Peasants' revolt in Palestine

Peasant's Revolt of 1834
Part of the Syrian Peasant Revolt (1834–35) (Campaigns of Muhammad Ali of Egypt)
DateMay–August 1834
Location
Palestine and Transjordan (then part of the Egyptian-ruled eyalets (provinces) of Damascus and Sidon; nominally, part of the Ottoman Empire)
Result

Revolt suppressed

  • Rebel leaders executed
  • Egyptian rule reasserted
  • Conscription orders carried out
  • 10,000 peasants deported to Egypt
Belligerents

Egypt Eyalet
Abd al-Hadi clan of Arraba
Abu Ghosh clan of Jerusalem region (From July 1834)
Supported by

Urban notables of Nablus, Jerusalem, Hebron and Safed

Rural clans and Bedouin tribes of Palestine

Supported by

Commanders and leaders

Muhammad Ali
Ibrahim Pasha
Salim Pasha
Rashad Bey 
Mustafa Bey (WIA)
Husayn Abd al-Hadi

Jabr Abu Ghosh (From July 1834)

Qasim al-Ahmad Executed
Yusuf al-Qasim Executed
Isa al-Amr Executed
Abdullah al-Jarrar
Isa al-Barqawi Executed
Mas'ud al-Madi Executed
Isa al-Madi Executed
Ismail ibn Simhan Executed
Abd al-Jabir Barghouti Executed
Aqil Agha
Salim Atawna 
Subh Shawkah
Ismail Majali Executed

Ibrahim Abu Ghosh (Until July 1834)
Strength
~26,000 professional soldiers Tens of thousands of irregulars
Casualties and losses
Several thousand[1] Thousands of rebels killed
10,000 peasants deported to Egypt
Thousands of civilians killed
Total (rebels and civilians): about 10,000 killed

The Peasants' Revolt[2][3] was a rebellion against Egyptian conscription and taxation policies in Palestine. While rebel ranks consisted mostly of the local peasantry, urban notables and Bedouin tribes also formed an integral part of the revolt. This was a collective reaction to Egypt's gradual elimination of the unofficial rights and privileges previously enjoyed by the various classes of society in the Levant under Ottoman rule.[4]

As part of Muhammad Ali's modernization policies, Ibrahim Pasha, the Egyptian governor of the Levant, issued conscription orders for a fifth of all Muslim males of fighting age. Encouraged by rural sheikh Qasim al-Ahmad, the urban notables of Nablus, Hebron and the Jerusalem-Jaffa area did not carry out Ibrahim Pasha's orders to conscript, disarm and tax the local peasantry. The religious notables of Safad followed suit. Qasim and other local leaders rallied their kinsmen and revolted against the authorities in May 1834, taking control of several towns. While the core of the fighting was in the central mountain regions of Palestine, the revolt also spread to the Galilee, Gaza and parts of Transjordan. Jerusalem was briefly captured by the rebels and plundered. Faced with the superior firepower and organization of Ibrahim Pasha's troops, the rebels were defeated in Jabal Nablus, Jerusalem and the coastal plain before their final defeat in Hebron, which was leveled. Afterward, Ibrahim Pasha's troops pursued and captured Qasim in al-Karak, which was also leveled.

By the 20th century, the revolt was largely absent in the Palestinian collective memory,[5] from which "the humiliating and traumatic events" were "conveniently erased", according to Israeli historian Baruch Kimmerling.[6] Kimmerling and Joel S. Migdal state that the revolt was a formative event for the Palestinian sense of nationhood in that it brought together disparate groups against a common enemy. Moreover, they asserted that these groups reemerged later to constitute the Palestinian people. The revolt represented a moment of political unity in Palestine. The goal of the rebels was to expel the Egyptian army and reinstate Ottoman rule to restore the Ottoman standards that defined the relationship between the government and the governed. These standards were made up of the religious laws, administrative codes and local norms and traditions that were disrupted by Egyptian reforms.[4]

  1. ^ Safi, Khaled M. (2008), "Territorial Awareness in the 1834 Palestinian Revolt", in Roger Heacock (ed.), Of Times and Spaces in Palestine: The Flows and Resistances of Identity, Beirut: Presses de l'Ifpo, ISBN 978-2-35159-265-6
  2. ^ Baer, 1982, p. 254
  3. ^ Grossman, 2011, p. 47
  4. ^ a b Rood, 2004, p. 139
  5. ^ Cite error: The named reference Manna93 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  6. ^ Cite error: The named reference KimmerlingForgottenRevolt was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

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