Ottoman History Podcast - Egypt, Libya, and the Desert Borderlands
Episode Date: August 26, 2019Episode 423 with Matthew Ellis hosted by Zoe Griffith Download the podcast Feed | iTunes | GooglePlay | SoundCloud When the Ottoman state granted the province of Egypt to the family of ...Mehmed Ali Pasha in the 19th century, neither party much cared where Egypt's western border lay. As Matthew Ellis argues in his book, Desert Borderland, sovereignty in the eastern Sahara, the expanse of desert spanning Egypt and Ottoman Libya, was not simply imposed by modern, centralized states. In this episode, we discuss the various groups and actors who complicated the question of borders and political identity in one of the least studied corners of Ottoman and Middle Eastern history. Conflict and negotiations between oasis dwellers, Ottoman bureaucrats, Egyptian royals, the Sanusi order, and colonial officials kept this territory unbounded until the border was ultimately drawn in 1925. How did modern states attempt to practice sovereignty and claim territory in this vast desert borderland? And how did local populations resist and assist in state-making in the decades surrounding the First World War? « Click for More »
Transcript
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Hello and welcome to another episode of Ottoman History Podcast. I'm Zoe Griffith and we are
recording today in New York City with our guest, Professor Matt Ellis, who is Professor of Modern
Middle East History at Sarah Lawrence College. We're going to be discussing Matt's recent book,
which offers a really fascinating narrative of territoriality, which is something we will explicate as we go on,
but the negotiation of nation-state formation in, I have to say, one of the most remote borderlands
of the Ottoman Empire, which is, you can correct me if this is a bad way of putting it, but, you
know, the Egyptian Wild West, maybe, or the desert borderland between Egypt and Ottoman Libya.
So Matt's first book, Desert Borderland, The Making of Modern Egypt and Libya,
came out with Stanford University Press in 2018.
Congratulations.
Thank you.
And Matt, thanks so much for coming on the podcast.
It's a pleasure to be here.
So I guess we should just start by introducing a space
that probably very few of our listeners have ever visited or can really imagine in their minds.
We'll be talking about how this quote-unquote empty space on a map comes to be delineated by
borders, comes to be sort of claimed by modern nation states. But let's just
start by talking about how did imperial states or modernizing states in the 19th century envision
this territory of the Eastern Sahara, the Western Egyptian desert, kind of leading up to this
process of delineation? No, I mean, that's a great question.
One of the central questions and themes that I'm exploring over the course of the book, which maps out
about 75 years of history, is that this was a region
that didn't actually matter all that much.
And the way that I try to illustrate that at the beginning
is by showing what's often known as the first
modern political map of Egypt, which was issued with
the firman to Mehmed Ali in 1841 after the Ottoman Egyptian settlement. And it basically
tried to lay out what the borders of Mehmed Ali's domain would be in Egypt. And a lot of the places
that I write about in the book, like the Western Oases, like Siwa, the border town of Saloum,
like the western oases, like Siwa, the border town of Solum,
Marsa Matrug, are left clear off the map.
And you can look at other maps of Egypt in the 19th century, and you realize that what I call the desert borderland
or the margins of the Egyptian state in this period aren't really,
they're not represented, they're not seen as important.
And from the ottoman standpoint too
these aren't regions that matter all that much until the last decade or two of the 19th century
and that's why i spend a lot of the time in the book focusing on those decades when something
starts to transform and in the official minds of both the ottoman and egyptian states yeah i mean
let's talk for a minute about this map itself,
because there's a really sort of interesting mystery, almost, that happens in the book, where
the Ottomans give Mehmed Ali this map showing him the territories of his domain, and then the map
is lost, right? Yeah, I mean, I love this story. It's one of the framing metaphors for the whole
book. But I'm able to trace, actually actually through different archives, because there's sporadic mention of it that occasionally, and it really became an issue during the first Tawba dispute in 1892, the Egyptian residency, you know, under Lord Cromer starts to look for some sort of evidence that might help them in their case against the Ottomans
about the eastern border.
And they realize that there is this map
that was issued by the Ottoman government,
but no one can find it.
And there's a point where Cromer thinks it burned down
in an archive and it was lost in a fire.
And they allude to it pretty regularly,
but no one seems to know where it is.
And then they stop looking for it.
So, I mean, I think that's a great way to think
about the fact that there are other ways
that space is talked about, imagines,
and even dealt with politically beyond cartography, right?
That historians of borderlands and border formation
have often been really centrally focused on maps, right?
Maps as central tools of statecraft.
And so the idea that the map that could do this work is missing
and isn't even that important in the minds of the states involved,
to me, forced me to start to imagine other ways
that state space was conceived and imagined
and negotiated in this period.
Yeah, absolutely.
And so at least the beginning of the book is
mostly focused on the Western Oasis and particularly Siwa, which I think is just a
really fascinating, I mean, for Egyptian historians, most of my research has been in Egypt.
You know, that's a really unusual sort of vantage point for thinking about Egyptian history at all.
So tell us a little bit about like what is going on in Siwa leading up to the
period when borders start to be really like defined or a topic of concern. You know, from the vantage
point of the inhabitants of Siwa, what did the state look like to them or what were they busy
doing? Sure. But before I get into the history, i just want to sort of on a say on a personal note
that this whole project was born on a trip to siwa when i um was living in egypt i fell in love
with the western desert i took um two separate trips out to the wahat and camped out in the
desert and just really fell in love with the space and it was in fact on a bus ride to siwa which is
about 10 hours in total from cairo
i just was staring out the window at the endless desert expanse and started to wonder well
we don't hear about this space when we when we do the historiography of modern egypt and i became
really interested in trying to understand how of this how all of this you know so-called empty
space that did become part of a modern nation state. And then when I got to Siwa, I was just blown away by the feel and vibe of the place. I mean, it was unlike anywhere
else I had ever been, you know, in Egypt, but in the world. It's amazingly beautiful, you know,
with these endless state palm groves and lots of hot springs and the colors of the place and the history you know the old
Oracle and some of the ruins you can see Shali the old sacred inner city of
course the people are fairly distinct they're an Amazigh people historically
who didn't always speak Arabic people debate when the majority of C1's
actually understood and were conversing in Arabic up until the 20th century.
So when I landed there, I just thought this is a place apart and I just wonder what its history would look like if you started to look into it.
And so to get into
the process of what it's like to do the history of Siwa, well, it was a frustrating process because when you go to the Egyptian archives,
there's not a lot written about this place. So I was looking at a lot of scraps,
I was pursuing a lot of about this place. So it was looking at a lot of scraps,
there was pursuing a lot of dead ends. And of course, you know, I can't lose sight of the fact that for a lot of history, this was not a particularly important place. It wasn't even
though it did have a lucrative date palm trade and was an important stop in the in certain caravan
routes. The Egyptian government wasn't that interested in it mehmet ali made sporadic efforts to control it and tax it but these were just i mean you know it's still not entirely clear to me
because sometimes he seems really intent on um exercising sovereignty and so far as he will at
least collect taxes and make sure that these people knew who was in charge and that um see
what was now beholden to cairo but then there were long fits of absence, where after a military campaign where he would basically subjugate the oasis,
they wouldn't come back for five years, 10 years, right? So going into the 1880s, 1890s,
Siwa still enjoyed a lot of autonomy. And I guess that's kind of the main story of the 19th century
is that Mehmed Ali did make some overtures to exert sovereignty there, but then it would sort
of, it would lapse and Siwa would once again enjoy a lot of political autonomy and running its own
affairs and really saw itself as a place of part and did not see itself as part of Egypt. And again,
Egypt didn't even necessarily see it as part of Egypt. It was not on modern Egyptian maps for a
very long time. And I guess this brings us to the sort of the overarching
or the underlying theme of the book or argument of the book,
which is this process of territoriality
or defining territoriality in a modern Egyptian context.
And so you're using Siwa and this very kind of unusual place apart
to define the limits of the reach of the state or people's understanding of themselves as part of the state.
But maybe before we sort of talk about Siwa as a case study, just explain for us, what is territoriality?
Why is Egyptian territoriality like a question in this period in the 19th century?
No, I mean, it's a great question.
Again, I mean, there are different ways to think about territoriality as it appears in this book.
Well, first, there's a kind of theoretical argument with other historians of territoriality,
and central in this revisionist bent of the book is thinking about Charles Mayer's work,
the Harvard historian, and his work is fantastic, but focused on Europe.
And he has this idea that territoriality is basically tantamount to politically bounded
space.
And so like I was saying before, the process of mapping, central state mapping, and then
a border delimitation for him is sort of the endpoint of a historical
process of territoriality. And my work on Egypt actually led me to challenge that. And I do think
this was kind of a more organic bottom-up revision in that because there was the absence of real
state attention or focus on this region and because the mapping process wasn't there, I mean, as I
point out in the book, the mapping that did matter to the Egyptian state both before and after the British occupation was cadastral mapping over the fertile Nile Valley and Delta.
So in the absence of all of that, I sought to think about other ways why this new political space started to matter in the eyes of the state. And so I hit upon this idea that territoriality isn't a sort of unilinear
historical process of bounding political space, but it's actually a process of negotiation between
different ways of conceiving and working in and moving through space. And so I talk a lot about
what I call the lived experience of territoriality. Yeah, that's a great phrase. And I'm really
interested in that in part because the native population of thisity. Yeah, that's a great phrase. And I'm really interested in that in part
because the native population of this desert borderland
is largely Bedouin nomads.
And they have very different ways of thinking
about desert space than the Egyptian or the Ottoman
or British or Italian states ultimately will.
And so what I try to chart throughout this book
is a story of how this region that was left
clear off the maps and wasn't that lucrative and wasn't really that important becomes important in
the eyes of all of these different states. And it's a fluid and dynamic process. So it's, again,
by sort of getting into the nitty gritty of that history that I hit upon this more dynamic and
fluid model of territoriality
that it's again it's not a unilateral process in which the state seeks to regularize or normalize
or rationalize marginal space but it's actually more of an interchange and has a lot to do with
how a very tentative central state goes out and negotiates with local actors in the marginal
domains of or the outer reaches
of its sovereignty yeah and so in the context of siwa and it's really fascinating kind of the
different groups that you are dealing with and particularly um the the sanosia movement which
seems like it spans a lot of different kind of social categories um but which i have never
thought of in the context of Egyptian
history or sort of so I mean I think if we could talk a little bit about you know you make this
really amazing argument about how the senesia winds up performing a lot of the or doing a lot
of the work almost of the function of the state during the second half of the 19th century. How do they sort of take on
this role in the process of Egyptian state making or borderland sort of governance in this period?
I mean, you hit on it exactly when you said that you don't usually think about the Sunni
in the context of Egypt, because neither had I. I feel like when we're trained as graduate students,
we might, you know, read Evans Pritchard, and that's their introduction into the Senussi movement. Obviously, there's a lot more work done now,
but it's really treated as a Libyan phenomenon, and it's almost a product of how nationalism
compartmentalizes the history of border regions. But what I found in my research was that the
Senussis were actually very important in Western Egypt. There was a special lodge and school in Siwa Oasis run by
the Sunnis. The large majority of Siwans seem to be adherents to the Sunnusi order.
Can you just even back up and like, who are they? You know, what is this movement? I mean,
in the context of Libyan history, even for those who might not know.
Sure. So the Sunnusiyah was a sort of mystical Islamic brotherhood. It was actually founded by a scholar
who had been trained in different places in North Africa
and then in Mecca and then ended up retreating
to Jabal al-Akhtar in this border region
on the Libyan side of today's border.
And it started as a small movement,
but actually, I mean, the history is still
a little bit fuzzy in the 19th century. And he did set up shop in this region in the mid-19th century, but by the end
of the century, it seemed like it expanded a lot and galvanized a lot of the Bedouin tribes
to follow it, at least in some way. And the research that I did showed that it's useful
to think of the Sunnis as a kind of quasi-state or proto-state, that they had communication networks, they had an economy, they had ways of organizing space and the way people move through this eastern Saharan region.
Saharan region. And what's interesting is that the story of territoriality I want to show transforms how the Senussis seem to think about themselves. Is that, again, it's not a typical
story that the central states encroach on this region and then they retreat or fight back and
then they're crushed. Right? Kind of the James Scott way of thinking about margins or marginal
populations. It's actually that territoriality in this period and the kind of competition
and dynamic interchange that it fosters is seen by the Sunnis as an opportunity.
And they start to see themselves, I think, more and more state-like.
Obviously, they're never an officially recognized territorial nation state,
but they start to act more state-like in how they interact with the British
and the Ottomans especially.
Was there a big difference in how the British and the Ottomans interacted with them? I mean,
did those two entities deal with them very differently?
Absolutely. You know, there's been some really good recent work about the Ottoman relationship
to the Sunni Siyah, and it's still a debate. mean to be honest again the history of the Sunni Siyah is a little bit fuzzy and the Ottoman sources are useful but of
course tell one side of the story and I'm not alone in wrestling with this
fraught relationship between the Ottomans and the Sunni Siyah which is
it's a sort of a historical debate that has been raging kind of in fits and
starts ever since Evans Pritchard, Michel Legault wrote about it,
Mustafa Manawi writes about it in his book.
And basically I see it as one of the two sides feeling each other out.
Sometimes, I mean, they're almost like frenemies.
Sometimes the Ottomans really resented the power
and the local authority that the Sunnis exercised.
And other times they were really leaning on them
to help do some of the police work and to help manage populations.
And there's still debates that I'm not sure will ever be resolved about the extent to which the Sunnis were actually helping the Ottomans collect taxes.
But there were certainly moments in which the relationship seemed symbiotic.
The British, on the other hand, saw the Sunnis like they saw a lot of Islamic movements in this period as fanatical.
Right.
And they're very afraid of the Sunnis.
And it actually governs their policy insofar as there is one towards the West.
Of course, the British are occupying Egypt after 1882.
And insofar as they think about this region at all,
and they do increasingly, and as I say in the book,
by the first decade of the 20th century,
they have to forge some kind of policy towards the Italian government
and the Ottoman government in the region.
But insofar as they think about the Sunnis at all,
they're afraid of them.
They don't want to deal with them.
They want a sort of laissez-faire policy
where they think that the Sunnis have the power
to mobilize a kind of irrational pan-Islamic sentiment
that might threaten British interests in Egypt.
Okay. I mean, the other kind of side of this coin, now that we're into a period where the British are
in play and sort of calling official shots from Cairo, you offer this really fascinating,
and I just found it like sort of humorous somehow, view view of Khedive Abbas Hilmi's interest in this region as well,
which he takes a sort of personal interest in the Western desert,
tries to present himself as the kind of representative
to this outpost of Egyptian sovereignty
to undercut, in a way,
like British interests in Cairo.
And so I loved the observation
that Abbas Hilmi goes to Siwa in 1906,
and this may be the first time
that any ruler has gone there
since Alexander the Great.
And so, yeah, maybe you could just talk a
little bit about you know what was uh you know the khedive's interest in the western desert and
how was he received when he got there what was his agenda great no i'm glad you you picked up
on that and to me this is one of the most exciting parts of the research it's to bring this character
abbas hilmi the, who's a little
bit of a laughingstock in Egyptian history, or certainly isn't treated often that critically,
as a major force or player with his own interests and his own sovereign capabilities in Egypt,
even after, well, he only reigned during the British occupation. And what I tried to show,
and, you know, what I think, and I do think this is one of the book's major contributions
to Egyptian historiography,
is that when you get outside Cairo,
Abbas Hilmi and the personal networks
that he worked so hard to cultivate,
and I could say a little bit more about that,
start to loom a lot larger in the story.
And that just because Abbas Hilmi is getting squeezed
out of some of the political debates that are central to british and nationalist politics in cairo in the late
in the last decade and of the 19th century and first decade of the 20th century doesn't mean
that he's not active elsewhere and that that you know the personal papers of abbas hilmi at durham
university actually tell a wildly different story about certain aspects of Egyptian history
that haven't really been talked about.
Although I know in the last few years,
there's been a sort of turn of Egyptian historians
to look at Abbas Homi again.
So what I noticed is that Abbas Homi
is very resentful of Lord Cromer,
basically pushing him around,
but at the whole time he's buying properties's buying properties around egypt you know i
really focused on the west the northwest coast and into siwa obviously but there are other
scholars doing other work on his properties but he's he's buying up all of these estates
he's salvaged can i just ask really quickly when he's buying them who's he buying them from
on one hand he's building up um new agricultural experiments on properties that were probably left over from the great expanse of land holdings of the royal family as far back as Mesmet Ali.
But then I also show evidence that he's buying up new properties, for example, in Siwa and some other locales on the northwest coast and then introducing agricultural experiments on them.
Right. Yeah, that's a really we can come back to back to that as a very interesting part of the book as well,
but I'm sorry I interrupted you.
You were saying Abbas Hilmi has these various,
he's buying up estates in different parts of Egypt and you're focusing on the
Western desert.
Right.
I mean,
the British were incredibly dismissive of Abbas Hilmi and the way he spent his
money.
They just thought he was basically a fool and, you know, Egyptian historiography, at least, you know, in the
United States, hasn't really taken his deal, his political dealings or his financial dealings
that seriously. But I really tried hard to show that in the context of the Egyptian West,
some of the projects that he introduced, especially in the first decade of the 20th
century, were taken very seriously
by local inhabitants.
There's still,
I mean,
if we accept some
of the ethnographic evidence
from anthropologists
who have worked
in the Western Desert,
his projects are still remembered
as bringing the Amar
and development in the region.
Also,
the railroad project
that I spent a lot of time
talking about,
you know,
it did last, right?
I mean,
if you take the bus
to Marsa Matruh,
you're going alongside a lot of the railroad tracks
that go back to the Marriott Railway project
that he was building in the first decade
of the 20th century.
So what was he up to?
I mean, it's still, it's hard to know for certainty,
but my interpretation of it is that
squeezed out of politics in Cairo,
he's really trying hard to build up
elaborate personal networks through the properties, through his cultivation of local
notables who are working for him, benefiting from the relationship with him. He's trying to
establish himself as the bona fide sovereign of Egypt in the eyes of local populations far and wide, hoping, I guess, that he can sell
himself as the authentically Egyptian sovereign in a way that the British-led interior ministry,
for example, couldn't be. And so what I'm trying to chart in these middle chapters of the book
that focus on the Khedive is that he's building a kind of shadow government that he's um he really thinks that
in time maybe the shadow government can replace you know what's still seen as the official state
apparatus right so it's an interesting paradox where you have the so-called sovereign of egypt
actually personally sponsoring you know the cultivation of these political networks and
property networks in a bid to exercise a very different kind of sovereignty
over different parts of Egypt.
In addition to the railroad project,
the one that stood out to me was this kind of impressive mosque project.
Is it still standing? Is it still...
Yeah, absolutely.
The mosque of Sidi Suleiman in Siwa is still the main central mosque.
He didn't finish it.
The project was not done when he was deposed in 1914 when World War I broke out.
But actually King Fuad finished the project and then was the second Egyptian sovereign
after Alexander the Great to visit Siwa when the mosque was finished.
I think there's pictures of this in the book as well.
Yeah, actually in one of the archives in Durham, I was able to find some photos from
the decade before World War I, and there's a fantastic one of this mosque in construction.
There's also a funny story in the book about a case of stolen cements and how personally
the Khedive and his minions in Siwa seemed to take it. And, you know, I mean, throughout the book, I'm trying to come up with what I think
are important implications
to what might seem as trivial or frivolous stories.
And this is a good example of that,
where I think the fact that there's a paper trail
at all that survives,
the fact that so much ink was spilled
over the question of how people
were perceiving medieval sovereignty,
and of course, building.
I mean, look at Trump today, right?
This kind of, I mean, I don't want to,
I sound like, you know, some grand ethnographer.
But, you know, the kind of wusta or authority
that can be constructed around the idea
that you're a builder, right?
And I think this is something that
Abbas Hilmi was very interested in.
He was also putting a lot of people to work
and we can't forget that.
So why was he so remembered?
Why are his public works remembered so positively
by Aulad Ali Berouin, for example?
And well, he put a lot of them to work.
There are a lot of Aulad Ali
working on his agricultural projects
and a lot of them were working on the Marriott Railway. And in Siwa, there are a lot of them to work. There are a lot of Ali working on his agricultural projects and a lot of them were working on the
Maruyut railway. And in Siwa, there
are a lot of people who are working on his, on the
properties that he had bought up there.
So there's a sense that he was
a mover and shaker, that he was making
things happen and doing
a lot of what the British said they were doing
in terms of developments and bringing
Egypt into a kind of financial
maturity and a kind of modernity.
But he was doing it in a way that he was trying to sell as more authentic.
Yeah, that was one of my favorite sort of connections that you drew in that part of the book is,
I mean, although you do tell, you know, in very, like the stories are very lively.
like the stories are very lively and you know i really really appreciate this this kind of history where you're taking kind of i mean forgotten places or like trivial trivial seeming anecdotes
like stolen cement but tying them into like much larger processes and you make this great point
about um how abbas hilmi is kind of trying to outplay the British at their own game of
economism and, and like, yeah,
legitimating rule through increasing material prosperity or sort of creating
economic prosperity. So I think that's really, it's, it's fascinating.
I mean, in this context.
Well, thank you. And I guess I just want to emphasize that.
That's another way to think about territoriality in this book is that again it's not a static meaning as some historians have have suggested
but that it's it's evolving and that i think abbas hilmi is actually a shrewd political player he
understands the language that cromer is speaking he understands what seems to be the sort of
prevailing discourse of um territoriality at least least in so far as it's related to financial reforms,
economic development,
and the kind of economic discourse of the day.
And so he sort of takes that and runs with it.
And I think the Mario Real way
and the way that it connected up territory
and sort of tied political territoriality
with questions of economic development
was absolutely in keeping with what he perceived
the British doing and the way that they were legitimating their rule right yeah and i mean so maybe to kind of bring this around um you know back to the theme of
territoriality and to start to uh bring the story to its less porous and more like delineated
less porous and more like delineated conclusion.
I think the really another great contribution of the book is the way that you show how the process of delineating borders and the process of defining
Egyptian,
you know,
territorial sovereignty comes to be a process,
you know,
that involves these very marginal actors or like the last sort of groups that you would expect to be a process you know that involves these very marginal actors or like the last sort of
groups that you would expect to be um you know at the heart of drawing lines on a map um and so
another of these these kind of you know historically quote-unquote trivial stories that i think you tell so well is of this uh official is an ottoman official who
gets kind of um sent on a on a fateful mission out into the into the desert thank you for for
bringing that up one thing that's really important to me in this book is to to bring out actors and
individuals and voices that are just typically completely obscured in egyptian historiography
and to make sure that we're hearing
from from people that we don't normally get to hear from sometimes that's a low-level officials
like this this coast guard officer Shalabi Mustafa who becomes kind of a hero of the Egyptian state
and you know just people that that are not usually talked about and and down to local bigwigs in a
place like Siwa population of about 5 5 000 in 1890s but that they actually
became very you know very central in some of the debates some of the discussions that were
happening in cairo in in this period so you can tell us about shelaby mustafa first and then we
can so the last part of the book i'm just just to back up a little bit talks about so after these
sort of disparate attempts to achieve territorial sovereignty
or to at least shore up this desert borderland as, you know, as sovereign territory for the
Egyptian state, that doesn't really progress too far.
There starts to emerge a kind of nascent imperial rivalry between the Ottomans and the Egyptian state,
which is, of course, still technically a province of the Ottoman government.
So it's an interesting rivalry insofar as it's a suzerain power vying for
sovereign legitimacy with part of its own imperial domains.
So, I mean, that I think is a fascinating story in itself.
Shalabi Mustafa represents an arm of the Egyptian state bureaucracy,
the Egyptian Coast Guard, which to my knowledge
has never really been written about in much Egyptian scholarship,
that starts to exercise, it really comes into its own
in the first decade of the 20th century.
And the catalyst here, again, is local actors, very local disputes.
There's a lot of Bedouin unrest between different tribes, subsections of the Alar Ali, but also
tribes that are more associated with what's now on the Libyan side, a lot of internecine fighting
and raiding. And it's really the Egyptian Coast Guard that starts to step in and settle some of
these disputes. And it turns out they're much better at it than the ottoman officials are who are coming over from bin ghazi or from derna
to deal with it and so it's actually um these bedouin feuds and raids that keep going on in
the last few years of the 20th century but really ramp up around 1903 1904 then again two years
three years later that the ottomans and e and Egyptians are forced to start thinking about the bounds of their sovereign control in this amorphous region.
Now, what's interesting about that, though, is that even though they're very nervous about each other's claims, another power comes in, and that's the Italian government that actually wants them to delimit a border.
that actually wants them to delimit a border. And both the Ottomans and the British Egyptian government
decide that it's not in their interest to do so
because they don't actually want to raise
a kind of political nightmare like Taba had turned into,
a sort of legal political dispute
that might actually challenge
the Ottoman-Egyptian relationship.
They'd rather keep this ambiguous.
So it's another way of thinking about territoriality,
that it's kind of dynamic and fluid
and you've got actors who are much more present in this region they're policing it they're
governing populations but they don't want to delimit it they don't want to map it out they'd
rather leave it ambiguous because they know how to resolve disputes among each other right and
the italians come in and they're sort of the odd man out and that they want a kind of more you know
cartesian linear um hard and fast solution
to territorial sovereignty in this region.
And the Ottomans and the British consistently refuse
right up until the Italians invade Libya in 1911.
That's the sort of larger background
to the incident that you alluded to.
There are these ongoing Bedouin disputes.
And again, the Egyptians and Ottomans
don't want it to come to a head
to the point that they actually have to draw a map
so instead they organize a series of Bedouin summits
where basically the Ottomans are going to bring
so-called Ottoman Bedouins
together with so-called Egyptian Bedouins
and this is terminology that I show
has an interesting provenance
like that Cromer starts to pick up language
that's actually translated by Shalabi Mustafa
from local notables who are appealing
to the Egyptian government through the Coast Guard.
But anyway, there's supposed to be this Bedouin summit
and this poor Kaimakam from Derna
which is a sort of a casa of the Ottoman administration
on the Libyan side, part of the Benghazi province,
is waiting for a week,
and his guys can't make their Bedouins show up.
And the Egyptians, and there's this wonderful phrase
that Kaim al-Khamim Darinah uses in his correspondence,
marked by the customs of British punctuality.
They show up on time,
and they have a beautiful
coast guard ship and they look professional
and they look really efficient and authoritative
and the Kaimakan of Derna had been forced
to get there on foot and he's just waiting around
and no one's showing up and he's really worried
that this is turning into a public relations disaster
for the Ottoman Empire that, again,
Egypt is supposed to be subservient to Istanbul
but instead Egypt is just kicking its butt Egypt just looks you
know looks and feels like a nascent modern nation-state and that's sort of
where where I leave off the story is that on the eve of the Italian
occupation in 1911 the Ottomans are still around they're still they've got
this kind of gentleman's agreement about not delineating a border,
but at the same time,
they're very, very anxious
that their own province
is outpacing them
and acting more and more
like a sovereign nation state,
exercising authority
through new institutions
that have come into their own
in this very period
as a response to these
Bedouin disputes
like the Coast Guard, right?
That the Ottomans feel like the coast guard right that um the
ottomans feel like they're losing um that they're losing a public relations battle but that they
might ultimately lose territory and of course as we know from a lot of ottoman diplomatic history
they're terrified about losing more and more territory throughout the last quarter of the 19th
century right i mean who like in terms of a a public relations debacle, who are they worried about losing face in front of in this particular instance? Like, who would have been watching this event unfold?
of the Egyptian state, but also the Italians have been closely watching this region for two decades. And the French are around too, right? So the Ottomans, you know, I talked more about how
places like Siwa had started to become increasingly important in the eyes of the Egyptian state and
especially Abbas Hilmi. But the Ottomans, again, in this context of fearing territorial law, start to shore up their
own control. They're worried about the French in Central Africa. They're worried about the Italians.
They know that the Italians have designs on the Libyan provinces. They're under no illusions
about that. And so I talk a lot about their exercise of sovereignty starting around 1902 when they set up a garrison in Saloum,
the border town. Again, no one really knows for certain if it's Egyptian or Ottoman territory.
There's a lot of sort of diplomatic exchange about it, but no one moves to settle it. But
yeah, the Ottomans are very concerned about losing face, I would say, to all of these
different state powers. And so what we see in these 14 years or so
before World War I is lots of imperial powers
coming up and sort of jostling against each other
and trying not to upset the status quo too much
while all fumbling towards their own territorial claims.
And so you have this kind of relational,
interactional conception of territoriality
that is still really functional
despite any bounded territorial space,
any demarcated boundary line,
or any authoritative cartography.
That would only happen in the 1920s.
1925 is when the Egyptian-Libyan border would be drawn.
So during this whole period,
there's a lot of disputing and arguing and exchanging,
but there's no settlement. And again, the Ottomans and the Egyptians don't want a settlement. Only
the Italian government does. So maybe the logical concluding point then is how did that line get
drawn? And if I recall correctly, you say that the lost map also resurfaces in 1925 or somewhere
around there. This is sort of where I actually leave the book off.
The epilogue talks about the border settlement of 1925.
So around 1920, so World War I is recent history.
The Italians are now in control of what becomes the nation of Libya.
The Egyptian government will become independent in 1922.
And there start to be border negotiations.
Basically, in this period,
the Italian conception of territoriality as bounded space
that can be neatly mapped cartographically wins out.
And there is a series of border commissions.
So the Egyptian military will commission some officers
to go out and look at and to map
out some space and the italians are doing the same and actually there are some photographs of
border commissions in the egyptian press in the 1920s but it doesn't go completely smoothly the
egyptians will change their minds a lot there are disputes over whether saloom is going to be
egyptian versus libyan where to draw the border around Sallum
because the geography there,
the landscape is quite striking.
It's on the cliffs
and there's actually a period
that goes a little bit north
before it curves west.
And so they don't know
where the line's going to start.
There's also disputes
about the oasis of Jakhbub,
which was a Sunni stronghold.
And that will end up on the Libyan side.
But the Egyptians are suddenly concerned that they're going to lose a major Sunni stronghold,
and so they're upset about that.
And so there's a lot of disputing in the few years before 1925,
but they finally come to an agreement,
and a sign was called a demarcation commission to go out and draw the line. So we will put the image of this sort of,
you know, the first modern political map of Egypt
on our website, ottomanhistorypodcast.com,
and we encourage our listeners to go look at that
and sort of, you know, try to imagine
how much things have changed.
And Matt, this has been a really wonderful conversation.
Thank you so much for coming on the podcast.
Thank you. This is a lot of fun. Thank you so much for coming on the podcast. Thank you.
This is a lot of fun.
And so to all of our listeners, again, we will, along with the image of these maps and a couple of other images,
Abbas Homi's mosque and other things that we've discussed on today's episode,
you can find a short bibliography of kind of relevant literature references that we made
in the episode today and thank you for tuning in we hope to see you next time Thank you.