The figure of Mustafa Kemal Atat眉rk (1881-1938), the founder and first president of the Republic of Turkey, looms large in the historiography of modern Turkey. Thousands of books and articles have been written about him in Turkish. His unassailable position as founding father of the country means that the genres 鈥渂iography of Atat眉rk鈥 and 鈥渉istory of modern Turkey鈥 have more or less merged, at least for the period 1918-38.
But neither is there a dearth of Atat眉rk biographies in English. Harold Armstrong鈥檚 hugely successful 1932 book Grey Wolf, Mustafa Kemal: An Intimate Study of a聽Dictator merged fiction and fact to an extraordinary degree and is now perhaps best studied as an interesting example of British orientalism. But Patrick Balfour, Lord Kinross鈥 Atat眉rk: The Rebirth of a聽Nation (1964) is still well worth reading, even if it has been replaced as state-of-the-art scholarship by Andrew Mango鈥檚 monumental Atat眉rk: The Biography of the Founder of Modern Turkey (1999). 艦眉kr眉 Hanio臒lu鈥檚 Atat眉rk: An Intellectual Biography (2011) was an important addition that looked at Atat眉rk鈥檚 sources of inspiration and knowledge. In this mature field, the value of any new addition rests on the author鈥檚 ability to present new original source materials and/or a聽new analysis.
The Young Atat眉rk鈥檚 format is that of a traditional biography. The title is a bit of a misnomer. Atat眉rk (who was called that only in the last four years of his life) died when he was 57 years old, and this book covers the first 42 of them. For the first 30 years of the subject鈥檚 life, George Gawrych鈥檚 study offers few new facts and it would be unrealistic to expect otherwise, given the paucity of primary sources at our disposal.
Where it does offer something new is in Gawrych鈥檚 treatment of Atat眉rk as a military professional. This is important: until he was elected the first president of the Republic of Turkey, Atat眉rk was primarily an officer. He was educated in military schools from early adolescence, graduating from the elite General Staff Academy in 1904, and for the next 20 years his career was primarily that of a soldier. The army provided him with his training, his worldview and most of his circle of friends and colleagues. More than any of Atat眉rk鈥檚 earlier English-language biographers, Gawrych, who taught at US military colleges for 19 years, has a good grasp of military matters. He describes how the teachings of German military theorist Colmar von der Goltz influenced Atat眉rk 鈥 nearly all his teachers had been pupils of Goltz 鈥 and through an analysis of the translations that Atat眉rk himself made of German instruction manuals, as well as of his own orders, letters and reports, Gawrych is able to give us a good insight into Atat眉rk鈥檚 development as an officer.
The book traces the different stages of Atat眉rk鈥檚 military career, from his early involvement in the resistance to the Italian invasion in Tripolitania, through the Balkan Wars and the First World War to the national liberation war of 1919-22. In doing so, Gawrych makes use of some hitherto unpublished archival materials, primarily from the war history of the General Staff, but the book鈥檚 footnotes show this use to be rather limited.
Throughout, Gawrych tells the story with clarity and, although he clearly admires Atat眉rk鈥檚 personality and abilities, his judgements are balanced and fair. The聽Young Atat眉rk is a valuable addition to the library on the founder of modern Turkey. Where Mango gives us a fuller treatment of Atat眉rk the man and the politician and Hanio臒lu presents us the (self-taught) intellectual, Gawrych adds another important dimension: the military Atat眉rk.
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