Jamal Al-Din Hamdan
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Jamal Al-Din Hamdan
Sheikh Jamal al-Din Hamdan () was a Lebanese Druze Sheikh living in the nineteenth century in Mount Lebanon in Bater, Lebanon, Bater, Chouf District. History

Following the History of Lebanon#Sectarian conflict: European Powers begin to intervene, Lebanese civil war of 1859-1860, Hamdan was sentenced to death by the Ottoman Turkish authorities alongside ten other Druze sheikhs : Sheikh Sa'id Jumblat, Sheikh Hussein Talhuq, Sheikh As'ad Talhuq, Sheikh Qasim Abu Nakad, Sheikh As'ad 'Imad, Amir Muhammad Qasim Arslan, Sheikh Salim Jumblat, Muhyi al-Din Shibli, 'Ali Sa'id, and Bashir Miri Sa'id. The Ottoman government's extraordinary envoy to the region, Fuad Pacha, had ordered that these men be executed for their participation in the atrocities of the Lebanese civil war of 1859-1860 against the Maronite Christians. According to Charles Henry Churchill, C.H. Churchill's 1862 ''The Druzes and the Maronites'', "none of these sentences have carried into execution, whether of death or ...
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Lebanese Druze
Lebanese Druze ( ar, دروز لبنان, durūz lubnān) are Lebanese people who are Druze. The Druze faith is a monotheistic and Abrahamic religion, and an ethnoreligious esoteric group originating from the Near East who self identify as unitarians ( ar, موحدين, muwaḥḥidīn). The Lebanese Druze people are believed to constitute about 5.2 percentLebanon 2015 International Religious Freedom Report
U.S. Department of State. Retrieved on 2019-04-23.
of the total population of Lebanon and have around 1.5 million members worldwide. The Druze, who refer to themselves as al-Muwahhideen, or "believers in one God," are concentrated in the rural, mountainous areas east and south of


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