Ibrahim Pasha al-Azm
Ibrahim Pasha al-Azm was the Ottoman governor of Tripoli in 1728–1730 and Sidon in 1737–1741 and 1742–1744.
Career
Governor of Tripoli
Ibrahim was a son of Ismail Pasha al-Azm, the founder of the Azm family's political prominence and beylerbey of Damascus in 1725. Ibrahim was appointed by the Ottoman imperial government as governor of Tripoli, while his father served in Damascus and his uncle, Sulayman Pasha al-Azm, governed Sidon. Sulayman was Ibrahim's predecessor in Tripoli, and his father had held the post before his appointment to Damascus. Ibrahim appointed his son, Yasin Bey, as the sanjakbey of Latakia.Ibrahim established monopolies in the province which caused significant rises in the prices of commodities. Ibrahim was overthrown by a mass uprising of the armies, including the janissaries, and residents of Tripoli, who viewed his rule as oppressive. The revolt coincided with the overthrow of the Azms' patron, Sultan Ahmed III, and led to the temporary deposition of the other Azm governors in Ottoman Syria.