Futile Efforts to Create an Arab Kingdom of Syria. From the Idea of Greater Syria to Syria Partitioned under the French Mandate (1915–1922)

The text presents the dynamics and variability of the political options and alliances which shaped the borders of modern Syria in the most crucial period of World War I and the first years of post-war reality in the Middle East. The researchers show how the external interests of the Great Powers to...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Krzysztof Kościelniak
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: The Pontifical University of John Paul II in Krakow 2020-12-01
Series:Folia Historica Cracoviensia
Subjects:
Online Access:http://czasopisma.upjp2.edu.pl/foliahistoricacracoviensia/article/view/3745/3615
_version_ 1818357206178856960
author Krzysztof Kościelniak
author_facet Krzysztof Kościelniak
author_sort Krzysztof Kościelniak
collection DOAJ
description The text presents the dynamics and variability of the political options and alliances which shaped the borders of modern Syria in the most crucial period of World War I and the first years of post-war reality in the Middle East. The researchers show how the external interests of the Great Powers took priority over the Syrians’ internal affairs. For the inhabitants of the Levant, it meant the Western practice of ignoring Arab opinions and aspirations in the aftermath of the Great War, which was sealed in the Treaty of Versailles. Despite the positive solutions proposed by The King-Crane Commission (1919), the new post-Ottoman order ignored local identities and political preferences. The new borders were created artificially and determined arbitrarily. The Sykes-Picot agreement reinforced both conspiracy theories in the Middle East and the mythology of the Great Arab Revolt. The competing Western powers took advantage of the local minorities, fueling dislike and strengthening sectarianism. In the years 1919–1920, Pan-Syrianism solidified and took a characteristic form of striving to consolidate the fragmented nation of the Greater Syria. The resolutions of the General Syrian Congress of 2 July 1919 provided timeless premises for the political orientation of the Syrian nationalists, which strongly influenced politics in the Middle East in the following decades. However, the partition of Greater Syria after World War I proved to be one of the worst of many political traumas experienced in the Middle East at that time. Pan-Syrianism was systematically weakened by the conflicting aspirations among the Syrians, the Lebanese, the Palestinians, and Jordanians.
first_indexed 2024-12-13T20:09:25Z
format Article
id doaj.art-eae44ad0a8084c688bd6e94a1764c63e
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 0867-8294
2391-6702
language deu
last_indexed 2024-12-13T20:09:25Z
publishDate 2020-12-01
publisher The Pontifical University of John Paul II in Krakow
record_format Article
series Folia Historica Cracoviensia
spelling doaj.art-eae44ad0a8084c688bd6e94a1764c63e2022-12-21T23:32:57ZdeuThe Pontifical University of John Paul II in KrakowFolia Historica Cracoviensia0867-82942391-67022020-12-0126219525010.15633/fhc.3745Futile Efforts to Create an Arab Kingdom of Syria. From the Idea of Greater Syria to Syria Partitioned under the French Mandate (1915–1922)Krzysztof Kościelniak0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3915-335XJagiellonian UniversityThe text presents the dynamics and variability of the political options and alliances which shaped the borders of modern Syria in the most crucial period of World War I and the first years of post-war reality in the Middle East. The researchers show how the external interests of the Great Powers took priority over the Syrians’ internal affairs. For the inhabitants of the Levant, it meant the Western practice of ignoring Arab opinions and aspirations in the aftermath of the Great War, which was sealed in the Treaty of Versailles. Despite the positive solutions proposed by The King-Crane Commission (1919), the new post-Ottoman order ignored local identities and political preferences. The new borders were created artificially and determined arbitrarily. The Sykes-Picot agreement reinforced both conspiracy theories in the Middle East and the mythology of the Great Arab Revolt. The competing Western powers took advantage of the local minorities, fueling dislike and strengthening sectarianism. In the years 1919–1920, Pan-Syrianism solidified and took a characteristic form of striving to consolidate the fragmented nation of the Greater Syria. The resolutions of the General Syrian Congress of 2 July 1919 provided timeless premises for the political orientation of the Syrian nationalists, which strongly influenced politics in the Middle East in the following decades. However, the partition of Greater Syria after World War I proved to be one of the worst of many political traumas experienced in the Middle East at that time. Pan-Syrianism was systematically weakened by the conflicting aspirations among the Syrians, the Lebanese, the Palestinians, and Jordanians.http://czasopisma.upjp2.edu.pl/foliahistoricacracoviensia/article/view/3745/3615syriagreater syriafrench mandate for syria and lebanonkingdom of hejazfirst world war
spellingShingle Krzysztof Kościelniak
Futile Efforts to Create an Arab Kingdom of Syria. From the Idea of Greater Syria to Syria Partitioned under the French Mandate (1915–1922)
Folia Historica Cracoviensia
syria
greater syria
french mandate for syria and lebanon
kingdom of hejaz
first world war
title Futile Efforts to Create an Arab Kingdom of Syria. From the Idea of Greater Syria to Syria Partitioned under the French Mandate (1915–1922)
title_full Futile Efforts to Create an Arab Kingdom of Syria. From the Idea of Greater Syria to Syria Partitioned under the French Mandate (1915–1922)
title_fullStr Futile Efforts to Create an Arab Kingdom of Syria. From the Idea of Greater Syria to Syria Partitioned under the French Mandate (1915–1922)
title_full_unstemmed Futile Efforts to Create an Arab Kingdom of Syria. From the Idea of Greater Syria to Syria Partitioned under the French Mandate (1915–1922)
title_short Futile Efforts to Create an Arab Kingdom of Syria. From the Idea of Greater Syria to Syria Partitioned under the French Mandate (1915–1922)
title_sort futile efforts to create an arab kingdom of syria from the idea of greater syria to syria partitioned under the french mandate 1915 1922
topic syria
greater syria
french mandate for syria and lebanon
kingdom of hejaz
first world war
url http://czasopisma.upjp2.edu.pl/foliahistoricacracoviensia/article/view/3745/3615
work_keys_str_mv AT krzysztofkoscielniak futileeffortstocreateanarabkingdomofsyriafromtheideaofgreatersyriatosyriapartitionedunderthefrenchmandate19151922