حسن باشا بن الخديو إسماعيل
Hassan Ismail Pasha | |||||
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Prince | |||||
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وُلِد | 1855 Cairo, Egypt Eyalet | ||||
توفي | 1888 Constantinople, Ottoman Empire | (aged 32–33)||||
الدفن | |||||
الأنجال | Aziz | ||||
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البيت | Muhammad Ali dynasty | ||||
الأب | Isma'il Pasha of Egypt | ||||
الأم | Misl Melek Qadin | ||||
الديانة | Sunni Islam |
Hassan Ismail Pasha (العربية المصرية: حسن إسماعيل باشا, romanized: Ḥasan Ismā‘īl Bāshā; 1855 – 22 March 1888)[أ] was an Egyptian prince and a member of the Muhammad Ali dynasty. He held the rank of Field Marshal of the Ottoman Empire.
Biography
He was born in 1855 to Isma'il Pasha of Egypt and Misl Melek Qadin.[1]
Hassan Pasha received the principles of languages and sciences in Egyptian schools, then his father sent him to Europe with his brothers, where he studied military arts.[2]
When he returned to Egypt, his father appointed him as Commander-in-Chief of the Egyptian campaign against Ethiopia, and commander of the rescue team that the Egyptian government sent to help the Ottoman Empire in the Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878), where the Ottomans honored him with their medals.[2]
When he returned to Egypt, his father celebrated his arrival with a lavish military celebration. After Khedive Ismail was deposed, Hassan Pasha traveled with his father to Italy, then his brother, Khedive Tawfiq Pasha, recruited him and sent him on a campaign to Sudan. When he completed his mission, he returned to Cairo, and from there to Constantinople, where Sultan Abdul Hamid II appointed him as his Yawar.[2]
Death
On March 22, 1888, Hassan Pasha died in Constantinople, and Sultan Abdul Hamid II issued an order to transport his body to Egypt in fulfillment of his will. He was transported to Alexandria on board a barge, where he was buried in the shrine of the Prophet Daniel.[1]
He had one son named Aziz.[1]
Notes
- ^ some sources say he was born 21 November 1853 or 1854
References

| Prince Hassan Isma'il of Egypt
]].- Short description is different from Wikidata
- Articles containing العربية المصرية-language text
- 1855 births
- 1888 deaths
- Muhammad Ali dynasty princes
- Egyptian generals
- Field marshals of the Ottoman Empire
- Royalty from Cairo
- People of the Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878)
- People of the Mahdist War
- 19th-century Egyptian people
- 19th-century Muslims