When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. History of Lebanon under Ottoman rule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Lebanon_under...

    Contents. History of Lebanon under Ottoman rule. The Ottoman Empire nominally ruled Mount Lebanon from its conquest in 1516 until the end of World War I in 1918. [ 1 ] The Ottoman sultan, Selim I (1516–20), invaded Syria and Lebanon in 1516. The Ottomans, through the Maans, a great Druze feudal family, and the Shihabs, a Sunni Muslim family ...

  3. History of Lebanon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Lebanon

    the El-Assaad dynasty that ruled most of South Lebanon for three centuries and whose lineage defended the local people of the Jabal Amel (Mount Amel) principality – today southern Lebanon – for 36 generations, they also held influence in Balqa in Jordan, Nablus in Palestine, and Homs in Syria during Ottomans rule.

  4. History of ancient Lebanon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_ancient_Lebanon

    Bronze Age. The area was first recorded in history around 4000 BC as a group of coastal cities and a heavily forested hinterland. [citation needed] It was inhabited by the Canaanites, a Semitic people, whom the Greeks called "Phoenicians" because of the purple (phoinikies) dye they sold. These early inhabitants referred to themselves as "men of ...

  5. Mount Lebanon Mutasarrifate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Lebanon_Mutasarrifate

    The autonomy of Mount Lebanon (Mutasarrifate) ended with the Ottoman occupation at the beginning of World War I. The Ottomans started an organized famine (known as Kafno). The defeat of the Ottoman Empire led to a French military invasion in 1918, this initiated the French Mandate.

  6. Timeline of Lebanese history - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Lebanese_history

    After the Battle of Yarmuk, Caliph Umar appointed the Arab Muawiyah I, founder of the Umayyad dynasty, as governor of Syria, an area that included present-day Lebanon. 667 Muawiyah negotiated an agreement with Constantine IV , the Byzantine emperor, whereby he agreed to pay Constantine an annual tribute in return for the cessation of Marada ...

  7. Partition of the Ottoman Empire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Partition_of_the_Ottoman_Empire

    v. t. e. The partition of the Ottoman Empire (30 October 1918 – 1 November 1922) was a geopolitical event that occurred after World War I and the occupation of Constantinople by British, French, and Italian troops in November 1918. The partitioning was planned in several agreements made by the Allied Powers early in the course of World War I ...

  8. Emirate of Mount Lebanon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emirate_of_Mount_Lebanon

    Emirate of Mount Lebanon. The Emirate of Mount Lebanon (Arabic: إِمَارَة جَبَل لُبْنَان) was a part of Mount Lebanon that enjoyed variable degrees of partial autonomy under the stable suzerainty of the Ottoman Empire between the mid-16th and the early-19th century. [1]

  9. Double Qaim-Maqamate of Mount Lebanon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_Qaim-Maqamate_of...

    The idea of dividing Mount Lebanon between Christians and Druze was a system proposed by the Austrian Chancellor Metternich between the British and the Ottomans, who backed the Druze demand for a Druze governor, and the French, who insisted on the return of the Shihab principality. Thus, the Druze emir Ahmad Arslan was appointed qāʾim maqām ...