Zahir al-Umar
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Zahir al-Umar al-Zaydani, alternatively spelled Dhaher el-Omar[1] or Dahir al-Umar (Template:Langx,Template:Efn 1689/90 – 21 or 22 August 1775), was an Arab ruler of northern Palestine in the mid-18th century,Template:Sfn while the region was part of the Ottoman Empire. For much of his reign, starting in the 1730s, his domain mainly consisted of the Galilee, with successive headquarters in Tiberias, Deir Hanna and finally Acre, in 1750. He fortified Acre, and the city became the center of the cotton trade between Palestine and Europe. In the mid-1760s, he reestablished the port town of Haifa nearby.
Zahir withstood sieges and assaults by the Ottoman governors of Damascus, who attempted to limit or eliminate his influence. He was often supported in these confrontations by the Shia Muslim clans of Jabal Amil. In 1771, in alliance with Ali Bey al-Kabir of the Egypt Eyalet and with backing from Russia, Zahir captured Sidon, while Ali Bey's forces conquered Damascus, both acts in open defiance of the Ottoman sultan. At the peak of his power in 1774, Zahir's rule extended from Beirut to Gaza and included the Jabal Amil and Jabal Ajlun regions. By then, however, Ali Bey had been killed, the Ottomans entered into a truce with the Russians, and the Ottoman imperial government felt secure enough to check Zahir's power. The Ottoman Navy attacked his Acre stronghold in the summer of 1775 and he was killed outside of its walls shortly after.
The wealth Zahir accumulated through monopolizing Palestine's cotton and olive oil trade to Europe financed his sheikhdom. For much of his rule, he oversaw a relatively efficient administration and maintained domestic security, although he faced and suppressed several rebellions by his sons. The aforementioned factors, along with Zahir's flexible taxation policies and his battlefield reputation made him popular among the local peasantry. Zahir's tolerance of religious minorities encouraged Christian and Jewish immigration to his domain. The influx of immigrants from other parts of the empire stimulated the local economy and led to the significant growth of the Christian communities in Acre and Nazareth and the Jewish community in Tiberias. He and his family, the Banu Zaydan, patronized the construction of commercial buildings, houses of worship and fortifications throughout the Galilee. Zahir's rule over a virtually autonomous area in Palestine has made him a national hero among Palestinians today.Template:Sfn
Origins and early life
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Zahir was born around 1690.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn His father, Umar, was a sheikh of the Banu Zaydan, a small family of Bedouin (nomadic Arab) origin which had abandoned nomadism under Zahir's grandfather, Salih,Template:Efn and settled as cultivators in the Tiberias area in the late 17th century.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Zahir's mother was a member of the Sardiyya, a Bedouin tribe based in the Hauran.Template:Sfn Around 1698, Umar effectively became the tax collector of the Safed Script error: No such module "lang". (fiscal district). He was appointed by Bashir Shihab, the powerful chief of the Druze in Mount Lebanon who had been granted the Script error: No such module "lang". (limited-term tax farm) of Safed by the governor of Sidon Eyalet.Template:Efn By 1703, Umar had grown powerful enough to be considered the "paramount sheikh of the Galilee" by the French vice-consul of Sidon, while his brothers Ali and Hamza were Script error: No such module "lang". (holders of Script error: No such module "lang".) of the western Lower Galilee and the vicinity of Nazareth.Template:Sfn Umar died in 1706 and was succeeded as head of the family by Zahir's eldest brother, Sa'd.Template:Sfn The Zaydans were deposed from their Script error: No such module "lang". by the governor of Sidon the following year, after the death of Bashir, but were restored by Bashir's successor, Haydar Shihab in 1711.Template:Sfn The Zaydans occasionally transferred their Script error: No such module "lang". to Zahir during his adolescence to help prevent the authorities from holding the practical Script error: No such module "lang". accountable in the event of a default.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Legal control of the Zaydani Script error: No such module "lang". gave Zahir considerable power within his clan.Template:Sfn
The Zaydans had left Tiberias after Zahir killed a man from there during a brawl in 1707. They settled in Arraba, a village between the market towns of Tiberias, Safed, and Nazareth but away from the main highways, after being offered safe haven there by the chiefs of the Bedouin Banu Saqr tribe, who resided in the village.Template:Sfn In Arraba, Zahir received a degree of formal education from a Muslim scholar, Abd al-Qadir al-Hifnawi. He also learned how to hunt and fight. When the nearby village of Bi'ina was attacked by the governor of Sidon sometime between 1713 and 1718, Zahir helped defend the village and evaded the governor's troops. According to contemporary chroniclers, this event, along with Zahir's moderate personality, made him a local folk hero. His martial talents gained him further respect among the peasantry throughout the 1720s.Template:Sfn
Sa'd and Zahir also gained respect from the people of Damascus, with whom they continued the commercial relationships established by their father.Template:Sfn The wealth that earlier Zaydans had generated from trade with Damascus and Aleppo had given them the financial ability to establish themselves as tax farmers.Template:Sfn Throughout the 1720s, Zahir frequently joined caravans bound for Damascus, where he bought and sold goods. Among the contacts Zahir made there was the Muslim scholar Abd al-Ghaffar al-Shuwayki, who introduced Zahir to Sayyid Muhammad of the Husayni family, which was part of the city's elite Script error: No such module "lang". class (descendants of the Islamic prophet Muhammad). Zahir married Sayyid Muhammad's daughter and established her residence in Nazareth because she considered Arraba too small. When Sayyid Muhammad died, Zahir inherited his fortune.Template:Sfn
Rise and consolidation of power
Stronghold in the Galilee
Capture of Tiberias
Around 1730, the governor of Sidon and the rural sheikhs of Jabal Nablus (e.g. Samaria) collaborated in a military campaign to suppress the Saqr Bedouins. The tribe had long dominated the area between Nablus and Safed, rendering the highways unsafe for travel and commerce, while often plundering villages and ignoring tax obligations. Under pressure, the Saqr resolved to appoint a local dignitary to negotiate on their behalf with the government.Template:Sfn Their leader, Rashid al-Jabr, nominated Zahir for the role, hoping his tribe could benefit from the Zaydans' good reputation with the authorities and the local inhabitants.Template:Sfn The Zaydans' chief at the time, Sa'd, was bypassed in favor of the younger Zahir, a signal that the Saqr did not intend to subordinate themselves to the Zaydans' will.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Philipp comments the Bedouins "probably hoped to use Zahir for their own purposes" but "did not anticipate how quickly Zahir al-Umar would use them for his own ambitions".Template:Sfn
Not long after allying with the Saqr, Zahir initiated his takeover of Tiberias with the Bedouins' support. Zahir captured the town's Script error: No such module "lang". (subdistrict governor and tax collector) and sent him to the governor of Sidon with a letter accusing the Script error: No such module "lang". of oppressing and illegally taxing the population, thereby engendering the inhabitants' ire toward the government. Zahir requested the Script error: No such module "lang". of Tiberias and Arraba, promising to timely forward taxes and rule justly.Template:Sfn The governor of Sidon consented,Template:Sfn marking the first time a Zaydani Script error: No such module "lang". was directly appointed by a provincial governor rather than through the Shihabi Script error: No such module "lang"..Template:Sfn Zahir made Tiberias his principal base and was joined there by his Zaydani kinsmen. He appointed his cousin Muhammad, the son of Ali, as commander of the family militia.Template:Sfn Zahir spent the 1730s fortifying Tiberias and expanding his territory.Template:Sfn
Northern and western expansion
Due to the relative justice and fairness of his rule, peasants from nearby areas moved to Zahir's domains or invited him to rule over them.Template:Sfn The people living under the rule of Ahmad al-Husayn, the Script error: No such module "lang". of the Jiddin district, in the northwestern Galilee, appealed for Zahir to relieve them of Ahmad's heavy-handedness, as well as the extortions of the Bedouins. Zahir accepted their proposition and obtained permission from Sidon's governor, Ibrahim Pasha al-Azm, to seize the area. Ahmad had also requested permission to attack Zahir, to which Ibrahim Pasha consented in the hope of neutralizing two powerful local leaders.Template:Sfn In 1738, Zahir assembled a 1,500-strong force and defeated Ahmad's forces near the Jiddin fortress, occupying it and the adjacent areas under its control, namely Abu Sinan, to the west, and Tarshiha, to the east.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He was then formally granted the Script error: No such module "lang". of Jiddin.Template:Sfn During the confrontation, Zahir encountered a mercenary, Ahmad Agha al-Dinkizli, whom he commissioned to raise and command a private army of Maghrebi troops.Template:Sfn
Zahir next moved on Safed, whose Script error: No such module "lang"., Muhammad al-Naf'i, surrendered the town around 1740, after prolonged negotiations and military pressure.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Control of the strategically situated town, with its citadel built on a high hill, gave the Zaydans command over the surrounding countryside.Template:Sfn Afterward, the fortified village of Bi'ina, which had withstood a siege by Zahir in 1739, was added to his domains through an agreement sealed by Zahir's marriage to the daughter of the village Script error: No such module "lang". (headman).Template:Sfn He also acquired the fortress of Suhmata through diplomacy,Template:Sfn followed by the nearby fortified village of Deir al-Qassi, after marrying the daughter of its sheikh, Abd al-Khaliq Salih.Template:Sfn All the above gains solidified his hold over the northern and eastern Galilee. Elsewhere, Sa'd had taken control of Deir Hanna, establishing his headquarters there, while their cousin Muhammad, who was already the Script error: No such module "lang". of Damun, added Shefa-Amr to his holdings, increasing the presence of the Zaydans in the western Galilee.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn
Capture of Nazareth and conflict with Nablus
During the 1740s, Zahir extended his control to the northern part of the Marj Ibn Amer (Jezreel Valley), making it a frontier of conflict with the local strongmen of the Jenin and Nablus areas.[2] Nazareth, a mostly Christian town, came under Zahir's control by the end of 1740, following his capture of Safed.Template:Sfn Philipp contends the extension of Zahir's rule southward toward Nazareth and the neighboring Marj Ibn Amer, the wide plain between the Galilee and Jabal Nablus through which the Damascus–Nablus trade routes passed, was a drawn-out process and the precise dating of the associated events is unclear.Template:Sfn Although it administratively belonged to the Sidon Eyalet, Nazareth was controlled by the rural chiefs of Nablus Sanjak, a district of the Damascus Eyalet. The town was the residence of Zahir's first, Damascene wife and the hometown of his second wife.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Through these connections, he forged good ties with its residents.Template:Sfn They preferred Zahir, who had a reputation for religious tolerance, over the chiefs and merchants of Nablus, who they viewed as oppressive or extortionary.Template:Sfn
The dominant clans of Jabal Nablus, especially the Jarrar family, challenged Zahir's advance, recruiting the Saqr as allies. By then, the Saqr had become hostile toward Zahir, their ostensible junior partner,Template:Sfn for stemming their raids against the peasants in his territories.Template:Sfn Probably sometime after 1738, Zahir, backed by his kinsmen, Maghrebi mercenaries, and the residents of Nazareth, routed the Jarrar–Saqr coalition at the Marj Ibn Amer village of al-Rawda, near al-Mansi.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Following his victory, Zahir called for reinforcements from the people of his domains to subdue Jabal Nablus. Among them were many residents of Nazareth, including Christian women who supplied the troops with food and water.Template:Sfn Zahir's forces pursued the Jarrars to their throne village of Sanur, but withdrew after failing to capture its fortress. The defeat marked the limit of Zahir's influence south of Marj Ibn Amer and confirmed the Jarrars as the dominant force of Jabal Nablus over their rivals, the Tuqans.Template:Sfn While the Jarrars and Zahir eventually concluded a truce, the former continued to mobilize the clans of Jabal Nablus to prevent Zahir's southward expansion.Template:Sfn
Confrontations and respite with Damascus
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Zahir's rise coincided with that of the Azm family, whose members governed Damascus Eyalet for over a quarter century,Template:Sfn beginning with Isma'il Pasha al-Azm in 1725.Template:Sfn The Azms often attempted to expand their control to the provinces of Tripoli and Sidon. Isma'il Pasha's brother, Sulayman Pasha al-Azm, became governor of Sidon in 1733, before taking up office in Damascus the following year. He opposed Zahir's buildup of power on the borders of his province and encroachments into the Nablus Sanjak.Template:Sfn More alarming to the governor than Zahir's activities in Palestine were his incursions east of the Jordan River. In 1737 and 1738, he had launched raids into the Golan Heights and the Hauran plain, and attacked Damascus city. For threatening Damascus, the imperial government determined Zahir was a threat to the all-important Hajj pilgrim caravan to Mecca,Template:Sfn which was annually marshaled in Damascus and traditionally led by its governor.Template:Sfn With Constantinople's sanction,Template:Sfn Sulayman Pasha launched an abortive attack against Zahir in 1738.Template:Sfn The Banu Saqr then captured his brother, Salih, and handed him over to Sulayman Pasha, who executed him, further embittering Zahir toward the Saqr.Template:Sfn Sulayman Pasha renewed his efforts to suppress the Zaydans in 1741, enlisting his nephew, Ibrahim Pasha of Sidon, who was defeated by Zahir near Acre.Template:Sfn
In September 1742, Sulayman Pasha besieged Tiberias for ninety days,Template:Sfn with unprecedented orders from Constantinople to execute Zahir.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn The latter proclaimed his loyalty to the Ottoman sultan, but failed to sway Sulayman Pasha during ensuing negotiations.Template:Sfn When Sulayman Pasha lifted the siege to lead the Hajj caravan, Zahir marshaled French mercantile partners in Acre and Jewish allies in Tiberias to lobby the authorities in Constantinople.Template:Sfn His efforts to sway the government failed and Sulayman Pasha resumed the operation after his return to Damascus in July 1743.Template:Sfn He died suddenly in August on the outskirts of Tiberias, and Zahir used the opportunity to assault his camp and capture its weapons and goods.Template:Sfn
Sulayman Pasha's successor, his nephew As'ad Pasha al-Azm, relented from further action against Zahir.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn The following fourteen years were characterized by peace between Zahir and Damascus, partly because As'ad Pasha was dissuaded by his brother's unsuccessful experience and preoccupied with domestic affairs.Template:Sfn In late 1757, the Banu Sakhr and Sardiyya tribes launched an assault on the Hajj caravan on its return to Syria. Thousands of Muslim pilgrims were killed in the raid, including Sultan Osman III's sister. The attack shocked the government, and discredited the governor of Damascus, Husayn Pasha ibn Makki, for failing to ward off the Bedouin. Husayn Pasha had replaced As'ad Pasha, and among his priorities were subduing Zahir. He lodged a complaint to the imperial government alleging Zahir's involvement in the raid.Template:Efn Zahir denied the allegation and pressed for an investigation into the assault. To earn the government's favor, he purchased the looted goods of the caravan from the Bedouin, including the decorated banners representing the Islamic prophet Muhammad and the sovereignty of the sultan, and restored them to Sultan Mustafa III (Osman III had died on 30 October).Template:Sfn Husayn Pasha was replaced by Uthman Pasha al-Kurji in 1760.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Control of Acre and Haifa
Zahir consolidated his authority over the port of Acre in a drawn-out process starting in the 1730s.Template:Sfn Joudah views Zahir's moves as "inevitable", considering he already controlled Acre's fertile countryside and needed "an outlet to the sea" and was motivated by "potential profits".Template:Sfn Zahir had commercial dealings with the French merchants of the city through his Acre-based partner, the Melkite merchant Yusuf al-Qassis.Template:Sfn His first contact with the merchants came in 1731 when he arranged the settlement of debts owed to them by his brother Sa'd.Template:Sfn Control of Acre would greatly improve his business potential, and the peace with Damascus under As'ad Pasha enabled Zahir to focus his military resources against the city.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
In 1743,Template:Sfn Zahir had his cousin Muhammad arrested and executed to remove him as a rival for influence in Acre.Template:Sfn That year, Zahir had requested the Script error: No such module "lang". of Acre from Ibrahim Pasha, who, wary of Zahir's growing power in the province, rejected the request. Zahir took Acre by force,Template:Sfn probably in 1744,Template:Sfn and killed its Script error: No such module "lang"..Template:Sfn After mobilizing its ulema (Muslim scholars) and qadi (Islamic head judge) to petition the sultan on his behalf,Template:Sfn in July 1746, Zahir was formally appointed the Script error: No such module "lang". of Acre. In the first few years following his takeover of Acre, Zahir resided in Deir Hanna. He began fortifying Acre by building a wall around it in 1750. He built other fortifications and public buildings in Acre and promoted immigration to the city, which became his new headquarters.Template:Sfn Afterward, Zahir confiscated five villages in Sahil Akka (the coastal plain of Acre), Julis, Mazra'a, Makr, Judayda, and Sumayriyya, as personal estates, which he also developed. He installed water mills on the Na'aman River south of Acre and the Ga'aton River north of the city, both part of the 16th-century Script error: No such module "lang". (endowment) of Sinan Pasha to which he paid a fixed amount yearly.Template:Sfn
In 1757, Zahir had expanded his holdings southward, along Palestine's northern coastal plain, taking control of the villages of Haifa, Tira, and Tantura, and nearby Mount Carmel.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Ostensibly, Zahir captured the harbor village of Haifa to eliminate the base established there by Maltese pirates,Template:Sfn but he probably aimed to prevent the governors of Damascus from utilizing the port village, strategically positioned across the bay from Acre, as a launchpad against him, while also seeking another potential port for his domains.Template:Sfn While As'ad Pasha had not acted against Zahir's occupation of Haifa, Uthman Pasha sought to return the port to Damascene authority.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Acting on Uthman Pasha's request, the governor of Sidon, Nu'man Pasha, dispatched 30 Maghrebi mercenaries on a vessel captained by a Frenchman to capture Haifa in May 1761.Template:Sfn Upon arrival, Zahir had the ship confiscated, its soldiers arrested, and its captain fined. The issue over Haifa's annexation was smoothed over with the assistance of Yaqub Agha, a Constantinople-based official with friendly ties to Zahir. Yaqub Agha had a high-ranking official, Sulayman Agha, revoke the imperial order sanctioning Uthman Pasha's attempt to capture the Haifa coast.Template:Sfn
Family rebellions
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To safeguard his interests in the Galilee, particularly after establishing headquarters in Acre, Zahir installed his sons at strategic fortresses across the region. In the 1760s, many of his sons increasingly struggled against him and each other to expand their holdings in anticipation of their aging father's death.Template:Sfn
In 1761, Zahir had Uthman assassinate Sa'd, hitherto his chief adviser and a key figure behind his successes, in exchange for control of Shefa-Amr.Template:Sfn Zahir reneged after Sa'd's killing, prompting Uthman and his full-brothers Ahmad and Sa'd al-Din to besiege Shefa-Amr in 1765, but they were repulsed.Template:Sfn In May 1766, Uthman renewed his rebellion against Zahir but was again defeated.Template:Sfn Mediation by Isma'il Shihab of Hasbaya culminated in a peace summit near Tyre where Zahir and Uthman reconciled and Uthman was given control of Nazareth.Template:Sfn
In September 1767, a conflict between Zahir and his son Ali, who controlled Safed, broke out over the former's refusal to cede the strategic fortress villages of Deir Hanna and Deir al-Qassi. Before the dispute, Ali had been a key supporter of his father, helping suppress dissent among his brothers and quashing external threats. Zahir's forces marched on Safed later that month, pressuring Ali to surrender. Zahir pardoned Ali, but gave him Deir al-Qassi.Template:Sfn The intra-family conflict resumed weeks later, with Ali and his full brother Sa'id poised against Zahir and Uthman. Ibrahim Sabbagh, Zahir's financial adviser, brokered a settlement giving Sa'id control of the villages of Tur'an and Hittin.Template:Sfn Ali held out and took over Deir Hanna, which Zahir previously denied him. Joined by Zahir's eldest son, Salibi, who controlled Tiberias, Ali defeated Zahir, who had demobilized his troops and was relying on local volunteers from Acre. Zahir remobilized his Maghrebi mercenaries and defeated Ali, prompting him to flee Deir Hanna in October. Nevertheless, he pardoned Ali for a fine and ceded him the fortress village.Template:Sfn By December 1767, Zahir's intra-family disputes had subsided.Template:Sfn
The rebellions by Zahir's sons were nearly always backed by the governor of Damascus, Uthman Pasha, in a bid to sustain the internal dissent and weaken Zahir.Template:Sfn The latter lodged complaints to the imperial government about Uthman Pasha's support for his rebellious sons at least once in 1765.Template:Sfn Zahir received the support of the governor of Sidon, Muhammad Pasha al-Azm, an opponent of Uthman Pasha who sought to restore the Azms to office in Damascus. While Sidon's support had no practical military value, the support of his nominal superior provided Zahir with official legitimacy amid his family's insurrections.Template:Sfn
Alliance with the Metawalis of Jabal Amil
Zahir's takeover of the Safed region and the western Galilee removed the barriers between him and the Twelver Shia Muslim clans of Jabal Amil, the predominantly Twelver Shia hill country east of Tyre and Sidon, who were referred to in the sources as the 'Metawalis'.Template:Sfn Their territory was wedged between the Shihabs in Mount Lebanon and the Zaydans in northern Palestine.Template:Sfn In 1743, Nassar, the chief of the Ali al-Saghirs, the dominant Metawali clan in the Bilad Bishara Script error: No such module "lang"., assisted government forces in their campaign against Zahir. Around 1750, Nassar's successor, his son Zahir al-Nassar, called for Zahir's backing against the Shihabs, who had earlier killed hundreds of Shia Muslim villagers and sacked the Script error: No such module "lang". of Jabal Amil in a campaign against the Metawalis. With Zahir's support, the Ali al-Saghirs routed the Shihabs at Marjayoun.Template:Sfn Zahir al-Nassar died that year and was succeeded by his brother, Nasif al-Nassar, who soon emerged as the most powerful chief of the Metawalis.Template:Sfn
Nasif and the other Metawali chiefs backed Zahir's son Uthman during his rebellion against him in 1766, and then his other son Ali in 1767.Template:Sfn Amid the conflict, Zahir captured the fortified Metawali-held villages of Bassa and Yaroun on the borders of Zaydani territory.Template:Sfn While the contemporary al-Rukayni and the near contemporary Mikha'il Sabbagh agree that the capture of the two villages were the cause of the subsequent battles between Zahir and Nasif, they diverge on the other details.Template:Sfn After a series of clashes, the two sides fought at the village of Tarbikha on 6 October 1766. While Sabbagh claims it ended in a victory for Zahir, al-Rukayni held Nasif was the decisive victor.Template:Sfn Thereafter, Zahir's Maghrebi mercenaries supposedly employed a ruse by capturing two of Nasif's yong sons from Nasif's headquarters, the Tebnine castle, compelling Nasif to negotiate terms.Template:Sfn This account is considered a local legend by the historian Stefan Winter,Template:Sfn and Philipp deems Rukayni more reliable for these events.Template:Sfn
Despite their conflict, Zahir and the Metawalis shared an interest in limiting the power of Sidon and keeping the Druze forces of Mount Lebanon at bay.Template:Sfn Zahir's son Uthman mediated an end to the conflict and secured a treaty between Zahir and Nasif.Template:Sfn Rukayni dates the treaty ceremony to 24 November 1767.Template:Sfn According to its terms, Zahir would keep control of Bassa and Yaroun,Template:Sfn he would represent the Metawalis in their fiscal and other relations with the governor of Sidon, and he reduced their tax obligations to Sidon by a quarter. He promised his backing for the Metawalis in any confrontation with the Shihabs and the Druze, in return for the Metawalis' military support.Template:Sfn In effect, though without official recognition, Zahir became the Script error: No such module "lang". of Jabal Amil, greatly expanding his territory.Template:Sfn The backing of some 10,000 Metawali fighters significantly boosted his military potential,Template:Sfn and the Metawalis "remained faithful allies ... to the end", in the words of Philipp, participating in fifteen subsequent campaigns against Zahir's foes.Template:Sfn The alliance secured Zahir's northern borders, allowing him to focus on operations in the south.Template:Sfn
Peak of power
In 1768, the Porte partially recognized or legitimized Zahir's de facto political position by granting him the title of 'Sheikh of Acre, Emir of Nazareth, Tiberias, Safed, and Sheikh of all Galilee'.Template:Sfn This recognition was tempered when Yaqub Agha was executed shortly after and Sulayman Agha died in 1770, depriving Zahir of close allies in Constantinople. In November 1770, Uthman Pasha engineered the replacement of Sidon's governor with his own son, Darwish Pasha, and succeeded in having his other son, Muhammad Pasha, appointed to Tripoli. Uthman Pasha was committed to ending Zahir's rule, which was left especially vulnerable with the loss of support in the imperial capital.Template:Sfn In response to threats from Damascus, Zahir further strengthened Acre's fortifications and armed every adult male in the city with a rifle, two pistols and a sabre. He mended ties with his sons, who held Script error: No such module "lang". throughout the Galilee, and consolidated his relationship with the Shia clans of Jabal Amil, thereby cementing his local alliances.Template:Sfn
Alliance with Ali Bey and war with Damascus
Although Zahir was bereft of support in Constantinople and Damascus, he was forging a new alliance with the increasingly autonomous mamluk governor of Egypt and the Hejaz, Ali Bey al-Kabir. Seeking to extend his influence to Syria for strategic purposes vis-a-vis his conflict with the Porte, Ali Bey had a mutual interest with Zahir in subduing Damascus. He dispatched 15,000-20,000 Egyptian troops to the port cities of Gaza and Jaffa under commander Ismail Bey.Template:Sfn Together, Zahir and Ismail crossed the Jordan Valley with their armies and moved north toward Damascus. They made it as far as Muzayrib, but Ismail abruptly halted his army's advance after confronting Uthman Pasha as he was leading the Hajj caravan in order to avoid harming the Muslim pilgrims. Ismail considered attacking the governor at that point to be a grave religious offense. He subsequently withdrew to Jaffa.Template:Sfn
Zahir was surprised and angered by Ismail's reticence to attack. In a unilateral move to impose his authority in Uthman Pasha's jurisdiction, Zahir had his son Ahmad and other subordinate commanders collect taxes from villages in Damascus Eyalet, including Quneitra, while he dispatched Ali on a campaign against the Banu Nu'aym tribe in the Hauran, also part of Damascus.Template:Sfn In response to Zahir's indignation, Ali Bey sent him 35,000 troops under Abu al-Dhahab in May.Template:Sfn Together with Ismail's troops in Jaffa,Template:Sfn the Egyptian army captured Damascus from Uthman Pasha in June, while Zahir and his Metawali allies captured the city of Sidon from Darwish Pasha. However, Abu al-Dhahab was persuaded by Ismail that confronting the Ottoman sultan, who carried a high religious authority as the caliph of Islam, was "truly ... a scheme of the Devil" and a crime against their religion.Template:Sfn A short time after capturing Damascus, Abu al-Dhahab and Ismail withdrew from the city, whose inhabitants were "completely astonished at this amazing event", according to a chronicler of the time period.Template:Sfn The sudden turn of events compelled Zahir's forces to withdraw from Sidon on 20 June.Template:Sfn
Abu al-Dhahab's withdrawal frustrated Zahir who proceeded to make independent moves, first by capturing Jaffa in August 1771,Template:Sfn after driving out its governor Ahmad Bey Tuqan. Shortly thereafter, he captured the cotton-producing Bani Sa'b district (centered around Tulkarm), which was held by Mustafa Bey Tuqan.Template:Sfn Zahir had Jaffa fortified and garrisoned with 2,000 men.Template:Sfn By the end of August, Uthman Pasha restored his control over Ramla and Gaza, but Zahir retained Jaffa.Template:Sfn
In an attempt to expand his zone of influence to Nablus, the commercial center of Palestine and its agriculturally-rich hinterland, Zahir besieged Nablus in late 1771. By then, he had secured an alliance with the Jarrars,Template:Sfn who were incensed at Uthman Pasha's appointment of Mustafa Bey Tuqan as the collector of the Script error: No such module "lang". (Hajj caravan tax).Template:Sfn Nablus was under the de facto control of the Tuqan and Nimr clans, local rivals of the Jarrars. The loss of Jaffa and Bani Sa'b stripped Nablus of its sea access. Nablus was defended by 12,000 mostly peasant riflemen under Nimr and Tuqan commanders. After nine days of clashes, Zahir withdrew to avoid a costly stalemate. As he departed Nablus, his forces raided many of the city's satellite villages, from which its peasant defenders originated.Template:Sfn
Uthman Pasha had resumed his governorship of Damascus at the end of June 1771 and was determined to eliminate Zahir. To that end, he assembled a coalition that included Darwish Pasha, Muhammad Pasha and Yusuf Shihab. In late August, Uthman Pasha reached Lake Hula at the head of 10,000 soldiers.Template:Sfn Before Uthman Pasha could be joined by his allies, Zahir and Nasif confronted the governor on 2 September. Zahir's son Ali raided Uthman Pasha's camp, while Zahir's other troops blocked them from the west. Uthman Pasha's troops hastily retreated towards the Jordan River, the only place where they were not surrounded. The overwhelming majority drowned in the river, with only 300–500 survivors, including Uthman Pasha, who almost drowned before being rescued by one of his men. The Battle of Lake Hula marked a decisive victory for Zahir, who entered Acre triumphantly with the spoils of Uthman Pasha's camp. He was celebrated by the city's residents and on the way there, had been given honorary gun salutes by the fortified villages between Tiberias and Acre. He also received congratulations from the French merchant ships at the port of Acre. Zahir's victory encouraged Ali Bey to relaunch his Syrian campaign.Template:Sfn
Following his victory, Zahir had Darwish Pasha vacate Sidon on 13 October. He returned two days later after receiving Yusuf Shihab's backing. Zahir decided to move against Yusuf Shihab and, together with Nasif, confronted him and his 37,000 men at the village of Nabatieh on 20 October. Zahir's Metawali cavalry feigned retreat, luring Yusuf Shihab's army into a place where they were surrounded by Zahir's men, who dealt them a decisive blow. Yusuf Shihab thereafter retreated to his mountain village of Deir al-Qamar, leaving Sidon under Sheikh Ali Jumblatt and 3,000 Druze defenders. When news of Zahir's victory reached them, Ali Jumblatt and Darwish Pasha withdrew from the city, which was subsequently occupied by Zahir and Nasif. Uthman Pasha and all of his sons were consequently dismissed from their posts by the Porte.Template:Sfn Although he could not capture Nablus and its hinterland, Zahir's domain by the end of 1771 extended from Sidon to Jaffa and included an influential presence in the Hauran plain.Template:Sfn In the same year, Lajjun was the site of a decisive battle in which Zahir defeated the alliance of the Jarrars, the Saqr and the Nabulsi sheikhs, preparing his political and military hegemony over Jabal Nablus.[2]
Muhammad Tuqan captured Jaffa from Zahir in May 1772, the same month that Ali Bey arrived in Acre to seek Zahir's protection after being forced out of Egypt by rival mamluks. In June, the Ottoman loyalist Jazzar Pasha took over Beirut from local Druze sheikhs. The Druze had previously been in conflict with Zahir, but due to Jazzar's offensive, the circumstances fostered an alliance between them, Zahir, and the Metawali clans. Zahir and Ali Bey captured Jaffa with help from the Russian Fleet after a nine-month siege, in which they exhausted many of their resources. Before that, in late October 1772, Zahir and his Druze and Metawali allies captured Beirut from Jazzar, also with Russian naval support.Template:Sfn
In March 1773, Ali Bey left Palestine to reestablish himself in Egypt, but Abu al-Dhahab had him killed when he arrived.Template:Sfn With this came an end to the alliance that politically and economically aligned Egypt and Palestine for the first time since the early 16th century.Template:Sfn While their attempts to unite their territories were unsuccessful, their rule posed the most serious domestic challenge to Ottoman rule in the 18th century.Template:Sfn As a consequence of Ali Bey's death, Zahir moved to strengthen his hold over Jaffa and capture Jerusalem, but he failed in the latter attempt. All of Syria came under the official command of Uthman Pasha al-Misri in 1774 in order to bring stability to its provinces. Misri avoided conflict with Zahir and sought to establish friendly terms with him. He convinced the Porte to appoint Zahir governor of Sidon as long as Zahir paid all of the taxes the province had owed the Porte. Misri further promoted Zahir in February by declaring him 'Governor of Sidon, Nablus, Gaza, Ramla, Jaffa and Jabal Ajlun', although this title was not imperially sanctioned.Template:Sfn In effect, Zahir was the de facto ruler over Palestine (with the exception of Nablus and Jerusalem), Jabal Amil, and the Syrian coast from Gaza to Beirut.Template:Sfn
Downfall and death
Misri was recalled to Constantinople in the summer of 1774 and Muhammad Pasha al-Azm was appointed governor of Damascus. Zahir's governorship of Sidon was thus left vulnerable because it had largely depended on guarantees from Misri. Azm sought peaceful relations with Zahir, but the Porte, having made peace with Russia and relieving itself from the Russo-Ottoman War, aimed to move against the rebellious rulers of its provinces, including Zahir. Azm secured an official pardon of Zahir from the Porte in April 1775, but his governorship of Sidon was not preserved. Meanwhile, conflict between Zahir and his sons was renewed, with Ali attempting to capture Zahir's villages in the Galilee in 1774. Zahir defeated Ali with support from his other son Ahmad. Later that year, Zahir's rule was challenged by his son Sa'id,Template:Sfn Zahir armed and mobilized 300 of Acre's civilian inhabitants to counter Sa'id.Template:Sfn Ali continued to undermine his father's rule by encouraging defections by his Maghrebi mercenaries through bribes.Template:Sfn
On 20 May 1775, Abu al-Dhahab, having been encouraged by the Porte to eradicate Zahir's influence, captured Jaffa and slaughtered its male inhabitants. News of the massacre spurred the people of Acre into a mass panic, with its residents fleeing and storing their goods in the city's Khan al-Ifranj caravanserai for safekeeping. On 24 May, Zahir also departed the city, leaving for Sidon.Template:Sfn Ali subsequently entered and declared himself governor. However, his Maghrebi troops abandoned him and looted the city as Abu al-Dhahab's troops approached it a few days later.Template:Sfn They proceeded to conquer Sidon by sea, prompting Zahir to seek shelter with Metawali allies in Jabal Amil.Template:Sfn Some of Zahir's sons attempted to secure their own peace with Abu al-Dhahab, but the latter became ill and died on 10 June, causing the collapse and chaotic withdrawal of his Egyptian troops from Acre. Zahir reentered the city two days later and reestablished order with the assistance of Dinkizli.Template:Sfn However, the setback of Abu al-Dhahab's death did not preclude the Porte from attempting to check Zahir's power and Sidon remained in direct government control.Template:Sfn
On 23 April, the Porte dispatched the Ottoman Navy admiral, Hasan Pasha al-Jazayiri, to blockade Acre. He reached Haifa on 7 August, taking Jaffa from Zahir's son-in-law, Karim al-Ayyubi.Template:Sfn Hasan Pasha ordered Zahir to pay arrears of the Script error: No such module "lang". accruing from 1768. Zahir initially agreed to pay 500,000 piasters of the total amount upfront and a further 50,000 piasters to Hasan Pasha personally to "spare the blood of the people".Template:Sfn Hasan Pasha accepted Zahir's proposals, but the arrangements fell apart.Template:Sfn
The accounts differ as to why the negotiations collapsed, but agree that their failure was the result of disputes within Zahir's inner circle between Sabbagh and Dinkizli.Template:Sfn Most accounts claim that Sabbagh urged Zahir not to pay the requested sums and agitated for war. Sabbagh argued that Zahir's treasury lacked the funds and that Zahir's forces were capable of defeating Hasan Pasha. Dinkizli pressed Zahir to pay, arguing that mass bloodshed could be averted. He advised Zahir to force Sabbagh to pay the amount if Zahir could not afford it. When the negotiations dragged on, Hasan Pasha pressed for a full repayment of the Script error: No such module "lang". arrears, warning Zahir that he would be executed if he failed to do so. Insulted by the threat, he threatened to destroy Hasan Pasha's fleet unless he withdrew.Template:Sfn
Hasan Pasha proceeded to bombard Acre, and Zahir's Maghrebi artillerymen responded with cannon fire, damaging two of imperial ships. The following day, Hasan Pasha's fleet fired roughly 7,000 shells against Acre without returning fire from the city's artillerymen;Template:Sfn Dinkizli ordered his Maghrebi forces to disengage because as Muslims they were prohibited from attacking the sultan's military. Realizing his long-time lieutenant's betrayal, Zahir attempted to flee Acre on 21 August or 22 August. As he departed its gates, he was fired on by Ottoman troops, with a bullet striking his neck and causing him to fall off his horse. A Maghrebi soldier then decapitated him. Zahir's severed head was subsequently delivered to Constantinople.Template:Sfn
Aftermath
Following his death, Sabbagh and Zahir's sons Abbas and Salih were arrested by Hasan Pasha's men.Template:Sfn Sabbagh was executed by Hasan Pasha. The sons were imprisoned in Constantinople. The Porte confiscated property belonging to Zahir, his sons and Sabbagh, valued at 41,500,000 piasters. Also arrested with Zahir's sons was their physician, who was known to be skilled. The physician was summoned by the sultan to treat his ailing wife, which he did successfully, earning him his release and a medal of honor from the sultan. The physician used his influence with the authorities to have Zahir's children and grandchildren released and returned to their hometowns.Template:Sfn Dinkizli was rewarded with the governorship of Gaza, but died en route to his new headquarters, likely having been poisoned by Hasan Pasha.Template:Sfn
Zahir's sons Uthman, Ahmad, Sa'id and Ali continued to resist government forces, with Ali putting up the longest fight from his fortress in Deir Hanna. On 22 July 1776, the fortress capitulated to the combined forces of Hasan Pasha and Jazzar Pasha. Ali fled, but was killed later that year in the area between Tiberias and Safed. By then, the rest of Zahir's sons had been arrested or killed. Abbas was later appointed by Sultan Selim III as the sheikh of Safed. In 1799, when Napoleon invaded Palestine and withdrew after being defeated by Jazzar in Acre, Abbas and Salih left Safed with the departing French forces. This marked the end of Zaydani influence in the Galilee.Template:Sfn
Constantin-François Volney, who wrote the first European biography of Zahir in 1787,Template:Sfn lists three main reasons for Zahir's failure. First, the lack of "internal good order and justness of principle". Secondly, the early concessions he made to his children. Third, and most of all, the avarice of his adviser and confidant, Ibrahim Sabbagh.Template:Sfn
Politics
Administration
Zahir appointed many of his brothers and sons as local administrators, particularly after he consolidated his control over Acre,Template:Sfn which became the capital of his territory. Except for Acre and Haifa, Zahir divided the remainder of his territory between his relatives.Template:Sfn His eldest brother was appointed to Deir Hanna, and his younger brothers Yusuf and Salih were installed in I'billin and Arraba, respectively.Template:Sfn Zahir appointed his eldest son Salibi as the Script error: No such module "lang". of Tiberias.Template:Sfn Salibi was killed in 1773 fighting alongside Ali Bey's forces in Egypt.Template:Sfn His death deeply distressed Zahir, who was around 80 years old at the time.Template:Sfn He appointed Uthman in Kafr Kanna then Shefa-Amr, Abbas in Nazareth, Ali in Safed, and Ahmad in Saffuriya. Ahmad replaced Salibi in Tiberias as well, and also conquered Ajlun and Salt in Transjordan. Ahmad was given authority over Deir Hanna after Sa'd's death. Zahir appointed his son-in-law Karim al-Ayyubi in Jaffa and Gaza,Template:Sfn while Dinkizli was made Script error: No such module "lang". in Sidon in 1774. The appointment of Zahir's relatives and close associates was meant to ensure the efficient administration of his expanding realm and the loyalty of his circle. Among their chief functions was to ensure the supply of cotton to Acre. It is not clear if these posts were recognized by the Ottoman government.Template:Sfn
Zahir had an aide who jointly served in the capacity of Script error: No such module "lang". (manager) and vizier to assist him throughout much of his rule in matters of finance and correspondence.Template:Sfn This official had always been a Melkite (local Greek Catholic). His first vizier was Yusuf al-Arqash,Template:Sfn followed by Yusuf Qassis in 1749. Qassis continued in this role until the early 1760s when he was arrested for attempting to smuggle wealth he had accumulated during his service to Malta.Template:Sfn He was succeeded by Ibrahim Sabbagh,Template:Sfn who had served as a personal physician for Zahir in 1757 when he replaced Zahir's longtime physician Sulayman Suwwan. The latter was a local Greek Orthodox Christian and when he failed to properly treat Zahir during a serious illness in 1757, Qassis used the opportunity to replace him with Sabbagh, a friend and fellow Melkite.Template:Sfn Sabbagh became the most influential figure in Zahir's administration, particularly as Zahir grew old. This caused consternation among Zahir's sons as they viewed Sabbagh to be a barrier between them and their father and an impediment to their growing power in Zahir's territory. Sabbagh was able to gain increased influence with Zahir largely because of the wealth he amassed through his integral role in managing Zahir's cotton monopoly. Much of this wealth was acquired through Sabbagh's own deals where he would purchase cotton and other cash crops from the local farmers and sell them to the European merchants in Syria's coastal cities and to his Melkite partners in Damietta, Egypt.Template:Sfn Sabbagh served other important roles as well, including as Zahir's political adviser, main administrator and chief representative with European merchants and Ottoman provincial and imperial officials.Template:Sfn
There were other officials in Zahir's civil administration in Acre, including chief religious officials, namely the mufti and the qadi (judge). The mufti was the chief scholar among the ulema (Muslim scholarly community) and oversaw the interpretation of Islamic law in Zahir's realm. Although he was appointed by the Sublime Porte, Zahir managed to maintain the same mufti for many years at a time in contrast with the typical Syrian province which saw its mufti replaced annually.Template:Sfn The mufti was a Damascene, Abd al-Halim al-Shuwayki, who had been an old friend of Zahir's family when they were based in Tiberias and had often hosted Zahir during his business trips to Damascus.Template:Sfn Zahir directly appointed the qadi from Palestine's local ulema, but his judicial decisions had to be approved by the qadi of Sidon.Template:Sfn Zahir had a chief imam, who in the last years of his rule was Ali ibn Khalid of Sha'ab.Template:Sfn An agha was also appointed to supervise the customs payments made by the European merchants in Acre and Haifa.Template:Sfn
Zahir's initial military forces consisted of his Zaydani kinsmen and the inhabitants of the areas he ruled. They numbered about 200 men in the early 1720s, but grew to about 1,500 in the early 1730s. During this early period of Zahir's career, he also had the key military backing of the Banu Saqr and other Bedouin tribes. As he consolidated his hold over Galilee, his army rose to over 4,000 men, many of the later recruits being peasants who supported Zahir for protecting them against Bedouin raids. This suppression of the Bedouin in turn caused the tribes to largely withdraw their military backing of Zahir. The core of his private army were the Maghrebi mercenaries. The Maghrebis' commander, Dinkizli, also served as Zahir's top military commander from 1735 until Dinkizli's defection during the Ottoman siege of Acre in 1775. From the time Zahir reconciled with Sheikh Nasif of Jabal Amil in 1768 until most of the remainder of his rule, Zahir also counted on the support of Nasif's roughly 10,000 Metawali cavalrymen. However, the Metawalis did not aid Zahir during the Ottoman offensive of 1775. Zahir's fortified villages and towns were equipped with artillery installments and his army's arsenal consisted of cannons, matchlock rifles, pistols and lances. Most of the firearms were imported from Venice or France, and by the early 1770s, the Russian imperial navy.Template:Sfn
General security
According to Joudah, the two principal conditions Zahir established to foster his sheikhdom's prosperity and its survival were "security and justice".Template:Sfn Before Zahir's consolidation of power, the villages of northern Palestine were prone to Bedouin raids and robberies and the roads were under constant threat from highway robbers and Bedouin attacks. Despite being left destitute following the looting raids, the inhabitants of these agrarian villages remained obligated to pay the Ottoman government the Script error: No such module "lang".. To avoid punitive measures for not paying the Script error: No such module "lang"., the inhabitants would abandon their villages for safety in the larger towns or the desert. This situation hurt the economy of the region as the raids sharply reduced the villages' agricultural output, tax collectors could not collect their impositions, and trade could not be safely conducted due to the insecurity of the roads.Template:Sfn
By 1746, Zahir had established order in the lands he controlled.Template:Sfn He coopted the dominant Bedouin tribe of the region, the Banu Saqr, which greatly contributed to the establishment of security in northern Palestine.Template:Sfn Moreover, Zahir charged the sheikhs of the towns and villages of northern Palestine with ensuring the safety of the roads in their respective vicinity and required them to compensate anyone who was robbed of their property. General security reached a level whereby "an old woman with gold in her hand could travel from one place to another without fear or danger", according to Zahir's biographer Sabbagh.Template:Sfn
The period of calm that persisted between 1744 and 1765 greatly boosted the security and economy of the Galilee. The security established in the region encouraged people from other parts of the empire to immigrate there.Template:Sfn Conflict between the local clans and between Zahir and his sons remained limited to periodic clashes, while there were no external attacks against Zahir's domains.Template:Sfn While Zahir used force to strengthen his position, the local inhabitants generally took comfort in his rule, which historian Thomas Philip described as "relatively just and reasonably fair".Template:Sfn According to the traveler Richard Pococke, who visited the area in 1737, the local people had great admiration for Zahir, especially for his war against bandits on the roads.Template:Sfn
Economic policies
In addition to providing security, Zahir and his local deputies adopted a policy of aiding peasants cultivate and harvest their farmlands as a means to ensure the steady supply of agricultural products for export. These benefits included loans to peasants and the distribution of free seeds.Template:Sfn Financial burdens on the peasants were also reduced as Zahir offered tax relief during dry seasons or when harvests were poor.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn This same tax relief was extended to newcomers who sought to begin cultivating new farmlands.Template:Sfn Moreover, Zahir assumed responsibility for outstanding payments the peasants owed to merchants from credit-based transactions, if the merchants could provide proof of unsatisfactory payment.Template:Sfn According to Philipp, Zahir "had the good business sense not to exploit peasants to the point of destruction, but kept his financial demands to a more moderate level".Template:Sfn He regularly paid the Ottoman authorities their financial dues, ensuring a degree of stability in his relationship with the sultanate.Template:Sfn
After Zahir conquered Acre, he transformed it from a decaying village into a fortified market hub for Palestinian products, including silk, wheat, olive oil, tobacco and cotton, which he exported to Europe.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Zahir monopolized the cotton market, controlling its production and foreign export. He did business with European merchants based in northern Palestine's ports, who competed with one another for the cotton and grain cultivated in the rural villages under Zahir's control or influence in the Galilee's hinterland and Jabal Amil.Template:Sfn Before this, European merchants dealt directly with local cotton growers, but Zahir, with the help of Sabbagh, ended this system by assuming the role of middleman between the foreign merchants and the growers living under his rule. This allowed him to both monopolize cotton production and the merchants' price for the product.Template:Sfn Zahir's pricing for the local cash crops prevented "exploitation" of the peasants and local merchants by European merchants and their "manipulation of the prices", according to Joudah.Template:Sfn This caused financial losses to the Europeans, who lodged numerous complaints to the French and English ambassadors to the Ottoman government. A formal agreement to regulate commerce between Zahir and the European merchants was reached in 1753.Template:Sfn Zahir further encouraged trade by offering local merchants interest-free loans.Template:Sfn
The high European demand for cotton enabled Zahir to become wealthy and finance his autonomous sheikhdom. Control of the cotton market also allowed him to gain practical control of the Sidon Eyalet, except for the city of Sidon.Template:Sfn With mixed success, Zahir attempted to have French merchant ships redirected from the ports of Tyre and Sidon to Haifa, in order to benefit from the customs fees he could exact.Template:Sfn Acre underwent an economic boom as a result of its position in the cotton trade with France.Template:Sfn
Relationship with religious minorities
Zahir governed with religious tolerance and encouraged the involvement of religious minorities in the local economy. As part of his wider efforts to increase the Galilee's population,Template:Sfn Zahir invited Jews to settle in Tiberias around 1742,Template:Sfn along with Muslims.Template:Sfn He did not consider Jews to be a threat to his rule and believed that their connections with the Jewish diaspora would encourage economic development in Tiberias, which the Jews considered particularly holy. His tolerance towards the Jews, the cuts in taxes levied on them, and assistance in the construction of Jewish homes, schools and synagogues, helped foster the growth of the Jewish community.Template:Sfn The initial Jewish immigrants came from Damascus and were later followed by Jews from Aleppo, Cyprus and Smyrna.Template:Sfn Many Jews in Safed, which was governed by Zahir's son Ali, moved to Tiberias in the 1740s to take advantage of better opportunities in that city, which at the time was under Zahir's direct rule.Template:Sfn Jewish communities were also established in the villages of Kafr Yasif and Shefa-Amr under Zahir's watch.Template:Sfn
Zahir encouraged the settlement of Christians in Acre,Template:Sfn in order to contribute to the city's commercial dynamism in trade and manufacturing.Template:Sfn Christians grew to become the largest religious group in the city by the late 18th century.Template:Sfn Zahir's territory became a haven for Melkites and Greek Orthodox from other parts of Ottoman Syria, who migrated there for better trade and employment opportunities. In Nazareth, the Christian community prospered and grew, receiving an influx of Maronites and Greek Orthodox from Mount Lebanon and Transjordan, respectively.Template:Sfn The Melkite patriarch was based in Acre between 1765 and 1768.Template:Sfn Along with Jews, Christians contributed to the economy of Zahir's sheikhdom through their relative ease in dealing with Christian European merchants, the financial support networks many of them maintained in Damascus or Constantinople, and their role in service industries.Template:Sfn
Zahir allowed the Franciscan community of Nazareth to build churches in 1730, 1741 and 1754 on sites Christians associated with the life of Jesus. He allowed the Greek Orthodox community to build St. Gabriel's Church over a ruined Crusader church in Nazareth,Template:Sfn and in 1750 they enlarged St. George's Church. The largest Christian community in Acre, the Melkites, built the city's largest church, St. Andrew's Church, in 1764, while the Maronites built St. Mary's Church for their congregation in 1750. As a testament to the exceptional prosperity Christians enjoyed under Zahir, no further churches were built under the auspices of the less tolerant successive rulers of Acre and the Galilee.Template:Sfn
A strong relationship was maintained between Zahir and the Shia Muslim peasants of Jabal Amil and their sheikhs and merchant class. Zahir maintained law and order in Jabal Amil, while leaving its mostly Shia inhabitants to their own devices. The Shia also benefited economically from Zahir's monopoly of the cotton industry and their sheikhs provided him men of great military skills.Template:Sfn Zahir was a key backer of the Shia in their successful conflict with the Druze Jumblatt clan and the Shihabs under Mulhim.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
The relationship between Zahir and the rural sheikhs of the Druze of Mount Lebanon under the Shihabs were mixed. While Mansur Shihab of the Chouf allied with Zahir, his nephew and rival, Yusuf Shihab of the Tripoli region remained supportive of the Ottomans.Template:Sfn Owing largely to the conflict between Zahir and the Druze emirs of Mount Lebanon, the Druze of the Galilee did not fare well under Zahir and his Zaydani clan. In the oral traditions of the Galilee's Druze, Zahir's reign was synonymous with oppression. During this period, many Druze villages were destroyed or abandoned, and there was a partial Druze exodus from the Galilee, especially from the villages around Safed, to the Hauran.Template:Sfn
Family
Zahir had five wives during his lifetime.Template:Sfn His marriages were politically advantageous, helping to seal his rule over areas he captured and consolidate relationships with Bedouin tribes, local clans, or urban notables.Template:Sfn His first wife was the daughter of the Damascene religious notable, Sayyid Muhammad al-Husayni.Template:Sfn Among his other wives was a woman from the Sardiyya tribe,Template:Sfn and the daughters of the Script error: No such module "lang". of Bi'ina and Deir al-Qassi.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Zahir had eight sons from his wives,Template:Sfn and according to Tobias Smollett, a daughter as well.Template:Sfn His sons, from eldest to youngest, were Salibi, Ali, Uthman, Sa'id, Ahmad, Salih, Sa'd al-Din and Abbas.Template:Sfn His daughter Nijma was married to Karim al-Ayyubi,Template:Sfn who was a cousin of Zahir.Template:Sfn By 1773, Zahir had a total of 272 children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren.Template:Sfn
As Zahir consolidated his power and reduced external threats to his rule in the 1760s, his sons aspired for more influence and ultimately fought against their father and each other in order to secure their place as Zahir's successor. Besides support from elements of the Zaydani clan, Zahir's sons maintained their own power bases, largely derived from their mothers' clans, and also made their own alliances with other powerful actors in the region. Zahir was victorious in the many conflicts he had with his sons, but their frequent dissent weakened his rule and contributed to his downfall. Before his sons' rebellions, Zahir had eliminated other relatives who challenged his power.Template:Sfn
Legacy
Zahir's rule radically changed the urban landscape of the Galilee.Template:Sfn The historian Mahmoud Yazbak credits Zahir for the revival of the Galilee's main centers, Acre, Haifa, Tiberias, and Nazareth, and their socioeconomic rise, which put them on par with Nablus, Palestine's principal commercial center. All four towns had been small villages before Zahir stimulated their urbanization and prosperity.Template:Sfn With the restoration and refortification of Acre and the establishment of the secondary harbor town of Haifa, the Galilee's ties with the Mediterranean world were significantly strengthened.Template:Sfn Following his death, his successor Jazzar Pasha maintained the cotton monopoly Zahir had established and the Galilee's economy remained almost completely dependent on the cotton trade. The region prospered for decades, but with the rise of cotton production in the southern United States during the early–mid-19th century, European demand shifted away from Palestine's cotton. Because of its dependency on the crop, the region experienced a sharp economic downturn from which it could not recover. The cotton crop was largely abandoned, as were many villages, and the peasantry shifted its focus to subsistence agriculture.Template:Sfn
In the late 19th century, the Palestine Exploration Fund's Claude Reignier Conder wrote that the Ottomans had successfully destroyed the power of Palestine's indigenous ruling families who "had practically been their own masters" but had been "ruined so that there is no longer any spirit left in them".Template:Sfn Among these families were the "proud race" of Zahir, which was still held in high esteem, but was powerless and poor.Template:Sfn Zahir's modern-day descendants in the Galilee use the surname 'Dhawahri' or 'al-Zawahirah' in Zahir's honor. The Dhawahri constitute one of the traditional elite Muslim clans of Nazareth, alongside the Fahum, Zu'bi and Onallas families.Template:Sfn Other places in the Galilee where descendants of Zahir's clan live are Bi'ina and Kafr Manda and, before its 1948 destruction, Damun. Many of the inhabitants of modern-day northern Israel, particularly the towns and villages where Zahir or his family left an architectural legacy, hold Zahir in high regard.Template:Sfn
Although he was mostly overlooked by historians of the Middle East, some scholars view Zahir's rule as a forerunner to Palestinian nationalism.Template:Sfn Among them is Karl Sabbagh, who asserts the latter view in his book Palestine: A Personal History, which was widely reviewed in the British press in 2010.[3] Zahir was gradually integrated into Palestinian historiography.Template:Sfn In Murad Mustafa Dabbagh's Biladuna Filastin (1965), a multi-volume work about Palestine's history, Zahir is referred to as the "greatest Palestinian appearing in the eighteenth century".Template:Sfn The Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) radio station, Voice of Palestine, broadcast a series about Zahir in 1966, praising him as a Palestinian national hero who fought against Ottoman imperialism.Template:Sfn Zahir is considered by many Arab nationalists as a pioneer of Arab liberation from foreign occupation.Template:Sfn According to Joudah, <templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />
However historians may look at Shaykh Zahir al-'Umar and his movement, he is highly respected by the Arabs of the East. In particular the Palestinians consider him a national hero who struggled against Ottoman authority for the welfare of his people. This praise is reflected in the recent academic, cultural and literary renaissance within Palestinian society that has elevated Zahir and his legacy to near-iconic status. These re-readings are not always bound to historical objectivity but are largely inspired by the ongoing consequences of the Nakba. Still it is precise to say that Shaykh Zahir had successfully established an autonomous state, or a "little Kingdom," as Albert Hourani called it, in most of Palestine for over a quarter of a century.Template:Sfn
Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Palestinian academic Nur Masalha described Zahir as "the founding father of early Palestinian modernities and social renewal".[4] Masalha further argued that Palestine under the rule of Zahir was "the closest Palestine got to a modern independent state".[5]
Building works
Zahir and his family built fortresses, watchtowers, warehouses, and khans (caravanserais). These buildings improved the domestic administration and general security of the Galilee. Today, many are in a state of disrepair and remain outside the scope of Israel's cultural preservation laws.Template:Sfn
Acre
Zahir rebuilt the Crusader walls around Acre.Template:Sfn Although considerable in their extent, Zahir's walls were designed to ward off pirates and Bedouin raiders, and could not defend well against the Ottoman military. Under Jazzar Pasha, major reconstruction of the walls was undertaken and the new walls largely remain in place in the present day. Part of Zahir's contributions are extant, mainly a section of the northeastern wall, and are characterized by small stone blocks.Template:Sfn An inscription dated to 1750 on a marble slab that was removed from this part of the wall credits Zahir as the builder:
<templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />
By the order of Allah this wall was erected in Akka [Acre] by a nobleman who generously acted.
The father of the heroes he is, the beloved Zahir.
May Allah reinforce his government forever.Template:Sfn
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He also built on top of a number of Crusader and Mamluk structures in the city. Among these were the caravanserais of Khan al-Shawarda and its Burj al-Sultan tower and Khan al-Shunah.Template:Sfn The Crusader plan and main structure of Khan al-Shunah was preserved by Zahir in his restoration of the building in 1764, and it remained in use as an inn and market for traders until Haifa overtook Acre as the commercial center of the region in the late 19th century. It thereafter became housing for the poor.Template:Sfn The original structure of the Suq al-Abyad (the White Bazaar), located in the northeastern corner of the walled city, was built by Zahir, though most of the present structure dates to an 1815 reconstruction by Acre's governor, Sulayman Pasha.Template:Sfn
In 1748, Zahir commissioned the construction of the Muallaq Mosque. The building had been used as a synagogue; after Zahir converted it for Muslim use, he compensated the Jewish worshippers with property elsewhere in the city.Template:Sfn The Zaytuna Mosque was built in Acre during his rule at the initiative of Hajj Muhammad al-Sadiq, or the local scholar Muhammad Shadi al-Farid, who financed its construction.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Nazareth
Zahir built the Seraya government house in Nazareth,Template:Sfn which served as the city's municipal headquarters until 1991.[6]
Haifa
Between 1765 and 1769, Zahir had Haifa demolished and rebuilt and fortified at a site Script error: No such module "convert". to the southeast. While the old village was situated on a plain, the new town, which remained a port along the Haifa Bay, was built on a narrow strip of land at the northern foot of Mount Carmel to make it easier to defend by land.Template:Sfn In the new Haifa, Zahir built a wall around the town with four towers and two gates,Template:Sfn none of which are extant.Template:Sfn They existed at least until the early 19th century when David Roberts described and sketched the wall. Within Haifa, Zahir built Burj al-Salam, a two-story square tower, which remained intact until the 1970s.Template:Sfn The original great mosque in new Haifa was probably built by Zahir, but most of the present building is a later construction.Template:Sfn He also built a customs building and a Script error: No such module "lang". (government residence).Template:Sfn The remains of the Script error: No such module "lang". consist of a few cross-vaults lying on square pillars in a car park, while the eastern section of the structure is used for warehousing.Template:Sfn
Tiberias
Zahir built fortifications around Tiberias in 1739–1740. Part of the walls originally ran along the shore of the Sea of Galilee and had eighteen towers. The fortifications were severely damaged in the 1837 earthquake. Most of the walls have been destroyed or form part of modern structures, while eight of the towers are extant.Template:Sfn
The two-story square citadel with its four-round towers, located at the northeastern section of the fortifications, remains extant. Both stories of the citadel are characterized by three rows of cross vaults.Template:Sfn The citadel was built by Zahir's son Salibi.Template:Sfn As of 2001, the upper floor was operated as a restaurant, while the lower floor contained an art gallery.Template:Sfn The citadel is locally often misidentified as the "Crusader castle/fortress".
In the present center of Tiberias, Zahir built a mosque, known after him as the Omari Mosque or the Zahiri Mosque.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn It consists of a prayer hall, a portico and a minaret.Template:Sfn It was built with alternating white and black stone, typical of the architectural style of Zahir's building works.Template:Sfn While there have been restorations since it was first constructed in the 1740s, the mosque retains its original plan.Template:Sfn
Villages
Fortifications and other structures were built in the rural villages under Zahir's control.Template:Sfn The Zaydans built a double wall around Deir Hanna, making it "the best example of a fortified village in the Galilee", according to Andrew Petersen.Template:Sfn Zahir's brother Sa'd built the inner walls and the twelve towers which hovered over them, while Zahir built the outer walls. His son Ali added towers, detached from the walls, in front of the eastern and western sides.Template:Sfn They also built a palace complex, including a mosque.Template:Sfn The Zaydans' building works in Deir Hanna were severely damaged during Jazzar Pasha's siege.Template:Sfn Nonetheless, considerable parts of the structures remain intact and as late as 1960, the town retained the same form of the fortress, with no structures built outside of the lines of the original fortifications.Template:Sfn
North of Deir Kifa (in Lebanon) Zahir built the castle of Kulat Marun.Template:Sfn In Khirbat Jiddin, Zahir rebuilt the demolished Crusader fortress with the addition of a mosque and hammam (bathhouse). The mosque was destroyed by Israeli forces when the village was captured during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.Template:Sfn In Shefa-Amr, Zahir's son Uthman built a large fortress with four towers, of which one remains standing.Template:Sfn His son Ahmad rebuilt the Crusader fortress in Saffuriya.Template:Sfn In the village of I'billin, Zahir's brother Yusuf built fortifications and a mosque.Template:Sfn The I'billin fortress was later used as the headquarters of Aqil Agha, the 19th-century, semi-autonomous Arab sheikh of the Galilee.Template:Sfn
In Tibnin, in modern Lebanon,Template:Sfn and in Safed, Zahir or his son Ali rebuilt Crusader fortifications.Template:Sfn Zahir fortified the village of Harbaj, though the village and its fort were in ruins by the late 19th century.Template:Sfn At Tabgha on the Sea of Galilee, Zahir built five fountains, one of which remained standing by the 19th century. That remaining fountain was the largest of its kind in the Galilee.Template:Sfn
See also
- Fakhr al-Din II, tax farmer and local strongman of Mount Lebanon, the Galilee, and the adjacent coasts in the late 16th–early 17th centuries.
- District of Acre
- Gigi and Bella Hadid: American models, claims descent from Zahir al-Umar through their father, Mohamed Hadid
Notes
References
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- ↑ DAAHL Site Record for Suhmata, The Digital Archaeological Atlas of the Holy Land (DAAHL), accessed 25 Sep 2024.
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Sources
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Further reading
- Pages with script errors
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- 17th-century births
- 1775 deaths
- 18th-century people from the Ottoman Empire
- Arab people from Ottoman Palestine
- Ottoman governors of Gaza
- Ottoman governors of Sidon
- Rebels from the Ottoman Empire
- People from Arraba, Israel
- People killed in action
- Zaydani family
- Ottoman rulers of Galilee
- 17th-century Arab people
- 18th-century Arab people