Hulusi Fuat Tugay
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24 March 1890
- Müşir Fuat Pasha (father)
- Ayşe Seyrandil Hanım (mother)
Hulusi Fuat Tugay | |
|---|---|
| Personal details | |
| Born | Ahmet Fuat 24 March 1890 Kadıköy, Istanbul, Ottoman Empire |
| Died | 1967 (aged 76–77) |
| Spouse | Emine Düriye Hanım |
| Parents |
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Hulusi Fuat Tugay (1890–1967) was a Turkish military doctor and diplomat. During the Ottoman period he served in the former post and after the establishment of the Republic of Turkey he served in the latter post. He was the first Turkish diplomat in Japan and China and served as the ambassador of Turkey in various countries, including Romania and Egypt. He is the first Turkish diplomat who was declared as the persona non grata during his ambassadorship in Egypt in 1954.
He was born Ahmet Fuat in Kadıköy, Istanbul, on 24 March 1890.[1] He was the youngest son of an Ottoman military commander and politician Müşir Fuat Pasha.[1] His mother, Ayşe Seyrandil Hanım, was the second wife of Fuat Pasha.[1]
His elder three brothers, Said, Reşit and Halil, were killed in the battles between 1912 and 1915.[2] His another brother, Esat, was a diplomat and journalist.[3]
Ahmet Fuat was first educated at home and then graduated from the Saint Joseph High School, İstanbul, in 1904.[1][4] Next he was educated at the Saint Michel High School between 1904 and 1908.[1] He continued his studies at the Galatasaray High School from 1908 to 1910.[4] During this period he was renamed as Hulusi Fuat since there were four students named Ahmet Fuat at the school.[1]
He attended the Military Medical School from 1910, but his education paused due to World War I.[5] He graduated from the school on 4 September 1916 after the end of the Gallipoli campaign.[5]