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===Djaladjie===
===Djaladjie===
{{main|Djaladjie}}
{{main|Djaladjie}}
===Modernization and decline===
===Modernization===
During the nineteenth century, the colonization of Bahia brought Beheira and its subjects into closer contact with the previously distant Sotirian states of the north, forcing the people of the Faras to recognize that Euclea had surpassed them in military and economic might. Although Beheirans remained convinced of their cultural and religious superiority, reformers argued that they needed to adapt to the ideas and technologies of Euclea if they were to maintain their independence. The Beheiran state began by reforming the army.
During the second half of the nineteenth century, the colonisation of Bahia brought Beheira into closer contact with Euclea, forcing the people of the Faras to recognise that they had been surpassed in military and economic might. Though the Beheiran elite remained convinced of their cultural and religious superiority, reformers argued that Beheira needed to adapt to the ideas and technologies of Euclea if they wanted to maintain their independence. Surrounded by Gaullican colonies, Beheira was entering a new era in its relations with the north.


In 1850, Emperor [[Ashraf II Ghabras|Ashraf II]] sent a delegation of 40 clerics, scholars, and diplomats to study northern science and forms of government in Gaullica. Among the delegation was [[Theodoroes Remtanthanos]], a cleric at the [[University of St. Maryam]]. In ''[[Overview of Verlois]]'', he describes his travels through colonial Bahia, Tsabara, and the Gaullican capital. Traveling through these regions, he notes that Bahia had fallen behind the north in science and technology. Having studied developments in liberal thought and the revolutions of the 19th century, Remtanthanos became the first Beheiran proponent of constitutionalism. In ''Overview'', he argues that a constitution that limited the power of the emperor, promoted the rights of common citizens, and allowed anyone to attain any office regardless of rank would lead to a meritocratic system. In such a system, all Beheirans would seek an education to advance their careers. This, in turn, would promote innovation and reverse Beheira's technological backwardness. At the time, Beheira was an autocratic state and Remtanthanos' praise for representative government and constraints on the power of the emperor were seen as foreign and subversive by Beheiran elites.
In 1840, Emperor [[Ashraf II Ghabras|Ashraf II]] sent a delegation of 40 clerics, scholars, and diplomats to study Euclean science and forms of government in Gaullica. Among the delegation was [[Tawadros Ramtanthanos]], a cleric at the [[University of St. Maryma]] who had travelled throughout colonial Bahia and Tsabara. In ''[[Overview of Verlois]]'', he describes his travels through Gaullica. Having studied developments in liberal thought and the revolutions of the 19th century, Remtanthanos was impressed by the Gaullican constitution, particularly its guarantees of equal rights and constraints on the authority of the king. Noting that Bahia had fallen behind the north, he argued that Gaullica owed its superiority to its liberal institutions. Remtanthanos was an active constitutionalist by the time he returned in 1852. In ''[[Foundations of the State]]'', he asserted that Beheira needed a constitution that limited the authority of the emperor and replaced [[Hourege]] with a meritocratic civil service. Though Remtanthanos' message resonated with Remtanthanos' contemporaries, Beheira was an autocratic state and his praise for representative government were seen as foreign and subversive by Beheiran elites.


As the colonization of Bahia intensified, the Beheiran state invested in building projects and public works programs aimed at staving off the threat of conquest. Beheira began to acquire advanced Euclean technology through wild spending sprees. Industrial goods and products started to reach Beheiran markets. Beheira was being drawn into the global economy.
[[File:Detail, "Battle of Adwa (2141058909).jpg|200px|thumb|right|1892 depiction of the [[Nizam al-Jadid]]]] In 1852, the ''[[Nizam al-Jadid]]'', an army of recruits drawn from rural communities was created. Ashraf II hired retired Gaullican officers to train the soldiers to fight with modern weapons and methods of warfare. This was the first standing army in Beheiran history. Traditionally, the Beheiran state relied on the [[badawi]] to supply the emperor with Makanian slave-soldiers in times of war. As Southern Makania fell under the control of Gaullica, the supply of slaves dried up and the badawi became obsolete. The idea of a standing army of citizen conscripts was still new in the Orthodox world and was met with resistance. Peasants fearing for their farms and the welfare of their families avoided conscription by fleeing their communities when military recruitment teams approached. The regions of [[Bashans]] and [[Souan]] rebelled against the draft. Despite the initial difficulties, the situation stabilized. In 1854, the army numbered 20,000 men. In 1864, it numbered 100,000 men.


In 1862 Emperor [[Tawadros IV Ghabras|Tawadros IV]] appointed [[Hassan al-Badawi]] as prime minister. As a member of the 1850 delegation, al-Badawi's firsthand encounter with Euclean progress made him an ardent advocate for reform. al-Badawi also shared Remtanthanos' concern that Beheira had fallen behind the north and that the colonial powers that surrounded the declining state would end its independence unless it demonstrated that it was willing to reform itself into modernity. Compared to the vast territory it once controlled, Beheira was a relatively small country. Despite its close connections to the Gaullican colonies of [[Ténéré]], [[Meyrout]], and [[Adésine]], it was far from the colonial ports of [[Mambiza|Sainte-Germaine]] and [[Adunis]]. Consequently, the cost of importing advisors and advanced technology from Gaullica was a difficult and costly task that required coordination between independent merchants, colonial administrators, and ultimately, the Gaullican government in Verlois. This task would become considerably less costly and time-consuming once the Gaullican government began to build railways through [[Ténéré]], [[Atudeé]], and [[Basêland]] in the 1870s.
However, maintaining the Nizam Al-Jadid required revenues that the Beheiran state did not have. Agriculture accounted for over 80% of Beheira's revenues. However, 30% of arable land was owned by the Orthodox Church and its monasteries. The other 70% was owned by large landholders who paid little to the treasury in Mina. If Ashraf II wanted to control Beheira's revenues, he had to control its land. From 1853 to 1859, he confiscated millions of {{wp|feddan}} from the landed elite.


During his tenure from 1862 to 1886, al-Badawi promoted investment in factories to process local cash crops into manufactured goods for domestic consumptions. He believed that developing Beheira's economic base would offset the cost of importing and adopting modern technology. In a 1864 speech to the [[Constulative Council (Beheira)|Consultative Council]], he lamented how Beheiran farmers sold their raw cotton, silk, and wool at cheap prices to foreign merchants who would ship them to Euclea where they would be processed into manufactured products sold at a price several times higher. He argued that it would be better if Beheiran factories spun and wove those crops to produce products for domestic consumption. This, in turn, would prevent Beheira from becoming dependent on Euclean economies while giving the government more money to invest in infastructure and military technology. By 1863, he successfully secured a deal with the Gaullican government to import the managers, engineers, and machines required to build textile mills in exchange for {{wp|concession (constract)|concessions}} to Gaullican colonial companies.
[[File:Téwodros II - 2.jpg|200px|thumb|right|[[Tawadros IV Ghabras|Tawadros IV]] in 1862.]]On 8 November 1857, Emperor [[Tawadros IV Ghabras|Tawadros IV]] read a reform decree drafted by Prime Minister [[Abdelmesseh al-Dishairi]] to the [[Consultative Council]]. The decree called on the government to reform the tax system, modernise the financial system, and reform the terms of military service. The decree also called for the foundation of a national bank to create funds for public works such as roads, railways, and canals. To reform the tax system, the government began to conduct a regular census using a system of land records that replaced traditional tax farms and communal holdings with individual titles, introducing northern notions of property for the first time. These reforms required thousands of bureaucrats with technical training to carry them out. During the 1850s and 60s, the government opened a network of schools and colleges that taught Euclean curricula to train civil servants. In 1860, all Beheiran laws were codified.
 
 
- one of the 1863 concessions is the construction of a railway through eastern Beheira that would be owned by both Gaullica and Beheira - beginning of the Adunis-Mambiza railway in Djedet
 
- Beheiran government soon sees a dramatic increase in trade revenue due to the expansion of industry, trade, and transport links
 
- al-Badawi, Bishoy al-Atuwani modernize the military, civil service, system of education
 
- al-Badawi is fired after admonishing Tawadros IV for borrowing money from foreign governments
 
- 1880s - Beheira begins to build a large railway network
 
- beginning of the debt crisis - Beheiran government begins to borrow money, grant concessions along the Faras to pay for its rapidly rising spending
 
 
[[File:Holy_Trinity_Cathedral_Mina.jpg|200px|thumb|right|The Holy Trinity Cathedral in Mina]]Though Tawadros IV and his advisors attempted to strengthen Beheira through administrative, economic, and military reforms, he refused to accept the constitutional constraints and representative assembles that reformist leaders had hoped he would support. These expectations were unrealistic. The emperor continued to rule with absolute power and there was no constraint to prevent him from spending the state into insolvency.
 
In 1860, Tawadros IV began an ambitious public works program under the direction of Hassan al-Amshir to remodel Mina. From 1861 to 1876, twelve quarters with Gaullican-inspired buildings lining broad boulevards lined with gas-lit lamps and imported trees were built between Old Mina and Bashans. Two bridges were built across the Faras. Landscape architects turned irrigation basins along the river into public parks and gardens. The completion of the program was comemmorated with the opening of the [[Holy Trinity Cathedral]] on Easter Day 1876. Similar programs were also undertaken in Souan, Atouan, and Tanta.
 
- public works program leads to a debt spiral
 
- Beheira declares bankruptcy in 1890
 
- Gaullica refuses to forgive Beheira's debt and invades in 1891
 
- Gaullica seizes Beheiran concessions, granting the railway to Tenere and


===Gaullican Protectorate===
===Gaullican Protectorate===

Revision as of 06:08, 18 January 2020

Prehistory

Faras Civilization

Atouan Culture

Ancient Djedet

Old Kingdom

Atouan Kingdom

First Intermediate Period

Middle Kingdom

Second Intermediate Period

New Kingdom

Kingdom of Medewi

Bedouin rule

Banu Hashid

Second Kingdom of Medewi

Banu Azd

Sotirian rule

Spread of Sotirianity

Empire of Mina

Kingdom of Bashans and Souan

Irfani rule

First Ghazi Dynasty

Second Ghazi Dynasty

Empire of Beheira

Kingdom of Souan

Conquest of the Faras

Lourale ka Maoube

Djaladjie

Modernization

During the second half of the nineteenth century, the colonisation of Bahia brought Beheira into closer contact with Euclea, forcing the people of the Faras to recognise that they had been surpassed in military and economic might. Though the Beheiran elite remained convinced of their cultural and religious superiority, reformers argued that Beheira needed to adapt to the ideas and technologies of Euclea if they wanted to maintain their independence. Surrounded by Gaullican colonies, Beheira was entering a new era in its relations with the north.

In 1840, Emperor Ashraf II sent a delegation of 40 clerics, scholars, and diplomats to study Euclean science and forms of government in Gaullica. Among the delegation was Tawadros Ramtanthanos, a cleric at the University of St. Maryma who had travelled throughout colonial Bahia and Tsabara. In Overview of Verlois, he describes his travels through Gaullica. Having studied developments in liberal thought and the revolutions of the 19th century, Remtanthanos was impressed by the Gaullican constitution, particularly its guarantees of equal rights and constraints on the authority of the king. Noting that Bahia had fallen behind the north, he argued that Gaullica owed its superiority to its liberal institutions. Remtanthanos was an active constitutionalist by the time he returned in 1852. In Foundations of the State, he asserted that Beheira needed a constitution that limited the authority of the emperor and replaced Hourege with a meritocratic civil service. Though Remtanthanos' message resonated with Remtanthanos' contemporaries, Beheira was an autocratic state and his praise for representative government were seen as foreign and subversive by Beheiran elites.

1892 depiction of the Nizam al-Jadid

In 1852, the Nizam al-Jadid, an army of recruits drawn from rural communities was created. Ashraf II hired retired Gaullican officers to train the soldiers to fight with modern weapons and methods of warfare. This was the first standing army in Beheiran history. Traditionally, the Beheiran state relied on the badawi to supply the emperor with Makanian slave-soldiers in times of war. As Southern Makania fell under the control of Gaullica, the supply of slaves dried up and the badawi became obsolete. The idea of a standing army of citizen conscripts was still new in the Orthodox world and was met with resistance. Peasants fearing for their farms and the welfare of their families avoided conscription by fleeing their communities when military recruitment teams approached. The regions of Bashans and Souan rebelled against the draft. Despite the initial difficulties, the situation stabilized. In 1854, the army numbered 20,000 men. In 1864, it numbered 100,000 men.

However, maintaining the Nizam Al-Jadid required revenues that the Beheiran state did not have. Agriculture accounted for over 80% of Beheira's revenues. However, 30% of arable land was owned by the Orthodox Church and its monasteries. The other 70% was owned by large landholders who paid little to the treasury in Mina. If Ashraf II wanted to control Beheira's revenues, he had to control its land. From 1853 to 1859, he confiscated millions of feddan from the landed elite.

Tawadros IV in 1862.

On 8 November 1857, Emperor Tawadros IV read a reform decree drafted by Prime Minister Abdelmesseh al-Dishairi to the Consultative Council. The decree called on the government to reform the tax system, modernise the financial system, and reform the terms of military service. The decree also called for the foundation of a national bank to create funds for public works such as roads, railways, and canals. To reform the tax system, the government began to conduct a regular census using a system of land records that replaced traditional tax farms and communal holdings with individual titles, introducing northern notions of property for the first time. These reforms required thousands of bureaucrats with technical training to carry them out. During the 1850s and 60s, the government opened a network of schools and colleges that taught Euclean curricula to train civil servants. In 1860, all Beheiran laws were codified.

Gaullican Protectorate

Gaullican Invasion

Beheiran nationalism

Bishop Sarjoun of Dotawo (center), Mikhail Bestawros (far left), and other founders of the Orthodox League in 1898.

Coming to terms with Catholic rule, Orthodox reformers and secular nationalists drafted their own responses to Gaullican imperialism. Led by Bishop Sarjoun of Dotawo and Mikhail Bestawros, the reformists laid the foundation for the anastasis, a movement that aimed to adapt Southern Orthodoxy to the modern world, calling for a new interpretation of the Bible capable of addressing the challenges of the 19th century. In 1886, Bestawros founded the Orthodox League, a political party that hoped to constrain the power of the emperor through a constitution based on Sotirian principles and present a united front of Bahian Sotirians led by Beheira against Gaullican imperialism.

Despite the Gaullican occupation, the spread of the printing press and the telegraph led to a literary revival known as the nahda. Intellectuals from Mina to Souan were actively writing books on Beheiran history and culture and commentaries on classical works of Beheiran literature. The nahda was a moment of cultural definition and rediscovery and laid the foundation for Beheiran nationalism. In 1892, Abassad Beshada and Harun Remtanthanos founded the Nahda Party. Beshada and Remtanthanos agreed with the constitutionalism of the Orthodox League but rejected its pan-Sotirian ambitions. In al-Sawt, the party newspaper, Beshada argued that Beheira was a direct descendant of Ancient Djedet and that the Beheirans and Makai were a nation united by a common history, culture, and religion. al-Sawt and other newspapers provided the nascent nationalist movement with broad support among students and intellectuals. By the beginning of the 20th century, Nahda, followed by the Orthodox League, was the largest political party in the country.

Liberal period

Functionalist period

Independence

Socialist Djedet

Meshir Revolution