Economic and political conditions
- Arabic:
- Bayrūt
- French:
- Beyrouth
News •
Between 1952 and 1975 Beirut was the hub of economic, social, intellectual, and cultural life in the Arab Middle East. In an area dominated by authoritarian or militarist regimes, the Lebanese capital was generally regarded as a haven of liberalism, though a precarious one. With its seaport and airport—coupled with Lebanon’s free economic and foreign exchange system, solid gold-backed currency, banking-secrecy law, and favourable interest rates—Beirut became an established banking centre for Arab wealth, much of which was invested in construction, commercial enterprise, and industry (mostly the manufacture of textiles and shoes, food processing, and printing). Foreign banking and business firms found in Beirut an ideal base for their operations in the Arab Middle East. The “free zone” of Beirut port was a leading entrepôt for the region. A skilled professional class provided varied sophisticated services for a pan-Arab clientele. Beirut was also a centre for tourism. The large number of daily and weekly newspapers, journals, and other periodicals, which were normally uncensored, kept the Arab world informed about regional and world developments and provided a full array of editorial opinion. Beirut’s schools, colleges, and universities—the American University of Beirut, St. Joseph University, Lebanese University, and Beirut Arab University—attracted students from many Arab countries. An underlying lack of consistency and organization, however, and an undercurrent of social and political unrest and intersectarian conflict never escaped notice.
Beirut became a prominent centre for Palestinian resistance organizations after the Arab-Israeli war of 1967 and became the headquarters of the movement after the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) in Jordan was crushed in 1970. Arab nationalist and leftist political parties established armed militias for themselves, often in association with the Palestinian resistance movement. When the PLO was trapped by Israeli troops in West Beirut in 1982, it was removed from Lebanon by multinational forces. Sectarian violence continued after the Israeli withdrawal, destroying the established order of the city.
Whether or not Beirut can regain its former position as the hub of the Arab Middle East remains uncertain. This it certainly ceased to be after 1975. The incessant fighting that began with the civil war, the Israeli bombing of West Beirut, and the chronic shelling that continued after the Israeli withdrawal all ate away at the city’s infrastructure. The Green Line established from the 1970s until 1990 to separate the Christian and Muslim factions in East and West Beirut, respectively, became a dangerous barricade dividing the city. Businesses and residents alike left the city as hopes for a cease-fire waned, and even basic services such as water and electricity came to be only sporadically available. Even in those bad years, however, economic activity in Beirut never ceased entirely. Industry, reverting in many cases from the factories to home production, continued to supply domestic and Arab markets, where Lebanese goods remained in high demand. With press censorship still the rule in many Arab countries, Lebanese printing, catering to the Arab world at large, actually expanded during the war years to become one of the country’s major industries.
Reconstruction after the civil war restored some economic activity in the city in the 21st century. Under the oversight of Solidere, a joint-stock company set up in 1994 to develop the Beirut Central District (BCD), Beirut became an attractive centre for high-end real estate in the region. The real estate sector relied on wealthy foreign investment, however, and remained out of reach for many in Beirut, rendering it vulnerable to political and economic instability in the region.
History
The early period
The antiquity of Beirut is indicated by its name, derived from the Canaanite name of Beʾerōt (Wells), referring to the underground water table that is still tapped by the local inhabitants for general use. Although the city is mentioned in Egyptian records of the 2nd millennium bce, it did not gain prominence until it was granted the status of a Roman colony, the Colonia Julia Augusta Felix Berytus, in 14 bce. The original town was located in the valley between the hills of al-Ashrafiyyah and al-Muṣayṭibah. Its suburbs were also fashionable residential areas under the Romans. Between the 3rd and 6th centuries ce, Beirut was famous for its school of law. The Roman city was destroyed by a succession of earthquakes, culminating in the quake and tidal wave of 551 ce. When the Muslim conquerors occupied Beirut in 635, it was still mostly in ruins.
Arab and Christian rule
Beirut was reconstructed by the Muslims and reemerged as a small, walled garrison town administered from Baalbek as part of the jund (Muslim province) of Damascus. Until the 9th or 10th century, it remained commercially insignificant and was notable mainly for the careers of two local jurists, al-Awzāʿī (d. 774) and al-Makḥūl (d. 933). A return of maritime commerce to the Mediterranean in the 10th century revived the importance of the town, particularly after Syria passed under the rule of the Fāṭimid caliphs of Egypt in 977. In 1110 Beirut was conquered by the military forces of the First Crusade and was organized, along with its coastal suburbs, as a fief of the Latin kingdom of Jerusalem.
As a Crusader outpost, Beirut conducted a flourishing trade with Genoa and other Italian cities; strategically, however, its position was precarious because it was subject to raids by the Druze tribesmen of the mountain hinterland. Saladin reconquered Beirut from the Crusaders in 1187, but his successors lost it to them again 10 years later. The Mamlūks finally drove the Crusaders out in 1291. Under Mamlūk rule, Beirut became the chief port of call in Syria for the spice merchants from Venice.
Ottoman rule
Beirut, along with the rest of Syria, passed under Ottoman rule in 1516, shortly after the Portuguese had rounded the African continent (1498) to divert the spice trade of the East away from Syria and Egypt. The commercial importance of Beirut declined as a consequence. By the 17th century, however, the city had reemerged as an exporter of Lebanese silk to Europe, mainly to Italy and France. Beirut at the time was technically part of the Ottoman province (eyalet) of Damascus, and after 1660 of Sidon. Between 1598 and 1633, however, and again between 1749 and 1774, it fell under the control of the Maʿn and Shihāb emirs (feudal suzerains and fiscal agents) of the Druze and Maronite mountain hinterland. From the mid-17th to the late 18th century, Maronite notables from the mountains served as French consuls in Beirut, wielding considerable local influence. During the Russo-Turkish War of 1768–74, the town suffered heavy bombardment by the Russians. Subsequently it was wrested from the Shihāb emirs by the Ottomans, and it soon shrank into a village of about 6,000.
The growth of modern Beirut was a result of the Industrial Revolution in Europe. Factory-produced goods of the Western world began to invade the markets of Ottoman Syria, and Beirut, starting virtually from nought, stood only to profit from the modern industrial world. The occupation of Syria by the Egyptians (1832–40) under Muḥammad ʿAlī Pasha provided the needed stimulus for the town to enter on its new period of commercial growth. A brief setback came with the end of the Egyptian occupation; by 1848, however, the town had begun to outgrow its walls, and its population had increased to about 15,000. Civil wars in the mountains, culminating in a massacre of Christians by Druzes in 1860, further swelled Beirut’s population, as Christian refugees arrived in large numbers. Meanwhile, the pacification of the mountains under an autonomous government guaranteed by the Great Powers (1861–1914) stabilized the relationship between the town and its hinterland. In 1888 Beirut was made the capital of a separate province (vilāyet) comprising the whole of coastal Syria, including Palestine. By the turn of the century, it was a city of about 120,000.
Meanwhile, Protestant missionaries from Great Britain, the United States, and Germany and Roman Catholic missionaries mainly from France became active in Beirut, particularly in education. In 1866 American Protestant missionaries established the Syrian Protestant College, which later became the American University of Beirut. In 1881 French Jesuit missionaries established St. Joseph University. Printing presses, introduced earlier by Protestant and Roman Catholic missionaries, stimulated the growth of the city’s publishing industry, mainly in Arabic but also in French and English. By 1900 Beirut was in the vanguard of Arabic journalism. A class of intellectuals sought to revive the Arabic cultural heritage and eventually became the first spokespeople of a new Arab nationalism.