Mount Lebanon Mutasarrifate

Mount Lebanon Mutasarrifate
مُتَصَرِّفِيَّة جَبَل لُبْنَان
Mutasarrifate of the Ottoman Empire
9 June 1861–September 1918

CapitalDeir el Qamar
Demonymأَهْل الْجَبَل; "Ahl al-Jabal", lit.'People of the Mountain'
Population 
 1870
110,000
 1895
399,530
 1913
414,747
 1918
200,000
Historical era19th–20th century
3 August 1860 9 June 1861
 Ottoman occupation
1 September
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Tripoli Eyalet
Double Qaim-Maqamate of Mount Lebanon
Sidon Eyalet
Occupied Enemy Territory Administration
Today part ofLebanon

The Mount Lebanon Mutasarrifate (1861–1918, Arabic: مُتَصَرِّفِيَّة جَبَل لُبْنَان, romanized: Mutaṣarrifiyyat Jabal Lubnān; Ottoman Turkish: جَبَلِ لُبْنَان مُتَصَرِّفلِيࢰِى, romanized: Cebel-i Lübnan Mutasarrıflığı) was one of the Ottoman Empire's subdivisions following the 19th-century Tanzimat reform. After 1861, there existed an autonomous Mount Lebanon with a Christian Mutasarrif (governor), which had been created as a homeland for the Maronites under European diplomatic pressure following the 1860 Druze–Maronite conflict. The Maronite Catholics and the Druze founded modern Lebanon in the early eighteenth century, through the ruling and social system known as the "Maronite-Druze dualism" in Mount Lebanon.

This system came during the era of Tanzimat reforms initiated by Sultan Abdulmejid I in an attempt to extricate the Ottoman State from its internal problems, and it was approved after the major sectarian strife of 1860 and the numerous massacres that occurred in Mount Lebanon, Damascus, the Beqaa Valley and Jabal Amil among Muslims and Christians in general, and the Druze and Maronites in particular; the European countries exploited the sectarian tensions to pressure the Sultan in a way that achieved their economic and ideological interests in the Arab East. The Mutasarrifate era is characterized by the spread of national consciousness, science and culture among the Lebanese, for many reasons, including: the spread of schools in numerous villages, towns and cities, and the opening of two large universities that are still among the oldest and most prestigious universities in the Middle East: the Syrian Evangelical College, which became the American University of Beirut, and Saint Joseph University.

The Mutasarrifate era is also characterized by the beginning of the Lebanese emigration to Egypt, Western European countries, North America, and South America, where a number of immigrants achieved great success that wasn't possible to achieve in their homeland. Additionally, many of these immigrants contributed to the revival of the Arabic Language and Arabic literature after years of stagnation; this revival lasted for many years, and contributed to raising the Arab national spirit and political awareness in the period of Al-Nahda among Arabs, both in Lebanon, in neighboring countries, and across the globe. The autonomy of Mount Lebanon (Mutasarrifate) ended with the Ottoman occupation at the beginning of World War I. The defeat of the Ottoman Empire led to a French military invasion in 1918, initiating the French Mandate.