Agah Efendi
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Çapanoğlu Agah Efendi | |
|---|---|
Agah Efendi | |
| Born | March 31, 1832 |
| Died | January 2, 1886 (aged 53) |
| Occupations | Journalist, writer |
| Family | Çapanoğlu family |
Çapanzade or Çapanoğlu Agah Efendi (March 31, 1832 – January 2, 1886)[citation needed] was an Ottoman Turkish civil servant, writer and newspaper editor who, along with his colleague İbrahim Şinasi, published Tercüman-ı Ahvâl ("Interpreter of Events"), the first private newspaper by Turkish journalists, and introduced postage stamps to the Ottoman Empire.[1]
Agah Efendi was born in Constantinople and his father's name was Çapanzade Ömer Hulûsi Efendi. He was educated in the Ottoman capital of Constantinople, in the Mekteb-i Tıbbiye-i Şahane.
He is also known as being a member of the Young Ottomans, a reformist secret society that enabled the first introduction of a constitutional system to the Empire, resulting in the short-lived First Constitutional Era.