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Three murders and a mandate: on property and French sovereignty in interwar Syria

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This paper is an investigation into a triple homicide in the French Mandate of Syria in 1925. It first suggests that the official decision to single out the murder of three French land registry employees in the midst of the Great Syrian Revolt, a two-year war against French imperial rule, is revealing of the Mandate's attempts to legitimize its dominion over Syria. It then argues that the capacity in which the three slain agents operated, as employees tasked with the break-up of musha' properties, is central to their demise. Indeed the Mandate advertised the individualization of musha' holdings (based on a rotation of land use rights) as a rational measure meant to improve living standards in rural Syria. But Syrian rebels also perceived such interventions as an attempt by French authorities to circumvent the Mandate-imposed restrictions to their authority through the construction of what is here called 'material sovereignty.'

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Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd

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Area studies, History

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British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies

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10.1080/13530194.2020.1719034

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