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The Ottoman Turks (AD 1516 - 1917)
History of Palestine
To win over
the Arabs, the conquering Turks declared themselves champions of
Islam; and to prove their point Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent
(1520 - 1566) built a new wall for Jerusalem. The Khasseki
Sultan, the favourite wife of Suleiman, built a complex in
Jerusalem to feed and shelter the poor and the distressed. The
complex included a monastry and an inn with a public kitchen,
Bakery, stables and store rooms. During the British Mandate
khasseki Sultan's public kitchen and bakery were still
functioning.
Palestine, however, continued slumbering, as Constantinople's un declared policy
was to keep its subjects illiterate. As Europe advanced through
its schools and universities, Palestine and the rest of the Arab
countries stagnated in illiteracy. During the seventeenth
century, the Ottomans went into defensive to protect their large
empire, which stretched from Hungary to Egypt. They conscripted
large numbers of Palestinian peasants into the Turkish army, and
the fertile plains of Palestine once again began to erode.
To block
Britain's trade route with India and the far East, Napoleon
Bonaparte invaded Egypt, then Palestine, in February 1799, after
besieging Jaffa, the French army savagely massacred the local
population. When a pernicious plague began devastating the
French army, the French interpreted this as a Divine retribution
for the sins which they had committed in the Holy Land. A
demoralized French army moved northwards to capture Acre but its
ruler, Ahmed Al-Jazzar, held off Napoleon despite a steady,
concerted French bombardment. Acre was finally relieved when
thirty Ottoman ships landed 10,000 Anglo-Turkish troops.
Napoleon ordered the burning of he harvest in the surrounding
area and, for the first time, was forced to retreat. He made his
way back, from where he sailed for France.
The long
Dark Age which had gripped Palestine finally began to lift when
Ibrahim Pasha of Egypt invaded Palestine in November 1831.
Ibrahim Pasha was the son of Mohammed Ali, Egypt's colorful
ruler who defied Turkey as the new power of the Middle East.
Ibrahim Pasha opened a string of Arabic schools in Palestine,
and he even encouraged the European missionaries to open schools
to educate the Palestinian Christians. Ibrahim's ten-year rule
of Palestine (1831 - 1840) was sufficient to spark off the
long-awaited renaissance for the Holy Land. Great Britain,
However, finally sided with Turkey against Egypt, and Ibrahim
Pasha was forced to retreat back home. The Turks reoccupied
Palestine and immediately closed down Ibrahim's schools, but out
of fear of reaction from the West, they kept clear of the
missionary schools.
After 1840,
European interests in Palestine steadily increased. Consulates
and vice-consulates of the greater powers were established in
Jerusalem and in some of the Palestinian seaports. Rivalry
between the Latins, championed by Tzarist Russia, reached
preposterous levels when they entered into a bitter feud over
who had the right to mark with a star the birthplace of Christ
in the Church of Nativity at Bethlehem. The feud sparked off
much international tension, and it became one of the prime
causes of the Crimean War.
In 1898,
Kaiser Wihelm II of Germany paid a visit to Palestine,
signalling to the European powers Germany's interests in the
Arab East. When World War I broke out, Turkey sided with Germany
against Great Britain. Great Britain, which had earlier occupied
Egypt, now braced itself for Turkish attacks on the strategic
Suez Canal.
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