasingly
insensitive
to
the
political
aspirations
of
this
changing
people,
although
they
gave
the
impression
of
listening
to
its
pulse.
As
popular
clamor
and
discontent
against
their
autocratic
rule
increased
with
the
active
participation
of
the
esnafs
in
the
administration
of
the
affairs
of
the
millet
and
the
challenge
to
their
leadership
by
the
young
intellectuals,
amiras
refused
to
accept
the
reform
measures
advocated
by
both
of
these
groups.
They
feared
change
and
fought
it
strenuously.
In
their
view,
the
status
quo
of
the
1840s
was
the
optimum
situation
for
the
millet.
Their
leadership
of
the
millet
on
the
political
plane
was
self-serving.
Any
threat
to
them,
they
perceived
as
a
threat
to
the
millet
and
represented
as
a
threat
to
the
Ottoman
system
as
well.
They
strove
to
preserve
the
integrity
and
specific
religious-cultural
profile
of
their
millet,
because
their
own
function
within
the
multi-religious
and
multi-ethnic
empire
was
predicated
upon
their
role
as
intermediaries
between
the
state
and
the
Armenian
millet.
To
preserve
the
millet
was
to
preserve
the
Ottoman
Empire,
and
this
in
turn
guaranteed
their
own
position
within
the
status
quo.
Paradoxically,
what
modern
nationalist
Armenian
historians
regard
as
a
revolutionary
step,
namely
the
emphasis
on
the
Armenians’
separate
identity,
was
perceived
by
the
amiras
as
a
reasonable
conservative
policy:
to
strengthen
the
identity
of
the
millet
as
a
separate
entity,
they
felt,
was
to
guarantee
the
continued
existence
of
their
fiefdom.
To
many
outside
observers,
this
role
of
the
amiras
as
leaders
of
a
quest
for
communal
identity
seemed
paramount,
and
at
least
one
contemporary
Greek
historian
chastised
his
own
countrymen
by
citing
amiras
as
example:
Les
Fanariotes
songent
à
eux,
les
arméniens
[speaking
of
the
sarrafs
and
other
wealthy
notables]
songent
à
leur
nation;
ils
ont
établi
entre
eux
une
espèce
de
solidarité
qui
contribue
au
bonheur
de
la
grande
famille.
Les
Fanariotes
ne
regardent
jamais
la
Grèce;
l'armenien
a
toujours
les
yeux
fixés
sur
sa
patrie.
[1]
Modern
Armenian
historians,
such
as
Leo,
have
asserted
that
“amira
capital[ism]
constituted
a
purely
Turkish
institution,
whose
raison
d’être
emanated
from
the
essential
nature
of
the
Turkish
Islamic
state.
”
[2]
Another
historian,
Ashot
Hovhannisian,
has
written
that
“like
the
regime
of
the
sultans
and
the
pashas,
so
amira
capital[ism],
too,
was
born
from
the
essence
of
Turkish
feudalism
and
was
nurtured
at
the
expense
of
the
peasantry
of
the
country,
which
was
[still]
in
the
condition
of
serfdom.
”
[3]
These
are
fundamentally
accurate
evaluations
of
the
amirate
and
its
function
as
an
ally
and
a
servant
of
the
Ottoman
state.
As
soon
as
the
state
ceased
to
borrow
from
the
sarrafs,
and
started
to
seek
loans
from
European
lending
institutions,
the
sarrafs
disappeared
almost
overnight
not
only
from
the
Ottoman
administrative
scene,
but
also
from
the
Armenian
millet.
Only
the
technocrat-amiras
maintained
their
declining
presence
in
the
millet
and
the
government.
As
individuals,
the
amiras,
like
their
institution,
were
also
Ottomans;
they
met
all
the
requirements
[4]
that
were
essential
for
being
an
Ottoman
(not
to
be
confused
with
Ottoman
subject),
except
for
religion:
they
held
first-class
status,
served
the
state
and
as
a
consequence
enjoyed
privileged
tax
status
and
received
income
from
state
resources.
They
knew
Ottoman
ways
and
used
the
Turkish
language.
Even
their
Armenian
was
replete
with
Turkish
words
and
ideas.
[5]
Religion
was
the
sole
barrier
which
prevented
their
total
absorption
into
Ottomanism.
It
is
regrettable
that
Turkish
historiography
has
no
knowledge
of
the
amira
class
which
is,
after
all,
as
much
part
of
Turkish
history
as
of
Armenian
history.
The
little
that
is
known
about
the
sarrafs
is
not
satisfactory,
but
it
can
be
used
as
a
first
step
toward
a
more
detailed
study
of
the
function
and
role
of
the
amiras
who
served
the
Ottoman
state
so
faithfully
for
almost
a
century.
Indifference
and
omission
[6]
serve
neither
Turkish
nor
Armenian
historical
scholarship;
serious
examination
of
the
class
will
certainly
help
develop
a
better
understanding
of
the
history
of
both
peoples
at
a
time
when
there
were
no
political
conflicts.
The
study
of
this
class
leads
to
a
conclusion
which
has
also
been
reached
elsewhere:
no
matter
how
important,
and
at
times
how
crucial,
economic
power
is,
ultimately
it
is
politics,
not
economics,
that
has
primacy
in
state
affairs.
[7]
The
amiras
did
not
fully
grasp
this
fact.
They
did
not
attempt
to
participate
in
Ottoman
political
life,
and
refused
administrative
positions
in
the
political
(rather
than
technical)
realm,
in
the
few
instances
when
such
positions
were
offered
to
them.
At
least
in
one
instance
which
has
been
recorded,
an
Armenian
notable
refused
to
serve
the
state
in
a
political
capacity.
Reportedly,
Mikayel
Çelebi
Diuzian
was
offered
the
high
position
of
“supervisor”
(the
Armenian
term
used
is
veratesutch,
which
could
also
mean
“inspector
general”
or
“governor”)
for
Moldavia
and
Wallachia,
but
he
refused.
[8]
An
aversion,
if
not
an
outright
fear
of
politics
emerges
as
a
characteristic
of
amiras.
This
study
of
the
amiras
lends
strong
support
to
the
theory
of
the
supremacy
of
the
political
over
the
economic
in
pre-modern
states,
a
theory
which
has
been
stated
by
scholars
working
in
other
fields
and
has
been
extended
to
apply
to
states
in
transition
from
pre-modern
to
the
industrialized
stage.
As
Fritz
Stern
has
noted,
it
is
interesting
to
observe
in
this
study
too,
“the
penetration
of
economic
power,
its
ubiquitous
presence,
but
also...
Its
limits
and
indeed
its
inferiority
as
compared
to
the
power
of
the
state.
”
[9]
In
the
final
analysis
the
trajectory
of
the
rise
and
fall
of
the
amiras
was
a
direct
response
to
the
needs
of
the
Ottoman
state,
in
which
they
had
a
dual
role
to
play.
The
functional
paradoxes
and
the
contradictory
viewpoints
of
historians
about
the
financial,
economic,
political
and
cultural
activities
by
which
the
amiras
sought
to
fulfill
these
two
roles
can
be
resolved
if
we
begin
to
understand
the
monolithic
and
rational
nature
of
amira
conservatism
as
central
to
its
own
view
of
its
interests
and
mission.
That
mission
was
defined
by
the
Ottoman
state
as
consisting
of
assistance
in
the
management
of
its
financial-economic
system
and
in
the
governance
of
the
Armenian
millet.
[1]
Marc-Philippe
Zallony,
Essai
sur
les
Fanariotes
(Marseille,
1824),
p.
252.
[2]
Leo,
Khotjayakan
Kapitale,
p.
246.
[3]
Hovhannisian,
Nalbandiane,
1:
351.
[4]
To
be
an
Ottoman
means
to
belong
to
the
class
of
ruling
elite.
The
term
Ottoman
signified
“those
who
qualified
for
first-class
status
in
that
society
by
serving
the
religion
(being
Muslim),
serving
the
state
(holding
a
position
that
gave
them
a
state
income
and
a
privileged
tax
status),
and
knowing
the
Ottoman
way
(using
the
Ottoman
Turkish
language
and
conforming
to
the
manners
and
customs
of
the
society
that
used
Ottoman
Turkish).
”
Norman
Itzkowitz
and
Max
Mote,
Mubadele:
An
Ottoman-Russian
Exchange
of
Ambassadors
(Chicago,
1970),
p.
11,
n.
11.
2.
[5]
Hnaser,
“Niuter
Ashkharhabari,
”
pp.
142-143.
[6]
Besim
Darkot
mentions
that
some
of
the
inhabitants
of
Egin
(Akn
in
Armenian)
rose
to
high
positions
in
the
government
in
Istanbul,
but
does
not
give
any
indication
that
they
were
Armenian;
see
Islam
Ansiklopedisi,
s.
v.
“Egin,
”
by
Besim
Darkot.
[7]
Stern,
Gold
and
Iron,
p.
xvii.
Like
the
Jews
whose
“special
services,
usually
as
bankers
and
lenders
to
dynasts,
earned
[for]
them
the
place
of
Hofjude
(‘Court
Jew’)”
(p.
5),
amira
s
were
Palace
or
Court
Armenians
of
the
Ottoman
state.
And
just
as
in
the
case
of
a
few
privileged
Jews
who
“for
particular
usefulness
to
the
state...
were
granted
the
status
of
protected
Jews,
exempted
by
the
state
from
many,
though
not
all,
of
the
disabilities
it
had
imposed
on
the
rest,
of
Jewry”
(p.
5),
Armenian
amira
s
were
granted
a
very
similar
status,
probably
even
more
privileged,
relative
to
the
mass
of
their
co-religionists.
[8]
A.
Ketchian,
Akn,
p.
166.
[9]
Stern,
Gold
and
Iron,
p.
xvii.