Knowledge

Jellaz Affair

Source 📝

360:
and defended by fourteen lawyers, none of whom was Tunisian. After seventeen hours of deliberation, the tribunal finally reached its verdict. Thirty-four of the accused were acquitted and two minors were committed to the supervision of their parents, but the charge of rebellion was upheld against thirty-two of the accused. Paul Dumas then pronounced seven death sentences for murder: Chedly El Guettari and Manoubi Djardjar, for the murder of Franchi at the Jellaz cemetery and various attempted murders; Abdallah Ouali, for the murder of Brayarda Di Bartholo; Mohammed Chedly, for the murder of Muccio; Mohammed Gharbi, for the attempted murder of Foatta and Soulet; Mohamed El Gabsi, for the attempted murder of Piatri Djilani; and Ben Abdullah, for the attempted murder of Durin. The court also sentenced Abdallah Ben Darmoul to forced labour for life and Hadj Ben Belgacem and Fredj Es-Soudani to ten and twenty years' hard labour respectively. Mohamed Lakhangi Belgacem, Ben Mohamed and Manoubi El Guettari were sentenced to between three and five years' hard labour, and the remaining defendants were sentenced to prison. Most of the death sentences were subsequently commuted to hard labour for life, but Djardjar and Guettari were guillotined.
253:
went inside with a number of them. The crowd was not calmed however, and began demanding the release of those who had been arrested earlier in the morning. Ghileb then sent for Espiau, who returned to the cemetery and gave the crowd assurances about the release of those being detained. The crowd however continued to grow larger and angrier, and Espiau decided to go and bring police reinforcements. He made his way with difficulty through the mass of people, and as he headed off he was struck from behind by a number of stones. A scuffle began, with the police trying to get Espiau and Ghileb safely away from the cemetery, striking protesters with their batons while the crowd threw pieces of rubble at them. Brigadier François Franchi was killed, while two police inspectors and four or five other officers were injured. The French press reported that the police fired on the crowd, but did not report numbers of dead and injured among the protesters at the cemetery. Police were mustered from stations in other parts of the city but they were unable to gain control of the situation.
385:, accusing Carnières of defamation. After unsuccessful attempts to have these accusations dealt with by other administrative or judicial means, Zaouche brought a case against him. The case did not come before the court until 26 October 1912, after the criminal trials were over. Carnières' defence was that he was relying on rumours he had picked up from Tunisians. The presiding judge described Zaouche as 'a good man' and the Attorney General described his actions as worthy only of praise. Nevertheless the court simply dismissed the case on the grounds that anything damaging Carnières had said about Zaouche was only of secondary importance, and that his primary aim had been to defend French interests. The court also ruled that Zaouche should pay the costs of the action, which tended to support the view among colonists that the accusations were well-founded. Exonerated by the court, Carnières continued his attacks on Zaouche and the Young Tunisians in his newspaper. Zaouche pursued the matter at the Court of Appeal in 265:
them. The zouaves made a half-turn and fired on the crowd, killing around fifteen people. As the morning progressed, there were other attacks on Europeans in different parts of the city, some leading to fatalities and others to serious injury. Fighting was particularly intense in the area between Bab Jedid and Bab Alioua, where the population was a mix of Tunisians and Italians. The Italians barricaded themselves in their houses, and those with weapons used them, shooting down from their balconies into the streets. At some point a Tunisian boy, Rebah Degla, was killed by an Italian bullet, and this provoked greater anger against the Italians across the city.
236:, the French authorities had indeed built a tramway through a Muslim cemetery. Having mobilised people to oppose the registration, insufficient efforts may have made to inform them that it was being abandoned, or perhaps this news was simply not sufficient to allay popular outrage. While all this as going on, anger was spreading in Tunis about the Italian invasion of Libya. Italy's ultimatum to the Ottoman Empire was issued just a few days after the news broke of the registration plans, and Italy proclaimed its annexation of Libya on 5 November, two days before the registration had been scheduled. 194:
consul calculated that here were 80,000 Italians alone, while a 1910 estimate indicated that there were 105,000 Italians in Tunisia, compared with only 35,0000 French people. Many Italians arrived in Tunisia poor and they were banned from employment on public works or in the colonial government unless they adopted French citizenship. Instead they often pursued the trades they had followed in Italy - fishermen, shopkeepers, labourers, farmers and miners. These and similar occupations meant that they were often likely to find themselves in competition with native Tunisian workers and traders.
438: 87: 337: 277: 398: 303: 158: 66: 389:, where Carnières' standing in the settler community in Tunis counted for less. The Algiers court found in Zaouche's favour and awarded him costs with interest against Carnières, taking into account his bad faith and his intention to defame. However the court also decided, 'considering the circumstances' not to announce its decision in the Tunis newspapers, which meant that it went largely unnoticed. 422:. In response the authorities clamped down hard on the Young Tunisian movement several of whose leaders were exiled from the country. After this the movement, which had generally sought to work for the advancement of Tunisia in collaboration with France, became disillusioned with this approach. When the leaders returned from exile, they took a different political approach and founded the 415:
The newspapers referred to 'massacres' of Italians, portraying the events as almost entirely Arab assaults on Italians, or of two (non-French) tribes killing each other. They stressed that the misunderstanding over the cemetery land registration was unfortunate, but insufficient to explain what followed, and deplored the irrationality and religious fanaticism of the Tunisians.
58:. Over the course of two days, it became a series of fights and attacks in the streets, primarily involving Tunisians and Italian settlers. It was the most serious outbreak of violence in Tunis, and the first time French soldiers fired on the civilian population, since the establishment of the Protectorate in 1881. It was therefore a critical juncture in the development of the 136:
could not be bought or sold. However a series of colonial laws since the 1880s had allowed the French in Tunisia to acquire the title or use of growing amounts of habous land. Thus land endowed for the benefit of local communities steadily came under the private control of French landlords and in some instances Tunisians occupying or working the land were displaced.
219:, but his two deputies were French, and eight of the seventeen seats on the municipal council were reserved for French people. Ghileb had not been consulted about the proposed registration of the Jellaz cemetery land, and the Deputy Mayor Jean-Baptiste Curtelin tried to keep the matter off the agenda when the municipal council met on 2 November. Nevertheless 245:
some 2,000 people already gathered there near the gates. A small number of people were arrested for obstructing the police as they made their way to the cemetery. Although posters calling people to defend the cemetery had been put up across the city, most of the demonstrators who gathered on 7 November were local people who lived near the cemetery.
414:
that the Jellaz land was to be registered. It described the protesters at the cemetery as 'fanaticised', stated that the 'real' cause of the problem was the 'overexcitement' of the Italian and Arab populations, and reassured its readers that the Jellaz incident was definitely not an anti-French riot.
359:
The main criminal trial opened on 3 June 1912 at the court house of Tunis, with Paul Dumas as presiding judge. The tribunal consisted of three magistrates and six assessors, of whom three were French and three Tunisian. The accused were charged with nineteen murders or attempted murders of Europeans,
405:
The French authorities found it appropriate to play up the importance of anti-Italian sentiment as a cause of the Jellaz Incident, such that, according to many official reports of the police and the administration, the disturbance was triggered not by the move to register the cemetery land, but by
368:
The murder of a French colonist named Vanel and the attempted murder of six Italian cart drivers during the Jellaz incident came to court in August 1912. Three of the accused, Ali ben Ataya, Hassen Elghoul and Ali Bahli were found innocent, Of the guilty, Abdallah Ben Djeballah and Amor Ben Mabrouk
272:
put it (9 November 1911) 'not a single bayonet had not been reddened with blood.' At around ten o'clock the Attorney General found himself surrounded by a threatening crowd which refused to disperse. Again the zouaves arrived and managed to rescue him, this time by firing into the air. As fighting
252:
According to the French press, it was only after this official business had been completed that serious trouble began. The Mayor of Tunis, Sadok Ghileb, arrived at the cemetery, and crowds pressed around him, demanding that he have the gates of the cemetery opened. To reassure them, he did so and
248:
Soon, administrators of the agency which managed the habous arrived, along with various other Tunisian notables, and told the crowd that the municipality had decided to drop its application to register the land. At seven o'clock the surveyors from the land office appeared, and posted the minutes of
244:
On 7 November, a survey was due to be undertaken to establish the boundaries of the cemetery land. The police had learned that a demonstration was planned for that morning at the cemetery, so at six o'clock in the morning, Police Commissioner Espiau went to the cemetery with 150 officers, and found
231:
However by this time, Ghileb had ensured that posters were put up all across Tunis, urging people to attend the meeting on 7 November to make their objections known, as the law provided for. While the council was at odds over what to do, rumours were spreading in Tunis. It was widely believed that
223:
spoke vehemently against the registration and in the end, the council agreed to abandon the idea. The plan had been to finalise the application for registration on 7 November, but the council voted, instead, to withdraw the application altogether. This decision was relayed to the public at a large
214:
On 26 September, the people of the city learned that the municipality of Tunis was planning to remove the cemetery from the habous agency and register it as its own property. This was being done with the stated intention of protecting it against the encroachments it was suffering. However, certain
210:
As a habous, the Jellaz cemetery was administered by a special agency, but the municipality of Tunis had, some twenty years previously, acquired the responsibility for protecting and maintaining it. However, in 1911, the cemetery was not well-managed and not clearly demarcated from other properties
193:
Tensions between Muslim Arabs and Italians in Tunis played a major role in the Jellaz Affair. Italian immigration to Tunisia had grown rapidly under the French Protectorate, and by 1900, Italians made up around seven-eighths of the colony's European population of 80,000 people. In 1903, the Italian
264:
were called out to restore order. The zouaves formed a line between the city and the cemetery, preventing more protesters who were now crowding the streets from reaching it. Abdeljelil Zaouche tried to urge calm, but the protesters still in the cemetery, behind the zouaves, began hurling stones at
135:
sufi order he founded. Another zawiya, of Sidi Al Bashir, also stood in the cemetery, and many of the most illustrious families of Tunis had their dead relatives buried there. Under Islamic law, habous property was donated by a benefactor and held in trust for some public benefit; once in trust it
317:
Given the anti-Italian character of much of the violence in Tunis, the Italian Consul-General, Bottesini, had taken refuge with his family at the home of the French Resident-General, Gabriel Alapetite on the night of 7 November. The next morning, a group of Italian demonstrators came to find him,
293:
so that by evening, there were 1,000 soldiers deployed across the city maintaining an uneasy calm. The city was placed under curfew from nine in the evening, and newspapers were banned. All cafes were forbidden to open, and all licences to carry weapons were summarily revoked. According to the
144:
Just as changes to the ownership of habous eroded a long-established religious institution and advanced French property rights, so changes to nationality law were divisive of the population. On 3 October 1910, a French Presidential decree significantly broadened the grounds for claiming French
284:
Here and there across the city, there were attacks and fights during the afternoon. Mostly these were isolated, though they led to more deaths. More fighting occurred at Bab Souika, where the killing of an Italian brought 600 other Italians out to avenge him until they were driven off by the
177:, and as a result, France called up troops in Tunisia to fight in Morocco. As France took effective control there, the other European powers demanded to be 'compensated' in regions they considered vital to their interests, and this led to an Italian declaration of war on the 314:. More fighting took place between Arabs and Italians - in the morning three Italians were killed at Bab Souika. A group of 200 Italians tried to prevent Arabs from crossing the square at Bab Cartagena, and in the ensuing fights, several Arabs were maltreated. 145:
nationality, to include volunteering for military services; holding two degrees or the title of doctor of medicine or of law; marrying a French woman, or exceptional service to the French state. This law did not make any explicit provision for Tunisians of the
369:
were condemned to death, although their sentence was later commuted to hard labour for life. Mohamed Gara was also sentenced to hard labour for life, while Mohamed Ben Kaddour, Abdelkader Chtiqui and Mohamed Bouzgaia were given fifteen years' hard labour.
249:
the meeting cancelling the application to register. All of this happened without incident, and many of the crowd began to disperse. The surveyors left, and Espiau sent his officers away, except for a dozen which he kept on duty at or near the cemetery.
149:, but was understood in Tunisia to be largely of interest to them, It was therefore seen by Arab nationalists as divisive since it encouraged a group of native-born Tunisians to renounce their loyalty to their homeland and identify with the occupier. 94:
The Jellaz cemetery was of great religious and cultural significance to Tunisians. It was named after Sheikh Abu Abdallah Muhammad Taj ad-Din al-Jallaz (d.1205) who had acquired the land and endowed it as a religious trust, or
273:
continued here and there across the city, the chasseurs d'Afrique charged with drawn sabres at eleven o'clock near Bab Jedid. For the most part, order had been restored across the city by one o'clock in the afternoon.
215:
individual French members of the municipal council had also submitted applications to register parcels of cemetery land in their own names. The municipality was a mixed institution - the mayor was a Tunisian Muslim,
211:
around it, so in various places the graves gave way to small quarries and skid-roads for felled trees. In addition, builders routinely pilfered materials from the cemetery for use in construction projects elsewhere.
318:
asking him to secure the release of all the Italians who had been arrested the day before from the Resident-General. He attempted to do so but his request was turned down and the demonstration dispersed by troops.
285:
artillery. When two Italians were brutally killed at Halfaouine, fifty others massed to fight with Arabs, and had to be driven off with live rounds, which killed another. In the afternoon, more troops arrived from
743: 755:
Mark I Choate, The Tunisia Paradox: Italy's Strategic Aims, French Imperial Rule, and Migration in the Mediterranean Basin, California Italian Studies 1, "Italy in the Mediterranean" (2010): 1-20 p.3
725:
Mark I Choate, The Tunisia Paradox: Italy's Strategic Aims, French Imperial Rule, and Migration in the Mediterranean Basin, California Italian Studies 1, "Italy in the Mediterranean" (2010): 1-20 p.6
321:
For the rest of the day, patrols of cavalry and infantry swept the streets, arresting anyone they found armed and sending any Tunisians bearing weapons to the summary justice of the traditional
381:, that Abdeljelil Zaouche, a leading member of the Young Tunisians, had led the riots and paid individuals to take part in them. On 30 November Zaouche replied in his own newspaper, 203: 418:
In the wake of the Jellaz Incident, the French authorities imposed martial law on Tunis for almost a decade. Within months however, popular discontent manifested itself in the
653:
Reeva Spector Simon, Michael Menachem Laskier, Sara Reguer, The Jews of the Middle East and North Africa in Modern Times, Columbia University Press 2003 p.448
69:
Plan of Tunis 1916 showing the Arab city to the left, the European areas to the right, and Jellaz cemetery to the south, marked 'cimitière de Sidi-bel-Hassen'
165:
Developments in neighbouring countries intensified a feeling of anger and injustice among Tunisian Muslims in 1911. First, a rebellion against the Sultan of
268:
A detachment of sixty zouaves under Lieutenant Pinelli was attacked with stones, and responded by fixing bayonets and charging the crowd. As the newspaper
328:
Immediately after the disturbances the Resident-General ordered an enquiry, on which the French press later largely relied for its account of the events.
1104: 344:
The numbers dead were 8 Europeans, and an unknown number of Tunisians. Some eight hundred arrests were made and 71 cases were brought to trial.
812:
David Lambert, Notables des colonies: Une élite de circonstance en Tunisie et au Maroc (1881-1939), Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2009 p.69
778:
Révolte et société: vol 2: actes, Colloque d'histoire au présent, Fabienne Gambrelle, Michel Trebitsch, Publications de la Sorbonne 1989 p.169
1139: 294:
newspaper 'Le Temps' (10/11/1911) that night there were three French and four Italian dead. The number of Arabs dead was reported as ten.
232:
the municipality intended to demolish part of the cemetery to build a tramway - perhaps based on the fact that a few years previously, in
1134: 1114: 837:
Waniss A. Otman and Erling Karlberg, The Libyan Economy: Economic Diversification and International Repositioning, Springer, 2007 p.13
701: 803:
Taoufik Ayadi, Mouvement réformiste et mouvements populaires à Tunis (1906-1912), Publications de l'Université de Tunis, 1986 pp.164
1094: 1069:
Arnold H. Green, The Tunisian Ulama 1873-1915: Social Structure and Response to Ideological Currents, Brill Archive, 1978 p.185-6
629: 608: 559:
Arnold H. Green, The Tunisian Ulama 1873-1915: Social Structure and Response to Ideological Currents, Brill Archive, 1978 p.65-66
1119: 734:
Smeaton Munro, Ion, Through Fascism to World Power: A History of the Revolution in Italy, Books for Libraries Press, 1933 p.221
587:
Arnold H. Green, The Tunisian Ulama 1873-1915: Social Structure and Response to Ideological Currents, Brill Archive, 1978 p.111
356:
to the Jellaz events, none of the men found guilty of participating in the riots held leadership positions in the movement.
1020:
Mary Dewhurst Lewis, Divided Rule: Sovereignty and Empire in French Tunisia, 1881-1938, Univ of California Press 2013 p.108
662:
Mary Dewhurst Lewis, Divided Rule: Sovereignty and Empire in French Tunisia, 1881-1938, Univ of California Press 2013 p.109
550:
Mary Dewhurst Lewis, Divided Rule: Sovereignty and Empire in French Tunisia, 1881-1938, Univ of California Press 2013 p.142
377:
The third trial was a civil matter arising from an accusation made on 26 November by Victor de Carnières in his newspaper
989: 571: 157: 479: 1129: 1124: 680:
Carl Cavanagh Hodge, Encyclopedia of the Age of Imperialism, 1800-1914: A-K Greenwood Publishing Group, 2008 p.15
124: 310:
Levels of violence were much lower the following day. A Norwegian sailor was killed at El Aouina on the road to
713: 689: 146: 51: 1089: 1060:
Eric Gobe, Les avocats en Tunisie de la colonisation à la révolution (1883-2011), KARTHALA Editions 2013 p.96
530:
Derek Hopwood & Sue Mi Terry, 'Habib Bourguiba of Tunisia: The Tragedy of Longevity', Springer 2016 p.114
461: 451: 1099: 182: 325:
tribunal. Groups of Tunisians were still gathering on the streets, but were chased off by the army.
1109: 1084: 596: 128: 1032: 261: 131:, and in 1911 this was the spiritual base for some 5,000 men in Tunis who were members of the 78:
Several factors led to the escalation of tension in Tunis in the months before November 1911.
59: 8: 1144: 419: 220: 518: 185:. Libyan refugees were soon crossing the border into Tunisia, fleeing the invasion. 964:
Kenneth Perkins, A History of Modern Tunisia, Cambridge University Press, 2014 p.77
764:
Kenneth Perkins, A History of Modern Tunisia, Cambridge University Press, 2014 p.26
620:
Kenneth Perkins, A History of Modern Tunisia, Cambridge University Press, 2014 p.60
1001: 973: 873: 575: 498: 456: 353: 116: 102: 55: 39: 24: 1044: 948: 929: 913: 892: 857: 821: 787: 410:
commented on 10 November that the cause of the disturbance was 'a false report'
225: 178: 86: 1078: 514: 443: 174: 714:
https://dash.harvard.edu/bitstream/handle/1/2665770/Lewis_%20Geographies.pdf
690:
https://dash.harvard.edu/bitstream/handle/1/2665770/Lewis_%20Geographies.pdf
568: 216: 170: 336: 276: 311: 397: 641: 290: 233: 302: 132: 1016: 1014: 888: 886: 65: 423: 386: 286: 257: 166: 47: 1011: 883: 97: 744:'Exodus in reverse: 100 thousand Sicilian migrants in Tunisia' 671:محمد الازهرالغربي <تونس رغم إلإستعمار> المنهل,2013 p.126 202: 944: 942: 909: 907: 905: 280:
Cavalry on the square at Bab Souika during the disturbances
111: 939: 401:
Monument in the Jellaz cemetery commemorating the incident
352:
Despite the efforts of the French authorities to link the
902: 1033:'Colons français et Jeunes-Tunisiens (1882-1912)' p.148 642:'De Tunis à l’Orient: la Grande Guerre de Victor Sebag' 197: 46:) was a violent confrontation in November 1911 between 188: 81: 630:'législation foncière et colonisation de la Tunisie' 609:'législation foncière et colonisation de la Tunisie' 433: 32: 774: 772: 770: 702:'World War 100: 1 July - The Agadir Crisis of 1911' 406:the shooting of the boy Rebah Degla by an Italian. 974:'L'affaire du Djellaz. Sept condamnations à mort, 853: 851: 849: 847: 845: 843: 1076: 767: 494: 492: 490: 488: 840: 949:'Troubles à Tunis. Un mouvement italophobe', 930:'Troubles à Tunis. Un mouvement italophobe', 485: 392: 1028: 1026: 480:'Un 7 novembre en cache toujours un autre…' 569:'Le habous, le domaine public et le trust' 546: 544: 542: 540: 538: 536: 340:Abdeljelil Zaouche during the Jellaz trial 1023: 123:)). On the cemetery hill stood the first 90:mausoleum of Sidi Abul Hasan ash-Shadhili 1105:Resistance to the French colonial empire 521:, 'Bourguiba', Editions Elyzad 2012 p.12 396: 363: 335: 301: 275: 201: 156: 85: 64: 533: 331: 297: 239: 1077: 347: 181:on 29 September 1911, followed by the 127:founded by the medieval Moroccan sufi 109:) (known in many other countries as a 50:protesters and the authorities of the 152: 16:1911 violent confrontation in Tunisia 198:Abortive registration of Jellaz land 1140:Riots and civil disorder in Tunisia 372: 189:Tensions with the Italian community 161:Italian aircraft in action in Libya 139: 120: 106: 82:Religious trusts and land ownership 28: 13: 1135:20th-century mass murder in Africa 1002:'Le meurtre de M. Vanel à Tunis', 597:'Les terres domaniales en Tunisie' 306:Resident-General Gabriel Alapetite 14: 1156: 1115:Massacres of protesters in Africa 256:As the fighting spread, both the 436: 1095:European colonisation of Africa 1063: 1054: 1038: 995: 983: 967: 958: 923: 867: 831: 815: 806: 797: 781: 758: 749: 737: 728: 719: 707: 695: 683: 674: 665: 656: 647: 635: 623: 614: 602: 169:led France to deploy troops in 590: 581: 562: 553: 524: 508: 473: 52:French Protectorate of Tunisia 1: 1120:Massacres committed by France 874:'Les grands jours de Tunis', 467: 462:Tunisian naturalization issue 452:History of French-era Tunisia 73: 858:'Les bagarres tunisiennes', 499:'Les grands jours de Tunis, 206:Sadok Ghileb, Mayor of Tunis 173:in April, precipitating the 7: 429: 33: 10: 1161: 914:'L'Origine des Troubles', 393:Reactions and consequences 716:p.818 accessed 27/2/2016 692:p.820 accessed 27/1/2016 1049:, 9 November 1911, p. 2 953:, 10 November 1911, p.1 934:, 10 November 1911, p.1 918:, 10 November 1911, p.3 862:, 24 November 1911, p.3 129:Abul Hasan ash-Shadhili 1130:Mass murder in Tunisia 1125:Anti-Arabism in Europe 990:Histoire de la Tunisie 897:, 9 November 1911, p.2 402: 341: 307: 281: 207: 162: 91: 70: 43: 878:, 4 June 1912, pp.1-2 826:, 9 November 1911 p.2 822:'Troubles à Tunis ', 792:, 9 November 1911 p.2 503:, 4 June 1912, pp.1-2 400: 364:Second criminal trial 339: 305: 279: 205: 160: 89: 68: 1090:November 1911 events 1045:'Troubles à Tunis', 1006:, 8 August 1912, p.2 893:'Troubles à Tunis', 788:'Troubles à Tunis', 599:accessed 27./12/2016 332:Trials and sentences 298:Events on 8 November 240:Events on 7 November 60:Tunisian nationalist 1100:Protests in Tunisia 1051:accessed 28/12/2016 1035:accessed 29/12/2016 1008:accessed 29/12/2016 992:accessed 29/12/2016 980:accessed 29/12/2016 955:accessed 28/12/2016 936:accessed 28/12/2016 920:accessed 28/12/2016 899:accessed 28/12/2016 880:accessed 28/12/2016 864:accessed 28/12/2016 828:accessed 28/12/2016 794:accessed 28/12/2016 746:accessed 27/12/2016 704:accessed 26/12/2016 644:accessed 26/12/2016 632:accessed 27/12/2016 611:accessed 27/12/2016 578:accessed 27/12/2016 505:accessed 28/12/2016 482:accessed 27/12/2016 348:Main criminal trial 262:chasseurs d'Afrique 54:which began at the 978:, 1 July 1912 p. 2 574:2017-08-03 at the 420:Tunis Tram Boycott 403: 342: 308: 282: 221:Abdeljelil Zaouche 208: 163: 153:Agadir and Tripoli 92: 71: 44:Affaire du Djellaz 519:Souhayr Belhassen 183:invasion of Libya 1152: 1070: 1067: 1061: 1058: 1052: 1042: 1036: 1030: 1021: 1018: 1009: 999: 993: 987: 981: 971: 965: 962: 956: 946: 937: 927: 921: 911: 900: 890: 881: 871: 865: 855: 838: 835: 829: 819: 813: 810: 804: 801: 795: 785: 779: 776: 765: 762: 756: 753: 747: 741: 735: 732: 726: 723: 717: 711: 705: 699: 693: 687: 681: 678: 672: 669: 663: 660: 654: 651: 645: 639: 633: 627: 621: 618: 612: 606: 600: 594: 588: 585: 579: 566: 560: 557: 551: 548: 531: 528: 522: 512: 506: 496: 483: 477: 446: 441: 440: 439: 373:Defamation trial 147:Jewish community 140:Nationality laws 122: 108: 36: 34:Aḥdāth ul-Jallāz 30: 1160: 1159: 1155: 1154: 1153: 1151: 1150: 1149: 1110:1911 in Tunisia 1075: 1074: 1073: 1068: 1064: 1059: 1055: 1043: 1039: 1031: 1024: 1019: 1012: 1000: 996: 988: 984: 972: 968: 963: 959: 947: 940: 928: 924: 912: 903: 891: 884: 872: 868: 856: 841: 836: 832: 820: 816: 811: 807: 802: 798: 786: 782: 777: 768: 763: 759: 754: 750: 742: 738: 733: 729: 724: 720: 712: 708: 700: 696: 688: 684: 679: 675: 670: 666: 661: 657: 652: 648: 640: 636: 628: 624: 619: 615: 607: 603: 595: 591: 586: 582: 576:Wayback Machine 567: 563: 558: 554: 549: 534: 529: 525: 513: 509: 497: 486: 478: 474: 470: 457:Habib Bourguiba 442: 437: 435: 432: 426:party in 1920. 395: 375: 366: 354:Young Tunisians 350: 334: 300: 242: 224:meeting at the 200: 191: 155: 142: 84: 76: 56:Jellaz Cemetery 17: 12: 11: 5: 1158: 1148: 1147: 1142: 1137: 1132: 1127: 1122: 1117: 1112: 1107: 1102: 1097: 1092: 1087: 1085:1910s protests 1072: 1071: 1062: 1053: 1037: 1022: 1010: 994: 982: 966: 957: 938: 922: 901: 882: 866: 839: 830: 814: 805: 796: 780: 766: 757: 748: 736: 727: 718: 706: 694: 682: 673: 664: 655: 646: 634: 622: 613: 601: 589: 580: 561: 552: 532: 523: 507: 484: 471: 469: 466: 465: 464: 459: 454: 448: 447: 431: 428: 394: 391: 379:Colon français 374: 371: 365: 362: 349: 346: 333: 330: 299: 296: 241: 238: 226:Zaytuna Mosque 199: 196: 190: 187: 179:Ottoman Empire 154: 151: 141: 138: 83: 80: 75: 72: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 1157: 1146: 1143: 1141: 1138: 1136: 1133: 1131: 1128: 1126: 1123: 1121: 1118: 1116: 1113: 1111: 1108: 1106: 1103: 1101: 1098: 1096: 1093: 1091: 1088: 1086: 1083: 1082: 1080: 1066: 1057: 1050: 1048: 1041: 1034: 1029: 1027: 1017: 1015: 1007: 1005: 998: 991: 986: 979: 977: 970: 961: 954: 952: 945: 943: 935: 933: 926: 919: 917: 910: 908: 906: 898: 896: 889: 887: 879: 877: 870: 863: 861: 854: 852: 850: 848: 846: 844: 834: 827: 825: 818: 809: 800: 793: 791: 784: 775: 773: 771: 761: 752: 745: 740: 731: 722: 715: 710: 703: 698: 691: 686: 677: 668: 659: 650: 643: 638: 631: 626: 617: 610: 605: 598: 593: 584: 577: 573: 570: 565: 556: 547: 545: 543: 541: 539: 537: 527: 520: 516: 515:Sophie Bessis 511: 504: 502: 495: 493: 491: 489: 481: 476: 472: 463: 460: 458: 455: 453: 450: 449: 445: 444:Africa portal 434: 427: 425: 421: 416: 413: 409: 399: 390: 388: 384: 380: 370: 361: 357: 355: 345: 338: 329: 326: 324: 319: 315: 313: 304: 295: 292: 288: 278: 274: 271: 266: 263: 259: 254: 250: 246: 237: 235: 229: 227: 222: 218: 212: 204: 195: 186: 184: 180: 176: 175:Agadir Crisis 172: 168: 159: 150: 148: 137: 134: 130: 126: 118: 114: 113: 104: 100: 99: 88: 79: 67: 63: 61: 57: 53: 49: 45: 41: 37: 35: 29:أحداث ٱلجلّاز 26: 22: 21:Jellaz Affair 1065: 1056: 1046: 1040: 1003: 997: 985: 975: 969: 960: 950: 931: 925: 915: 894: 875: 869: 859: 833: 823: 817: 808: 799: 789: 783: 760: 751: 739: 730: 721: 709: 697: 685: 676: 667: 658: 649: 637: 625: 616: 604: 592: 583: 564: 555: 526: 510: 500: 475: 417: 411: 407: 404: 382: 378: 376: 367: 358: 351: 343: 327: 322: 320: 316: 309: 283: 269: 267: 255: 251: 247: 243: 230: 217:Sadok Ghileb 213: 209: 192: 164: 143: 110: 96: 93: 77: 31: 20: 18: 951:La Lanterne 932:La Lanterne 383:Le Tunisien 312:La Goulette 1145:1911 riots 1079:Categories 468:References 291:Hammam-Lif 234:Casablanca 74:Background 62:movement. 1047:Le Temps 1004:Gil Blas 976:Gil Blas 916:Le Temps 895:Le Temps 876:Gil Blas 860:Le Temps 824:Le Temps 790:Le Temps 572:Archived 501:Gil Blas 430:See also 408:Le Temps 270:Le Temps 260:and the 133:Shadhili 48:Tunisian 424:Destour 387:Algiers 287:Bizerte 258:zouaves 167:Morocco 517:& 125:zawiya 117:Arabic 103:Arabic 98:habous 40:French 25:Arabic 412:(sic) 323:driba 289:and 112:waqf 107:حبوس 19:The 171:Fez 121:وقف 38:) ( 1081:: 1025:^ 1013:^ 941:^ 904:^ 885:^ 842:^ 769:^ 535:^ 487:^ 228:. 119:: 105:: 42:: 27:: 115:( 101:( 23:(

Index

Arabic
French
Tunisian
French Protectorate of Tunisia
Jellaz Cemetery
Tunisian nationalist


habous
Arabic
waqf
Arabic
zawiya
Abul Hasan ash-Shadhili
Shadhili
Jewish community

Morocco
Fez
Agadir Crisis
Ottoman Empire
invasion of Libya

Sadok Ghileb
Abdeljelil Zaouche
Zaytuna Mosque
Casablanca
zouaves
chasseurs d'Afrique

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.