Hejaz Rebellion
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The Hejaz rebellion took place in the then Ottoman Province of Hejaz between 1854/1855 and 1856. It was a reaction toward Ottoman rule in the Arabian Peninsula. It was triggered by an anti-slavery edict that contradicted religious law, but also a political conflict between Ottoman rule and the local sharifs of Mecca. It ultimately ended with Ottoman victory.


Background

The
Firman of 1854 The Firman of 1854, sometimes called the Prohibition of the Circassian and Georgian Slave Trade, refers to the Imperial ''Firman'' or ''Ferman'' (Decree) issued by Sultan Abdülmecid I in October 1854, prohibiting the slave trade in Circassian an ...
was one of the causes of the Hejaz rebellion of 1855–1856. The
Ottoman Arabia The Ottoman era in the history of Arabia lasted from 1517 to 1918. Ottoman degree of control over these lands varied over the four centuries with the fluctuating strength or weakness of the Empire's central authority. History Early period In t ...
n Province of Hijaz was in a situation of strong tension in 1854. In June that year had tensions had erupted in fighting before it was nominally suppressed in the end of 1854. Abdulmuttalib Efendi, emir of Mecca, was in a conflict with the Ottoman Governor of Jeddah,
Kamil Pasha Kamil is a name used in a number of languages. Kamil () is a Polish language, Polish, Czech language, Czech, and Slovak language, Slovak given name, equivalent to the Italian Camillo, Spanish/Portuguese Camilo and French Camille (given name) ...
. Abdulmuttalib gathered support by asking the notables of Jeddah to write a letter of 1 April 1855 to the sharif and ulema of Mecca, where they condemned the Firman as concession to Europeans, since it authorized the Ottoman governors to ban slave trade, permitted non-Muslims to erect edifices in the Arab Peninsula, allow non-Muslim men to marry Muslim women and prohibited the interference in women's dress, and the notables of Jeddah petitioned the emir to petition the Sultan.


Events

In August 1855 the Sultan ordered the deposition of Abdulmuttalib Efendi if necessary. Governor Kamil Pasha ordered the publc reading of the firman in the province, resulting in the ulema of condemning it as contrary to sharia. However, open rebellion broke out with rioting in Mecka and Jeddah and attacks on houses belonging to French and British protegees. On 15 November 1855 Abdulmuttalib Efendi was deposed and replaced by sharif Muhammed ibn Avn. Abdulmuttalib Efendi refused to accept the deposition and gathered support among the desert Arab bedouin chiefs (urban), resulting in an urban army of 600-700 soldiers attacking the Ottoman troops in Bahre, and then again with a force of 2000 soldiers; both times without success, but with riots in Mecca and Jeddah. On 11 January 1856 Seyhülislam Arif Efendi ruled that the firman did not violate sharia to the dignitaries of Mecca, and that while it did prohibit the slave trade it did not prohibit slavery itself and did not threaten the slavowners possession of their human property.


End and aftermath

The rebellion was ended by the capture of Abdulmuttalib Efendi in 1856. When the Firman of 1857 against trade in African slaves was introduced, the Hijaz Province was excluded from the law. However the tensions continued and resulted in the Jeddah massacre of 1858.Badem, C. (2010). The Ottoman Crimean War (1853-1856). Tyskland: Brill. p358 Ottoman rule was not fully restored in the province until 1869.


References

{{Reflist Ottoman Arabia Rebellions in the Ottoman Empire 1854 in the Ottoman Empire 1855 in the Ottoman Empire 1856 in the Ottoman Empire 19th-century rebellions History of Mecca History of Jeddah 19th century in Mecca History of Hejaz Slavery in the Ottoman Empire