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The Karak Plateau in
the Ottoman Period

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

THE KARAK PLATEAU IN THE OTTOMAN PERIOD

Click to see enlarged image!Note: Make yourself familiar with the names of places and regions on the map before reading the text. For more detailed information on the geographical extent of the Ottoman empire, see the historical atlases cited in the bibliography. All dates are according to the Common Era.

The Political History of the Karak plateau in the Ottoman Period

This period can be defined as lasting from the end of Mamluk occupation of Syria in 1516 to the departure of Ottoman troops from the north of Jordan at the end of September 1918. It is important to recognize, however, that the use of the term ‘Ottoman’ to describe this historical period does not mean that Karak, and the surrounding lands were always under the direct control of officials of the Ottoman empire. For much of the time, southern Jordan was a largely autonomous region governed by powerful local families. Some of the phases within this long time period remain poorly understood due to the uneven quality of the historical record. The latter part of the Ottoman period is, however, of considerable importance for it is during this time that many aspects of the economy, demography and material culture of the modern Karak plateau were defined.

In 1516 the forces of the Ottoman sultan Selim I defeated the Mamluk army at the battle of Marj Dābiq in northern Syria. In the aftermath of this victory, the Ottoman sultan was able extend his control over the province of Syria (that is, the region covered by the modern states of Syria, Jordan, Lebanon, Israel and the Palestine Authority), and in the following year Cairo, the capital of the Mamluk sultanate, was taken. The Karak plateau, and the remainder of southern Jordan thus became part of the expanding Ottoman empire that was governed from the city of Istanbul in modern Turkey. It would seem that this momentous political change had little immediate impact upon the region of Karak, but to understand the reasons for this it is necessary to review some of the events of the last few decades of Mamluk rule in the region [ Photo]

From what we know of the history of this period, Karak and the other regions of southern Jordan had become very difficult to govern in the fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries. Although these areas remained relatively fertile, it was proving very difficult for the central government in Cairo to ensure the safety of the region. In part, this difficulty can be attributed to the lack of investment in the area by the Mamluk sultans, but it was also due to the growth in power of the tribal factions in Jordan at this time. There were numerous incidents of bedouin tribes raiding merchants passing through the region, as well as the annual pilgrimage (Arabic: hajj) caravan that went south from Damascus to the Holy Cities of Mecca and Medina in the Hijāz. At times it was necessary for the governor of Damascus to bribe the tribes of southern Jordan with purses of gold to persuade them not to attack the pilgrims. The town of Karak also contained a governor appointed by the Mamluk sultan in Cairo, and answerable to the governor of Damascus, but he had insufficient troops at his command to deal with the outbreaks of lawlessness. In 1506-1507 even the governor of Karak was forced to flee the town because of a rebellion (Mamluk control over the town was only re-imposed in 1512). There appears to have been an acknowledgement by the sultans, and their officials in Damascus, that there was little hope of ever bringing the region under control and of taking advantage of the tax revenues from the productive agricultural lands and livestock. Mamluk intervention on the Karak plateau became limited to occasional punitive military expeditions by the governor of Damascus following local insurrections in Karak and attacks on the pilgrim caravans.

This was the troubled situation inherited by the Turkish officials and soldiers of the new Ottoman province of Damascus. The initial policy of the Ottomans was to employ high-ranking members of the Mamluk system to run the conquered territories. The first man to be named as the governor of Damascus was a Mamluk called Janbirdī al-Ghazālī. Before 1516 he had served as governor of Jerusalem and Karak in 1509, the Palestinian town of Safad in 1511, and the Syrian city of Hamā in 1513. With this extensive experience he was in a good position to understand the workings of the administration, and one of his major objectives during his brief rule was to secure the passage of the annual hajj caravan from Damascus. Using captured bedouin prisoners as a bargaining tool, he was able to conclude a peace treaty with the Jughaymān tribe in 1519-20, and in the same year the largest pilgrimage caravan in seventy years set out from Damascus for the journey south to Mecca and Medina. Unfortunately for Janbirdī, his political ambitions were not matched by sufficient military resources, and he was killed following a failed bid to make himself independent of central Ottoman rule.

 

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