UC San Diego Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

UC San Diego Electronic Theses and Dissertations UC San Diego UC San Diego Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title To the Edge of the Desert: Caucasian Refugees, Civilization, and Settlement on the Ottoman Frontier, 1866-1918 Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/6cv111x5 Author Adamiak, Patrick John Publication Date 2018 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SAN DIEGO To the Edge of the Desert: Caucasian Refugees, Civilization, and Settlement on the Ottoman Frontier, 1866-1918 A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History by Patrick John Adamiak Committee in Charge: Professor Hasan Kayalı, Chair Professor Michael Provence, Co-Chair Professor Gary Fields Professor Tom Gallant Professor Jeremy Prestholdt 2018 Copyright Patrick John Adamiak, 2018 All rights Reserved The Dissertation of Patrick John Adamiak is approved, and it is acceptable in quality and form for publication on microfilm and electronically: _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ Co-chair _____________________________________________________________ Chair University of California San Diego 2018 iii DEDICATION To Jessica iv TABLE OF CONTENTS Signature Page……………………………………………………………………………...…….iii Dedication……………………………………………………………………………………..….iv Table of Contents………………………………………………………………………………….v Note on Translation and Transliteration…………………………..………..…………………….vi List of Abbreviations.……………………………………………………………………...…….vii Acknowledgements……………………………………...…………………………………..….viii Vita…………………………………………………………………………………………...……x Abstract of the Dissertation……………………………………………………...……………….xi Chapter 1: Introduction………………………………………………………..…………………..1 Chapter 2: The Ottoman Civilizing Attitude and the Internal Frontier……………………....….17 Chapter 3: A Second Egypt? The Failure of Settlement Plans in Benghazi, 1880-1895………...62 Chapter 4: The Ottoman Settlement of the Golan Heights, 1860-1888…………………….........89 Chapter 5: The Circassians of Quneitra and the End of a Regime of Exception in Southern Syria, 1890-1908………………………………………………………………………………………133 Chapter 6: “The Sheep Dogs Had Been Worse than the Wolves:” The Chechen Settlement at Resülayn, 1866-1908…….……………………………………………….…………….………177 Chapter 7: Epilogue and Conclusion………….…………………………………………….….224 Appendix: Maps………………………………………………………………………………...241 Bibliography……………………………………………………………..……..………………246 v NOTE ON TRANSLATION AND TRANSLITERATION I have chosen to render Arabic and Turkish words that are familiar to an English- speaking audience in their common anglicized form whenever possible, such as pasha and sheikh. For transliteration of Ottoman Turkish, I have followed the guidelines set down by the International Journal of Middle Eastern Studies. Transliterating place names has been tricky, as this dissertation covers an era when Ottoman planners could legitimately worry that passengers on the Berlin-Baghdad railroad might get confused by having a stop named Pınarbaşı and Resülayn, meaning “head of the spring” in Turkish and Arabic respectively, on the same line. I tried to use the most common current spelling of a place if possible, and for more obscure locations discussed in Ottoman documents, I deferred to the transliteration system for Ottoman Turkish. For personal names of Caucasian settlers I preferred Turkish transliterations, as contemporary British travelers and Consuls sometimes transliterated a name into English, and it is clear from this that many Caucasians of that generation used the Turkish pronounciation of the name (for example, the head of the Damascene gendarmerie in the 1890s went by Hüsrev and not Khosrow). vi LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS BOA Başbakanlık Osmanlı Arşivi PRO Public Records Office vii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The help and encouragement of a great number of people made this dissertation possible. I am indebted to Hasan Kayalı and Michael Provence, who have shaped me both as a scholar and a person through my years under their guidance. It is difficult to imagine better mentors. Baki Tezcan, Erik-Jan Zürcher, Hans Theunissen, Tom Gallant, Gary Fields, and Jeremy Prestholdt have also provided invaluable support to me over the years. I have been honored to receive a great deal of financial and institutional support. I would like to thank the Fulbright Program; the American Center of Oriental Research in Amman; the Institute of Turkish Studies; and the University of California, San Diego for the funding that made the research and writing of this dissertation possible. I am also grateful for the assistance of the staffs of the Başbakanlık Archive in Istanbul; the National Archives in London; and the Center for Documents, Manuscripts and Bilad al-Sham Studies in Amman. My work would not be what it is without the help of those who have commented upon my writing, argued a point with me, joined me in pondering the imponderables of Ottoman Turkish, or given me valuable advice. I would like to thank Emre Erol, Mehmet Kuru, David Stenner, Einar Wigen, Oscar Aguirre Mandujano, Timur Hammond, Michael Ben Sims, Lisel Hintz, Sinan Ciddi, Michael Christopher Lowe, Jeffery Dyer, Jim Ryan, Chris Gratien, Nir Shafir, Nick Danforth, Alex Brey, David and Linda Graf, Vladimir Hamed-Troyansky, Ella Fratantuono, Efe Murad, James Shepard, and Çağdaş Sumer. The vibrant and supportive community in La Jolla I have been fortunate enough to enjoy over the years also deserves a great deal of thanks. Leonidas Mylonakis, David Henderson, Foster Chamberlain, Kate Thompson, Matt Davidson, Ted Falk, Robert Terrell, Kiri Hagerman, Reuben Silverman, Mirna Wasef, viii Semih Gökaltay, Dimitris Stergiopoulos, Emre Sunu, David Idol, and Joel Palhegyi have all made my time at UC San Diego a wonderful experience. I would like to specially thank Johanna Peterson, Barış Taşyakan, and Ben Smuin for their gracious comments and assistance in helping me complete my dissertation. Any mistakes remaining in the dissertation are my own and do not reflect the quality of their assistance. There is no way this work could have been completed without my loving family. It is not possible to thank my parents for how much support and inspiration they have supplied to me over the years. My brother and sister have always been there for me, no matter the circumstances. Above all I want to thank my wife Jessica who has been, and always shall be my partner. ix VITA 2006 Bachelor of Arts, University of California, Davis 2009 Master of Arts, Leiden University 2018 Doctor of Philosophy, University of California, San Diego x ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION To the Edge of the Desert: Caucasian Refugees, Civilization, and Settlement on the Ottoman Frontier, 1866-1918 by Patrick John Adamiak Doctor of Philosophy in History University of California San Diego, 2018 Professor Hasan Kayalı, Chair Professor Michael Provence, Co-Chair This dissertation investigates the Ottoman Empire’s settlement of refugees fleeing Russian persecution along the empire’s desert frontiers between 1866 and 1918. I contend that Muslim refugees from the Caucasus and the state officials who planned their settlement developed the internal frontiers of the Ottoman Empire to transform these regions’ societies, politics, and environments well into the twentieth century. The dissertation is thus an xi intervention in the histories of population mobility, the environment, and the project of modernity in the Ottoman Empire. It investigates the implications of Istanbul’s policies, driven by what I refer to as a “civilizing attitude,” for the refugee settlers, administrators, local populations, and the environments of the Middle East. The Ottoman state enacted a program of creating model agricultural settlements populated by refugees to sedentarize nomads, whom officials viewed as backwards. The dissertation argues for the agency of the refugees, who adapted to challenging circumstances and ultimately influenced the drawing of borders in the Middle East after the collapse of the Ottoman Empire. The analysis takes as its case studies settlement schemes in Benghazi, eastern Libya; Quneitra, southern Syria; and Resülayn, northern Mesopotamia to conclude that small communities of refugees at the far edges of empire altered historical trajectories on the regional, imperial, and global levels. xii Chapter 1: Introduction In February of 1878, tens of thousands of Muslim refugees began to arrive in the ports of Syria. The wretched refugees carried what little remained of their worldly possessions along with small pox, typhus, and a host of other diseases. They were destined for a dying settlement at the edge of the semi-arid steppe that fringes southern Syria. For many of the refugees, their arrival in Syria was not their first experience of arriving destitute in a new land. Many of the older refugees had been born in the Caucasus Mountains before the 1860s, when a Russian campaign of extermination had reduced a population of over 2,500,000 Muslim Circassians to 1,500,000 refugees that sought protection in the Ottoman Empire between 1864 and 1877. Hundreds of thousands tried to build new lives in the Balkans. When the Ottoman Empire lost the 1877-8 Russo-Ottoman War, however, the victorious powers forced the Circassians from their homes again. The refugees who settled in Syria in the late nineteenth
Recommended publications
  • Reflections on American Agricultural History*
    AGHR52_1.qxd 15/06/2007 10:23 Page 1 Reflections on American agricultural history* by R. Douglas Hurt Abstract This paper reviews the contribution of American agricultural history over the twentieth century. It traces the earliest writings on the topic before the foundation of the Agricultural History Society in 1919. The discipline is reviewed under six heads: land policy including tenancy; slave institutions and post-bellum tenancy in the southern states; agricultural organizations; the development of commercial agriculture; government policy towards farming; and the recent concern with rural social history. A final section con- siders whether the lack of any definition of agricultural history has been a strength or a weakness for the discipline. The history of American agriculture as a recognized field of study dates from the early twentieth century. In 1914, Louis B. Schmidt apparently taught the first agricultural history course in the United States at Iowa State College. Schmidt urged scholars to study the history of agriculture to help government officials provide solutions to problems that were becoming increasingly economic rather than political. He believed historians had given too much attention to politi- cal, military and religious history, and Schmidt considered the economic history of agriculture a new and exciting subject for historical inquiry. Schmidt recognized the limitless topical nature of such work, because so little had been done. He urged historians to investigate land, immi- gration, tariff, currency, and banking policy, as well as organized labour, corporate regulation, slavery, and the influences of agriculture, broadly conceived, on the development of national life.1 Schmidt called on the first generation of professionally trained historians, who intended to make history more useful and relevant and whose interests often involved economic causation, to interpret the present ‘in light of economic and social evolution’.
    [Show full text]
  • UCLA Electronic Theses and Dissertations
    UCLA UCLA Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title Transnational Rebellion: The Syrian Revolt of 1925-1927 Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/99q9f2k0 Author Bailony, Reem Publication Date 2015 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Los Angeles Transnational Rebellion: The Syrian Revolt of 1925-1927 A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy in History by Reem Bailony 2015 © Copyright by Reem Bailony 2015 ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION Transnational Rebellion: The Syrian Revolt of 1925-1927 by Reem Bailony Doctor of Philosophy in History University of California, Los Angeles, 2015 Professor James L. Gelvin, Chair This dissertation explores the transnational dimensions of the Syrian Revolt of 1925-1927. By including the activities of Syrian migrants in Egypt, Europe and the Americas, this study moves away from state-centric histories of the anti-French rebellion. Though they lived far away from the battlefields of Syria and Lebanon, migrants championed, contested, debated, and imagined the rebellion from all corners of the mahjar (or diaspora). Skeptics and supporters organized petition campaigns, solicited financial aid for rebels and civilians alike, and partook in various meetings and conferences abroad. Syrians abroad also clandestinely coordinated with rebel leaders for the transfer of weapons and funds, as well as offered strategic advice based on the political climates in Paris and Geneva. Moreover, key émigré figures played a significant role in defining the revolt, determining its goals, and formulating its program. By situating the revolt in the broader internationalism of the 1920s, this study brings to life the hitherto neglected role migrants played in bridging the local and global, the national and international.
    [Show full text]
  • Aachen, 590,672
    INDEX THIS Index contains no reference to the Introductory Tables which pre· sent a summary of the Finance and Commerce of the United Kingdom, British India, the British Colonies, the various countries of Europe, the United States of America, and Japan. AAC AFR ACHEN, 590,672 Adrar, 815, 1041 A Aalborg, 491 Adrianople (town), 1097 Aalesund, 1062 - (Vilayet), 1096 Aargau, 1078, 1080 Adua, 337 Aarhus, 491 Adulis Bay, 569 Abaco (Bahamas), 244 lEtolia, 705 Abbas Hilmi, Khedive, 1122 Afghanistan, area, 339 Abdul-Hamid n., 1091 - army, 340 Abdur Rahman Khan, 339 - books of reference, 342 Abeokuta (W. Africa), 219 - currency, 342 Abercorn (Cent. Africa), 215 - exports, 342 Aberdeen, 22; University, 34 - government, 340 Aberystwith College, 34 - horticulture, 341 Abo (Finland), 933, 985 - imports, 342 Abomey, 572 - justice, 340 Abruzzi, 732 -land cultivation, 341 Abyssinia, 337 - manufactures, 341 Abyssinian Church, 337, 1127 - mining, 341 Ahuna (Coptic), 337 - origin of the Afghans, 339 Acajutla (Salvador), 998 - population, 340 Acanceh (Mexico), 799 - reigning sovereign, 339 Acarnania, 705 - revenue, 340 Accra, 218 - trade, 341 Achaia, 705 - trade routes, 341 .Achikulak, 933 Africa, Central, Protectorate, 193 Acklin's Island, 244 East (British), 194 Aconcagua, 4.46 -- (German), 623 Acre (Bolivia), 430, 431, 437 -- - Italian, 768 Adamawa, 211 -- Portuguese, 909 Adana (town), 1097 -- South-West (German), 622 - (Vilayet), 1096 - (Turkish), 1095, 1097 Adelaide, 297 ; University, 298 - West (British), 218 Aden, 108, 129 -- (French), 569 Adis Ababa, 337, 769 -- German, 621, 622 Admiralty Island (W. Pacific), 625 -- colonies in, British, 180 Adolf, Grand Duke of Luxemburg, 796 -- colonies in, French, 556 1222 THE STATESMAN'S YEAR-BOOK, 1900 AFR AMI Africa, Colonies in, German, 620 Algeria, army, 530, 558 -- Italian, 768 - books of reference, 560 -- Portuguese, 907 - commerce, 559 -- Spanish, 1041 - crime, 557 Agana (Ladrones), 1200 - defence, 558 Agra, 135 - exports, 559, 560 Agone (W.
    [Show full text]
  • Ordinary Jerusalem 1840–1940
    Ordinary Jerusalem 1840–1940 Angelos Dalachanis and Vincent Lemire - 978-90-04-37574-1 Downloaded from Brill.com03/21/2019 10:36:34AM via free access Open Jerusalem Edited by Vincent Lemire (Paris-Est Marne-la-Vallée University) and Angelos Dalachanis (French School at Athens) VOLUME 1 The titles published in this series are listed at brill.com/opje Angelos Dalachanis and Vincent Lemire - 978-90-04-37574-1 Downloaded from Brill.com03/21/2019 10:36:34AM via free access Ordinary Jerusalem 1840–1940 Opening New Archives, Revisiting a Global City Edited by Angelos Dalachanis and Vincent Lemire LEIDEN | BOSTON Angelos Dalachanis and Vincent Lemire - 978-90-04-37574-1 Downloaded from Brill.com03/21/2019 10:36:34AM via free access This is an open access title distributed under the terms of the prevailing CC-BY-NC-ND License at the time of publication, which permits any non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided no alterations are made and the original author(s) and source are credited. The Open Jerusalem project has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) (starting grant No 337895) Note for the cover image: Photograph of two women making Palestinian point lace seated outdoors on a balcony, with the Old City of Jerusalem in the background. American Colony School of Handicrafts, Jerusalem, Palestine, ca. 1930. G. Eric and Edith Matson Photograph Collection, Library of Congress. https://www.loc.gov/item/mamcol.054/ Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Dalachanis, Angelos, editor.
    [Show full text]
  • Armenia, Republic of | Grove
    Grove Art Online Armenia, Republic of [Hayasdan; Hayq; anc. Pers. Armina] Lucy Der Manuelian, Armen Zarian, Vrej Nersessian, Nonna S. Stepanyan, Murray L. Eiland and Dickran Kouymjian https://doi.org/10.1093/gao/9781884446054.article.T004089 Published online: 2003 updated bibliography, 26 May 2010 Country in the southern part of the Transcaucasian region; its capital is Erevan. Present-day Armenia is bounded by Georgia to the north, Iran to the south-east, Azerbaijan to the east and Turkey to the west. From 1920 to 1991 Armenia was a Soviet Socialist Republic within the USSR, but historically its land encompassed a much greater area including parts of all present-day bordering countries (see fig.). At its greatest extent it occupied the plateau covering most of what is now central and eastern Turkey (c. 300,000 sq. km) bounded on the north by the Pontic Range and on the south by the Taurus and Kurdistan mountains. During the 11th century another Armenian state was formed to the west of Historic Armenia on the Cilician plain in south-east Asia Minor, bounded by the Taurus Mountains on the west and the Amanus (Nur) Mountains on the east. Its strategic location between East and West made Historic or Greater Armenia an important country to control, and for centuries it was a battlefield in the struggle for power between surrounding empires. Periods of domination and division have alternated with centuries of independence, during which the country was divided into one or more kingdoms. Page 1 of 47 PRINTED FROM Oxford Art Online. © Oxford University Press, 2019.
    [Show full text]
  • Talaat Pasha's Report on the Armenian Genocide.Fm
    Gomidas Institute Studies Series TALAAT PASHA’S REPORT ON THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE by Ara Sarafian Gomidas Institute London This work originally appeared as Talaat Pasha’s Report on the Armenian Genocide, 1917. It has been revised with some changes, including a new title. Published by Taderon Press by arrangement with the Gomidas Institute. © 2011 Ara Sarafian. All Rights Reserved. ISBN 978-1-903656-66-2 Gomidas Institute 42 Blythe Rd. London W14 0HA United Kingdom Email: [email protected] CONTENTS Introduction by Ara Sarafian 5 Map 18 TALAAT PASHA’S 1917 REPORT Opening Summary Page: Data and Calculations 20 WESTERN PROVINCES (MAP) 22 Constantinople 23 Edirne vilayet 24 Chatalja mutasarriflik 25 Izmit mutasarriflik 26 Hudavendigar (Bursa) vilayet 27 Karesi mutasarriflik 28 Kala-i Sultaniye (Chanakkale) mutasarriflik 29 Eskishehir vilayet 30 Aydin vilayet 31 Kutahya mutasarriflik 32 Afyon Karahisar mutasarriflik 33 Konia vilayet 34 Menteshe mutasarriflik 35 Teke (Antalya) mutasarriflik 36 CENTRAL PROVINCES (MAP) 37 Ankara (Angora) vilayet 38 Bolu mutasarriflik 39 Kastamonu vilayet 40 Janik (Samsun) mutasarriflik 41 Nigde mutasarriflik 42 Kayseri mutasarriflik 43 Adana vilayet 44 Ichil mutasarriflik 45 EASTERN PROVINCES (MAP) 46 Sivas vilayet 47 Erzerum vilayet 48 Bitlis vilayet 49 4 Talaat Pasha’s Report on the Armenian Genocide Van vilayet 50 Trebizond vilayet 51 Mamuretulaziz (Elazig) vilayet 52 SOUTH EASTERN PROVINCES AND RESETTLEMENT ZONE (MAP) 53 Marash mutasarriflik 54 Aleppo (Halep) vilayet 55 Urfa mutasarriflik 56 Diyarbekir vilayet
    [Show full text]
  • Syria Drought Response Plan
    SYRIA DROUGHT RESPONSE PLAN A Syrian farmer shows a photo of his tomato-producing field before the drought (June 2009) (Photo Paolo Scaliaroma, WFP / Surendra Beniwal, FAO) UNITED NATIONS SYRIAN ARAB REPUBLIC - Reference Map Elbistan Silvan Siirt Diyarbakir Batman Adiyaman Sivarek Kahramanmaras Kozan Kadirli TURKEY Viransehir Mardin Sanliurfa Kiziltepe Nusaybin Dayrik Zakhu Osmaniye Ceyhan Gaziantep Adana Al Qamishli Nizip Tarsus Dortyol Midan Ikbis Yahacik Kilis Tall Tamir AL HASAKAH Iskenderun A'zaz Manbij Saluq Afrin Mare Al Hasakah Tall 'Afar Reyhanli Aleppo Al Bab Sinjar Antioch Dayr Hafir Buhayrat AR RAQQA As Safirah al Asad Idlib Ar Raqqah Ash Shaddadah ALEPPO Hamrat Ariha r bu AAbubu a add D Duhuruhur Madinat a LATAKIA IDLIB Ath Thawrah h Resafa K l Ma'arat a Haffe r Ann Nu'man h Latakia a Jableh Dayr az Zawr N El Aatabe Baniyas Hama HAMA Busayrah a e S As Saiamiyah TARTU S Masyaf n DAYR AZ ZAWR a e n Ta rtus Safita a Dablan r r e Tall Kalakh t Homs i Al Hamidiyah d Tadmur E e uphrates Anah M (Palmyra) Tripoli Al Qusayr Abu Kamal Sadad Al Qa’im HOMS LEBANON Al Qaryatayn Hadithah BEYRUT An Nabk Duma Dumayr DAMASCUS Tyre DAMASCUS QQuneitrauneitra Ar Rutbah QUNEITRA Haifa Tiberias AS SUWAIDA IRAQ DAR’A Trebil ISRAELI S R A E L DDarar'a As Suwayda Irbid Jenin Mahattat al Jufur Jarash Nabulus Al Mafraq West JORDAN Bank AMMAN JERUSALEM Bayt Lahm Madaba SAUDI ARABIA Legend Elevation (meters) National capital 5,000 and above First administrative level capital 4,000 - 5,000 Populated place 3,000 - 4,000 International boundary 2,500 - 3,000 First administrative level boundary 2,000 - 2,500 1,500 - 2,000 050100150 1,000 - 1,500 800 - 1,000 km 600 - 800 Disclaimers: The designations employed and the presentation of material 400 - 600 on this map do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the Secretariat of the United Nations concerning the legal 200 - 400 status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries.
    [Show full text]
  • Going with the Flow of the Ancient Rivers Tracing the Early Mesopotamian Civilizatons
    GOING WITH THE FLOW OF THE ANCIENT RIVERS TRACING THE EARLY MESOPOTAMIAN CIVILIZATONS Private tours of the most important archaeological projects Friday, August 23rd - Friday, September 6th (14 Nights, 15 Days) A journey filled with history, nature, and the legend of the rushing waters of the Orontes, Euphrates and the Tigris’s quieter flow... Antioch, Zeugma, Göbekli Tepe, Tur Abdin and the colourful, authentic bazaars of the Southeast of Turkey. Antioch, city of the artistic and faithful. Zeugma, the world’s largest mosaic museum, surpasses even the Bardo of Tunis and the Antakya Museum in the ancient city of Antioch. A great mystery lies behind Göbeklitepe. What makes it unique is not the size or beauty of the monuments, but the date when they were built, roughly twelve thousand years ago! The bustling and colourful markets are where one experiences the heart and soul of the Southeast cities which lie between the Mesopotamia and the Mediterranean. The trade routes from the east, west and north that pass that intersect these cities have determined the history of the region’s civilization and its cultural development. Day 1 Istanbul Special category hotel Guests are met by a Peten Travels tour manager at the Atatürk Airport and then transferred to their hotel. That evening will be spent meeting your fellow travellers along with your guides while enjoying a drink and sit down dinner. (D) Day 2 Fly to Antioch Savon Hotel (special category) Travelling distance: 30 km~19 miles After breakfast we take the morning flight to Antioch (Antakya) where we will spend three nights.
    [Show full text]
  • Inventory of Shared Water Resources in Western Asia
    INVENTORY OF SHARED WATER RESOURCES IN WESTERN ASIA دراسة مسح الموارد المائية المشتركة في غربي آسيا Federal Institute for Geosciences and Natural Resources Copyright © 2012, United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA) and the German Federal Institute for Geosciences and Natural Resources (BGR). How to cite: ESCWA-BGR Cooperation, 2012. Inventory of Shared Water Resources in Western Asia (Online Version). Chapter 7: Orontes River Basin. Beirut. Chapter 7 Orontes River Basin INVENTORY OF SHARED WATER RESOURCES IN WESTERN ASIA CHAPTER 7 - ORONTES RIVER BASIN Orontes River Basin EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Also known as the Assi River, the Orontes is the only perennial river in Western Asia that flows north and drains west into the Mediterranean Sea. Its flow regime shows typical winter peak flows due to increased precipitation, and summer low flows maintained exclusively by groundwater discharge. The river is mainly used for irrigation purposes with several agricultural projects planned in the three riparian countries. Water quality at the headwaters is generally good, but deteriorates in the middle and lower reaches of the river due to agricultural, urban and industrial activities. There is no basin-wide agreement between the three riparians, but there are several bilateral agreements in place on issues such as water allocation (Lebanon-Syria) and the joint The Dardara Falls on the Orontes in Lebanon, 2009. Source: Andreas Renck. construction of infrastructure (Syria-Turkey). Orontes Basin politics are heavily influenced MAIN AGREEMENTS by the status of Turkish-Syrian relations in general, and discussions over the sharing of the 1994 – Agreement on the Distribution of Orontes Euphrates River in particular.
    [Show full text]
  • Political and Economic Transition of Ottoman Sovereignty from a Sole Monarch to Numerous Ottoman Elites, 1683–1750S
    Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hung. Volume 70 (1), 49 – 90 (2017) DOI: 10.1556/062.2017.70.1.4 POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC TRANSITION OF OTTOMAN SOVEREIGNTY FROM A SOLE MONARCH TO NUMEROUS OTTOMAN ELITES, 1683–1750S BIROL GÜNDOĞDU Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen Historisches Institut, Osteuropäische Geschichte Otto-Behaghel-Str. 10, Haus D Raum 205, 35394 Gießen, Deutschland e-mail: [email protected] The aim of this paper is to reveal the transformation of the Ottoman Empire following the debacles of the second siege of Vienna in 1683. The failures compelled the Ottoman state to change its socio- economic and political structure. As a result of this transition of the state structure, which brought about a so-called “redistribution of power” in the empire, new Ottoman elites emerged from 1683 until the 1750s. We have divided the above time span into three stages that will greatly help us com- prehend the Ottoman transition from sultanic authority to numerous autonomies of first Muslim, then non-Muslim elites of the Ottoman Empire. During the first period (1683–1699) we see the emergence of Muslim power players at the expense of sultanic authority. In the second stage (1699–1730) we observe the sultans’ unsuccessful attempts to revive their authority. In the third period (1730–1750) we witness the emergence of non-Muslim notables who gradually came into power with the help of both the sultans and external powers. At the end of this last stage, not only did the authority of Ottoman sultans decrease enormously, but a new era evolved where Muslim and non-Muslim leading figures both fought and co-operated with one another for a new distribution of wealth in the Ottoman Empire.
    [Show full text]
  • SYRIAN ARAB REPUBLIC - Reference Map
    SYRIAN ARAB REPUBLIC - Reference Map Elbistan Silvan Siirt Diyarbakir Batman Adiyaman Sivarek Kahramanmaras Kozan Kadirli T U R K E Y Viransehir Mardin Sanliurfa Kiziltepe Nusaybin Dayrik Zakhu Ceyhan Osmaniye Adana Gaziantep Al Qamishli Nizip Tarsus Dortyol Midan Ikbis Yahacik Kilis Tall Tamir AL HASAKAH Iskenderun A'zaz Manbij Saluq Mare Afrin Al Hasakah Tall 'Afar Reyhanli Aleppo Al Bab Sinjar AR RAQQA Antioch Dayr Hafir Buhayrat As Safirah al Asad Idlib Ar Raqqah Ash Shaddadah ALEPPO Hamrat r Ariha u b Abu ad Duhur Madinat a LATAKIA IDLIB h Ath Thawrah K Resafa l a Ma'arat Haffe r Ann Nu'man h Latakia a Jableh Dayr az Zawr N El Aatabe Baniyas HAMA Hama Busayrah a e S As Saiamiyah TARTUS Masyaf n DAYR AZ ZAWR a e n Tartus Safita a Dablan r r e t Tall Kalakh i Homs d Al Hamidiyah Tadmur E e uphrates Anah M (Palmyra) Tripoli Al Qusayr Abu Kamal Sadad Al Qa’im HOMS L E B A N O N Al Qaryatayn Hadithah BEYRUT An Nabk Duma Dumayr DAMASCUS Tyre DAMASCUS Quneitra Ar Rutbah QUNEITRA Haifa Tiberias AS SUWAIDA I R A Q DAR’A Trebil I S R A E L Dar'a As Suwayda Irbid Jenin Mahattat al Jufur Jarash Nabulus Al Mafraq West J O R D A N Bank AMMAN JERUSALEM Bayt Lahm Madaba S A U D I A R A B I A Legend Elevation (meters) National capital 5,000 and above First administrative level capital 4,000 - 5,000 Populated place 3,000 - 4,000 International boundary 2,500 - 3,000 First administrative level boundary 2,000 - 2,500 1,500 - 2,000 0 50 100 150 1,000 - 1,500 800 - 1,000 km 600 - 800 Disclaimers: The designations employed and the presentation of material 400 - 600 on this map do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the Secretariat of the United Nations concerning the legal 200 - 400 status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries.
    [Show full text]
  • Country Coding Units
    INSTITUTE Country Coding Units v11.1 - March 2021 Copyright © University of Gothenburg, V-Dem Institute All rights reserved Suggested citation: Coppedge, Michael, John Gerring, Carl Henrik Knutsen, Staffan I. Lindberg, Jan Teorell, and Lisa Gastaldi. 2021. ”V-Dem Country Coding Units v11.1” Varieties of Democracy (V-Dem) Project. Funders: We are very grateful for our funders’ support over the years, which has made this ven- ture possible. To learn more about our funders, please visit: https://www.v-dem.net/en/about/ funders/ For questions: [email protected] 1 Contents Suggested citation: . .1 1 Notes 7 1.1 ”Country” . .7 2 Africa 9 2.1 Central Africa . .9 2.1.1 Cameroon (108) . .9 2.1.2 Central African Republic (71) . .9 2.1.3 Chad (109) . .9 2.1.4 Democratic Republic of the Congo (111) . .9 2.1.5 Equatorial Guinea (160) . .9 2.1.6 Gabon (116) . .9 2.1.7 Republic of the Congo (112) . 10 2.1.8 Sao Tome and Principe (196) . 10 2.2 East/Horn of Africa . 10 2.2.1 Burundi (69) . 10 2.2.2 Comoros (153) . 10 2.2.3 Djibouti (113) . 10 2.2.4 Eritrea (115) . 10 2.2.5 Ethiopia (38) . 10 2.2.6 Kenya (40) . 11 2.2.7 Malawi (87) . 11 2.2.8 Mauritius (180) . 11 2.2.9 Rwanda (129) . 11 2.2.10 Seychelles (199) . 11 2.2.11 Somalia (130) . 11 2.2.12 Somaliland (139) . 11 2.2.13 South Sudan (32) . 11 2.2.14 Sudan (33) .
    [Show full text]