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Great Famine of Mount Lebanon

The Great Famine of Mount Lebanon (1915–1918) (Classical Syriac: ܟܦܢܐ, romanized: Kafno, lit.'Starvation'; Arabic: مجاعة جبل لبنان, romanizedMajā'at Jabal Lubnān; Turkish: Lübnan Dağı'nın Büyük Kıtlığı) was a period of mass starvation on Mount Lebanon during World War I that resulted in the deaths of 200,000 people, most of whom were Maronite Christians.[1]

Great Famine of Mount Lebanon
مجاعة جبل لبنان

Mount Lebanon

1915–1918

Est. 200,000

Population of 400,000 declined by 50%

There were many reasons for the famine in Mount Lebanon. Natural as well as man-made factors both played a role. Allied forces (United Kingdom and France) blockaded the Eastern Mediterranean, as they had done with the German Empire and Austro-Hungarian Empire in Europe, in order to strangle the economy and weaken the Ottoman war effort.[2][3][4] The situation was exacerbated by Jamal Pasha, commander of the Fourth Army of the Ottoman Empire, who deliberately barred crops from neighbouring Syria from entering Mount Lebanon, in response to the Allied blockade.[5][6] Additionally, a swarm of locusts devoured the remaining crops,[7][5] creating a famine that led to the deaths of half of the population of the Mount Lebanon Mutasarrifate, a semi-autonomous subdivision of the Ottoman Empire and the precursor of modern-day Lebanon. Ottoman Mount Lebanon had the highest per capita fatality rate of any ‘bounded’ territory during the First World War.[8]


Other areas in modern-day Lebanon, according to multiple sources, were also famine-stricken. However, due to poor documentation, casualties were never recorded. Some of the areas hit with no documentation include Tyre, Zahle, Akkar and Bint Jbeil.

Ottoman Empire in World War I

Aftermath of World War I

Turnip Winter

Linda Schilcher Schatkowski, «The famine of 1915-1918 in greater Syria», in J. Spagnolo (dir.), Problems of the modern Middle East in historical perspective, Essays in honor of Albert Hourani, Ithaca Press, Reading, 1992, 229–258.

Pitts, Graham Auman.

“Make Them Hated in All of the Arab Countries: France, Famine, and the Creation of Lebanon.” Environmental Histories of World War I. Richard P. Tucker, Tait Keller, J.R. McNeill, and Martin Schmid, eds. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press (2018)

Pitts, Graham Auman (2020-09-22). . Journal of the Ottoman and Turkish Studies Association. 7 (2): 217–237. doi:10.2979/jottturstuass.7.2.13. S2CID 235051188. Retrieved 2022-09-14.

"A Hungry Population Stops Thinking About Resistance: Class, Famine, and Lebanon's World War I Legacy"

al-Qattan, Najwa (November 2014). "When mothers ate their children: Wartime memory and the language of food in Syria and Lebanon". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 46 (4): 719–736. :10.1017/S0020743814001032. JSTOR 43303223. S2CID 163058456.

doi

Yann Bouyrat, « Une crise alimentaire « provoquée » ? La famine au Liban (1915-1918) », Actes des congrès nationaux des sociétés historiques et scientifiques, vol. 138, no 8, 2016, p. 22–37

https://www.persee.fr/doc/acths_1764-7355_2016_act_138_8_2870

(2012). Lebanon: A History, 600–2011. Oxford University Press. pp. 173–179. ISBN 9780195181111.

Harris, William

Tanielian, Melanie Schulze (November 2014). "Feeding the city: the Beirut municipality and the politics of food during World War I". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 46 (4): 737–758. :10.1017/S0020743814001044. JSTOR 43303224. S2CID 153353905.

doi

Tanielian, Melanie Schulze (2018). . Stanford University Press. ISBN 9781503603523.

Charity of War: Famine, Humanitarian Aid and World War I in the Middle East

Taoutel, Christian; Wittouck, Pierre (2015). Le peuple libanais dans la tourmente de la grande guerre 1914-1918 d'après les Pères Jésuites au Liban (in French). Presses de l'Université Saint-Joseph.  978-9953455440.

ISBN

. The961. Lebanon: The961.com. 22 July 2018. Archived from the original on 25 December 2019. Retrieved 22 July 2018.

"Victims of the Great Famine of Mount Lebanon finally have a memorial monument in Beirut"