Bedouin Bureaucrats: Mobility and Property in the Ottoman Empire

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In the late nineteenth century, the Ottoman government sought to fill landscapes they legally defined as "empty." Both land and people were incorporated into territorially bounded grids of administrative law. Bedouin Bureaucrats examines how tent-dwelling, seasonally migrating Bedouin engaged in these processes of Ottoman state transformation on local, imperial, and global scales. As the "tribe" became a category of Ottoman administration, Bedouin in the Syrian interior used this category both to gain political influence and to organize community resistance to maintain control over land.

Narrating the lives of Bedouin individuals involved in Ottoman administration, Nora Elizabeth Barakat brings this population to the center of modern state-making, from their involvement in the pilgrimage administration in the eighteenth century and their performance of land registration and taxation as the Ottoman bureaucracy expanded in the nineteenth, to their eventual rejection of Ottoman attempts to reallocate the "empty land" they inhabited in the twentieth. She places the Syrian interior in a global context of imperial expansion into regions formerly deemed marginal, especially in relation to American and Russian empires. Ultimately, the book illuminates Ottoman state formation attempts within Bedouin communities and the unique trajectory of Bedouin in Syria, who maintained their control over land.

Author(s): Nora Barakat
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Year: 2023

Language: English
Pages: 374
City: Stanford

Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
List of Maps, Figures, and Tables
Note on Transliteration, Dates, Currencies, and Measures
Introduction
1. Beyond the Tribal Frontier
2. Commercial Capital in the Syrian Interior
3. Producing Tribes and Property
4. Bureaucracy in Crisis
5. Taxation, Property, and Citizenship
Conclusion
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Back Cover