This timeline tries to compile dates of important historical events that happened in or that led to the rise of the Middle East. The Middle East is the territory that comprises today's Egypt, the Persian Gulf states, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Cyprus and Northern Cyprus, Jordan, Lebanon, Oman,Saudi Arabia, Syria, Turkey, the State of Palestine, Gaza Strip, UAE, and Yemen. The Middle East with its particular characteristics was not to emerge until late second millennium AD. To refer to a concept similar that of today's Middle East but earlier in time, the term Ancient Near East is used.
This list is intended as a timeline of the history of the Middle East. For more detailed information, see articles on the histories of individual countries. See Ancient Near East for ancient history of the Middle East.
Neolithic period
10th millennium BCE
- 10000 BCE – earliest neolithic sanctuaries at Göbekli Tepe in southern Turkey
- 9300 BCE – first cultivating of wild emmer in Netiv HaGdud and other sites inJordan by hunter gatherers[1]
9th millennium BCE
- 9000 to 7000 BCE – first domestication of sheep in Mesopotamia
- 8500 BCE – first domestication of the cow (taurine line from the aurochs nearÇayönü Tepesi in southeastern Turkey and Dja'de el-Mughara in northern Iraq.[2]
- 8400 to 8100 BCE – first settlements at Nevali Cori in Turkey
- 8200 to 7650 BCE – first domestication of emmer wheat near Damascus, Syria
8th millennium BCE
- 8000 BCE – human settlements at Sagalassos in southwest Turkey
- 8000 BCE – first domestication of goats from the bezoar ibex in Iran
- 8000 BCE – first domestication of einkorn wheat near Karaca Dağ in southeast Turkey
- 8000 BCE – first domestication of Durum wheat near Karaca Dağ in the Levantand the Ethiopian Highlands
- 7500 BCE – Çatalhöyük, very large Neolithic and Chalcolithic settlement in southern Anatolia
- 7000 BCE – Jarmo, one of the oldest agricultural communities, in northern Iraq
7th millennium BCE
- 7000 to 6500 BCE – early undecorated, unglazed and low-fired pottery inHassuna
- 6000 to 4000 BCE – invention of the potter's wheel in Mesopotamia
6th millennium BCE
- 6000 BCE – first Irrigation and flood control in Mesopotamia and Egypt
- 6000 to 4300 BCE – first sail boats in Mesopotamia[3]
- 5600 BCE – Black Sea floods according to the Black Sea deluge theory
- 5509 BCE – date of creation according to the Byzantine calendar
- 5500 BCE – first large scale agriculture by the Sumerians and in the valley of theNile
- 5403 BCE – expulsion from the Garden of Eden according to the Genealogies of Genesis
- 5100 BCE – first Temples in South Mesopotamia
5th millennium BCE
- 4500 BCE – civilization of Susa and Kish in Mesopotamia
- 4570 to 4250 BCE – Merimde culture on the Nile
- 4400 to 4000 BCE – Badari culture on the Nile
- 4000 BCE – first use of light wooden ploughs in Mesopotamia
- 4000 BCE – Egyptians discover how to make bread using yeast
Ancient Near East
4th millennium BCE
- 4000 to 3000 BCE – domestication of the African wild ass in Egypt or Mesopotamia, producing the donkey
- 4000 BCE – city of Ur in Mesopotamia
- 4000 to 3100 BCE – Uruk period
- 4000 to 3000 BCE – Naqada culture on the Nile
- 3760 BCE – date of creation according to some interpretations of Jewish chronology
- 3600 BCE – first civilization in the world: Sumer (city-states) in modern-day southern Iraq[4]
- 3500 to 3000 BCE – one of the first appearances of wheeled vehicles in Mesopotamia
- 3500 BCE – beginning of desertification of Sahara: the shift from a habitable region to a barren desert
- 3500 BCE – first cities in Egypt
- 3300 BCE – earliest hieroglyphs
- 3200 BCE – Iry-Hor reigns as pharaoh of Upper Egypt, the earliest historical person known by name
- 3100 BCE – King Narmer unifies the Upper and Lower Egyptian Kingdoms, and gives birth to the world's first nation
- 3100 to 2686 BCE – early Dynastic Period (Egypt)
- 3000 BCE – first examples of Sumerian writing in Mesopotamia, in the cities ofUruk and Susa (cuneiform writings)
3rd millennium BCE
- 3000 to 2000 BCE – first domestication of the dromedaries in Somalia and southern Arabia
- 2900 to 2350 BCE – first ziggurats in Sumer
- 2800 BCE – beginning of Uruk's decline
- 2600 to 2350 BCE – early Dynastic III period in Mesopotamia
- 2560 BCE – completion of the Great Pyramid of Giza
- 2500 BCE – first domestication of the camel in central Asia[5] [6] [7]
- 2500 BCE – Ur-Nina first king of Lagash
- 2340 to 2280 – reign of Sargon of Akkad, founder of the dynasty of Akkad
- 2334 to 2154 BCE – Akkadian Empire
- 2254 to 2218 BCE – Naram-Sin of Akkad, under who the empire reached its maximum strength and the first taking the title "god of Akkad"
- 2200 BCE – Akkad taken by the Guti
- 2112 tot 2094 BCE – Ur-Nammu, founder of the Third Dynasty of Ur
- 2111 to 2004 BCE – Third Dynasty of Ur
- 2052 to 1570 BCE – Middle Kingdom in Egypt
- 2004 BCE – Elamites destroy Ur
- 2004 to 1763 BCE – rise of the Amorites who established several city-states in Mesopotamia
- 2000 BCE – first use of the spoke-wheel by the Andronovo culture and soon after used by horse cultures of the Caucasus region in war chariots
2nd millennium BCE
- 1900 BCE – Hittites Old Kingdom in Anatolia
- 1800 BCE – civilization in Canaan
- 1800 to 1200 BCE – emergence of the city of Ugarit when it ruled a coastal kingdom, trading with Egypt, Cyprus, the Aegean, Syria, the Hittites and others
- 1792 to 1750 BCE – reign of Hammurabi of the First Babylonian Dynasty, extended control throughout Mesopotamia, known for the Code of Hammurabi, one of the earliest codes of law
- 1763 to 1595 BCE – Paleo-Babylonian Empire
- 1600 to 1360 BCE – Egyptian domination over Canaan and Syria
- 1594 BCE – Cassites take Babylon
- 1595 to 1155 BCE – Cassite Dynasty
- 1550 to 1077 BCE – New Kingdom of Egypt
- 1500 to 1300 BCE – Kingdom Mitanni, a Hurrian-speaking state in northern Syria and southeast Anatolia
- 1500 to 539 BCE – Phoenicia and the spread of their alphabet from which almost all modern phonetic alphabets derived
- 1457 BCE – Battle of Megiddo
- 1380 to 1336 BCE – Shuppiluliuma, king of the Hittites who challenged Egypt for control of the lands between the Mediterranean and the Euphrates
- 1370 to 1200 BCE – Hittite Empire
- 1350 to 1050 BCE – Middle Assyrian Empire
- 1300 BCE – discovery of iron smelting and smithing techniques in Anatolia or the Caucasus: start of the Iron Age
- 1274 BCE – Battle of Kadesh between theEgyptian Empire under Ramesses II and theHittite Empire under Muwatalli II,[8] largestchariot battle ever fought[9]
- 1245 to 1208 BCE – Tukulti-Ninurta I, king of Assyria, first native Mesopotamian ruler in Babylon, took on the ancient title "King of Sumer and Akkad"
- 1237 BCE – Battle of Nihriya, resulting in Assyrian victory over the Hittites for control over remnants of the former empire of Mitanni in Asia Minor and the Levant
- 1234 BCE – Babylon taken by Assyrians
- 1200 to 1050 BCE – Bronze Age collapse
- 1200 BCE – oldest Phoenician alphabet inscription engraved on thesarcophagus of King Ahiram
- 1200 to 884 BCE – Sea Peoples, conjectured groups of seafaring raiders, invaded Anatolia, Syria, Canaan, Cyprus, and Egypt
- 1200 to 546 BCE – Lydian Empire
- 1190 BCE – Hattusha, capital of the Hittites, taken by the Sea Peoples
- 1184 BCE – Fall of Troy
- 1180 to 700 BCE – Neo-Hittite kingdoms
- 1155 BCE – Babylon taken by Elamites
- 1100 to 539 BCE – Neo-Elamite period
- 1087 BCE – Babylon destroyed by Assyrians
- 1070 BCE to 350 CE – Cushites, an ancient African Nubian kingdom in Sudan
- 1102 to 850 BCE – estimated period in which Homer lived
- 1069 to 664 BCE – Third Intermediate Period of Egypt
- 1050 to 930 BCE – Kingdom of Israel
- 1041 BCE – King David captures Jerusalem, designates it the capital of the united Kingdom of Israel
- 1004 BCE – King Solomon lays the foundation for the First Temple
1st millennium BCE
- 927 BCE – Jerusalem becomes the capital of the (southern) Kingdom of Judahafter the split of the United Monarchy
- 884 to 858 BCE – Ashurnasirpal II, king of Assyria, embarked on a vast program of expansion, known for his harshness, moved his capital to the city of Kalhu(Nimrod)
- 884 to 612 BCE – Neo-Assyrian Empire
- 800 to 480 BCE – Archaic period in Greece with the rice of the city-states, Greek colonies and Epic Greek poetry: onset of Classical Antiquity
- 776 BCE – first Olympic Games
- 745 to 727 BCE – Tiglath-Pileser III, king of Assyria who introduced advanced civil, military, and political systems into the empire
- 689 BCE – Babylon destroyed by Sennacherib, king of the Assyrians
- 678 to 549 BCE – Median Empire
- 672 to 525 BCE – Twenty-sixth dynasty of Egypt
- 626 to 539 BCE – Chaldean Empire (Neo-Babylonian Empire)
- 612 BCE – Fall of Niniveh by a coalition Babylonians, Medes, Persians,Chaldeans, Scythians and Cimmerians, leading to the destruction of the Neo-Assyrian Empire
- 597 BCE – king Nebuchadnezzar II of Babylon capturing Jerusalem
- 587 BCE - king Nebuchadnezzar II of Babylon destroys Jerusalem and theSolomon's Temple
- 600 or 576 – 530 BCE – Cyrus the Great conquered Babylon and created the Persian Achaemenid Empire
- 550 to 330 BCE – Achaemenid Empire
- 539 BCE – Fall of Babylon
- 537 BCE – Cyrus allows the Israelites to return from the Babylonian captivity and rebuild the Temple
- 522 to 486 BCE – reign of Darius the Great, third king of the Persian Achaemenid Empire
- 516 BCE – completion of he Second Temple
- 510 to 323 BCE – Classical Greek period with large annexations by the Persian Empire and a powerful influence on the Roman Empire and western civilization
- 500 BCE – Ionian Revolt
- 499 to 449 BCE – Greco-Persian Wars, finally won by the Greek city-states
- 480 to 479 BCE – Xerxes invades Greece, start of Second Persian invasion of Greece
- 477 BCE – founding of the Delian League, an association of Greek city-states under Athenian hegemony
- 431 to 404 BCE – Peloponnesian War between Sparta and Athens leading to the end of Athene's hegemony and weakening of Greece
- 353 to 350 BCE – Mausoleum at Halicarnassus built in Persia
- 330 BCE – Alexander the Great conquered Persia
- 323 to 31 BCE – Hellenistic period with Greek influence in Europe, Africa andAsia, in the arts, exploration, literature, theatre, architecture, music, mathematics,philosophy, and science
- 247 BCE to 224 CE – Parthian Empire
- 100 to 44 BCE – Julius Caesar
- 31 BCE – emergence of the Roman Empire as signified by the Battle of Actium
- 48 BCE to 642 CE – Destruction of the Library of Alexandria, one of the largest and most significant libraries of the ancient world
- 92 BCE to 629 CE – Roman–Persian Wars
1st millennium CE
- 30 to 100 CE – Apostolic Age, onset of Christianity
- 66 to 136 CE – Jewish-Roman Wars and Jewish diaspora
- 135 CE – Roman Emperor Hadrian renamed Iudaea Province into Syria Palaestina
- 285 to 628 CE – Byzantine–Sasanian wars
- 376 CE – large-scale irruption of Goths and others, and the subsequent onset of the Fall of the Western Roman Empire
- 394 CE – Theodosius I suppressed the Olympic Games as part of the campaign to impose Christianity as the state religion
- 330 to 1453 CE – Byzantine Empire, continuation of the Roman Empire in the east, until it fell to the Ottoman Empire
Rise of Islam
1st millennium CE
Ottoman Empire, 1481–1683
In blue, the Arabic Empire in its greatest extent and in yellow the four Christian empires.
- 570 – Birth of Muhammad
- 614 – Persecution of the Muslims by the Quraish(Migration to Abyssinia)
- 616 – Second migration to Abyssinia
- 620 – Ascension to the heavens
- 622 – Constitution of Medina, establishment of the first Islamic state
- 624: Battle of Badr, expulsion of the Bani Qainuqa Jews from Medina
- 626 – Siege of Constantinople
- 629 to 1050 – Arab–Byzantine wars
- 630 – Conquest of Mecca
- 632 – Death of Muhammad, Abu Bakr chosen ascaliph
- 632 to 661 – Rashidun Caliphate
- 633 to 651 – Muslim conquest of Persia
- 634 to 641 – Muslim conquest of the Levant(Syria)
- 639 to 642 – Muslim conquest of Egypt
- 642 to 799 – Khazar-Arab Wars weaken the Umayyad army and contribute to the eventualfall of the dynasty
- 642 to 870 – Islamic conquest of Afghanistan
- 656 to 661 – First Fitna (First Islamic Civil War)
- 661 to 750 – Umayyad Caliphate
- 670 to 742 – Muslim conquest of North Africa
- 680 to 692 – Second Fitna (Second Islamic Civil War)
- 711 to 718 – Umayyad conquest of Hispania
- 711 to 714 – Muslim conquest in the Indian subcontinent
- 719 to 759 – Umayyad invasion of Gaul
- 738 – Caliphate campaigns in India
- 746 to 750 – Abbasid Revolution
- 750 to 1258 – Abbasid Caliphate
- 770 to 840 – Khwarizmi, developed algebra
- 801 to 873 – Al-Kindi, promotor of Greek and Hellenistic philosophy, introduced Indian numerals
- 803 – Jabir ibn Hayyan, first to produce sulfuric acid, and other chemicals and instruments
- 810 – House of Wisdom set up in Baghdad, where Greek and Indianmathematical and astronomy works were translated into Arabic
- 821 to 979 – Iranian Intermezzo
- 821 to 873 – Tahirid dynasty in Iran, Afghanistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan
- 827 to 902 – Muslim conquest of Sicily
- 836 to 901 – Thabit Ibn Qurra, discovered a theorem which enables pairs ofamicable numbers to be found
- 847 to 871 – Emirate of Bari
- 861 to 1003 – Saffarid dynasty, an Iranian Persian empire
- 864 to 930 – Al-Razi, advocate of hygiene and patients' psychology, wrote onalkali, caustic soda, soap, glycerine and naphta in "Book of the Secret of Secrets
- 875/819 to 999 – Samanid dynasty, an Iranian empire
- 909 to 1171 – Fatimid Caliphate, originally based in Tunisia, spanned a vast area of the Arab lands, ultimately made Egypt its centre
- 929 to 1031 – Caliphate of Córdoba, with the Iberian peninsula as an integral province, ruled from Damascus
- 932 to 1055 – Buyid dynasty in Iran
- 942 to 979 – Sallarid dynasty in Iran, Azerbaijan and Armenia
- 965 to 1091 – Emirate of Sicily
- 970 – foundation of Al-Azhar University, oldest Islamic institution for higher studies
2nd millennium CE
- 1037 to 1194 – arrival of the Turkish Seljuq Empire, and the subsequent end of Arab dominance
- 1044 or 1048 to 1123 – Al-Khayyam gave a classification of cubic equations with geometric solutions using conic sections, extracted roots using the Indiandecimal system
- 1096 to 1487 – Crusades
- 1100 to 1166 – Muhammad al-Idrissi, known for having drawn some of the most advanced ancient world maps
- 1147 to 1269 – Almohad Caliphate, a Moroccan Berber Muslim movement, started by Ibn Tumart among the Masmuda
- 1171 to 1260 – Ayyubid dynasty
- 1213 to 1288 – Ibn Al-Nafis, discovered the lesser circulatory system of the heartand the lungs), and described the mechanism of breathing and its relation to the blood
- 1218 to 1221 – Mongol conquest of Khwarezmia marked the beginning of the Mongol conquest of the Islamic states
- 1241 to 1244 – Mongol invasions of Anatolia
- 1258 – Forses of the Mongol Empire sack Baghdad and destruct the House of Wisdom, marking the end of the Islamic Golden Age
- 1260 to 1323 – Mongol invasions of the Levant
- 1261 to 1517 – Mamluk Sultanate of Cairo
- 1261 to 1517 – Abbasid Caliphate
- 1299 to 1923 – rise of the Ottoman Empire
- 1300 – deportation of the last Muslims from Lucera, Italy
- 1303 – Battle of Marj al-Saffar, defeat for the Mongols, which put an end toGhazan Khan's invasions of Syria
- 1347 – a fleet of Genoese trading ships fleeing Caffa (Theodosia) reached the port of Messina and spreads the Black Death
- 1380 – al-Kashi, contributed to development of decimal fractions for approximating algebraic numbers and real numbers such as pi
- 1393 to 1449 – Ulugh Beg commissions an observatory at Samarqand inUzbekistan
- 1453 to 1566 – Growth of the Ottoman Empire
- 1517 to 1924 – Ottoman Caliphate
- 1566 to 1827 – Stagnation of the Ottoman Empire
Contemporary Middle East
2nd millennium CE
- 1798 – Napoleon Bonaparte leads a campaign in Egypt and Syria
- 1828 to 1908 – Decline of the Ottoman Empire
- 1869 – Construction of the Suez Canal is completed
- 1882 – British troops occupy Cairo – Egypt becomes British protectorate
- 1908 to 1922 – Defeat and dissolution of the Ottoman Empire
- 1917 – Lord Balfour, Foreign Minister of Great Britain, in letter to Lord Rothschild, gives British government approval to Zionist's goal of building a "national home" in Palestine
- 1918 – Britain and France occupy former Ottoman Empire lands
- 1919 to 1921 – Franco-Syrian War
- 1919 to 1923 – Asia Minor Catastrophe reshapes Anatolia, as continuous fighting incorporates the newly founded Republic of Turkey, Armenia, France, Greece
- 1922 – Egypt is granted nominal independence from the United Kingdom.
- 1922 to 1923 – French Mandate of Syria and Lebanon and British Mandate of Palestine come into power, Emirate of Transjordan is an autonomous region under the Mandate for Israel
- 1924 – abolition of the Caliphate as part of Atatürk's Reforms
- 1925 – Sheikh Said rebellion of Kurds against Turkey
- 1927 to 1930 – Ararat rebellion of Kurds, as Republic of Ararat is declared, but dissolved upon defeat
- 1932 – Kingdom of Saudi Arabia declared in unification of Najd and Hejaz
- 1933 to 1936 – Tribal revolts in Iraq of Assyrians in Simele, Shia in the south and Kurds in the north
- 1934 – Saudi-Yemeni War
- 1935 – Persia becomes Iran
- 1937 – Dersim rebellion, is the largest uprising of the Kurds against Turkey, massive casualties
- 1939 to 1945 – Mediterranean and Middle East Theatre
- 1946 – Emirate of Transjordan becomes Kingdom of Jordan (named Transjordan until 1948)
- 1946 – Kurdish Republic of Mahabad declared along with Azerbaijan People's Government, but defeated by Iranian military forces and dissolved
- 1947 – UN General Assembly proposes to divide Palestine into an Arab and Jewish state
- 1948 – Israel declares independence and Arab-Israeli war erupts
- 1862 to 1892 – development of the internal combustion engine rivals the steam engine, and ultimately makes petroleum an important political factor in the following century
- 1952 – After a revolution in Egypt the monarchy is overthrown
- 1953 – The coup d'état in Iran
- 1954 – Gamal Abdel Nasser becomes president of Egypt
- 1954 – Central Treaty Organization
- 1956 – Suez Crisis
- 1961 – First Kurdish-Iraqi War erupts in north Iraq.
- 1963 – Ba'th Party comes to power in Iraq under the leadership of GeneralAhmad Hasan al-Bakr and Colonel Abdul Salam Arif
- 1964 – Abdul Rahman Arif stages military coup in Iraq against the Ba'th Party and brings his brother, Abdul Salam Arif, to power
- 1967 – Six-Day War, Israel occupies the Sinai Peninsula, Golan Heights, West Bank and Gaza Strip
- 1967 – Kurds revolt in Western Iran, the revolt is crushed
- 1968 – Ba'athists stage second military coup under General Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr, Saddam Hussein is made vice president of Iraq
- 1970 – Gamal Abdel Nasser dies, Anwar Sadat becomes president of Egypt
- 1971 – The Aswan High Dam is completed with Soviet help in finance and construction; independence of Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain and the UAE
- 1973 – Yom Kippur War
- 1974 – The PLO is allowed to represent the people of Palestine in the UN
- 1974 to 1975 – Second Kurdish-Iraqi War
- 1975 to 1990 – Lebanese Civil War
- 1976 – Syria invades Lebanon
- 1978 – Camp David Accords
- 1979 – Saddam Hussein becomes president of Iraq; Iranian Revolution; Israel-Egypt Peace Treaty
- 1980 to 1989 – Iran–Iraq War results in 1–1.25 million casualties, Iraq uses chemical weapons against Iran and rebel Kurds; large scale economical devastation and surge in oil prices affect the global world economy
- 1981 – Murder of Anwar Sadat
- 1982 – Israel invades Lebanon
- 1987 to 1990 – First Intifada
- 1991 – The Gulf War
- 1993 – Oslo Accords
- 1994 – 1994 civil war in Yemen
3rd millennium CE
- 2000 - Israeli troops leave Lebanon
- 2001 - Members of al-Qaeda attacked sites in the U.S.
- 2003 - The 2003 Iraq War
- 2004 to present – Shia insurgency in Yemen
- 2005 - Syrian troops leave Lebanon as a result of the Cedar Revolution
- 2006 - The 2006 Israel-Lebanon conflict; Saddam Hussein executed for "crimes against humanity"
- 2010 - Arab Spring, which culminates in the Syrian Civil War with involvement of many regional powers to either support the Syrian opposition or the ruling Ba'ath party
- 2014 - ISIS rises in Iraq and Syria;rival groups try to overthrow Syrian president
See also
- History of the Middle East
- Cities of the ancient Near East
- Empires
- Mesopotamia
- Anatolia
- Canaan
- Egypt
- Ancient Egypt: 3000 BCE to 332 BCE
- Ptolemaic Egypt: 332 BCE to 30 BCE
- Roman Egypt: 30 BCE to 639 CE
- History of Arab Egypt: 639 to 1517
- History of Ottoman Egypt: 1517 to 1805
- Egypt under Mehemet Ali and his successors: 1805 to 1882
- History of Modern Egypt: since 1882
- Iran
- Arabia
- Timeline of Islamic history
- Timeline of Jewish history
- Timeline of the region of Palestine
- History of pottery in the Southern Levant
References
- http://archaeology.about.com/od/eterms/qt/Emmer-Wheat.htm
- McTavish, E.J., Decker, J.E., Schnabel, R.D., Taylor, J.F. and Hillis, D.M.year=2013."New World cattle show ancestry from multiple independent domestication events.". Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 110: E1398–406.doi:10.1073/pnas.1303367110. PMC 3625352. PMID 23530234.
- Carter, Robert (2012). "19". In Potts, D.T. A companion to the archaeology of the ancient Near East. Ch 19 Watercraft. Chichester, West Sussex: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 347–354. ISBN 978-1-4051-8988-0. Retrieved 8 February 2014.
- King, Leonid W. (2015) "A History of Sumer and Akkad" (ISBN 1522847308)
- Mukasa-Mugerwa, E. (1981). The Camel (Camelus Dromedarius): A Bibliographical Review. International Livestock Centre for Africa Monograph. 5. Ethiopia: International Livestock Centre for Africa. pp. 1, 3, 20–21, 65, 67–68.
- Scarre, Chris (15 September 1993). Smithsonian Timelines of the Ancient World. London: D. Kindersley. p. 176. ISBN 978-1-56458-305-5.
Both the dromedary (the seven-humped camel of Arabia) and the Bactrian camel (the two-humped camel of Central Asia) had been domesticated since before 2000 BC.
- Bulliet, Richard (20 May 1990) [1975]. The Camel and the Wheel. Morningside Book Series. Columbia University Press. p. 183. ISBN 978-0-231-07235-9.
As has already been mentioned, this type of utilization [camels pulling wagons] goes back to the earliest known period of two-humped camel domestication in the third millennium B.C.
—Note that Bulliet has many more references to early use of camels - near the modern village of Al-Houz in Syria's Al-Qusayr District. see Kitchen, K. A., "Ramesside Inscriptions", volume 2, Blackwell Publishing Limited, 1996, pp. 16–17.
- Eggenberger, David (1985). An Encyclopedia of Battles. Dover Publications. p. 214.
Home to the Cradle of Civilization, the Middle East(usually interchangeable with the Near East) has seen many of the world's oldest cultures and civilizations. This history started from the earliest human settlements, continuing through several major pre- and post-Islamic Empires through to the modern collection of nation-states covering the Middle East today.
Egyptian civilization coalesced around 3150 BC with the political unification of Upper and Lower Egypt under the first pharaoh.[1]Mesopotamia was home to several powerful empires that came to rule almost the entire Middle East—particularly the Assyrian Empires of 1365–1076 BC and the Neo-Assyrian Empire of 911–605 BC. From the early 7th century BC and onwards, the Iranian Medes followed by Achaemenid Persia and other subsequent Iranian states empires dominated the region. In the 1st century BC, the expanding Roman Republic absorbed the whole Eastern Mediterranean, which included much of theNear East. The Eastern Roman Empire, today commonly known as the Byzantine Empire, ruling from the Balkans to the Euphrates, became increasingly defined by and dogmatic about Christianity, gradually creating religious rifts between the doctrines dictated by the establishment in Constantinople and believers in many parts of the Middle East. From the 3rd up to the course of the 7th century AD, the entire Middle East was dominated by the Byzantines and Sassanid Persia. From the 7th century, a new power was rising in the Middle East, that of Islam. The dominance of the Arabs came to a sudden end in the mid-11th century with the arrival of theSeljuq Turks. In the early 13th century, a new wave of invaders, the armies of theMongol Empire, mainly Turkic, swept through the region. By the early 15th century, a new power had arisen in western Anatolia, the Ottoman emirs, linguistically Turkic and religiously Islamic, who in 1453 captured the Christian Byzantine capital of Constantinople and made themselves sultans.
Large parts of the Middle East became a warground between the Ottomans and Iranian Safavids for centuries starting in the early 16th century. By 1700, the Ottomans had been driven out of Hungary and the balance of power along the frontier had shifted decisively in favor of the West. The British also established effective control of the Persian Gulf, and the French extended their influence intoLebanon and Syria. In 1912, the Italians seized Libya and the Dodecanese islands, just off the coast of the Ottoman heartland of Anatolia. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Middle Eastern rulers tried to modernize their states to compete more effectively with the European powers. A turning point in the history of the Middle East came when oil was discovered, first in Persia in 1908 and later in Saudi Arabia(in 1938) and the other Persian Gulf states, and also in Libya and Algeria. A Western dependence on Middle Eastern oil and the decline of British influence led to a growing American interest in the region.
During the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s, Syria and Egypt made moves towards independence. The British, the French, and the Soviets departed from many parts of the Middle East during and after World War II (1939–1945). The struggle between the Arabs and the Jews in Palestine culminated in the 1947 United Nations plan to partition Palestine. Later in the midst of Cold War tensions, the Arabic-speaking countries of Western Asia and Northern Africa saw the rise of pan-Arabism. The departure of the European powers from direct control of the region, the establishment of Israel, and the increasing importance of the oil industry, marked the creation of the modern Middle East. In most Middle Eastern countries, the growth of market economies was inhibited by political restrictions, corruption and cronyism, overspending on arms and prestige projects, and over-dependence on oil revenues. The wealthiest economies in the region per capita are the small oil-rich countries of Persian Gulf: Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, and the United Arab Emirates.
Since the Iranian Revolution of 1979 (a.k.a. the Islamic Revolution) and similar changes in other Muslim-majority countries throughout the 1980s, the region has been experiencing an ideological trend in favor of Islamism. The Fall of the Soviet Union in 1991 brought a global security refocus from a Cold War to a War on Terror. Starting in late 2010s, a revolutionary wave popularly known as the Arab Springbrought major protests, uprisings, and even revolutions to several Middle Eastern and Maghreb countries. Clashes in western Iraq on 30 December 2013 were preliminary to the Sunni pan-Islamist ISIL uprising.
The term Near East can be used interchangeably with Middle East, but in a different context, especially when discussing ancient times, it may have a limited meaning, namely the northern, historically Aramaic-speaking Semitic area and adjacentAnatolian territories, marked in the two maps below.
The historical Semitic region, defined by the pre-Islamic distribution ofSemitic languages and coinciding very roughly with the Arabian plate. Not so much lingually but rather culturally, politically and historically, the most significant division here has been between the north and the south, to some degree isolated from each other by the sparsely populated Arabian Desert. The north comprisesMesopotamia and the Levant, which, together with the lower Nile (i.e., Egypt), constitute the Fertile Crescent.
General
Geographically, the Middle East can be thought of as Western Asia without the Caucasus but with Egypt, which is the non-Maghreb part ofNorthern Africa. The Middle East was the first to experience a Neolithic Revolution (c. the 10th millennium BC), as well as the first to enter theBronze Age (c. 3300–1200 BC) and Iron Age (c. 1200–500 BC).
Historically human populations have tended to settle around bodies of water, which is reflected in modern population density patterns. Irrigationsystems were extremely important for the agricultural Middle East: for Egypt that of the lower Nile River, and for Mesopotamia that of the Tigris River and Euphrates River. Levantine agriculture depended on precipitation rather than on the river-based irrigation of Egypt and Mesopotamia, resulting in preference for different crops. Since travel was faster and easier by sea, civilizations along theMediterranean, such as Phoenicia and later Greece, participated in intense trade. Similarly,Ancient Yemen, much more conducive to agriculture than the rest of the Arabian Peninsula, sea traded heavily with the Horn of Africa, some of which it lingually Semitized. TheAdnanite Arabs, inhabiting the drier desert areas of the Middle East, were all nomadic pastoralistsbefore some began settling in city states, with the geo-linguistic distribution today being divided between Persian Gulf, the Najd and theHejaz in the Peninsula, as well as the Bedouinareas beyond the Peninsula.
Since ancient times the Middle East has had several lingue franche: Akkadian (c. 14th – 8th century BCE), Aramaic (c. 8th century BCE – 8th century CE),[2] Greek (c. 4th century BCE – 8th century CE), and Arabic (c. 8th century CE – present). Familiarity with English is not uncommon among the middle and upper classes.[3] [4] Arabic is not commonly spoken in Turkey, Iran, and Israel, and some varieties of Arabic lackmutual intelligibility, thus qualifying as distinct languages by this linguistic criterion.
The Middle East was the birthplace of the Abrahamic, Gnostic, and most Iranian religions. Initially the ancient inhabitants of the region followed various ethnic religions, but most of those began to be gradually replaced at first by Christianity (even before the 313 CE Edict of Milan) and finally by Islam (after the spread of theMuslim conquests beyond the Arabian Peninsula in 634 CE). To this day, however, the Middle East has, in particular, some sizable, ethnically distinct Christian minority groups, as well as Jews, concentrated in Israel, and followers of Iranian religions, such as Yazdânism and Zoroastrianism. Some of the smaller ethnoreligiousminorities include the Shabak people, the Mandaeans and the Samaritans. It is somewhat controversial whether the Druze religion is a distinct religion in its own right or merely a part of the Ismailist branch of Shia Islam.
Prehistory
The Arabian Tectonic Plate was part of the African Plate during much of thePhanerozoic Eon (Paleozoic–Cenozoic), until the Oligocene Epoch of the Cenozoic Era. Red Sea rifting began in the Eocene, but the separation of Africa and Arabia occurred in the Oligocene, and since then the Arabian Plate has been slowly moving toward the Eurasian Plate.
The collision between the Arabian Plate and Eurasia is pushing up the Zagros Mountains of Iran. Because the Arabian Plate and Eurasia plate collide, many cities are in danger such as those in south eastern Turkey (which is on the Arabian Plate). These dangers include earthquakes, tsunamis, and volcanoes.
The earliest human migrations out of Africa occurred through the Middle East, namely over the Levantine corridor, with the pre-modern Homo erectus about 1.8 million years BP. One of the potential routes for early human migrations toward southern and eastern Asia is Iran.
Haplogroup J-P209, the most common human Y-chromosome DNA haplogroup in the Middle East today, is believed to have arisen in the region 31,700±12,800 years ago.[5] [6] The two main current subgroups, J-M267 and J-M172, which now comprise between them almost all of the population of the haplogroup, are both believed to have arisen very early, at least 10,000 years ago. Nonetheless, Y-chromosomes F-M89* and IJ-M429* were reported to have been observed in the Iranian plateau.[7]
There is evidence of rock carvings along the Nile terraces and in desert oases. In the10th millennium BC, a culture of hunter-gatherers and fishermen was replaced by agrain-grinding culture. Climate changes and/or overgrazing around 6000 BC began to desiccate the pastoral lands of Egypt, forming the Sahara. Early tribal peoples migrated to the Nile River, where they developed a settled agricultural economyand more centralized society.[8]
The ancient Near East
The ancient Near East was the first to practice intensive year-round agriculture andcurrency-mediated trade (as opposed to barter), gave the rest of the world the firstwriting system, invented the potter's wheel and then the vehicular and mill wheel, created the first centralized governments and law codes, served as birthplace to thefirst city-states with their high degree of division of labor, as well as laying the foundation for the fields of astronomy and mathematics. However, its empires also introduced rigid social stratification, slavery, and organized warfare.
Cradle of civilization, Sumer and Akkad
The earliest civilizations in history were established in the region now known as the Middle East around 3500 BC by the Sumerians, in Mesopotamia (Iraq), widely regarded as the cradle of civilization. The Sumerians and the Akkadians (later known as Babylonians and Assyrians) all flourished in this region.
"In the course of the fourth millennium BC, city-states developed in southern Mesopotamia that were dominated by temples whose priests represented the cities' patron deities. The most prominent of the city-states was Sumer, which gave its language to the area, [presumably the first written language,] and became the first great civilization of mankind. About 2340 BC, Sargon the Great (c. 2360–2305 BC) united the city-states in the south and founded the Akkadian dynasty, the world's first empire."[9]
Egypt
Soon after the Sumerian civilization began, the Nile valley of Lower and Upper Egypt was unified under the Pharaohs approximately around 3150 BC. Since then, Ancient Egypt experienced 3 high points of civilization, the so-called "Kingdom" periods:
- The Old Kingdom (2686–2181),
- The Middle Kingdom (2055–1650) and, most notably,
- The New Kingdom (1550–1069).
The history of Ancient Egypt is concluded by the Late Period (664–332 BC), immediately followed by the history of Egypt in Classical Antiquity, beginning withPtolemaic Egypt.
The Levant and Anatolia
Thereafter, civilization quickly spread through the Fertile Crescent to the east coast of the Mediterranean Sea and throughout the Levant, as well as to ancient Anatolia. Ancient Levantine kingdoms and city states included Ebla City, Ugarit City, Kingdom of Aram-Damascus, Kingdom of Israel, Kingdom of Judah, Kingdom of Ammon,Kingdom of Moab, Kingdom of Edom, and the Nabatean kingdom. The Phoeniciancivilization, encompassing several city states, was a maritime trading culture that established colonial cities in the Mediterranean Basin, most notably Carthage, in 814 BC.
Assyrian empires
Mesopotamia was home to several powerful empires that came to rule almost the entire Middle East—particularly the Assyrian Empires of 1365–1076 BC and the Neo-Assyrian Empire of 911–605 BC. The Assyrian Empire, at its peak, was the largest the world had seen. It ruled all of what is now Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Israel, Palestine, Kuwait, Jordan, Egypt, Cyprus, and Bahrain—with large swathes of Iran, Turkey, Armenia, Georgia, Sudan, and Arabia. "The Assyrian empires, particularly the third, had a profound and lasting impact on the Near East. Before Assyrian hegemony ended, the Assyrians brought the highest civilization to the then known world. From the Caspian to Cyprus, from Anatolia to Egypt, Assyrian imperial expansion would bring into the Assyrian sphere nomadic and barbaric communities, and would bestow the gift of civilization upon them."[10]
Neo-Babylonian and Persian empires
From the early 6th century BC onwards, several Persian states dominated the region, beginning with the Medes and non-Persian Neo-Babylonian Empire, then their successor the Achaemenid Empire known as the first Persian Empire, conquered in the late 4th century BC. by the very short-lived Macedonian Empire ofAlexander the Great, and then successor kingdoms such as Ptolemaic Egypt and the Seleucid state in Western Asia.
After a century of hiatus, the idea of the Persian Empire was revived by the Central Asian Iranian Parthians in the 3rd century BC—and continued by their successors, the Sassanids from the 3rd century AD. This empire dominated sizable parts of what is now the Asian part of the Middle East and continued to influence the rest of the Asiatic and African Middle East region, until the Arab Muslim conquest of Persia in the mid-7th century CE. Between the 1st century BC and the early 7th century AD, the region was completely dominated by the Romans and the Parthians and Sassanids on the other hand, which often culminated in various Roman-Persian Wars over the seven centuries. Eastern Rite, Church of the East Christianity took hold in Persian-ruled Mesopotamia, particularly in Assyria from the 1st century AD onwards, and the region became a center of a flourishing Syriac–Assyrian literary tradition.
Greek and Roman Empire
In the 1st century BC, the expanding Roman Republic absorbed the whole Eastern Mediterranean, which included much of the Near East. The Roman Empire united the region with most of Europe and North Africa in a single political and economic unit. Even areas not directly annexed were strongly influenced by the Empire, which was the most powerful political and cultural entity for centuries. Though Roman culture spread across the region, the Greek culture and language first established in the region by the Macedonian Empire continued to dominate throughout the Roman period. Cities in the Middle East, especially Alexandria, became major urban centers for the Empire and the region became the Empire's "bread basket" as the key agricultural producer. Ægyptus was by far the most wealthy Roman province.[11] [12]
As the Christian religion spread throughout the Roman and Persian Empires, it took root in the Middle East, and cities such as Alexandria and Edessa became important centers of Christian scholarship. By the 5th century, Christianity was the dominant religion in the Middle East, with other faiths (gradually including heretical Christian sects) being actively repressed. The Middle East's ties to the city of Rome were gradually severed as the Empire split into East and West, with the Middle East tied to the new Roman capital of Constantinople. The subsequent Fall of the Western Roman Empire therefore, had minimal direct impact on the region.
Byzantine Empire (Eastern Roman Empire)
The Eastern Roman Empire, today commonly known as the Byzantine Empire, ruling from the Balkans to the Euphrates, became increasingly defined by and dogmatic about Christianity, gradually creating religious rifts between the doctrines dictated by the establishment in Constantinople and believers in many parts of the Middle East. By this time, Greek had become the 'lingua franca' of the region, although ethnicities such as the Syriacs and the Hebrew continued to exist. Under Byzantine/Greek rule the area of the Levant met an era of stability and prosperity.
The medieval Near East
Islamic caliphate
Age of the Caliphs
Expansion under Muhammad, 622–632
Expansion during the Rashidun Caliphate, 632–661
From the 7th century, a new power was rising in the Middle East, that of Islam, whilst theByzantine Roman and Sassanid Persian empires were both weakened by centuries of stalemate warfare during the Roman–Persian Wars. In a series of rapid Muslim conquests, the Arab armies, motivated by Islam and led by theCaliphs and skilled military commanders such as Khalid ibn al-Walid, swept through most of the Middle East; reducing Byzantine lands by more than half and completely engulfing the Persian lands. In Anatolia, their expansion was blocked by the still capable Byzantines with the help of the Bulgarians.
The Byzantine provinces of Roman Syria, North Africa, and Sicily, however, could not mount such a resistance, and the Muslim conquerors swept through those regions. At the far west, they crossed the sea taking Visigothic Hispania before being halted in southern France by the Franks. At its greatest extent, the Arab Empire was the first empire to control the entire Middle East, as well 3/4 of the Mediterranean region, the only other empire besides the Roman Empire to control most of theMediterranean Sea.[13] It would be the Arab Caliphates of the Middle Ages that would first unify the entire Middle East as a distinct region and create the dominantethnic identity that persists today. The Seljuq Empire would also later dominate the region.
Much of North Africa became a peripheral area to the main Muslim centres in the Middle East, but Iberia (Al-Andalus) and Morocco soon broke from this distant control and founded one of the world's most advanced societies at the time, along with Baghdad in the eastern Mediterranean.
Between 831 and 1071, the Emirate of Sicily was one of the major centres of Islamic culture in the Mediterranean. After its conquest by the Normans the island developed its own distinct culture with the fusion of Arab, Western and Byzantine influences. Palermo remained a leading artistic and commercial centre of the Mediterranean well into the Middle Ages.
Africa was reviving, however, as more organized and centralized states began to form in the later Middle Ages after the Renaissance of the 12th century. Motivated by religion and dreams of conquest, the kings of Europe launched a number ofCrusades to try to roll back Muslim power and retake the Holy Land. The Crusades were unsuccessful in this goal, but they were far more effective in weakening the already tottering Byzantine Empire that began to lose increasing amounts of territory to the Ottoman Turks. They also rearranged the balance of power in the Muslim world as Egypt once again emerged as a major power in the eastern Mediterranean.
Turks, Crusaders and Mongols
The dominance of the Arabs came to a sudden end in the mid-11th century with the arrival of the Seljuq Turks, migrating south from the Turkic homelands in Central Asia, who conquered Persia, Iraq (capturing Baghdad in 1055), Syria, Palestine, and the Hejaz. Egypt held out under the Fatimid caliphs until 1169, when it too fell to the Turks.
Despite massive territorial losses in the 7th century, the Christian Byzantine Empirecontinued to be a potent military and economic force in the Mediterranean, preventing Arab expansion into much of Europe. The Seljuqs' defeat of the Byzantine military in the 11th century and settling in Anatolia effectively marked the end of Byzantine influence in the region. The Seljuks ruled most of the Middle East region for the next 200 years, but their empire soon broke up into a number of smaller sultanates.
Christian [Western Europe] had staged a remarkable economic and demographic recovery in the 11th century since the nadir of its fortunes in the 7th century. The fragmentation of the Middle East allowed joined forces, mainly from England, France and the emerging Holy Roman Empire to enter the region. In 1095, Pope Urban II had responded to pleas from the flagging Byzantine Empire, summoned the European aristocracy to recapture the Holy Land for Christianity, and in 1099 the knights of the First Crusade captured Jerusalem. They founded the Kingdom of Jerusalem, which survived until 1187, when Saladin retook the city. Smaller crusader fiefdoms survived until 1291.
Mongol invasions (13th century)
In the early 13th century, a new wave of invaders, the armies of the Mongol Empire, swept through the region, sacking Baghdad in 1258 and advancing as far south as the border of Egypt. Mamluk Emir Baibars left Damascus to Cairo where he was welcomed by Sultan Qutuz. After taking Damascus, the Ilkhanate was established and Hulagu demanded that Sultan Qutuz surrender Egypt but Sultan Qutuz had Hulagu's envoys killed and, with the help of Baibars, mobilized his troops.
Although Hulagu had to leave for the East when great Khan Möngke died in action against the Southern Song, he left his lieutenant, the Christian Kitbuqa, in charge. Sultan Qutuz drew the Mongol army into an ambush near the Orontes River, routed them at the Battle of Ain Jalut and captured and executed Kitbuqa. With this victoryMamluk Turks became Sultans of Egypt and the real power in the Middle East and gaining control of Palestine and Syria, while other Turkish sultans controlled Iraq andAnatolia until the arrival of the Ottomans.
The Ottoman Empire (1299–1918)
Selim the Grim, Ottoman conqueror of the Middle East
Middle East Map 1890 - 1914. Ottoman Empire (Hejaz Vilayet and Yemen Vilayet), Jabal Shammar, Aden Protectorate, Emirate of Nejd and Hasa, and Hadhramaut.
By the early 15th century, a new power had arisen in western Anatolia, the Ottoman Empire. Ottoman khans, who in 1453 captured the Christian Byzantine capitol of Constantinople and made themselves sultans. The Mamluks held the Ottomans out of the Middle East for a century, but in 1514 Selim the Grim began the systematic Ottoman conquest of the region. Syria was occupied in 1516 and Egypt in 1517, extinguishing the Mameluk line. Iraq was conquered almost in 40 years from the IranianSafavids, who were successors of the Aq Qoyunlu.
The Ottomans united the whole region under one ruler for the first time since the reign of theAbbasid caliphs of the 10th century, and they kept control of it for 400 years, despite brief intermissions created by the Iranian Safavids and Afsharids. "The Ottoman Empires was one of the greatest, most extensive, and long lasting in the History of the World. It included most of the territories of the Eastern Roman Empire(...)and held portions that the Byzantines never ruled (...)The Ottoman Empire was born in 1300 and endured until World War I-."[14]
By this time the Ottomans lost Greece, theBalkans, and most of Hungary, setting the new frontier between east and west far to the north of the Danube. In the west, Europe was rapidly expanding; demographically, economically and culturally. By the 17th century, Europe had overtaken the Muslim world in wealth, population and—most importantly—technology. The industrial revolution in Europe fuelled a boom that laid the foundations for the growth ofcapitalism.
By 1700, the Ottomans had been driven out of Hungary and the balance of power along the frontier had shifted decisively in favor of the west. Although some areas of Ottoman Europe, such as Albania and Bosnia, saw many conversions to Islam, the area was never culturally absorbed into the Muslim world. From 1700 to 1918, the Ottomans steadily retreated, and the Middle East fell further and further behind Europe, becoming increasingly inward-looking and defensive. During the 19th century, Greece, Serbia, Romania, and Bulgaria asserted their independence, and in the Balkan Wars of 1912–13 the Ottomans were driven out of Europe altogether, except for the city of Constantinople and its hinterland.
By the 19th century, the Ottoman Empire was known as the "sick man of Europe", increasingly under the financial control of the European powers. Domination soon turned to outright conquest. The French annexed Algeria in 1830 and Tunisia in 1878. The British occupied Egypt in 1882, though it remained under nominal Ottoman sovereignty.
The British also established effective control of the Persian Gulf, and the French extended their influence into Lebanon and Syria. In 1912, the Italians seized Libyaand the Dodecanese islands, just off the coast of the Ottoman heartland of Anatolia. The Ottomans turned to Germany to protect them from the western powers, but the result was increasing financial and military dependence on Germany.
Ottoman attempts at reform
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Middle Eastern rulers tried to modernize their states to compete more effectively with the European powers. In the Ottoman Empire, the Tanzimat reforms re-strengthened Ottoman rule and were furthered by the Young Ottomans in the late 19th century, leading to the First Constitutional Era in the Empire that included the writing of the 1876 constitution and the establishment of the Ottoman Parliament. The authors of the 1906 revolution in Persia all sought to import versions of the western model of constitutional government, civil law, secular education and industrial development into their countries. Across the region, railways and telegraphs lines were built, schools and universities were opened, and a new class of army officers, lawyers, teachers and administrators emerged, challenging the traditional leadership of Islamic scholars.
The first Ottoman constitutional experiment ended soon after it began, however, when the autocratic Sultan Abdul Hamid II abolished the parliament and the constitution in favor of personal rule. Abdul Hamid ruled by decree for the next 30 years, stirring democratic resentment towards his rule. The reform movement known as the Young Turks emerged in the 1890s against Abdul Hamid's rule, which included massacres against minorities. The Young Turks seized power in the 1908Young Turk Revolution and established the Second Constitutional Era, leading to a pluralist and multiparty elections in the Empire for the first time in 1908. The Young Turks split into two parties, the pro-German and pro-centralization Committee of Union and Progress and the pro-British and pro-decentralization Freedom and Accord Party. The former was led by an ambitious pair of army officers, Ismail Enver Bey (later Pasha) and Ahmed Cemal Pasha, and a radical lawyer, Mehmed Talaat Bey (later Pasha). After a power struggle between the two parties of Young Turks, the Committee emerged victorious and became a ruling junta, with Talaat as Grand Vizier and Enver as War Minister, and established a German-funded modernisation program across the Empire.[15]
Enver Bey's alliance with Germany, which he saw as the most advanced military power in Europe, was enabled by the British demands that the Ottoman Empire cede their formal capital Edirne (Adrianople) to the Bulgarians after losing the First Balkan War, which the Turks saw as a betrayal by Britain.[16] These demands cost Britain the support of the Turks, as the pro-British Freedom and Accord Party was now repressed under the pro-German Committee for, in Enver's words, "shamefully delivering the country to the enemy [Britain]" after agreeing to the demands to give up Edirne.[17]
Modern Middle East
Final years of the Ottoman Empire
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, founder of modern Turkey
In 1878, as the result of the Cyprus Convention, the United Kingdom took over the government of Cyprus as a protectorate from the Ottoman Empire. While the Cypriots at first welcomedBritish rule, hoping that they would gradually achieve prosperity, democracy and national liberation, they soon became disillusioned. The British imposed heavy taxes to cover the compensation they paid to the Sultan for conceding Cyprus to them. Moreover, the people were not given the right to participate in the administration of the island, since all powers were reserved to the High Commissioner and to London. In 1819, the Government of Lord Liverpool created the Six Acts, which established press censorship, the banning of political parties (mainly the communist party), the dissolution of municipal elections, as well as the out-ruling of trade unions, meetings of more than five individuals, and the tolling of church bellsoutside services.[18]
Meanwhile, the fall of the Ottomans and the partitioning of Anatolia by the Allies led to resistance by the Turkish population, under the Turkish National Movement led byMustafa Kemal Atatürk, the Turkish victory against the invading powers during theTurkish War of Independence, and the founding of the modern Republic of Turkey in 1923. As the first President of Turkey, Atatürk embarked on a program of modernisation and secularisation. He abolished the caliphate, emancipated women, enforced western dress and the use of a new Turkish alphabet based on Latin alphabet in place of the Arabic alphabet, and abolished the jurisdiction of the Islamic courts. In effect, Turkey, having given up rule over the Arab World, was now determined to secede from the Middle East and become culturally part of Europe.
Another turning point in the history of the Middle East came when oil was discovered, first in Persia in 1908 and later in Saudi Arabia (in 1938) and the other Persian Gulf states, and also in Libya and Algeria. The Middle East, it turned out, possessed the world's largest easily accessible reserves of crude oil, the most important commodity in the 20th-century industrial world. Although western oil companies pumped and exported nearly all of the oil to fuel the rapidly expanding automobile industry and other western industrial developments, the kings and emirs of the oil states became immensely rich, enabling them to consolidate their hold on power and giving them a stake in preserving western hegemony over the region.[19]
A Western dependence on Middle Eastern oil and the decline of British influence led to a growing American interest in the region. Initially, the Western oil companies established a predominance over oil production and extraction. However, indigenous movements towards nationalizing oil assets, oil sharing and the advent of OPEC ensured a shift in the balance of power towards the Arab oil producing nations.[19] Oil wealth also had the effect of stultifying whatever movement towards economic, political or social reform might have emerged in the Arab world under the influence of the Kemalist revolution in Turkey.
In 1914, Enver Pasha's alliance with Germany led the Ottoman Empire into the fatal step of joining Germany and Austria-Hungary in World War I, against Britain and France. The British saw the Ottomans as the weak link in the enemy alliance, and concentrated on knocking them out of the war. When a direct assault failed atGallipoli in 1915, they turned to fomenting revolution in the Ottoman domains, exploiting the awakening force of Arab, Armenian, and Assyrian nationalism against the Ottomans.
The British found an ally in Sharif Hussein, the hereditary ruler of Mecca (and believed by Muslims to be a descendant of the family of Muhammad), who led anArab Revolt against Ottoman rule, having received a promise of Arab independence in exchange.
Defeat and partition of the Ottoman Empire (1918–22)
When the Ottoman Empire was defeated by an Arab uprising and British Empire forces after the Sinai and Palestine Campaign in 1918, the Arab population was rewarded with what many Islamic activists of more recent times have described as an Anglo-French betrayal. British and French governments concluded a secret treaty (the Sykes–Picot Agreement) to partition the Middle East between them and, additionally, the British, via the Balfour Declaration promised the international Zionistmovement their support in re-creating the historic Jewish homeland in Palestine.
Historically known as the site of the ancient Jewish Kingdom of Israel and successor Jewish nations for 1,200 years between approximately 1100 BC–100 AD, the region now had a large Arab population also from the 7th century. When the Ottomans departed, the Arabs proclaimed an independent state in Damascus, but were too weak, militarily and economically, to resist the European powers for long, and Britain and France soon established control and re-arranged the Middle East to suit themselves.[20]
Syria became a French protectorate thinly disguised as a League of Nations mandate. The Christian coastal areas were split off to become Lebanon, another French protectorate. Iraq and Palestine became British mandated territories. Iraq became the "Kingdom of Iraq" and one of Sharif Hussein's sons, Faisal, was installed as the King of Iraq. Iraq incorporated large populations of Kurds, Assyrians andTurkmens, many of whom had been promised independent states of their own.
Palestine became the "British Mandate of Palestine" and was split in half. The eastern half of Palestine became the "Emirate of Transjordan" to provide a throne for another of Husayn's sons, Abdullah. The western half of Palestine was placed under direct British administration. The Jewish population of Palestine which numbered less than 8 percent in 1918 was given free rein to immigrate, buy land from absentee landlords, set up a shadow government in waiting and establish the nucleus of a state under the protection of the British Army which suppressed a Palestinian revolt in 1936.[21] Most of the Arabian peninsula fell to another British ally, Ibn Saud. Saud created the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia in 1932.
During the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s, Syria and Egypt made moves towards independence. In 1919, Saad Zaghloul orchestrated mass demonstrations in Egypt known as the First Revolution. While Zaghloul would later become Prime Minister, the British repression of the anticolonial riots led to the death of some 800 people. In 1920, Syrian forces were defeated by the French in the Battle of Maysalun and Iraqi forces were defeated by the British when they revolted. In 1922, the (nominally) independent Kingdom of Egypt was created following the British government's issuance of the Unilateral Declaration of Egyptian Independence.
Although the Kingdom of Egypt was technically "neutral" during World War II, Cairosoon became a major military base for the British forces and the country was occupied. The British were able to do this because of a 1936 treaty by which the United Kingdom maintained that it had the right to station troops on Egyptian soil to protect the Suez Canal. In 1941, the Rashīd `Alī al-Gaylānī coup in Iraq led to the British invasion of the country during the Anglo-Iraqi War. The British invasion of Iraq was followed by the Allied invasion of Syria–Lebanon and the Anglo-Soviet invasion of Iran.
In Palestine, conflicting forces of Arab nationalism and Zionism created a situation the British could neither resolve nor extricate themselves from. The rise to power of German dictator Adolf Hitler had created a new urgency in the Zionist quest to immigrate to Palestine and create a Jewish state. A Palestinian state was also an attractive alternative to the Arab and Persian leaders, instead of the de facto British, French, and perceived Jewish colonialism or imperialism, under the logic of "the enemy of my enemy is my friend".[22]
New states post-World War II
The British, the French, and the Soviets departed from many parts of the Middle East during and after World War II. Iran, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and the Middle East states on the Arabian Peninsula generally remained unaffected by World War II. However, after the war, the following Middle East states had independence restored or became independent:
- 22 November 1943 – Lebanon
- 1 January 1944 – Syria
- 22 May 1946 – Jordan (British mandate ended)
- 1947 – Iraq (forces of the United Kingdom withdrawn)
- 1947 – Egypt (forces of the United Kingdom withdrawn to the Suez Canal area)
- 1948 – Israel (forces of the United Kingdom withdrawn)
- August 16, 1960 – Cyprus
The struggle between the Arabs and the Jews in Palestine culminated in the 1947United Nations plan to partition Palestine. This plan attempted to create an Arab state and a Jewish state in the narrow space between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean. While the Jewish leaders accepted it, the Arab leaders rejected this plan.
On 14 May 1948, when the British Mandate expired, the Zionist leadership declared the State of Israel. In the 1948 Arab–Israeli War which immediately followed, the armies of Egypt, Syria, Transjordan, Lebanon, Iraq, and Saudi Arabia intervened and were defeated by Israel. About 800,000 Palestinians fled from areas annexed by Israel and became refugees in neighbouring countries, thus creating the "Palestinian problem", which has troubled the region ever since. Approximately two-thirds of 758,000–866,000 of the Jews expelled or who fled from Arab lands after 1948 were absorbed and naturalized by the State of Israel.
On August 16, 1960, Cyprus gained its independence from the United Kingdom. Archbishop Makarios III, a charismatic religious and political leader, was elected the first president of independent Cyprus, and in 1961 it became the 99th member of the United Nations.
Modern states
The departure of the European powers from direct control of the region, the establishment ofIsrael, and the increasing importance of the oil industry, marked the creation of the modern Middle East. These developments led to a growing presence of the United States in Middle East affairs. The U.S. was the ultimate guarantor of the stability of the region, and from the 1950s the dominant force in the oil industry. When revolutions brought radical anti-Westernregimes to power in Egypt in 1954, Syria in 1963, Iraq in 1968 and Libya in 1969, theSoviet Union, seeking to open a new arena of the Cold War in the Middle East, allied itself with Arab socialist rulers such as Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt and Saddam Hussein of Iraq.
These regimes gained popular support through their promises to destroy the state of Israel, defeat the U.S. and other "western imperialists," and to bring prosperity to the Arab masses. When the Six-Day War of 1967 between Israel and its neighbours ended in a decisive loss for the Muslim side, many in the Islamic world saw this as the failure of Arab socialism. This represents a turning point when "fundamental and militant Islam began to fill the political vacuum created".[23]
In response to this challenge to its interests in the region, the U.S. felt obliged to defend its remaining allies, the conservative monarchies of Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Iran and the Persian Gulf emirates, whose methods of rule were almost as unattractive to western eyes as those of the anti-western regimes. Iran in particular became a key U.S. ally, until a revolution led by the Shi'a clergy overthrew the monarchy in 1979 and established a theocratic regime that was even more anti-western than the secular regimes in Iraq or Syria. This forced the U.S. into a close alliance with Saudi Arabia. The list of Arab-Israeli wars includes a great number of major wars such as 1948 Arab–Israeli War, 1956 Suez War, 1967 Six-Day War, 1970War of Attrition, 1973 Yom Kippur War, 1982 Lebanon War, as well as a number of lesser conflicts.
Between 1963 and 1974, conflict arising betweenGreek Cypriots and Turkish Cypriots in British colonial Cyprus led to Cypriot intercommunal violence and the Turkish invasion of Cyprus. TheCyprus dispute remains unresolved.
In the mid-to-late 1960s, the Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party led by Michel Aflaq and Salah al-Din al-Bitar took power in both Iraq and Syria. Iraq was first ruled by Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr, but was succeeded by Saddam Hussein in 1979, and Syria was ruled first by a Military Committee led by Salah Jadid, and later Hafez al-Assad until 2000, when he was succeeded by his son, Bashar al-Assad.
In 1979, Egypt under Nasser's successor, Anwar Sadat, concluded a peace treaty with Israel, ending the prospects of a united Arab military front. From the 1970s the Palestinians, led by Yasser Arafat's Palestine Liberation Organization, resorted to a prolonged campaign of violence against Israel and against American, Jewish and western targets generally, as a means of weakening Israeli resolve and undermining western support for Israel. The Palestinians were supported in this, to varying degrees, by the regimes in Syria, Libya, Iran and Iraq. The high point of this campaign came in the 1975 United Nations General Assembly Resolution 3379condemning Zionism as a form of racism and the reception given to Arafat by theUnited Nations General Assembly. Resolution 3379 was revoked in 1991 by theUnited Nations General Assembly Resolution 4686.
Due to many of the frantic events of the late 1970s in the Middle East it culimated in the Iran–Iraq War between neighbouring Iran and Iraq. The war, started by Iraq, who invaded Iranian Khuzestan in 1980 at the behest of the latter's chaotic state of country due to the 1979 Islamic Revolution, eventually turned into a stalemate with hundreds of thousands of dead on both sides.
The fall of the Soviet Union and the collapse of communism in the early 1990s had several consequences for the Middle East. It allowed large numbers of Soviet Jews to emigrate from Russia and Ukraine to Israel, further strengthening the Jewish state. It cut off the easiest source of credit, armaments and diplomatic support to the anti-western Arab regimes, weakening their position. It opened up the prospect of cheap oil from Russia, driving down the price of oil and reducing the west's dependence on oil from the Arab states. It discredited the model of development through authoritarian state socialism, which Egypt (under Nasser), Algeria, Syria and Iraq had followed since the 1960s, leaving these regimes politically and economically stranded. Rulers such as Saddam Hussein in Iraq increasingly turned to Arab nationalism as a substitute for socialism.
Saddam Hussein led Iraq into a prolonged and very costly war with Iran in the 1980s, and then into its fateful invasion of Kuwait in 1990. Kuwait had been part of the Ottoman province of Basra before 1918, and thus in a sense part of Iraq, but Iraq had recognized its independence in the 1960s. The U.S. responded to the invasion by forming a coalition of allies that included Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Syria, gaining approval from the United Nations and then evicting Iraq from Kuwait by force in thePersian Gulf War. President George H. W. Bush did not, however, attempt to overthrow Saddam Hussein's regime, something the U.S. later came to regret. The Persian Gulf War and its aftermath brought about a permanent U.S. military presence in the Persian Gulf region, particularly in Saudi Arabia, which offended many Muslims, and was a reason often cited by Osama bin Laden as justification for the September 11 attacks.
1990s–present
The rapid spread of political democracy and the development of market economies in Eastern Europe, Latin America, East Asia and parts of Africa had passed by the Middle East. In the whole region, only Israel, Turkey and to some extent Lebanon and the Palestinian territories were democracies.
Other countries had legislative bodies, but these had little power. In the Persian Gulf states the majority of the population could not vote because they were guest workers rather than citizens. Many Arab countries counter-claim that a direct result of Western foreign policy and an overly strong Israel, has been the removal of much progress that would come naturally from these nations.
In most Middle Eastern countries, the growth of market economies was inhibited by political restrictions, corruption and cronyism, overspending on arms and prestige projects, and over-dependence on oil revenues. Successful economies in the region were those that combined oil wealth with low populations, such as Qatar, Bahrain,Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates. In these states, the ruling emirs allowed some political and social liberalization, but without giving up any of their own power. Lebanon also rebuilt a fairly successful economy after a prolonged civil war in the 1980s.
In the opening years of the 21st century all these factors combined to raise the Middle East conflict to a new height, and to spread its consequences across the globe. The failure of the attempt by Bill Clinton to broker a peace deal between Israel and the Palestinians at Camp David in 2000 (2000 Camp David Summit) led directly to the election of Ariel Sharon as Prime Minister of Israel and to the Al-Aqsa Intifada, characterised by suicide bombing of Israeli civilian targets. This was the first major outbreak of violence since the Oslo Peace Accords of 1993.
At the same time, the failures of most of the Arab regimes and the bankruptcy of secular Arab radicalism led a section of educated Arabs (and other Muslims) to embrace Islamism, promoted both by the Shi'a clerics of Iran and by the powerfulWahhabist sect of Saudi Arabia. Many of the militant Islamists gained their military training while fighting against the forces of the Soviet Union in Afghanistan.
One of these militants was a wealthy Saudi Arabian, Osama bin Laden. After fighting against the Soviets in Afghanistan, he formed the al-Qaida organization, which was responsible for the 1998 U.S. embassy bombings, the USS Cole bombing and theSeptember 11, 2001 attacks on the United States. The September 11 attacks led the administration of U.S. President George W. Bush to launch an invasion of Afghanistan in 2001 to overthrow the Taliban regime, which was harbouring Bin Laden and his organisation. The U.S. and its allies described this operation as part of a global "War on Terror."
During 2002 the administration, led by Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, developed a plan to invade Iraq, remove Saddam from power, and turn Iraq into a democratic state with a free-market economy, which they hoped would serve as a model for the rest of the Middle East. When the U.S. and its principal allies, Britain, Italy, Spain and Australia, could not secure United Nations approval for the execution of the numerous United Nations resolutions, they launched an invasion of Iraq, overthrowing Saddam with no great difficulty in April 2003.
The advent of a new western army of occupation in a Middle Eastern capital marked a turning point in the history of the region. Despite successful elections (although boycotted by large portions of Iraq's Sunni population) held in January 2005, much of Iraq had all but disintegrated, due to a post-war insurgency which morphed into persistent ethnic violence that the American army was initially unable to quell. Many of Iraq's intellectual and business elite fled the country, and many Iraqi refugees left as a result of the insurgency, further destabilizing the region. A responsive surge in US forces in Iraq has recently been largely successful in controlling the insurgency and stabilizing the country.
By 2005, President George W. Bush's Road map for peace between Israel and the Palestinians was stalled, although this situation had begun to change with Yasser Arafat's death in 2004. In response, Israel moved towards a unilateral solution, pushing ahead with the Israeli West Bank barrier to protect Israel from Palestinian suicide bombers and proposed unilateral withdrawal from Gaza. The barrier if completed would amount to a de facto annexation of areas of the West Bank by Israel. In 2006 a new conflict erupted between Israel and Hezbollah Shi’a militia in southern Lebanon, further setting back any "prospects for peace".
Starting in late 2010 to the present, a revolutionary wave popularly known as theArab Spring has brought major protests, uprisings, and even revolutions to several Middle Eastern countries and appears to be in the process of significantly changing the social order of the region.
See also
- List of historians, inclusive of most major historians
- List of history journals#Middle East
- Middle Eastern Empires
- Timeline of Middle Eastern history
- The oil crises
By country:
- History of Armenia
- History of Azerbaijan
- History of Bahrain
- History of Egypt
- History of Georgia
- History of Iran
- History of Iraq
- History of Israel
- History of Jordan
- History of Kuwait
- History of Lebanon
- History of Oman
- History of Palestine
- History of Qatar
- History of Saudi Arabia
- History of Syria
- History of Turkey
- History of the United Arab Emirates
- History of Yemen
General:
- History of North Africa
- Synoptic table of the principal old world prehistoric cultures
- History of Asia
References
- Dodson, Aidan (1991). Egyptian Rock Cut Tombs. Buckinghamshire, UK: Shire Publications Ltd. p. 46. ISBN 0-7478-0128-2.
- Richard, Suzanne (2003). Near Eastern Archaeology: A Reader (Illustrated ed.). EISENBRAUNS. p. 69. ISBN 978-1-57506-083-5.
- "World Factbook – Jordan".
- "World Factbook – Kuwait".
- Semino, Ornella; Magri, Chiara; Benuzzi, Giorgia; Lin, Alice A.; Al-Zahery, Nadia; Battaglia, Vincenza; MacCioni, Liliana; Triantaphyllidis, Costas; Shen, Peidong; Oefner, Peter J.; Zhivotovsky, Lev A.; King, Roy; Torroni, Antonio; Cavalli-Sforza, L. Luca; Underhill, Peter A.; Santachiara-Benerecetti, A. Silvana (2004). "Origin, Diffusion, and Differentiation of Y-Chromosome Haplogroups E and J: Inferences on the Neolithization of Europe and Later Migratory Events in the Mediterranean Area". The American Journal of Human Genetics 74 (5): 1023–34.doi:10.1086/386295. PMC 1181965. PMID 15069642.
- Gérard, Nathalie; Berriche, Sala; Aouizérate, Annie; Diéterlen, Florent; Lucotte, Gérard (2006). "North African Berber and Arab Influences in the Western Mediterranean Revealed by Y-Chromosome DNA Haplotypes". Human Biology78 (3): 307–16. doi:10.1353/hub.2006.0045. PMID 17216803.
- Grugni, Viola; Battaglia, Vincenza; Hooshiar Kashani, Baharak; Parolo, Silvia; Al-Zahery, Nadia; Achilli, Alessandro; Olivieri, Anna; Gandini, Francesca; et al. (2012). Kivisild, Toomas, ed. "Ancient Migratory Events in the Middle East: New Clues from the Y-Chromosome Variation of Modern Iranians". PLoS ONE 7 (7): e41252.doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0041252. PMC 3399854. PMID 22815981.
- Midant-Reynes, Béatrix. The Prehistory of Egypt: From the First Egyptians to the First Kings. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers.
- Lyons, Albert S. "Ancient Civilizations – Mesopotamia". Health Guidance.org. Retrieved 24 August 2013.
- BetBasoo, Peter (2007). "Brief History of Assyrians". Assyrian International News Agency. Retrieved 24 August 2013.
- Egypt (page 102)
- The Inheritance of Rome
- Subhi Y. Labib (1969), "Capitalism in Medieval Islam", The Journal of Economic History 29 (1), p. 79–96 [80].
- Quataert 2000.
- Mansfield & Pelham 2013, pp. 141-147.
- Erik-Jan Zürcher (2004). Turkey: A Modern History (Revised ed.). I.B.Tauris. pp. 107 ff. ISBN 978-1-86064-958-5.
- Y.R. (1 February 1913). "Le coup d'état du 23 Janvier". L'Illustration. Retrieved 28 July 2014.
- Dr. Tofallis, Kypros, A History of Cyprus, p.98 (2002)
- Morton, Michael Quentin (December 2011). "Narrowing the Gulf: Anglo-American Relations and Arabian Oil, 1928-74" (PDF). Liwa Journal 3 (6): 39–54. Retrieved 14 July 2012.
- "Skyes Picot Agreement: Division of Territory". Crethi Plethi. 2009. Retrieved 24 August 2013.
- Justin McCarthy The Population of Palestine 1990
- Lewis 1995, pp. 348–350.
- Watson, Peter (2006). Ideas: A History of Thought and Invention, from Fire to Freud. New York: Harper Perennial. p. 1096. ISBN 0-06-093564-2.
Further reading
- Fawaz, Leila Tarazi. A Land of Aching Hearts: The Middle East in the Great War (2014)
- Fawcett, Louise, ed. International relations of the Middle East (Oxford University Press, 2013)
- Lewis, Bernard (1995), The Middle East: A Brief History of the Last 2,000 Years, New York: Scribner
- Goldschmidt, Arthur, and Lawrence Davidson. A concise history of the Middle East (Westview Press, 1991)
- Issawi, Charles. An economic history of the Middle East and North Africa (Routledge, 2013) Excerpt and text search
- Kirk, George Eden. A short history of the Middle East: from the rise of Islam to modern times(Methuen, 1964)
- Mansfield, Peter; Pelham, Nicolas (2013), A History of the Middle East (4 ed.),Penguin Books, ISBN 978-0-7181-9967-8
- Rogan, Eugene (2009), The Arabs: A History
- Quataert, Donald (2000), The Ottoman Empire, 1700-1922, Cambridge University Press
External links
- Qatar Digital Library - an online portal providing access to previously undigitised British Library archive materials relating to Persian Gulf history and Arabic science
- Modern Historical Struggles from the Dean Peter Krogh Foreign Affairs Digital Archives
- Ancient Civilizations Medicine
- Assyrians
- Middle East: Primary Cultural and Historical Zon
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