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Bedouin Tribes of the
Karak Region

Virtual Karak Resources Project - VKRP
Virtual Karak Resources Project - VKRP
Virtual Karak Resources Project - VKRP
Virtual Karak Resources Project - VKRP
Virtual Karak Resources Project - VKRP
Virtual Karak Resources Project - VKRP
Virtual Karak Resources Project - VKRP

Eveline J. van der Steen

THE BEDOUIN TRIBES OF THE KARAK REGION

Click to see larger image!With the building of a fortress at Karak by the crusaders the town acquired an importance within the region that lasts until the present day. During the Ayyubid and the first part of the Mamluk periods Karak had an important function in the economy and political structure of the empire. According to Burchard of Mount Zion, who wrote around 1230, Karak was one of the strongholds of the sultan, who used it as a treasury.

Click to see larger image!The social organization of the Levant has always, from the Early Bronze Age on, and probably before that, been determined by tribal structures. This means that the tribe was the basis of society. Often there was a ruling superstructure, like a kingdom or an empire. The tribes could either cooperate with the ruling powers of the day, or be independent and oppose those powers. Their attitude towards them, as well as their mutual relationships were determined by a combination of territorial claims and economic interests.

Because of its fertility the Karak Plateau was sought after by bedouin tribes. They camped in the region, pastured their flocks and acquired the produce of the land from the farming population. Sometimes they traded with the fellahin, but more commonly they demanded khawa, ‘protection’. Or they simply robbed the farmers at harvest time.


 

 

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