Ali Bey Al-Kabir by Levan Urushadze
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Ali Bey Al-Kabir (1728 - May 8, 1773) was a Mamluk Sultan of Egypt in 1760-1772. He born in 1728, in Abkhazia (Western Georgia). His father was a Georgian Orthodox monk.
In 1741 he was kidnaped by Turk kidnapers. In 1743 he was purchased in Cairo and gradually rose in influence, winning the top office of Sheikh al-balad (Chief of the country) in 1760.
In 1768 Ali Bey deposed the Ottoman governor and assumed the post of acting governor. He stopped the annual tribute to Istanbul and in an unprecedented usurpation of the Ottoman Sultan's privileges had his name struck on local coins in 1769 (alongside the sultan's emblem).
In 1770 he gained control of the Hijaz and a year later temporarily occupied Syria, thereby reconstituting the Mamluk state that had disappeared in 1517. But Ali Bey lost power in 1772.
Ali Bey Al-Kabir was killed in 1773, in Cairo.

