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    • League of Nations mandate

      • The Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon (French: Mandat pour la Syrie et le Liban; Arabic: الانتداب الفرنسي على سوريا ولبنان, romanized: al-intidāb al-faransī ʻalā sūriyā wa-lubnān, also referred to as the Levant States; 1923−1946) was a League of Nations mandate founded in the aftermath of the First World War and the partitioning of the Ottoman Empire, concerning Syria and Lebanon.
      www.wikiwand.com/en/articles/Mandate_for_Syria_and_the_Lebanon
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  2. The Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon (French: Mandat pour la Syrie et le Liban; Arabic: الانتداب الفرنسي على سوريا ولبنان, romanized: al-intidāb al-faransī ʻalā sūriyā wa-lubnān, also referred to as the Levant States; [1] [2] 1923−1946) [3] was a League of Nations mandate [4] founded in the aftermath of ...

  3. 1 day ago · In July 1922 the League of Nations approved the texts of the French Mandate for Syria and Lebanon. Lebanon had already, in August 1920, been declared a separate state, with the addition of Beirut, Tripoli, and certain other districts, to the prewar autonomous province.

  4. FRENCH MANDATE FOR SYRIA AND THE LEBANON1. The Council of the League of Nations: Whereas the Principal Allied Powers have agreed that the territory of Syria and the Lebanon, which formerly belonged to the Turkish Empire shall, within such boundaries as may be fixed by the said Powers, be en-

  5. 1 day ago · In 1923 the League of Nations formally gave the mandate for Lebanon and Syria to France. The Maronites, strongly pro-French by tradition, welcomed this, and during the next 20 years, while France held the mandate, the Maronites were favored.

  6. Officially the French Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon[1] (also known as the French Mandate of Syria) was a League of Nations mandate founded after the First World War and the partitioning of the Ottoman Empire.

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  7. The history of Lebanon covers the history of the modern Republic of Lebanon and the earlier emergence of Greater Lebanon under the French Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon, as well as the previous history of the region, covered by the modern state.

  8. Dec 10, 2019 · For more recent works on the French mandate in Lebanon, see especially Carla Eddé, Beyrouth: Naissance d’une capitale, 1918–1924 (Paris, 2009); Philip S. Khoury, Syria and the French Mandate: The Politics of Arab Nationalism, 1920–1945 (London, 1987); Nadine Méouchy, ed., France, Syrie et Liban, 1918–1946: Les ambiguïtés et les ...