Member of the Council of the Tanzimat When
Mustafa Reşid rose to his sixth term as grand vizier, he made Ahmed a member of the Council of the Tanzimat. The Council was established to codify the actions sanctioned by the
Tanzimat reforms. Ahmed played a prominent role in preparing laws, virtually writing the new regulations on landownership and cadastral surveys. His role as a member of Council of the Tanzimat also influenced his history projects. He abandoned the old annalistic approach for one emphasizing problems and topics, with an increasingly critical examination of the sources. Additionally, Ahmed was the principal author of the regulation that created the new
Supreme Council of Judicial Ordinances, of which he became a member, in place of the Council of the Tanzimat in 1861. Ahmed Cevdet recognized that military and administrative reforms were necessary, but being a conservative, was reluctant to use European law as an example, opting for Islamic law. His proposed answer was two-fold. The first step was to appeal to traditional values of improving education and communication. The second part involved creating conditions which would eliminate corruption and increase efficiency, while preserving the fundamental political and social concepts upon which the Ottoman Empire was based. His attempts at reconciling modernization with Islamic law are most notably present in his drafting of the
Mecelle.
Other offices In the 1860s, Ahmed Cevdet officially transferred from the
Ilmiye to the Scribal Institution. In 1861, he was sent as a special agent to
Albania to suppress revolts and develop a new administrative system. It was rumored that Ahmed would become vizier then, but he was denied of this honor due to strong opposition among the ulema. They resented his enlightened and liberal interpretation of religious matters. As a result,
Mehmed Fuad Pasha became vizier and Ahmed Cevdet become the
inspector general in
Bosnia from 1863 to 1864. There, he extended Tanzimat reforms, despite opposition from the
Habsburgs and Slavic national groups. This identified him as a leading provincial troubleshooter. Living up to this role, Ahmed attempted to settle the nomadic tribes and establish order in Kozan, located in southeastern
Anatolia, in 1865. Finally in 1866, his transfer to the Scribal Institution was official and he was able to accept regular administrative positions. Ahmed became governor of
Aleppo Eyalet, which was formed to apply recent Tanzimat provincial reforms introduced by
Fuad, the Grand Vizier. ==Notable contributions==