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- #81
Why frustrating? We may have difference of opinion on certain points or even different opinion that is why the discussion is sequentially going on. I think here we got indulged in the legitimacy of empires? You have rightly put forward certain historical specifics and that are historical facts though little exaggerated. As I stated categorically in post # 79 that there was the period when Arabs opposed the decisions of ruling caliphs in Istanbul. To be very precise the Tanzimat Period started in 1839, Both Mahmud 11 and Abdulmejed forced the reforms on people. The so called reforms were equally opposed by Arabs and Turks. That is the period of imposition and revolts that you rightly mentioned.This is very frustrating. It's like discussing the British Empire with someone who thinks that it was an entirely good thing for all the conquered territories.
You are completely, utterly, wrong. The Turks conquered their empire by force, by military conquest. Where they held it, they held it the same way. They often ruled indirectly (e.g. via the Greek Phanariotes in parts of the Balkans), or, as I described, allowed parts of their empire effective independence as client states, but even there, the client regimes held power by force of arms, whether their own or Turkish. The local rulers were almost always foreign to the territories they governed (though where they were long-established, as in Tunis, hereditary governors became assimilated) - and that was deliberate. Their power initially, & in some cases always, depended on the threat of Turkish arms. All of this was, of course, no different from other empires.
When the Ottoman empire started re-establishing its rule over Arab provinces which had been self-governing for long periods, in the 19th century Ottoman revival, they did so by sending armies to re-conquer them. They weren't welcomed with open arms. They fought long & bloody wars, not always successfully, to establish control. They fought a 20 year war to take back Libya, for example. Hejaz was conquered in 1517, & again 300 years later, & rebelled in WW1. Asir was re-conquered in the early 19th century, out of control again by the 1840s, re-conquered by 1872, & held down by numerous forts garrisoned by Turkish troops. There was another rebellion in the 1900s. Yemen was re-conquered starting in the 1830s, but San'a didn't fall to the Ottomans until the 1870s.
You have a romantic vision, strongly coloured by prejudice. It's wrong - just as wrong as the romantic vision of benign British officials ruling over contented natives that used to be commonplace in this country.
I am contesting your point of equating Master / Servant relationship of western colonialism with Ottoman rule of Arab land. In my view barring few patches of disgruntlement the relationship between Ottoman Turks and Arabs were harmonious in most part of the history.
If you examine my posts I have desisted in pointing out on Ottoman conquest of Balkan, Caucuses and Northern Europe that we can discuss separately and there we may find more points of convergence.