The Politics of Interventionism in Ottoman Lebanon, 1830-61

Front Cover
Bloomsbury Academic, 2000 - History - 816 pages
This study analyzes thirty critical and determinant years in the shaping of modern politics and patterns of foreign intervention in Lebanon. Relying on the archives of the major European powers, the Catholic and Protestant missions, and Ottoman documents, and supplemented by unpublished manuscripts, this book depicts the events that affected the relationships between the country's contending clerical and feudal factions, the Great Powers, as well as the resistance of the Ottoman authorities to having this critical province succumb to European domination. Finally, it analyzes the effect of Franco-British rivalry on inter-sectarian tension and strife.

About the author (2000)

Ceasar E. Farah is Professor of Middle Eastern and Islamic History at the University of Minnesota.

Bibliographic information