Imperial Predator
Britain and the Destruction of the Ottoman Empire

Due to be published
by Hurst Publishers
in October 2026...
Description
Britain’s plunder of the Ottoman Empire is one of history’s great land grabs. In 1876, the Ottomans controlled territory as large as contemporary China. By 1923, nine-tenths of this grand heritage was gone, half now under British control.
From the ‘civilising mission’ of Salisbury to the Sykes-Picot Agreement, this is the riveting story of Britain’s systematic destruction of the Ottoman Empire.
Nineteenth-century diplomacy was brutal, with treaties ignored and promises elided. The Ottomans sought to balance between the European powers, but Britain had a navy second to none, and admirals no less impetuous than Nelson.
It 1914, siding with the Russians, it spurned the Young Turks, driving them into the German camp, thereby expanding hostilities into Asia, and increasing its war costs by half.
Although the Ottomans resisted more fiercely than often recorded, their fateful defeat would taint the future of the whole Middle East.
Drawing on the latest archival research, David S. Tonge shows that the end of the Ottomans was far more than a collapse: it was imperial asset stripping by a predator at the top of its game. Written in the memory of every Turk and Arab, this history forged today’s world.