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Palestine in 1896. The video you see is the earliest footage of what is now known as Palestine or Israel. Despite the contentiousness of this particular topic, I believe it would prove itself interesting going over the peoples of this land over a hundred years ago in 1896. During this time the Levant, what was known as Mesopotamia, and many other territories were under the control of the Ottoman Empire, an empire based in the majority-Turkish Anatolia, modern-day Turkey.  The modern state/states of Israel/Palestine were then organized under three different Ottoman districts, known as vilayets and sanjaks. The first is the Mutasarrifate of Jerusalem, ruled directly from the Ottoman Empire’s capital of Istanbul/Constantinople, then the Villayet of Bierut and the Villayet of Syria.  The demographics of the Ottoman Empire were last compiled in 1893, which is what we shall use as our source for the region's demographics. The region known as the Levant has always been a splashwork of peoples, and during Ottoman times it, despite its religious and cultural importance, was viewed as a backwater province of little economic importance; it also had a relatively small population, with about 500,000 people in total.  It depends on where you draw the boundaries, but the religious demographics of the Southern Levant were 80-90% Muslim and 10-20% everyone else, mainly Christians, Jews, and Druze. The peoples present were various Arab groups such as Bedouin and Fellah, various Christian denominations such as Greek Orthodox and Catholics, Latin Catholics, and Armenian Apostolic, along with new Protestant arrivals from across the European empires and colonies. Jews in the region comprised the old yishuv, religious Jews who had been in the region since the Middle Ages and were widely documented under Ottoman rule, and the new yishuv, who were the first Zionist arrivals, migrating mostly from Eastern Europe and defined by their secular and labor values. The Zionist movement was ramping up in speed, and the new yishuv had been starting to arrive in small numbers in the 1880s, at the start of the Zionist movement. Other groups include Armenians, Circassians, Druze, Samaritans, and the aforementioned European diplomats, missionaries, and scholars.  It’s important to understand that although the idea of a nation-state as the preferred form of governance was taking root in Europe, the Ottoman Empire was anything but the former; ethnic groups were spread out across the regions of the Ottoman Empire in a very multicultural and multiethnic society. #History #ottomanempire #foryoupage #fyp
Palestine in 1896. The video you see is the earliest footage of what is now known as Palestine or Israel. Despite the contentiousness of this particular topic, I believe it would prove itself interesting going over the peoples of this land over a hundred years ago in 1896. During this time the Levant, what was known as Mesopotamia, and many other territories were under the control of the Ottoman Empire, an empire based in the majority-Turkish Anatolia, modern-day Turkey. The modern state/states of Israel/Palestine were then organized under three different Ottoman districts, known as vilayets and sanjaks. The first is the Mutasarrifate of Jerusalem, ruled directly from the Ottoman Empire’s capital of Istanbul/Constantinople, then the Villayet of Bierut and the Villayet of Syria. The demographics of the Ottoman Empire were last compiled in 1893, which is what we shall use as our source for the region's demographics. The region known as the Levant has always been a splashwork of peoples, and during Ottoman times it, despite its religious and cultural importance, was viewed as a backwater province of little economic importance; it also had a relatively small population, with about 500,000 people in total. It depends on where you draw the boundaries, but the religious demographics of the Southern Levant were 80-90% Muslim and 10-20% everyone else, mainly Christians, Jews, and Druze. The peoples present were various Arab groups such as Bedouin and Fellah, various Christian denominations such as Greek Orthodox and Catholics, Latin Catholics, and Armenian Apostolic, along with new Protestant arrivals from across the European empires and colonies. Jews in the region comprised the old yishuv, religious Jews who had been in the region since the Middle Ages and were widely documented under Ottoman rule, and the new yishuv, who were the first Zionist arrivals, migrating mostly from Eastern Europe and defined by their secular and labor values. The Zionist movement was ramping up in speed, and the new yishuv had been starting to arrive in small numbers in the 1880s, at the start of the Zionist movement. Other groups include Armenians, Circassians, Druze, Samaritans, and the aforementioned European diplomats, missionaries, and scholars. It’s important to understand that although the idea of a nation-state as the preferred form of governance was taking root in Europe, the Ottoman Empire was anything but the former; ethnic groups were spread out across the regions of the Ottoman Empire in a very multicultural and multiethnic society. #History #ottomanempire #foryoupage #fyp

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