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Arab Revolt

Arab Revolt formation
Part of the Middle Eastern theatre of World War I
030Arab.jpg
Soldiers of the Arab Army in the Arabian Desert carrying the Flag of the Arab Revolt.
Date June 1916 – October 1918
Location Ottoman Empire
Result Treaty of Sèvres
Territorial
changes
Partitioning of the Ottoman Empire
Belligerents
Arab Revolt Kingdom of Hejaz
United Kingdom British Empire
 France
 Ottoman Empire

German Empire German Empire
Flag of the Emirate of Ha'il.svg Emirate of Jabal Shammar
Commanders and leaders
Arab Revolt Hussein bin Ali
Arab Revolt Faisal
Arab Revolt Abdullah
United Kingdom Edmund Allenby
United Kingdom T. E. Lawrence
Ottoman Empire Djemal Pasha
Ottoman Empire Fahreddin Pasha
Ottoman Empire Muhiddin Pasha

German Empire Otto Liman von Sanders
Flag of the Emirate of Ha'il.svg Abdul-Aziz bin Mitab
Strength
30,000 (June 1916)
50,000+ (1918)
May 1916:
6,500–7,000 troops
September 1918:
25,000 troops
340 guns
Casualties and losses
Unknown Ottoman Empire 47,000+
5,000 killed
10,000 wounded
22,000+ captured
~10,000 disease deaths

The Arab Revolt (Arabic: الثورة العربية‎‎, al-Thawra al-‘Arabiyya; Turkish: Arap İsyanı) or Great Arab Revolt (Arabic: الثورة العربية الكبرى‎‎, al-Thawra al-‘Arabiyya al-Kubrā) began on June 5, 1916 and was declared on June 8 by the Sherif Hussein bin Ali with the aim of securing independence from the ruling Ottoman Turks and creating a single unified Arab state spanning from Aleppo in Syria to Aden in Yemen.

Though the Sherifian revolt has tended to be regarded as a revolt rooted in a secular Arab nationalist sentiment the Sherif did not present it in those terms; rather, he accused the Young Turks of violating the sacred tenets of Islam and called Arab Muslims to sacred rebellion against the ostensibly "impious" Ottoman government. Contrarily, Turks accused rebelling tribes of betraying the Muslim Caliphate during a campaign against imperialist powers which were trying to divide and govern the Muslim lands.

The rise of nationalism under the Ottoman Empire dates from at least 1821. Arab nationalism has its roots in the Mashriq (the Arab lands east of Egypt), particularly in countries of Sham (the Levant). The political orientation of Arab nationalists in the years prior to the Great War was generally moderate. The Arabs' demands were of a reformist nature, limited in general to autonomy, greater use of Arabic in education, and changes in conscription in the Ottoman Empire in peacetime for Arab conscripts that allowed local service in the Ottoman army.


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