Subhi Bey Barakat
Subhi Bey Barakat al-Khalidi | |
---|---|
صبحي بك بركات الخالدي | |
Head of State of Syria | |
In office 28 June 1922 – 21 December 1925 | |
Prime Minister | Himself(1925) |
Vice President | None |
Preceded by | Faisal I (As King of Syria) |
Succeeded by | François Pierre-Alype |
Personal details | |
Born |
1889 Antioch, Ottoman Empire |
Died |
1939 Antakya, Turkey |
Political party | Independent |
Religion | Sunni Islam |
Subhi Bey Barakat al-Khalidi (Arabic: صبحي بك بركات الخالدي ; 1889, Antioch – 1939, Turkey) was a Syrian politician from Antioch,[1] to a family of Turkish origin.[2] During the French Mandate of Syria, he was the president of the Syrian Federation (28 June 1922 – 31 December 1924) and the State of Syria (1 January 1925 – 21 December 1925).[1]
Part of the reason the French supported his candidacy as president of the Syrian Federation was because as neither a native of Damascus nor a very strong Arabic speaker (Turkish was his mother tongue), he did not seem to pose a nationalist threat to French rule.[3]
Initially he was a partner of Ibrahim Hanano in his revolt. He played a major role in merging the States of Aleppo and Damascus into one state, and he quit the presidency of Syria in 1925 in protest to the French position regarding the fate of the Alawite and Druze States, which France refused to add to Syria because it feared that might endanger the independence of the newly created Lebanon.
See also
References
- 1 2 Moubayed, Sami M. (2006). Steel & silk: men and women who shaped Syria 1900-2000. Bridge between the cultures series. Cune Press. pp. 200–202. ISBN 978-1-885942-40-1. Retrieved February 2012. Check date values in:
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(help) - ↑ Bidwell, Robin (1998), "Barakat, Subhi (c.1886-)", Dictionary Of Modern Arab History, Routledge, p. 68, ISBN 1136162917,
BARAKAT, Subhi (c. 1886-) Syrian Head of State. He was born into a Turkish family in Antioch and was educated in the local secondary school.
- ↑ Khoury, Philip (1987). Syria and the French Mandate: the Politics of Arab Nationalism, 1920-1945. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. p. 127.