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  2. On 25 April, the supreme inter-Allied council, which was formulating the Treaty of Sèvres, granted France the mandate of Syria (including Lebanon), and granted Britain the Mandate of Palestine (with Trans-Jordan later), and Iraq.

  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. 2 days 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.

  5. On 25 April, the supreme inter-Allied council, which was formulating the Treaty of Sèvres, granted France the mandate of Syria (including Lebanon), and granted Britain the Mandate of Palestine (with Trans-Jordan later), and Iraq.

  6. Dec 10, 2019 · More than any other act, these opening moves shaped and defined the nearly twenty-five-year French mandate in Syria and Lebanon. They embroiled France in the developing confrontation between two local projects proposing to reorganize the former Arab Syrian provinces of the Ottoman Empire into a Greater Syria and a Greater Lebanon. 1 The rift ...

    • Carol Hakim
    • 2019
  7. Mar 3, 2023 · The map above shows the initial 6 states created by the French Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon granted by the League of Nations in 1922. The mandate had been more less agreed to by Britain and France in the Sykes–Picot Agreement of 1916.

  8. France's acquisition of Syria and Lebanon as mandated territory after the First World War has often been described as the result of war-time arrangements such as the SykesPicot Agreement and the MacMahonHussein Correspondence.