Modern History of the Middle East

Most countries in the Middle East were only established as independent nation-states in the 20th century. This page will discuss the most important events leading up to this period of independence, and their influence on the modern Middle East.

The Great Arab Revolt & the Sykes-Picot Agreement

During the second half of World War I, the British signed an agreement according to which the Arab forces of Hashemite King Hussein bin Ali would help the British fight against the Ottoman Empire. In return, the British promised to recognize a new Arab Kingdom stretching from Syria to Yemen under Hashemite leadership. This was known as the Arab Revolt, or the Great Arab Revolt.

However, at the same time as Britain was making promises of Arab leadership, Britain was negotiating with France about how to divide the Ottoman Empire between their respective spheres of influence, should they manage to defeat the Ottomans. In 1916 Sir Mark Sykes of Britain and Francois Georges-Picot of France finalized an agreement assuring French influence over Lebanon, Syria, parts of Turkey, and parts of Iraq, and British influence over Palestine, Jordan, and southern Iraq. While the ultimate territorial divisions after World War I did not entirely match the Sykes-Picot agreement of 1916, British promises made regarding Arab independence were cast aside following the end of the war. Nevertheless, many countries became independent nations some years later, albeit heavily influenced by redrawn French and British borders.

Modern Nations of the Middle East

The Levant

Jordan

As with most countries in the Middle East, the decline of the Ottoman Empire and the Great Arab Revolt can be seen as the starting point of Jordan’s modern history. After members of the Hashemite family — with help from the British and French armies — were successful in conquering large parts of the Middle East, the ‘Arab Kingdom of Syria’ was declared in 1918, containing parts of Transjordan. As a result of the Sykes-Picot agreement, the French quickly took over control of the kingdom’s northern region; however, the southern region was soon taken by the son of Shariff Hussein, King Abdullah I, who became Emir of Transjordan in 1921. As the British slowly started retreating from their protectorate in Transjordan, they ceded more and more autonomy to the Transjordanian Emirate. On May 25th, 1946 the Hashemite Kingdom of Transjordan gained full independence, and in 1949 the kingdom was officially renamed the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, the state with which we are familiar today. The current Jordanian monarchy is only reigning Hashemite dynasty since the Republic of Iraq was established in 1958.

Syria

Syria’s modern history dates back to the end of World War I and the successes of the Great Arab Revolt when the Arab Kingdom of Syria was established in 1918, ruled by Faisal I, son of Shariff Hussein. The Kingdom did not last long however, as in 1920 the French Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon was installed, in accordance with the Sykes-Picot agreement. In 1936, it looked like the mandate was coming to an end with the Franco-Syrian Treaty of Independence and the election of the first Syrian president Hashim al-Atassi. However, due to the emerging threat of World War II, the French did not ratify the treaty and kept control over Syria. This led Syrian nationalists to enlist the help of British forces, and on April 17th, 1946 the French mandate ended and the Syrian republic gained full independence.

Lebanon

The modern history of Lebanon began under the French mandate for Syria and Lebanon — declared in 1920. The mandate was first known as Greater Lebanon, but in 1926 the Lebanese Republic was declared, with its own constitution and a parliamentary system of government. France maintained a strong hold over Lebanon until World War II, when Syria and Lebanon gained independence from the French. British troops helped free Lebanon from French control, and in 1943 elections were held; the new Lebanese government unilaterally abolished the mandate, creating the Republic of Lebanon as we know it today.

Iraq

With the partition of the Ottoman Empire, Britain planned to establish firm control over the Mandate of Mesopotamia. Instead, following a large-scale Iraqi revolt in 1920, in which Iraqis organized mass demonstrations against British mandate plans, a sovereign Hashemite Kingdom of Iraq was established in 1921 under British protection. In 1932, the Kingdom of Iraq was finally granted full independence, but during World War II Britain once again exerted control in Iraq and installed the pro-British King Faisal II, fearing the Iraqi ties to the Axis powers. In 1958, a coup d’état overthrew the Hashemite monarchy and led to the establishment of the Republic of Iraq.

Egypt

Fuad I crowned himself king of Egypt after the nominal independence of Egypt from the British Kingdom in 1922. Nevertheless, Britain continued to exert influence over Egypt, given its important tactical position in the Middle East and its control over the Suez Canal. Nationalist sentiment grew in 1951 after Egypt ordered British troops to vacate the Suez Canal, and a year later, King Farouk was deposed by Mohammad Naguib and Gamel Abdul Nasser. In 1953, the Egyptian Republic was officially declared with Naguib as its first president, soon to be followed by Nasser.

Saudi Arabia

Abdulaziz bin Abdul Rahman al Saud, the first king of modern Saudi Arabia, captured Riyadh in 1902, beginning the current Saudi Arabian Kingdom. Ibn Saud did not take part in the Great Arab Revolt that would eventually result in Hussein Ibn Ali— the head of the Hashemite family—becoming King of Hejaz. In the following years, Ibn Saud conquered increasingly more land, and in 1924 he successfully conquered Hejaz and declared himself the King of Hejaz. In 1932, Ibn Saud united the lands of Najd and Hejaz into the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

Turkey

Turkey was part of the Ottoman Empire which entered World War I fighting on behalf of the Central Powers against British, French, and Russian forces. After the Allies’ victory in 1918, territories of the Ottoman Empire were seized from Turkish control and divided up according to the Treaty of Sèvres in 1920. Catalysed by nationalist Turkish sentiment against the occupying forces of Anatolia, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk and other head officers initiated the Turkish War of Independence, and in 1923 the Republic of Turkey was established with Atatürk as its first president. President Atatürk implemented a number of secularizing reforms that continue to influence Turkey into the modern day.

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