Syria
Ottoman Empire
The Ottomans were nomadic Muslim Turks from central Asia who had been
converted to Islam by Umayyad conquerors in the eighth century. Led by
Uthman (whence the Western term Ottoman), they founded a principality in
1300 amid the ruins of the Mongolwrecked Seljuk Empire in northwest Turkey.
Fifty years later Uthman's successors invaded Europe. They conquered
Constantinople in 1453 and in the sixteenth century conquered all of the
Middle East. From 1300 to 1916, when the empire fell, 36 sultans, all
descendants of Uthman, ruled most of the Muslim world. Europeans referred to
the Ottoman throne as the Sublime Porte, a name derived from a gate of the
sultan's palace in Istanbul.
From 1516 the Ottomans ruled Syria through pashas, who governed with
unlimited authority over the land under their control, although they were
responsible ultimately to the Sublime Porte. Pashas were both administrative
and military leaders. So long as they collected their taxes, maintained
order, and ruled an area not of immediate military importance, the Sublime
Porte left them alone. In turn the pashas ruled smaller administrative
districts through either a subordinate Turk or a loyal Arab. Occasionally,
as in the area that became Lebanon, the Arab subordinate maintained his
position more through his own power than through loyalty. Throughout Ottoman
rule, there was little contact with the authorities except among wealthier
Syrians who entered government service or studied in Turkish universities.
The system was not particularly onerous to Syrians because the Turks
respected Arabic as the language of the Quran and accepted the mantle of
defenders of the faith. Damascus was made the major entrepot for Mecca, and
as such it acquired a holy character to Muslims because of the baraka
(spiritual force or blessing) of the countless pilgrims who passed through
on the hajj, the pilgrimage to Mecca
Ottoman administration often followed patterns set by previous rulers.
Each religious minority--Shia Muslim, Greek Orthodox, Maronite, Armenian,
and Jewish--constituted a millet. The religious heads of each community
administered all personal status law and performed certain civil functions
as well.
The Syrian economy did not flourish under the Ottomans. At times attempts
were made to rebuild the country, but on the whole Syria remained poor. The
population decreased by nearly 30 percent, and hundreds of villages
virtually disappeared into the desert. At the end of the eighteenth century
only one-eighth of the villages formerly on the register of the Aleppo
pashalik (domain of a pasha) were still inhabited. Only the area now known
as Lebanon achieved economic progress, largely resulting from the relatively
independent rule of the Druze amirs.
Although impoverished by Ottoman rule, Syria continued to attract
European traders, who for centuries had transported spices, fruits, and
textiles from the Middle East to the West. By the fifteenth century Aleppo
was the Middle East's chief marketplace and had eclipsed Damascus in wealth,
creating a rivalry between the two cities that continues.
With the traders from the West came missionaries, teachers, scientists,
and tourists whose governments began to clamor for certain rights. France
demanded the right to protect Christians, and in 1535 Sultan Sulayman I
granted France several "capitulations"--extraterritorial rights that
developed later into political semiautonomy, not only for the French, but
also for the Christians protected by them. The British acquired similar
rights in 1580 and established the Levant Company in Aleppo. By the end of
the eighteenth century, the Russians had claimed protective rights over the
Greek Orthodox community.
The Ottoman Empire began to show signs of decline in the eighteenth
century. By the nineteenth century European powers had begun to take
advantage of Ottoman weakness through both military and political
penetration, including Napoleon's invasion of Egypt, subsequent British
intervention, and French occupation of Lebanon. Economic development of
Syria through the use of European capital--for example, railroads built
largely with French money--brought further incursions.
Western penetration became decidedly political after the Druze uprising
in the Syrian province of Lebanon in 1860. The revolt began in the north as
a Maronite Christian peasant uprising against Christian landlords. As the
revolt moved southward to the territories where the landlords were Druzes,
the conflagration acquired an intersectarian character, and the Druzes
massacred some 10,000 Maronites. France sent in troops and removed them a
year later only after the European powers had forced the Sublime Porte to
grant new laws for Lebanon. By the Statute of 1861, for the first time Mount
Lebanon was officially detached from Syria, and its administration came
increasingly under the control of France.
Because of European pressure as well as the discontent of the Syrian
people, the Ottoman sultans enacted some reforms during the nineteenth
century. The Egyptian occupation of Syria from 1831 to 1839 under the
nominal authority of the sultan brought a centralized government, judicial
reform, and regular taxation. But Ibrahim Pasha, son of the Egyptian ruler,
became unpopular with the landowners because he limited their influence, and
with the peasants because he imposed conscription and taxation. He was
eventually driven from Syria by the sultan's forces. Subsequent reforms of
Turkish Sultan Mahmud II and his son were more theoretical than real and
were counteracted by reactionary forces inside the state as well as by the
inertia of Ottoman officials. Reforms proved somewhat successful with the
Kurds and Turkomans in the north and with the Alawis around Latakia, but
unsuccessful with the Druzes--who lived in the Jabal Druze (now known as
Jabal al Arab), a rugged mountainous area in southwest Syria--who retained
their administrative and judicial autonomy and exemption from military
service.
Although further reform attempts generally failed, some of the more
successful endure. Among them are the colonization of Syria's frontiers, the
suppression of tribal raiding, the opening of new lands to cultivation, and
the beginnings of the settlement of the beduin tribes. Attempts to register
the land failed, however, because of the peasants' fear of taxation and
conscription.
Sultan Abdul Hamid II (1876-1909), sometimes known as Abdul Hamid the
Damned, acquired a reputation as the most oppressive Ottoman sultan.
Opponents died quickly; taxes became heavy. Abdul Hamid tried to earn the
loyalty of his Muslim subjects by preaching pan-Islamic ideas and in 1908
completing the Hijaz Railway between Istanbul and Medina. However, the
sultan's cruelty--coupled with that of his deputy in Acre, known in Syria as
The Butcher--and increasing Western cultural influences set the stage for
the first act of Arab nationalism; World War I opened the next.