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Ragıp Gümüşpala

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
11th Chief of the General Staff of the Turkish Armed Forces (1960)

Ragıp Gümüşpala
Chairman ofJustice Party
In office
11 February 1961 – 6 June 1964
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded bySüleyman Demirel
11thChief of the General Staff of Turkey
In office
3 June 1960 – 4 August 1960
Commander of the Turkish Army
In office
21 August 1958 – 3 June 1960
Preceded byCemal Gürsel
Succeeded byCelal Alkoç
Personal details
Born1897 (1897)
Died6 June 1964(1964-06-06) (aged 67)
Alma materTurkish Military Academy
Military service
AllegianceOttoman Empire (1917–1920)
Turkey (1920–1960)
Branch/serviceOttoman EmpireOttoman Army
 Turkish Land Forces
Years of service1917–1960 (43 years)
RankGeneral

Ragıp Gümüşpala (1897 – 6 June 1964) was the 11thChief of the General Staff of theTurkish Armed Forces and founder of theJustice Party in 1961. He died shortly afterwards, on 6 June 1964, inIstanbul.[1]

Biography

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Military life

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While he was a student at Edirne High School, he climbed into Talimgâha and in 1917 he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant. While he was Deputy Commander of the 63rd Regiment of the 12th Division, he was captured by theBritish Empire on 2 October 1918 during theBattle of Nablus on theSinai and Palestine campaign. He remained in captivity until 6 October 1920. He returned fromIstanbul toAnkara and joined theWar of Independence on 13 December 1920. For his contributions to the National Struggle, he was awarded with theMedal of Independence with Red Ribbon. After serving as Team and Company Commander, he graduated from theTurkish Military Academy, which he entered in 1931, and became a staff officer in the same year.

After serving in various headquarters and units, he was promoted to the rank of brigadier general in 1948, major general in 1951, lieutenant general in 1955 and general in 1959. With the rank of Brigadier General, 65th Division Infantry Brigade Command, Motorized Units School Command, 9th Division Deputy Commander and3rd Army Chief of Staff, 65th Division Command with the rank of Major General and Deputy Commander of the 2nd Corps, 7th Corps Command and 3rd Army Corps with the rank of Lieutenant General. He served as the Deputy Commander of the Army.

In 1960, while he was Commander of the 3rd Army in the rank of general, the1960 Turkish coup d'état happened. He asked theNational Unity Committee, which made the coup in Ankara, who their leader was, and informed that if their leader was not a senior general, he would march to Ankara with the 3rd Army under his command and put an end to the rebellion. Thereupon, the juntaists brought retired generalCemal Gürsel from Izmir to Ankara by military plane and showed him the leader instead of Major GeneralCemal Madanoğlu, who was the most senior of the coup. He was appointed Chief of General Staff on 3 June 1960. On 2 August 1960, he wasex officio retired by the National Unity Committee, together with about 5000 officers who would later form the Retired Revolution Officers Association (EMINSU).[citation needed]

Political life

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He entered politics after military service. After the closure of theDemocrat Party (DP) on 29 September 1960, he participated in the work of a political party that would gather the electorate of this party. He was elected as the first chairman of theJustice Party (AP), which was founded on 11 February 1961. As the first chairman of this party, he was elected as Izmir deputy in the 1961 general elections. He did not take part in theCHP-AP coalition government established on 20 November 1961 under the chairmanship ofİsmet İnönü. He was re-elected as the chairman of the 1st Congress of the AP that convened in 1962.[citation needed]

He died in Istanbul on 6 June 1964. His grave is inZincirlikuyu Cemetery. He was married with six children.[2]

After his death,Süleyman Demirel was elected as the Justice Party leader. Perceived as the continuation of the Democrat Party, AP came to power alone with 52% of the votes in the 1965 elections.[3]

References

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  1. ^"Türk Silahlı Kuvvetleri Genelkurmay Başkanlığı". 22 November 2015. Archived fromthe original on 22 November 2015. Retrieved14 January 2021.
  2. ^"Gümüşpala".Milliyet (in Turkish). Retrieved14 January 2021.
  3. ^TBMM Album. Cilt 2 TBMM (in Turkish)

External links

[edit]
Military offices
Preceded byCommander of theThird Army
29 August 1958–5 June 1960
Succeeded by
Preceded byChief of the General Staff of Turkey
3 June 1960–4 August 1960
Succeeded by
Italics indicate interim officeholder
Democrat Party
(1946–1960)
Justice Party
(1961–1981)
True Path Party
(1983–2007)
True Path Party (2007)
2007–present
Democrat Party
(2007–present)
Before 1960
1960–80
1980–present
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