Kalbiyya

Kalbiyya
الكلبية
Alawite Syrian tribal confederation
Kalbiyya tribal areas,
northwestern Syria
EthnicityArab
LocationNusayri mountains region, Syria
Population480,000 (est. 2011)[1]
Branches
  • Rashawneh
  • Junaydi
  • Al-Nawasireh
  • Al-Jurud
  • Al-Qarahilah
LanguageLevantine Arabic (Alawite dialect)
ReligionAlawite

The Kalbiyya (Arabic: الكلبية), or Kalbi or Kelbi tribe[2] is one of four tribes, or tribal confederations, of the Alawite community in Syria. Appearing in historical sources from the 16th century, the Kalbiyya came to prominence when Hafez al-Assad, the son of a Kalbiyya tribal leader, seized power in Syria in a coup in 1970. Assad ruled Syria as dictator for 30 years and ensured that power was concentrated in the hands of members of the Kalbiyya tribe, a policy which his son, Bashar Al-Assad, continued after he became president in 2000. The Kalbiyya population mainly live in the Latakia Governorate in north west Syria.

Background

The Kalbiyya are a tribe, or tribal confederation, of the Alawite community of northwestern Syria.[3][4] Also known as Nusayris or Alawis,[5] the Alawites are a prominent mystical[6] religious sect who follow a syncretic form of the Twelver branch of Shia Islam.[7]

The Alawite homeland is in the Nusayri mountains coastal region, inland of the Mediterranean ports of Latakia and Tartus.[5][8] Historically, the Alawites lived in about eighty villages in the region.[9] The Kalbiyya are one of the four tribes, or tribal confederations, into which the Alawite community is divided, the others being the Matawira, Haddadin, and Khayyatin.[3][4]

Demographics and society

The Nusayri mountains, homeland of the Kalbiyya, near Qardaha

The Kalbiyya were estimated in 2011 to number approximately 480,000 out of a population of 3 million Alawites in Syria.[1] At that time the total Syrian population was around 22 million.[10] The main areas of Kalbiyya settlement are the districts of Jableh, Haffa and Latakia and the town of Qardaha,[1] all within Latakia Governorate in north west Syria.[11] They are the most geographically compact of the Alawite tribes, the others being more dispersed in non-contiguous areas across the coastal region.[12]

The Kalbiyya consists of five branches: Rashawneh, Junaydi, al-Nawasireh, al-Jurud, and al-Qarahilah.[13] Each branch of an Alawite tribe has its own hereditary chief, a structure which leads to frequent internal disputes within Alawite society.[14] The Junayd family typically provide the leadership of the Kalbiyya and was based at Tell Salhab, near Masyaf.[13] Traditionally, Alawite society is divided into three classes: religious leaders, landowners and peasants, with religious leadership, like chieftaincy, being hereditary.[14]

History

Emergence and Ottoman period

There are no known references to the Kalbiyya in medieval sources. They are not, for instance, mentioned among the tribes led by the 13th century Alawite paramount leader Makzun al-Sinjari. It is only after the Ottoman conquest of Syria in the early 16th century that the Kalbiyya are mentioned in historical records. Stefan Winter, an historian specialising in Ottoman Syria, notes that, despite this, they may have existed as a grouping before the 16th century (but without any "special role" among the Alawites). He also speculates that their name "may originally have invoked a link" with the medieval Banu Kalb bedouin tribal confederation.[2]

There is evidence that, following the conquest, the Kalbiyya were among the tribes favoured by the Ottomans in order to use them as part of their local administrative control and tax collection structure.[15] The Kalbiyya's emergence as a recognised group may therefore be linked to this Ottoman policy.[2] Nevertheless, there were a number of Kalbiyya rebellions during the 16th century,[16] and by the beginning of the 19th century, the Kalbiyya had a reputation for lawlessness and were in constant and open conflict with the Ottoman authorities.[17]

In the 1850s, Samuel Lyde, an English missionary, lived among the Kalbiyya and built a mission and school in the Kalbiyya village of Bhamra.[18] He subsequently published a negative but influential account of his time there, in which he wrote that he was convinced that they were like St Paul's description of the heathen: "filled with all unrighteousness, fornication, wickedness, covetousness, maliciousness".[19] He criticized their brigandage, feuds, lying and divorce[19] and claimed that "the state of [their] society was a perfect hell upon earth".[20] Lyde's account has been described as "colourful" but "unreliable" in certain respects.[19]

During the mid-19th century, there were rising tensions in the mountains due to the pressure on resources from a growing population and attempts by the central government to enforce direct rule. In 1854, the governor of Latakia Sanjak was killed in a battle by the Kalbiyya of Qardaha. Buoyed by their victory, the Kalbiyya raided the gardens of Latakia and Jableh. Raids by the tribesmen and counterattacks by the Ottomans continued for some time.[21] Alawites were prohibited from entering Latakia and Jableh without a certificate of safe conduct by the sanjak governor and trade between the largely Sunni Muslim townspeople and the Alawite mountaineers was conducted in a souk on the outskirts of Latakia for security purposes. By the end of the 19th century, relations had improved between the rural Alawites and urban Sunnis. This was partly due to Ottoman efforts to bring the Alawites into the Muslim fold and void pretexts for European interventionism (as had occurred with the Maronites of Mount Lebanon in 1861) and partly because of the burgeoning ties between Latakia's merchants and Alawite tribal chiefs to secure the mountaineers' supply of tobacco for export.[22]

During the French mandate

Following the end of Ottoman rule after World War I, Syria became part of the French mandate, which was subdivided into separate territories including an Alawite State.[23] By 1930, Syria as a whole had an Alawite population of 213,870, of which 50,700 were Kalbiyya.[1]

The Alawite community was divided between "separatists" who supported the maintenance of a separate Alawite state and "nationalists" or "unionists", who advocated integration into a wider Syrian or even pan-Arab state.[23] The Kalbiyya leadership was similarly divided and through the 1920s and 1930s individual chiefs shifted between separatism and the nationalist/unionist position depending on prevailing opinions within the tribe. Nevertheless, in the negotiations leading to the Alawite State joining the Mandatory Syrian Republic in 1936, even nationalist Kalbiyya chiefs signed letters asking for separation from Syria to be maintained for fear of Sunni domination.[23] One of the Kalbiyya leaders whose signature appears on one of the letters was Ali Sulayman, father of Hafez Al-Assad, later president of Syria.[24] It should, however, be noted that historian Stefan Winter has questioned the authenticity of these letters.[25]

Post-Syrian independence

Syria became independent in 1946 but suffered from political instability in its first years and, in 1963, the Ba'athist coup overthrew the then government.[26] The coup was led by three Alawites: Salah Jadid, Muhammad Umran and Hafez Al-Assad. Assad was from the Kalbiyya tribe, Umran from the Khayyatin, and Jadid from the Haddadin.[27] Following Assad's seizure of sole power in 1970, part of his strategy was to concentrate control in the hands of members of his own Kalbiyya tribe.[27] The Kalbiyya's rise under came at the detriment of the historically more dominant and prestigious Alawite confederations, the Haddadin and Khayyatin.[28] In 1970, the Kalbiyya numbered 108,800[1] compared to a total Syrian population of 6,305,000.[29]

Although Alawites in general dominated the government, as historian Jordi Tejel points out, in practice "active participation" in the Assad regime was limited to the Kalbiyya.[30] There is evidence that the Kalbiyya areas received much greater infrastructure investment and other economic benefits compared to other Alawite areas.[31] According to anthropologist Fabrice Balanche, the Kalbiyya's dominance of power in Syria was not the primary objective of Hafez Al-Assad but rather a result of his placement of relatives in key military and bureaucratic positions. While their kinship ties to the president gave them an advantage over the rest the population, Hafez Al-Assad could not rely solely on the Kalbiyya and forged alliances and relations with other Syrian tribes and communities to broaden his base in the country.[28]

Assad, following his death in 2000, was succeeded as president by his son, Bashar.[32] The latter continued to rule through the same power structures as his father, with the Kalbiyya playing a central role.[33] With the advent of the 2011 uprising and subsequent civil war, there was even greater focus on this policy. In 2012–2013, some 90% of regime army generals, according to sources close to the government, were not only Alawite but from the Kalbiyya tribe.[34]

Notable Kalbiyya

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Goldsmith 2015, p. 7.
  2. ^ a b c Winter 2016, p. 99.
  3. ^ a b Tibi 1990, p. 138.
  4. ^ a b Commins 2004, p. 28.
  5. ^ a b Williams 2020, p. 59.
  6. ^ Rolland 2003, p. 75.
  7. ^ Menzies & Granados Palmer 2019, p. 694.
  8. ^ Field 1994, p. 101.
  9. ^ Nisan 2015, p. 117.
  10. ^ Akhmedov 2022, p. 708.
  11. ^ PCGN 2011, p. 7.
  12. ^ Goldsmith 2015, p. 25.
  13. ^ a b Batatu 1999, p. 377.
  14. ^ a b Alkan 2022, p. 27.
  15. ^ Winter 2016, p. 122.
  16. ^ Winter 2016, pp. 75, 83, 113, 115.
  17. ^ Moosa 1987, p. 276.
  18. ^ Moosa 1987, p. 277.
  19. ^ a b c Howse 2011.
  20. ^ Pipes 1992, p. 165.
  21. ^ Balanche 2000, p. 101.
  22. ^ Balanche 2000, pp. 101–102.
  23. ^ a b c Firro 1997, pp. 91–92.
  24. ^ Seale 1990, p. 20.
  25. ^ Winter 2016, pp. 260–261.
  26. ^ Commins 2004, pp. 10–12.
  27. ^ a b Zisser 1999, p. 135.
  28. ^ a b Balanche 2000, p. 456.
  29. ^ Batatu 1999, p. 6.
  30. ^ Tejel 2008, p. 58.
  31. ^ Goldsmith 2015, pp. 109–110.
  32. ^ Winter 2016, p. 1.
  33. ^ Zisser 2006, p. 65.
  34. ^ Droz-Vincent 2016, p. 176.
  35. ^ Zisser 1999, p. 129.
  36. ^ Cordesman 2002, p. 337.
  37. ^ Goldsmith 2015, p. 109.
  38. ^ Seale 1990, p. 19.

Bibliography

Read other articles:

Lorik Larix Larix lyallii in autumn near Sprite Lake in Washington State, USTaksonomiDivisiPinophytaKelasPinopsidaOrdoPinalesFamiliPinaceaeSubfamiliLaricoideaeGenusLarix Mill., 1754 SpeciesAbout 10–11; see textlbs Lorik atau lariks adalah tumbuhan runjung gugur dalam genus Larix, dari keluarga Pinaceae (subfamili Laricoideae ). Tumbuh setinggi 20 hingga 45 meter (65 hingga 150 kaki), mereka berasal dari daerah yang lebih dingin di belahan bumi utara, di mana mereka ditemukan di hutan datara...

 

 

Festival Film Indonesia 1979 adalah Festival Film Indonesia yang ke-X. Pemenang penghargaan Film November 1828 Pengemis dan Tukang Becak Binalnya Anak Muda Gara-Gara Istri Muda Kemelut Hidup Sutradara Teguh Karya - November 1828 Wim Umboh - Pengemis dan Tukang Becak Ismail Soebardjo - Binalnya Anak Muda Wahyu Sihombing - Gara-Gara Istri Muda Asrul Sani - Kemelut Hidup Pemeran utama pria terbaik Soekarno M. Noor - Kemelut Hidup Parto Tegal - Pulau Cinta El Manik - Gara-Gara Istri Muda Maruli S...

 

 

Carmen EjogoEjogo in 2002LahirCarmen Elizabeth Ejogo22 Oktober 1973 (umur 50)Kensington, London, InggrisTempat tinggalBrooklyn, New York, ASPekerjaanPemeran, penyanyiTahun aktif1986–sekarangSuami/istriTricky ​ ​(m. 1998; bercerai 1998)​ Jeffrey Wright ​ ​(m. 2000; bercerai 2014)​Anak2 Carmen Elizabeth Ejogo (/ɪˈdʒoʊɡoʊ/; lahir 22 Oktober 1973)[1][2] adalah seorang...

Peucetian tomb in Ruvo di Puglia, Italy Fresco from the tomb depicting dancing Peucetian women The Tomb of the Dancers or Tomb of the Dancing Women (Italian: Tomba delle danzatrici) is a Peucetian tomb in Ruvo di Puglia, Italy. It was discovered in the Corso Cotugno necropolis in November 1833.[1] The date of its construction is uncertain, dates ranging from the end of the fifth century BC[2] to the mid-fourth century BC[1] have been proposed. In any case, the tomb's f...

 

 

Hello, Love, GoodbyePoster rilis teatrikalSutradaraCathy Garcia-MolinaProduser Carlo L. Katigbak Olivia M. Lamasan Skenario Carmi G. Raymundo Crystal S. San Miguel Cathy Garcia-Molina Pemeran Kathryn Bernardo Alden Richards Penata musikJessie Q. LasatenSinematograferNoel TeehankeePenyuntingMarya IgnacioPerusahaanproduksiStar CinemaDistributorStar CinemaTanggal rilis 31 Juli 2019 (2019-07-31) (Filipina) 09 Agustus 2019 (2019-08-09) (Amerika Serikat) 08 Agustus 2019 ...

 

 

AbbotsfordWharf in June 2018General informationLocationGreat North Road, AbbotsfordNew South WalesAustraliaCoordinates33°49′54″S 151°07′04″E / 33.8318°S 151.1179°E / -33.8318; 151.1179Owned byTransport for NSWOperated byTransdev Sydney FerriesPlatforms1 wharf (1 berth)Connections Great North Rd at The TerraceConstructionAccessibleYesOther informationStatusUnstaffedServices Preceding wharf Sydney Ferries Following wharf Chiswicktowards Circular Quay F3 Parr...

Neo-Nazisme di Amerika Bagian dari seri tentangNazisme Organisasi Nationalsozialistischer Reichsbund für Leibesübungen (NSRL) Partai Pekerja Jerman Sosialis Nasional (NSDAP) Geheime Staatspolizei (Gestapo) Sturmabteilung (SA) Schutzstaffel (SS) Pemuda Hitler (HJ) Liga Perempuan Jerman (BDM) Liga Wanita Sosialis Nasional (NSF) Sejarah Garis waktu awal Kenaikan Hitler Machtergreifung Persenjataan Jerman Jerman Nazi Agama di Jerman Nazi Malam Pisau-Pisau Panjang Rapat Nuremberg Pakta Anti-Komi...

 

 

Bahasa UhunduniBPS: 0821 1 Amung-kal Damal-kal WilayahPapua Tengah: Pegunungan Tengah, Kabupaten Paniai, Beoga and Ilaga; Asmat, Deiyai, Mimika, dan Puncak, dan utara dan selatan Puncak Jaya; kemungkinan Lanny Jaya dan Nduga.EtnisAmungme, DamalPenutur14.000 (2000)[1] Rincian data penutur Jumlah penutur beserta (jika ada) metode pengambilan, jenis, tanggal, dan tempat.[2] 14.000 (2000) Rumpun bahasaRumpun bahasa Trans-Nugini Pegunungan IrianAmung–DemUhunduni Aspek ketata...

 

 

Primera División Uruguaya 1916 Competizione Primera División Uruguaya Sport Calcio Edizione 16ª Organizzatore AUF Luogo  Uruguay Partecipanti 9 Formula 1 girone all'italiana Risultati Vincitore  Nacional(5º titolo) Statistiche Incontri disputati 72 Gol segnati 153 (2,13 per incontro) Cronologia della competizione 1915 1917 Manuale Il campionato era formato da nove squadre e il Nacional vinse il titolo. Non vi furono retrocessioni. Classifica finale Pos. Squadra G V N P GF ...

Halaman ini berisi artikel tentang tempat berpijak Ibrahim saat membangun Ka'bah. Untuk tempat jenazah Ibrahim disemayamkan, lihat Masjid Ibrahimi. Maqam Ibrahimمقام إبراهيمMaqam IbrahimLokasiMasjidil HaramWilayahMakkah, Jazirah ArabCatatan situsbatu tempat Ibrahim berpijak saat membangun Ka'bah Maqam Ibrahim (Arab: مقام إبراهيمcode: ar is deprecated ) adalah batu tempat Ibrahim berpijak saat membangun Ka'bah. Awalnya batu tersebut menempel di dinding Ka'bah, tetapi kemu...

 

 

Sekolah Tinggi Agama Katolik Negeri PontianakNama lainSTAKatN PontianakJenisNegeriDidirikan2006 (2006) (sebagai sekolah tinggi pastoral)2017 (2017) (sebagai sekolah tinggi negeri)KetuaDr. Sunarso, S.T., M.Eng.LokasiSungai Raya, Kubu Raya, Kalimantan Barat, IndonesiaKampusUrbanSitus webwww.stakatnptk.ac.id Sekolah Tinggi Agama Katolik Negeri Pontianak (disingkat STAKatN Pontianak) adalah sebuah perguruan tinggi negeri di Provinsi Kalimantan Barat, Indonesia. STAKatN Pontianak adalah ...

 

 

American New Testament scholar, historian, theologian and author This article may rely excessively on sources too closely associated with the subject, potentially preventing the article from being verifiable and neutral. Please help improve it by replacing them with more appropriate citations to reliable, independent, third-party sources. (November 2018) (Learn how and when to remove this message) The Reverend CanonScot McKnightMcKnight speaking at ACU's Summit in 2013Born1953 (age 70...

Type of coastal body of water A gut is a narrow coastal body of water, a channel or strait, usually one that is subject to strong tidal currents flowing back and forth.[1][2][3] The term is also used in some places for a small creek. Coastal channels Hull Gut shows the classic conditions for a gut: a large body of water, subject to tides, drained through a small channel, resulting in heavy flow and strong currents Many guts are straits but some are at a river mouths wh...

 

 

Частина серії проФілософіяLeft to right: Plato, Kant, Nietzsche, Buddha, Confucius, AverroesПлатонКантНіцшеБуддаКонфуційАверроес Філософи Епістемологи Естетики Етики Логіки Метафізики Соціально-політичні філософи Традиції Аналітична Арістотелівська Африканська Близькосхідна іранська Буддій�...

 

 

КладбищеЛевашовское мемориальное кладбищеЛевашовская пустошь Памятник «Молох тоталитаризма» у входа на кладбище 60°05′38″ с. ш. 30°11′26″ в. д.HGЯO Страна  Россия Санкт-Петербург Левашово, Горское шоссе, 143 Дата основания 1937 Статус  Объект культурного наследи...

2010 American filmBlood Done Sign My NameDirected byJeb StuartWritten byJeb StuartBased onBlood Done Sign My Nameby Timothy TysonProduced byMel EfrosDavid MartinJeb StuartMari StuartStarringRicky SchroderOmar Benson MillerMichael RookerNate ParkerCinematographySteve MasonEdited byToby YatesMusic byJohn LeftwichProductioncompanyReal Folk ProductionsDistributed byPaladinRelease date February 19, 2010 (2010-02-19) Running time128 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglish Blood Do...

 

 

Israeli chemist (born 1939) Ada E. Yonathעדה יונתYonath in 2013BornAda Lifshitz (1939-06-22) 22 June 1939 (age 84)Jerusalem, British Mandate of Palestine (now in Israel)CitizenshipIsraeliAlma materHebrew University of JerusalemWeizmann Institute of ScienceKnown forCryo bio-crystallographyAwardsHarvey Prize (2002)Wolf Prize in Chemistry (2006) L'Oréal-UNESCO Award for Women in Science (2008) Albert Einstein World Award of Science (2008) Nobel Prize in Chemistry (2009)Sci...

 

 

This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these template messages) The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject. You may improve this article, discuss the issue on the talk page, or create a new article, as appropriate. (December 2010) (Learn how and when to remove this message) This article may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia's quality standar...

米拉贝拉Mirabela市镇米拉贝拉在巴西的位置坐标:16°15′46″S 44°09′50″W / 16.2628°S 44.1639°W / -16.2628; -44.1639国家巴西州米纳斯吉拉斯州面积 • 总计720.828 平方公里(278.313 平方英里)海拔600 公尺(2,000 英尺)人口 • 總計12,769人 • 密度17.7人/平方公里(45.9人/平方英里) 米拉贝拉(葡萄牙语:Mirabela)是巴西米纳斯吉拉...

 

 

本條目存在以下問題,請協助改善本條目或在討論頁針對議題發表看法。 此條目已列出參考文獻,但因為沒有文內引註而使來源仍然不明。 (2018年12月)请加上合适的文內引註来改善这篇条目。 此條目需要补充更多来源。 (2018年12月)请协助補充多方面可靠来源以改善这篇条目,无法查证的内容可能會因為异议提出而被移除。致使用者:请搜索一下条目的标题(来源搜索:素数...