The world the Bedouin lived in: Climate, migration and politics in the early modern Arab East

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Brill Academic Publishers

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Environmental history provides a perspective from which we can deepen our understanding of the past because it examines the relationships of people with their material surroundings and the effects of those relationships on the individual as well as the societal level. It is a perspective that holds particular promise for the social and political history of arid and marginal zones, as it contributes to our understanding of the reason some groups are more successful than others in coping with the same environmental stresses. Historians working on the early modern Arab East have only recently engaged with the lively field of global environmental history. After presenting a brief overview of some strands of this research, this article illustrates the potential of this approach by looking closely at a series of conflicts involving Bedouin and other power groups in the southern parts of Bilad al-Sham around the middle of the eighteenth century. © 2015 Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands.

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Bedouin, Climate, Drylands, Early modern history, Environmental history, Migration, Ottoman empire

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