The
Barbary coast; 16th - 20th century AD
With the decline of the local Berber dynasties in the 15th and 16th centuries,
the valuable coastal strip of north Africa (known because of the Berbers as the
Barbary coast) attracts the attention of the two most powerful Mediterranean
states of the time - Spain in the west, Turkey in the east.
The Spanish-Turkish rivalry lasts for much of the 16th century, but it is
gradually won - in a somewhat unorthodox manner - by the Turks. Their successful
device is to allow Turkish pirates, or corsairs, to establish themselves along
the coast. The territories seized by the corsairs are then given a formal status
as protectorates of the Ottoman empire.
The first such pirate establishes himself on the coast of Algeria in 1512. Two
others are firmly based in Libya by 1551. Tunisia is briefly taken in 1534 by
the most famous corsair of them all, Khair ed-Din (known to the Europeans as
Barbarossa). Recovered for Spain in 1535, Tunisia is finally brought under
Ottoman control in 1574.
Piracy remains the chief purpose and main source of income of all these Turkish
settlements along the Barbary coast. And the depredations of piracy, after three
centuries, at last prompt French intervention in Algeria. This, at any rate, is
stated by the French at the time to be the cause of their intervention. The
reality is somewhat less glorious.
Algiers is occupied by the French in 1830, but it is not until 1847 that the
French conquest of Algeria is complete - after prolonged resistance from the
Berber hinterland, which has never been effectively controlled by the Turks on
the coast.
It is in the European interest to police this entire troublesome Barbary region.
Tunisia becomes a French protectorate in 1881, and Morocco (which has maintained
a shaky independence, under its own local sultans, since the end of the Marinid
dynasty) follows in 1912. Italy takes Libya from the Turks in 1912. The regions
of the Barbary coast thus enter their last colonial phase before independence.
Italo-Turkish War; AD 1911-1912
Turkish control over over the region of modern Libya has been little more than
nominal during much of the Ottoman period. In the western region, Tripolitania,
the descendants of an Ottoman governor, Ahmad Karamanli, win hereditary rights
as pashas in 1711 and retain them until 1832. In the eastern district of
Cyrenaica real power resides with the Senussi, followers of a 19th-century
religious reformer (al-Senussi al-Kabir), whose creed of a strict and simple
Sunni life proves popular with the Bedouin tribesmen.
But the eventual removal of the Turks from the region is not the result of local
antagonism. It derives from the wish of Italy, a latecomer in the imperial
scramble, to increase her stake in Africa while there is time.
By the first decade of the 20th century Algeria and Tunisia are French. Egypt is
British. Libya, situated between these French and British regions, is a part of
north Africa in which Italy has been developing extensive commercial interests.
In 1900 the French and Italian governments come to a cool-headed secret
agreement. France has designs on Morocco, Italy on Libya. Each will allow the
other a free hand.
In 1911 Italy finds a trumped-up reason to send a 24-hour-ultimatum to Istanbul,
demanding the presence of Italian troops in Tripolitania and Cyrenaica to
protect the local Italian population. This is followed a day later by a
declaration of war and almost immediate invasion of north Africa.
The Italians make relatively little headway, partly because of a spirited
resistance by the Sennusi tribesmen on behalf of their imperial masters, who at
least are fellow Muslims. But by the autumn of 1912 Turkey, beset by troubles
elsewhere, is ready to concede. Under the terms of a treaty signed in October at
Ouchy (the lakeside district of Lausanne), Tripolitania and Cyrenaica are ceded
to Italy.
The new imperial power soon also occupies Fezzan, a region to the southwest
under Sennusi control. With the annexation of Fezzan, modern Libya takes shape -
though as yet only as a broad area suffering and greatly resenting Italian
occupation.
World Wars and Fascism; AD 1914-1945
In its short span of existence the Italian colony of Libya sees two world wars
and the rise of fascism. These events have profound and differing effects in the
region.
The demands of World War I cause Italian troops to be withdrawn until only the
coastal towns of Libya are safely held. Elsewhere control returns to the network
of local Senussi zawiya (fortified outposts around a mosque). After the war the
Senussi leader, Mohammed Idris, attempts to achieve a compromise with the
Italians. In 1920 he acknowledges their sovereignty over coastal Cyrenaica. In
return he is granted the title of emir. But this uneasy relationship crumbles
with the onset of fascism.
Idris flees in 1923 to Egypt, while fascist governors in Libya take strong
measures - including the use of concentration camps - to subdue resistance in
Tripolitania and Cyrenaica. (The two provinces are united in 1934 to form the
colony of Libya.)
World War II at last brings the Senussi into a winning team. As enemies of
Italy, they are natural allies of Britain and the USA. They play their part in
the all-important campaign of 1942-3 which drives the Italian and German armies
out of north Africa.
During the later stages of the war and in the immediate postwar years
Tripolitania and Cyrenaica are adminstered by the British, while Fezzan is under
the control of the French. But it is agreed that the future of Libya shall be
referred to the United Nations.
The result is a resolution for Libyan independence. In December 1950 a national
assembly representing all three provinces elects Mohammed Idris to be Libya's
king. As Idris I, he formally declares the independence of the new state on 24
December 1951.
Royal Libya; AD 1951-1969
Idris rules as an old-fashioned monarch, with scant regard for any democratic
ideals. For the first eight years his realm is similarly backward, an
impoverished region in which a subsistence economy is boosted only by revenues
from British and US airbases and by international aid.
This situation is transformed in 1959 by the discovery of major oil reserves.
Idris, with the luxury now of a massive national revenue, begins to assert
Libya's new independence. Negotiations are begun to secure the withdrawal of
foreign troops from Libyan soil. But the king's leisurely pace is suddenly
trumped. In 1969, when absent on a visit to Turkey, he is deposed in a bloodless
coup led by a 27-year old captain, Moamar al-Gaddafi.
The Gaddafi regime; from AD 1969
Gaddafi immediately becomes commander-in-chief of the armed forces and chairman
of the Revolutionary Command Council which now governs Libya. From 1979 he is
known simply as Leader of the Revolution, ruling with a firm grip which means
that Libya's policies are entirely his own.
Gaddafi soon acquires a reputation as one of the world's more eccentric and
unpredicable dictators. The various roots of his political philosophy - Islam,
Arab nationalism, socialism - are combined in his personal manifesto The Green
Book (published in two volumes, in 1976 and 1980).
An extra element is added in a new name of the country, introduced in 1977. It
is now to be known as the People's Socialist Libyan Arab Jamahiriya. The phrase
Jamahiriya ('government through the masses') implies that power is transferred
to some 1500 local committees. But the reality remains very much a personal rule
by one man.
Gaddafi's unpopularity on the international stage derives from his use of
Libya's oil wealth to meddle in the affairs of other nations. Locally this means
often tense relationships with Egypt and Chad. Further afield it brings
international condemnation, as assassination squads eliminate Libyan opponents
living abroad and Libyan funds support terrorist activities in far-flung parts
of the world.
In 1972 Gaddafi announces that he is supporting the IRA in northern Ireland.
Libyan cash is also believed to lie behind Black Panther and Nation of Islam
activities in the USA, as well as funding terrorist acts by extremist
Palestinian groups.
To demonstrate US commitment against international terrorism, President Reagan
launches in April 1986 an air strike (in bombers flying from Britain) against
what are said to be terrorist targets in Tripoli and Benghazi. Various members
of Gaddafi's family are killed or wounded, and he himself narrowly escapes.
A new escalation in Libya's status as an international pariah follows the
Lockerbie air disaster of 1988. A Pan Am airliner explodes over Lockerbie in
Scotland, killing all 259 people on board and another eleven on the ground.
Evidence later suggests that two Libyans may have been responsible for planting
a bomb on board in Paris. But Gaddafi resolutely refuses to hand over the two
suspects for trial.
This refusal leads to UN-approved sanctions from 1993. An embargo is placed on
trade and air contact with Libya, followed by a ban on the sale of equipment
needed for Gaddafi's oil industry.
Libya in the 1990s is a place increasingly isolated by the vagaries of one man
(by now one of the world's longest established rulers). Almost immediately after
taking power, Gaddafi expels in 1970 nearly all the Italians and Jews living in
Libya. In 1995 he even throws Palestinians out of his Muslim state, along with
citizens of neighbouring north African nations. He doubts their loyalty to
Libya.
Thus Libyans, at the end of the century, are in a very real sense on their own
in a hostile world. However isolation begins to end early in the new milliennium
after Gaddafi allows the Lockerbie suspects to stand trial in the Netherlands.
The UN sanctions are suspended, and Libya starts trying to attract tourists to
its famous archaeological sites.
Other articles in this category |
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Libya at a glance |
Geography |
History |
Culture |
Economy 1 |
Economy 2 |
Politics |
Military |