Mansur ibn Furaykh

Mansur Bey ibn Furaykh (died 7 December 1593) was Emir of the Biqa'a, Safad and Ajlun districts in the late 16th century during Ottoman rule.[1] The Ottomans granted Mansur this large power base to enable him to check the growing power of rebellious Lebanese clans, namely the Ma'an and Harfush. However, complaints were lodged against him alleging that he oppressed his subjects, and killed and robbed wealthy Muslim pilgrims during his service as amir al-hajj. Mansur also failed to pay the Ottoman authorities the taxes they were due from his sanjaks. Because of these actions, Mansur was arrested and executed.

Mansur Bey ibn Furaykh
MonarchMurad III
Amir al-Hajj
In office
1590–1591
Preceded byQansuh al-Ghazzawi
Succeeded byFarrukh Pasha
Sanjak-Bey of Nablus
In office
1589–1593
Sanjak-Bey of Safad
In office
1589–1593
In office
1583–1585
Preceded byHuseyn Pasha
Sanjak-Bey of Ajlun
In office
1589–1593
Preceded byQansuh al-Ghazzawi
Personal details
BornBiqa'a, Damascus Eyalet, Ottoman Empire
Died7 December 1593
Damascus, Damascus Eyalet, Ottoman Empire
NationalityOttoman
ChildrenKorkmaz
Nasrallah
Mansur
Muhammad

Biography

Mansur came from Bedouin stock and possibly worked as a barn-man for the Bani al-Hansh, a Sunni Muslim clan that controlled the Biqa'a nahiya (subdistrict) of the Damascus Sanjak of Damascus Eyalet. Together with a local sheikh named Ibn Shihab, Mansur and 3,000 of his men looted several villages in the nahiya of Acre in 1573, killing between 50–60 local residents in the process.[2] Consequently, an arrest order for Mansur was issued by the court of Sultan Selim II, but Mansur was not apparently punished.[2]

In 1581, Mansur was appointed as the amir al-hajj (commander of the Hajj) for the Hajj pilgrim caravan departing Damascus for Mecca.[3] In May 1583, Mansur was given control of Safad Sanjak by the district's governor, Huseyin Pasha, because the latter was reassigned to Jerusalem Sanjak to quell Bedouin disturbances there. Mansur continued to hold Safad until September 1585.[4]

By 1585, Mansur had emerged as the strongman of the Biqa'a nahiya. The Ottoman authorities permitted him to rise to the position due to fears that the often-rebellious Ma'an or Harfush clans of Chouf and Baalbek, respectively, would gain control of Biqa'a. The Ma'ans were Druze and the Harfush were Shia Muslim.[5] Mansur was known to be a devoted practitioner and champion of Sunni Islam who had a hatred of the Druze and Shia.[6][5] During an Ottoman military campaign against the Ma'ans in the Chouf, Mansur served as a guide for the Ottoman commander and former governor of Egypt, Ibrahim Pasha.[7] Later that year, Emir Husayn ibn Sayfa of Tripoli in Lebanon, who was being pursued by the authorities, took refuge with Mansur. The Ottomans sent Mansur a decree demanding Husayn's immediate arrest and handover to the authorities.[8]

Mansur was appointed amir al-hajj in 1589 and 1590, according to historian Muhammad Adnan Bakhit,[9] however, historian Tarif Khalidi asserts he served as amir al-hajj in 1590 and 1591. Upon his return to Syria, he was officially appointed the multazem of his Biqa'a stronghold, as well as the sanjak-bey (district governor) of the Nablus, Safad and Ajlun sanjaks (districts) for four consecutive years. In return, Mansur's obligation to the Ottoman authorities was prompt payment of the annual taxes collected from his districts and the successful protection and the provisioning of the annual Hajj caravan to Mecca.[10]

Initially, Mansur based himself in Safad and directly administered that sanjak, whose majority population was Shia.[3] However, he mostly resided in Damascus or in the Biqa'a village of Qabb Ilyas, where he built palatial homes for himself using forced labor.[11] He delegated one of his sons to administer Nablus, a close partisan named Cherkes Ali in Ajlun and another close partisan in Biqa'a. He had apparent help from local janissaries to enforce his authority in the sanjaks and nahiyas he controlled and to collect taxes from their inhabitants.[3]

According to historians from his era, Mansur oppressed and killed many of the inhabitants in the districts he governed and destroyed several villages. Moreover, he incompetently administered his sanjaks, and neglected or was unable to pay the authorities the taxes that he owed them.[11] While he was praised and rewarded by the imperial authorities for successfully leading the Hajj caravan in 1590, he was admonished for his actions serving the role in 1591, after an accusation that he had "killed rich pilgrims in secret and seized their money".[12] In addition, the powerful Ma'anid Emir Fakhr ad-Din II of Chouf probably lobbied the beylerbey (provincial governor) of Damascus to end Emir Mansur's rule. In mid-1593, Mansur was arrested and imprisoned. Sometime later, the beylerbey was given an imperial order mandating a death sentence for Mansur. Mansur was executed on 7 December 1593.[11]

Legacy

In 1594, Mansur's son Korkmaz, who had been released from his imprisonment at Damascus in 1592, attempted to flee to Tripoli and seek refuge with the Sayfa clan, the Furaykhs' allies. Korkmaz was being pursued by the authorities. At the request of the beylerbey of Damascus, Murad Pasha, Fakhr ad-Din and his ally Musa ibn Harfush, enemies of the Furaykhs, captured and killed Korkmaz and 150 of his men in the Biqa'a while they were on their way to Tripoli.[13][14][15]

Following Mansur's death, his brother Murad ibn Furaykh inherited Mansur's headquarters at Qabb Ilyas. In 1609, the Druze sheikh, Ali Jumblatt, captured Qabb Ilyas during a rebellion against the authorities in Damascus. Not long after, Emir Fakhr ad-Din II took control of the area, prompting Murad to obtain a decree from the Grand Vizier in Constantinople, Murad Pasha, restoring Mansur's properties to the Furaykh family. However, Emir Fakhr ad-Din refused to hand over the property, namely Mansur's residence, to Murad. After Murad's death, Yunus ibn Harfush was in control of the Biqa'a (Fakhr ad-Din was living in exile), and refused to hand over the residence to Mansur's sons Nasrallah, Mansur and Muhammad, claiming he purchased the home or that the home belonged to Fakhr ad-Din. The Ottoman authorities continued to back the Furaykhs' demands for the return of their Qabb Ilyas properties until at least November 1615, when a decree was issued ordering the Damascus authorities to settle the matter.[16]

gollark: Easy. Many goals a god could have would be harder to achieve if there were other gods interfering. So obviously they would immediately engage in wars of extermination.
gollark: That just pushes the problem up a level.
gollark: I do not understand your sentence.
gollark: We do know how the world (the Earth, that is) was created. We don't know how the universe came into existence, but you have exactly the same issue with a god.
gollark: It might actually be worse in that case, because at least for the universe thing you can just lean on the anthropic principle - if things *had* gone differently such that we did not exist, we would not be here to complain about it.

References

  1. Sluglett and Weber, p. 333.
  2. Bakhit, 1982, p. 207.
  3. Khalidi, 1984, p. 253.
  4. Abu Husayn, p. 137.
  5. Khalidi, 1984, p. 251.
  6. Winter, p. 47.
  7. Abu Husayn, p. 136.
  8. Abu Husayn, pp. 115–116.
  9. Bakhit, 1982, p. 207.
  10. Khalidi, 1984, p. 252.
  11. Khalidi, 1984, p. 254.
  12. Abu Husayn, p. 154.
  13. Winter, p. 50.
  14. Abu Husayn, pp. 137–138.
  15. Harris, p. 92.
  16. Abu Husayn, pp. 132–133.

Bibliography

  • Abu Husayn, Abdul Rahim (2004). The View from Istanbul: Ottoman Lebanon and the Druze Emirate. I.B.Tauris. ISBN 9781860648564.
  • Bakhit, Muhammad Adnan (1982). The Ottoman Province of Damascus in the Sixteenth Century. Librairie du Liban.
  • Harris, William (2012). Lebanon: A History, 600–2011. OUP USA. ISBN 9780195181111.
  • Khalidi, Tarif (1984). Land Tenure and social Transformation in the Middle East. American University of Beirut.
  • Sluglett, Peter; Weber, Stefan (2010). Syria and Bilad Al-Sham Under Ottoman Rule. BRILL. ISBN 9789004181939.
  • Winter, Stefan (2010). The Shiites of Lebanon under Ottoman Rule, 1516–1788. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781139486811.
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