AN OTTOMAN ARAB MAN OF LETTERS AND THE MEANINGS OF EMPIRE, c. 1860

Abstract This paper returns to one of the germinal texts of nineteenth-century Arab political thought, Butrus al-Bustani's Nafir Suriyya (‘The Clarion of Syria’). A series of broadsides published between September 1860 and April 1861, these reflected on the confessional violence that had rent apart Mount Lebanon and Damascus in mid-1860. As scholars have suggested, Bustani – now regarded as one of the pre-eminent thinkers of the nineteenth-century Arab nahda, or ‘awakening’ – here offered a new vision of Syrian patriotism, which formed part of a longer reflection on political subjectivity, faith, and civilisation. But, this paper argues, these texts can also be read as reflections on the changing workings of empire: on the imperial ruler's duties and attributes and his subjects’ obligations and rights; on the relationship between state and population and capital and province; on imperial administrative reform; and on the dangers foreign intervention posed to Ottoman sovereignty. Drawing on the languages of Ottoman reform and ethical statecraft, as well as on imperial comparisons, Bustani argued against the autonomy some counselled for Mount Lebanon and for wholesale integration with the Ottoman state. These texts offer grounds for methodological reflection and for writing Ottoman Arab thought into broader histories of imperial political thought.


I Introduction
In late September , the Ottoman port of Beirut was still a city reeling from war. In the last days of May, brutal fighting had broken out between the Christian and Druze inhabitants of Mount Lebanon, whose ranges overhung the Mediterranean littoral. The conflict lasted barely a month. By the end of June, Druze fighters had prevailed over their opponents, leaving Christian localities like Zahleh and Dayr Lebanon. But they returned insistently to their central themes, harping on the need to reform Syria's society and administration and to expunge prejudice from its inhabitants' spirits, replacing it with the genuine faith from which patriotism and concord could spring. All bearing the pseudonym muhibb li-l-watanthe 'lover of the homeland'these were the work of the man of letters Butrus al-Bustani (c. -).  It is no exaggeration to say that Bustani occupies a pre-eminentnot to say canonicalposition in the overlapping fields of Arab intellectual and literary history and the history of Arab political thought.  Born into a Maronite Christian family in the southern reaches of Mount Lebanon, he was educated at the Maronite seminary of 'Ayn Waraqa. In the s he fell in with the American missionaries who had recently established a station in Syria and converted to Protestantism, his break with the Maronite Church consecrated by the martyrdom of his fellow convert As'ad Shidyaq. As Ussama Makdisi has shown, however, this traumatic event only reinforced Bustani's belief in freedom of conscience and his 'ecumenical' sense that a diverse range of religions were all 'equidistant from a universal god', and he eventually broke with the 'Bible-men', as the missionaries were known locally.  Over the course of a long and busy life, Bustani was variously a translator, lexicographer, encyclopedist, orator, publisher and educator. He founded and ran learned societies, schools, printing presses and newspapers, and among his many published works were a new translation of the Bible, prepared with the American missionary Cornelius Van Dyck, primers in Arabic grammar and arithmetic, an edition of the Abbasid poet al-Mutannabi, a dictionary, a vast, multi-volume encyclopedia, and Arabic renditions of Robinson Crusoe and Pilgrim's Progress.  In light of such commitments, scholars have tended to treat Bustani as the archetypal Arab reformer, whose work strove to explore the central questions of the nahda, or cultural 'awakening' of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries: how to refurbish the Arabic language to make full use of its vast lexical possibilities? How to renovate Arab culture under the emergent conditions of capitalist modernity and craft a new Arab subject capable of progress and civilisation? How to engage with the West without losing oneself? And how to give coherent shape to an Arab or Syrian nation?  Indeed, Bustani has often been regarded as a proto-nationalist, whose writings laid the foundations on which later, fuller constructions of Syrian and Arab identity were built. This view is, to a significant extent, founded on readings of Nafir Suriyya. These broadsides bore the deep imprint of the violence and dislocation Bustani had lived through. But they also form part of a longer reflection on citizenship, faith and community, on sin, duty and judgement, and on language, culture, civilisation and ethics, which left its inflection on earlier writings such as his translations of Pilgrim's Progress and the Bible, or his 'lecture on the morals and mores of the Arabs'.  It is perhaps unsurprising, therefore, that they have lent themselves to the view that they were, at heart, meditations on the meaning of patriaand, in particular, articulations of a Syrian patriotism which Bustani hoped could supplant the fanaticism that had rent asunder local society.  In part for this reason, they have acquired canonical status in Arabic political thought. Generations of readers have come back to them, seeking in their words the means to build a future after war and to construct a secular politics founded on fraternity among fellow citizens.  I want to return here to the Nafir to complicate these readings. As much as evidence of Syrian patriotism, I contend, these texts show Bustani as an imperial political thinker.  By this, I mean not just that, as scholars have long since shown, his primary loyalty lay to the end with the Ottoman Empire, nor that his sense of Syrianness did not conflict with this broader commitment but was fortified by it.  After all, as Ussama Makdisi has reminded us, the only surviving portrait of Bustani, painted a week before his death, shows him wearing the fez of the Ottoman reformer, a majidiyya imperial medal proudly pinned to his chest.  More than this, I argue that the Nafir evinced a deep concern with the central questions of imperial governance: what should be the relationship between the imperial capital and the provinces in a polity characterised by its territorial extent and demographic variety? On what basis could the imperial state build an effective and cohesive system of government? What path, in other words, should administrative reform follow? What rights should imperial subjects possess, and what were the duties incumbent upon them? And how could the Ottoman state thrive in a world of empires, at a time when other polities were increasingly encroaching upon its sovereignty? To answer these questions, Bustani resorted not just to the language of the Tanzimat itself, which he wove into his own political vision, but also, it would seem, to older conceptions of ethical governance which still inflected Ottoman languages of state into the nineteenth century.  Furthermore, I argue that Bustani's broadsides were also an attempt to puzzle through a more immediate, practical and local question: what future should the government of Mount Lebanon pursue after the disaster of ? Here too Bustani fell back upon empire, rejecting the autonomist visions of Maronite clergymen and French diplomats and military officers in favour of wholesale integration into a reformed Ottoman state. In short, Bustani was not simply concerned here with limning a new vision for the 'integration of Syrian society' within the 'framework' of Ottomanism, but also with establishing a new relationship between local society and imperial state. 

II Bustani as a thinker of empire
Reading Bustani as a thinker concerned with the changing workings of empire allows us to see him as a figure who lived in his own timestimes that were, as the phrase has it, deeply out of jointrather than as a pioneer whose writings foreshadowed later ideas of the nation. To make sense of Bustani's writings, in other words, we must read them synchronically, and not teleologically as links in a chain of conceptual transmission broken by the tragedies of the Arab twentieth century or proleptically as 'earlier "anticipations" of later' ideologies and imaginings of the Arab nation.  The 'problem-space' in which these texts took form was one that was shaped by the existence of empire.  It is not just that, as Ussama Makdisi has suggested, Bustani was in many ways the 'embodiment of the Tanzimat', a figure whose works echoed the 'civilising' impulse of Ottoman reform even as they offered a less hierarchical and more 'secular [and] liberal' vision of 'coexistence' than that which imperial reformers were willing to countenance, reversing the Tanzimat's 'negative imperative … to not discriminate into a positive injunction to respect diversity' as the foundation of active 'citizenship'.  More than this, his thought during these fraught months was concerned as much with the state as with society, giving rise to a series of urgent reflections on the workings of government, the shortcomings and potentiality of imperial reform, and the respective duties and expectations of imperial state and subject. His writings took as their own, to a degree hitherto unappreciated by scholars, both the dirigiste, rationalising ethos of the Tanzimatthe 'reorganisation' of the state, as the Ottoman military and administrative reforms of the mid-nineteenth century are knownand the older languages of virtuous governance on which it drew.  As Hala Auji has recently suggested, this was reflected even in his broadsides' visual grammar, which shared 'numerous … similarities' with the Arabic translation of the  decree Bustani prepared at the American Missionary Press in Beirut. For Auji, it is no coincidence that Bustani referred to his text as a layyiha or 'bill', the same term that contemporaries used for the Ottoman decrees posted in public squares, for the original copies of the Nafir 'resemble' his setting of the  edict 'more than they do any other extant print medium from this period'.  At the same time, Bustani's answers to the fundamental questions thrown up by imperial governance were shaped by the intensely eventful and traumatic political and social context in which he wrote.  This, too, posed urgent questions. Scholars have largely focused on the broader consideration to which Bustani returned repeatedly: how to salve the wounds of civil war and construct a new compact for a Syrian society rent apart by fanaticism? But it is clear that Bustani was also concerned with the question of Lebanon's future government, and of how best to overcome the ruinous legacies of a system that had given rise to the bloodletting of .
Until the s, Bustani's home region had been subject to a complex system of layered governance, in which local-born potentates enjoyed considerable fiscal and military powers.  In the early nineteenth century, this system was dominated by one man, Bashir al-Shihab, who had concentrated political and economic power in his own hands, curbing the authority of Druze dynasties like the Junblat, while bolstering that of Christian families like the Khazin and encouraging the activities of Christian merchants in market towns like Dayr al-Qamar and Zahleh.  This was an order founded on the dominance of an elite structured around complex gradations of rank, status and factionand not around religious difference.  The Egyptian occupation of Syria from  to , and the establishment of direct Ottoman rule in , precipitated the collapse of this 'old regime'.  From the s onwards Ottoman officials and European diplomats created a new political system for the mountain, founded on the assumption that religion was fundamental to its inhabitants' sense of self and that the confessional community should therefore serve as the basic building block of public life. Far from reflecting ancient distinctions, this gave rise to a distinctly novel 'culture of sectarianism'. As newfangled ideas of popular sovereignty and religious difference bled into each other, the mountain's Christians increasingly came to think of political representation and rights in the terms of popular sovereignty. By the late s, Maronite clerics and laymen argued that Christians' demographic dominance, as well as the Shihabs' supposed conversion to Christianity, gave them the right to govern.  Christian commoners like the muleteer Tanyus Shahin, who in  led the people of Kisrwan in revolt against their Khazin landlords, combined this communitarianism with a growing sense that elite families, whether Christian or Druze, had usurped the people's right to govern themselves. Shahin thus demanded not just 'full equality and complete freedom' from the landlords' exactions, but also the 'liberation of Christians from their servitude'.  Such language only exacerbated existing tensions over land and labour in mixed regions like the Matn and the Shuf, feeding a cycle of mutual recrimination that culminated in the conflict of .  Bustani's texts were a reflection on this tortuous history and an attempt to envision another future. As such, they sought to provide an alternative not just to local visions of reform and restoration, but also to the recommendations of the international commission constituted to 'seek the origin and cause of these events … [and] suggest modifications to the current order of things … in the government of the Mountain'.  Here, I argue, empire provided the answer as much as the question. For Bustani's later broadsides can be read as a rebuke to those who proposed cleaving off the mountain from Ottoman sovereignty and keeping its government on a confessional basis. Where Maronite clergymen and European diplomats and military officers called for the creation of an autonomous, if not independent, political unit, governed on a religious basis, Bustani counselled the mountain's subjection to the writ of a reformed and reforming Ottoman state.
At the same time, we should be wary of too reductive and temporally narrow an understanding of context, which regards reflective writings entirely as epiphenomenal products of their political and economic circumstances.  For the Nafir can also be read, not just as reflections  'Protocole de la première séance de la commission de Syrie, tenue à Beïrout, le  octobre  ( rébiul-ewel )', in I. de Testa, Recueil des Traités de la Porte ottomane avec les puissances étrangères depuis le premier traité conclu en , entre Suléyman I et François I, jusqu'à nos jours ( vols., Paris, -), VI, .  Omnia El Shakry, 'Rethinking Arab Intellectual History: Epistemology, Historicism, Secularism', Modern Intellectual History,  (), -. See also Peter E. Gordon, on and of the moment, but as interventions in a 'historically extended … argument', a discursive tradition full of 'alteration' and disagreement.  As I will argue, there are tantalising signs that Bustani drew upon older ideas of ethical and wise government, refurbishing them to make them fit for his own times. It is clear, then, that categorical distinctions between intellectual reflection and political engagement, which treat one or another of these as determinant, are of little help here.  For Bustani's writings of  were at once commentaries on the pressing concerns of the present and attempts to construct a normative basis for political and ethical conduct. As such, they present an opportunity to rethink the workings of context and the relationship between praxis and normmaking, while integrating Ottoman Arab thought into broader histories of imperial political thought.  III Writing the Tanzimat: imperial patriotism and civic responsibility  Much of the case for Bustani as a Syrian patriot rests on the Nafir Suriyya, which recent scholarship continues to treat as an attempt to imagine an 'Arab national subject' and a new 'positive definition of the nation' for 'Levantine society'.  Indeed, even those who acknowledge the imperial dimension continue to treat him as, ultimately, 'the first Syrian nationalist'.  There is no disputing that these eleven broadsides were, at a fundamental level, concerned with elaborating a new kind of local community of feeling. After all, as their title suggests, it was for Syria that they sounded the alarm. Equally suggestive is the epithet Bustani gave his pieces: wataniyyat, or patriotic letters. Each opened in the same way, with a call to Bustani's 'fellow countrymen'abna' al-watan, 'the sons of the homeland'a form of address that he used repeatedly to punctuate each new section. And each had the same signature, muhibb li-l-watan, 'lover of the homeland', anonymity here a function of Bustani's desire to stress patriotism as an article of faith.  What's more, Bustani made explicit the scope of this 'homeland'. In September , he declared that 'Syria … with all its plains and desolate places, its coastlines and mountains, is our homeland. And the inhabitants of Syria, of various religious persuasions and origins and groupings are the sons of our homeland.'  By his last broadside, Bustani had distilled this stillcomplex vision of patriotic belonging into a purer formula, writing simply of 'the people of Syria, our countrymen'.  The evidence that these texts were, first and foremost, expressions of a new understanding of Syrian patriotism appears overwhelming. I do not want to suggest, therefore, that such readings are somehow wrongheaded; on the contrary, they are entirely legitimate. But I do want to add another layer of interpretation here, by arguing that, nested within these dense, allusive, sometimes repetitive texts, there was also another vision of belonging to the Ottoman Empire, or mamlaka. This worked its way into Bustani's language and shaped his sense of the relationship between society, homeland and state as one that was fundamentally hierarchical and founded as much on duties as on rights.
Thus, Bustani redeployed the political language of Ottoman reform, with its conception of the state as a benevolent protector, even when he was considering the ties binding the territorial patria to its inhabitants. In his fourth broadside, Bustani wrote that first among the 'obligations the homeland owes its people' was 'security for their most important rights, their [life and] blood, honour, and wealth (damihim wa 'irdihim wa malihim)'.  As Peter Hill has pointed out, these were the self-same rights enshrined in the  Gülhane edict, with its call for 'new laws' that would ensure the 'security of life and soul and the preservation of honour, conscience, and wealth'emniyet-i can ve mahfuziyyet-i ırz u nâmûs u mal.  The  reform edict that so impressed Bustani reaffirmed the imperial state's commitment to protect the 'life, wealth … and honour' of 'all the subjects of our realm without exception'.  Bustani's order of priorities here, then, is precisely that of imperial reform. Even when seemingly absent from Bustani's vision, the state remained a presence, haunting his prose and shaping his conception of what the people were owed.
What has not hitherto been appreciated, however, is that Bustani's subsequent invocation of 'civil, moral, and religious rights, not least the right to freedom of conscience in the matter of religious persuasion (hurriyyat al-damir fi amr al-madhhab)', was also an invocation of the  decree, with its commitment to guaranteeing 'every denomination (mezhab)' 'perfect freedom' of belief.  This is not to claim that Bustani's stress on freedom of religion was not born of his own experience as a Protestant and his grief at the martyrdom of his fellow convert, As'ad Shidyaq.  Rather, it is simply to suggest that Bustani voiced this commitment in the language of imperial reform. Neither of these two contextsthe eventful, lived, intensely affective context of personal and local experience, and the linguistic, normative context of imperial decrees and administrationtook precedence over the other in Bustani's writings. On the contrary, they were interwoven to create a powerful vision of the rights and duties of the individual subject.
Here, Bustani was not pushing the state to go further than it was prepared to go or sketching out a new horizontal conception of Syrian citizenship.  Rather, he was urging his fellow Syrians to regard the rights enshrined in the decrees of  and, especially,  as their ownto enjoy freedom of religion, but also to remember that these rights should not be abused or misconstrued, and that they entailed duties and constraints on individual subjects' comportment. Jens Hanssen is thus certainly correct to argue that Bustani was promoting here 'a contract of rights and duties between the inhabitants and their homeland'.  This is plainly apparent from Bustani's insistence that 'the people have binding rights and claims (huquq) on their patria, just as the patria [imposes] obligations on its people'. But if the people were to be given 'a hand in the affairs' of their country, it was precisely because this 'responsibility' would increase their 'concern for its progress'.  This, then, was a vision of 'active citizenry' that placed a great deal of weight on commitment to the commonweal.  'Love of the homeland' should take precedence over 'religious fanaticism', and Syria's 'welfare' over 'personal inclinations'ghayyat shakhsiyya, Bustani using here, in his punning, allusive way, a term also connoting error and sin.  Bustani clearly did conceive of his Syrian compatriots as rights-bearing subjects. His understanding of these rights, however, was closely modelled on that of the reforming Ottoman state. What's more, he saw these rights as always entailing concomitant dutiesto one's fellow countrymen, to the homeland and, as I will argue below, to the imperial state. For while Bustani's fourth broadside focused on the relationship between the Syrian land and its people, at other moments he strove to consider their place within the overarching structures of imperial rule. This is true not just of rote invocations of imperial munificence like that which opened his second broadside in September , with its praise for Sultan Abdülmecid's 'beneficent intentions' to ensure 'comfort, security, and justice' for all members of his 'flock' 'without exception'.  At a more fundamental level, Bustani's stress on the relationship between the territorial homeland and the imperial state shaped both his aetiological analysis of Syria's maladies and his prescriptions for a ravaged society. This is apparent from his fifth broadside, in which he considered at length the causes of the events of . It was not just that Syria's inhabitants were 'a cluster of tribes of varying places, temperaments, prejudices, and interests, the majority of whom care not for the general interest'. To compound matters, the 'peripheries of the land were far from the centre of government, that is to say the capital of the empire (mamlaka)' and their 'governance was left to groupings (aqwam), many of whom, as history informs us … did a great deal of harm to the lands under their rule, perpetrating acts of corruption and destruction'.  The effects of this were plain to see 'when we open … a book giving news of this land'perhaps, as Peter Hill suggests, Tannus Shidyaq's chronicle Akhbar al-A'yan fi Jabal Lubnan, which Bustani had recently edited.  For Syria's history was 'full of wars and disasters', and 'blind' 'prejudice' stains every page 'like a black ugly spot'. 'This malicious principle', Bustani went on, 'takes on a different colour in each age.' In earlier times, it had attached itself to 'names like Qaysi and Yamani and then Junblati and Yazbaki'for Shidyaq the main factions of elite politics in early modern Mount Lebanon.  'More horrid' still was 'the form' that prejudice had taken 'these past few years, when it had consumed once-sacred epithets like Nazarene [Christian] and Druze, and then Muslim and Christian'. For Bustani, local prejudiceswhether of faction and family or religionhad for too long been the motive force of Syrian history. For all that there were many people of 'morals and quality' among its inhabitants, left to its own devices Syria could not but succumb to this 'evil'. Only one path could provide real 'hope of progress and civilisation' and allow the inherent 'qualities' of the majority to prosper: 'plac[ing]' the country under special measures, by imposing 'reforms (tanzimat) befitting the time and circumstances, and whose aim is the welfare of the land and the comfort of the subjects'.  On the one hand, it is clear that the Nafir was an 'antisectarian' appeal to 'build a cohesive and "civilised" Syrian society'.  In such passages, Bustani developed a searing historical critique, both of the 'old order' that had prevailed until the early nineteenth century and the new 'culture of sectarianism' that emerged from the s on. As dangerous as a system of government founded on inherited status and rank was one built on the confessionalisation of social life, the reduction of religious belief to sectarian prejudice, and the elevation of prelates to the position of temporal rulers. Both were equally ruinous, stymieing Syria's potential for civilisation. On the other hand, it is rather less certain that what he aimed for was a new 'social contract' in which Ottoman 'absolutist monarchy' would give way to the 'logic of the modern nation-state'.  For it is striking that Bustani did not see the imposition of direct Ottoman rule as in any way responsible for the events of . On the contrary, he regarded this violence as, at least in part, born of Syria's political autonomy and remoteness from the centres of imperial sovereignty. Nothing could be done to overturn the tyranny of distance. But it could still be hoped that the watanthe homelandcould be integrated more fully within the mamlakathe imperial realmthrough a programme of thoroughgoing and just reform, which would expunge for once and for all the forces of prejudice from Syria.

IV Against autonomy: Mount Lebanon in the Nafir
Indeed, this was not the only instance in which Bustani's language provides evidence of his endorsement of effective imperial reform as the only means of salving Syria's wounds and restoring order to Mount Lebanon. In November , he reiterated his call for 'appropriate laws and just reforms, which suit the circumstances, the place and the time'.  At one level, this appears a straightforward use of the stock phrases of administrative parlance, with their rote invocation of the need to devise ordinances befitting the time and place.  At the same time, however, this can be read as a call to place Mount Lebanon in the grip of a strong, reforming central state. It is in this light that we can read Bustani's calls for 'appropriate laws (shara'i mutfiqa) and just reforms (tanzimat 'adila)'. The measures needed to address Mount Lebanon's predicament were not, for Bustani, the bespoke protocols devised by partisans of Mount Lebanon's administrative autonomy. Quite the opposite: the moment demanded that the state fulfil the commitments spelled out in grand edicts like those of  and  and continue with the thoroughgoing reorganisation, rationalisation and homogenisation of government. In other words, the reformed administration of Mount Lebanon and Syria should follow the imperial norm, rather than the devolved exception. This is apparent from Bustani's insistence that the empire's laws and regulations should not be 'admixed with confessional laws' and that 'judgments [should] consider the particulars of the case and not the person'. Legislation should be 'rigorous, vigilant, and capable of keeping each [subject] within his limits'. But it should also 'look equally on every class of subject, granting no recognition to religious sects other than that accorded to their members' religious, moral, and civic rights, and the defence of these rights as such, and not by virtue of their connection to any person or group'.  Here, Bustani can again be seen restating the programme of the  reform edict, with its commitment to erasing 'every distinction or designation tending to make any class whatever of the subjects of my Empire inferior to another class, on account of their religion', to ensuring freedom of religion, and to creating mixed courts for the judgement of 'all commercial, correctional, and criminal suits' involving members of different religious communities.  This too can be read as an intervention in debates on the future status of Mount Lebanon. Against those who insisted that the region should retain its own administration founded on the principle of confessional distinction, Bustani argued that it should be folded fully into an empire-wide system of universal and impersonal procedural norms that would ensure equal judicial treatment for all. Religious difference should be respected as sacrosanct, but no single confessional group  Bustani, Nafir Suriyya, .  I am grateful to Camille Cole for pointing this out.  Bustani, Nafir Suriyya, .  www.anayasa.gen.tr/reform.htm (last accessed  April ).
should be accorded special status. To overcome the strife that had torn local society limb from limb and allow the wounds of sectarian hatred to close over, it was necessary to pursue the path of imperial reform to its fullest expression, rather than retreating into self-government founded on the weighted representation of different communities.
We do not need to look far for evidence that Bustani took seriously the potential of Ottoman bureaucracy. For his penultimate broadside treated the state as one of the primary agents of social transformation, setting out an expansive programme for a new regime of imperial sovereignty. He thus insisted on the 'need for governors to show circumspection and vigilance in the exercise of their mission, and to take steps to prevent events before they occur'. In an implicit criticism of the actions of Fuad Paşa, who had sentenced Druze notables to death on the basis of lists drawn up by Christian villagers, Bustani insisted it was not enough 'to execute the first killer … or to pin the responsibility on the administrator of the province or district where the violence occurred'.  Far more effective than this organised score-settling was a system of government that might prevent such 'strife' from occurring in the first place. For 'the country' could find 'repose and success' only in 'secure and favourable circumstances'. This was, once again, a deliberate echo of mid-nineteenth-century imperial decrees that harped on the need for 'security'. But it was also, in a way, a rebuke of the approach Ottoman administrators had taken in . What was needed was the ideal vision of reformed government presented in official pronouncements, of 'governors who believe in the right of the state and the law of the country and the people, and who possess the ability, the will, and the means, both personal and military, to implement the laws and to punish offenders', rather than the 'reliance' shown on 'principles of division' drawn from the 'dark ages of despotism'.  To pit Christian against Druze by giving in to demands for 'retribution', let alone to make confessionalism the keystone of Mount Lebanon's government, would be a mistake.  It followed from this that 'a barrier' should be erected separating 'spiritual power from statecraft or civil power'. Whereas spiritual 'leadership' (al-ri'asa) was 'by nature … invariable', 'governance [was] related to external and changing matters'. As only the latter was 'susceptible to alteration and reform', it alone was capable of bringing 'process and civilisation'. Inflexible and unresponsive to 'circumstances', religious leadership could lead only to stagnation. It was not that there was no place for religion in social lifequite the contrary. But combining spiritual and  On Fuad Paşa's actions, see Fawaz, Occasion for War, ff.  Bustani, Nafir Suriyya, -.  Ibid., . religious authority would only attract unsuitable candidates, thus corrupting both true religion and statecraft, undermining faith in these 'most important and noble' of tasks and sowing 'discord'. Under 'spiritual leaders who could agree only to disagree', 'the people' were 'like a flock without a shepherd', stripped all at once of legitimate government and spiritual guidance.  Bustani protestedtoo eagerly, perhapsthat he had no particular community in mind, but spoke 'of all the many spiritual leaders of our country, Muslim and Christian, Druze, Nusayri, Isma'ili, Yazidi, Jewish, or Samaritan'.  It is hard, however, not to see this as an attack on the Maronite Church's growing pretensions to political authority. Since the s, churchmen had increasingly argued that Mount Lebanon was, in history and population, a Christian land. It followed from this, both that the Maronite Church was the natural representative of the people and that the country should be governed by a Christian ruler reflecting its culture and demographic make-up.  To the dismay of men such as Tubiya 'Awn, the Maronite archbishop of Beirut, this vision of Mount Lebanon as a Christian land had slipped out of their grasp in  when it was taken up by subaltern agents like the muleteer Tanyus Shahin.  Now, amidst the ruins, figures like the Maronite patriarch, Bulus Mas'ad, and the archbishop of Saida, 'Abdallah al-Bustani, attempted to reassert their control over their community, portraying themselves to Ottoman authorities and French diplomats as the Maronites' legitimate representatives.  In the Nafir, Bustani urged his countrymen to renege on this vision and to follow the precedent of the 'civilised countries that have taken stock of the dangers of this admixture, and who have created a separation between these two powers so that neither counteracts the other's public benefits'.  For Syria and Mount Lebanon to be governed effectively, sovereignty over the people should not be divided among the religious leaders of each community but concentrated in the hands of the imperial state. Indeed, Bustani insisted that the sultan's 'righteous power' should reign supreme, for neither 'true religion nor statecraft (siyasa) provided any grounds for his subjects, whatever their background, to fail to give it due respect and consideration'. There was no room in Bustani's vision for consultation or representation. For as he explained, should imperial decrees 'be subject to the will of the people and their diverse desires and varying prejudices'  Ibid., .  Ibid., .  Hakim, Origins, -.  Makdisi, Culture of Sectarianism, -.  Hakim, Origins, -.  Bustani, Nafir Suriyya, . they would quickly lose all persuasive force, holding 'great meaning' for some and none at all for others.  Bustani's vision of the new relationship between the locality and the imperial centre, then, was deeply hierarchical. Against the autonomy that some were advocating for Mount Lebanon and Syria, he insisted on subjection to the singular will of the sultan, the better to break the clergy's overweening influence over their flock.  Far from the liberal, egalitarian dispensation that some have discerned in Bustani's writings, this was a frank endorsement of the munificent authority of an autocratic state.  If this separation between local clerical authority and imperial sovereignty was one element of Bustani's vision, another was his opposition to inherited status. He thus called for 'the granting of administrative positions on the basis of merit and aptitude, rather than nationality, descent, wealth or status'. To entrust administrative office to figures of 'lofty rank' on the basis of the 'majesty of the founder' of their 'tribe or dynasty' was a mistake, for these figures' belief that 'precedence' was theirs by right of birth and contempt for their perceived inferiors rendered them 'unsuitable' for office. As careful observation of the 'conditions of states' showed, government founded on inherited status led inexorably towards 'decline', while a system that accorded positions to 'those who deserve them, and not on the basis of inheritance' was assured of steady progress.  It is again important to situate these arguments within a local context. Bustani was writing in February , at a time when various schemes for the future of Mount Lebanon were being floated. One was that of the commander of the French expeditionary force to Syria, General Beaufort d'Hautpoul, who advocated the creation of a quasi-independent Lebanon under the aegis of Amir Majid Shihab, a scion of the family that had dominated the administration of Mount Lebanon until the s.  To demonstrate the purported legitimacy of his plan, Beaufort circulated a petition through the mountain calling for the right of the Lebanese to be governed by a Christian prince and the restoration of the Shihabi dynasty.  Another was that of Patriarch Mas'ad, who shared Beaufort's vision of an autonomous Lebanon under a Christian governor, but favoured his own candidate, Yusuf Karam, himself the son of a family of standing from the mountain's northern reaches. Here, Bustani marked his opposition to these schemes of princely government. And he did so by resorting again to the language of the  imperial rescript, with its declaration that 'all the subjects of my Empire, without distinction of nationality, shall be admissible to public employments, and qualified to fill them according to their capacity and merit'.  In weaving the rhetoric of imperial reform into his own prose, Bustani sought to ensure the creation of a new social order in Mount Lebanon and Syria by their wholesale integration into a reformed imperial polity.

V Looking backwards: imperial ethics and just administration
In articulating this vision of the relations between centre and province and state and people, however, Bustani did not simply redeploy the language of the Tanzimat, but also an older way of thinking about governance. This is apparent from his eighth broadside. In this text, which appeared in November , he wrote that among the many baleful consequences of the late 'civil war' was the loss of the mutual support (arkan) between ruler and ruled, and between subjects (ri'aya) and their government. For it is well known that the trust of those who govern the matters [of state] in the people depends in great part on the trust (irkan) of the people in them, and vice versa.
'Hope' for progress, then, resided 'on the one hand … in the wisdom of rulers, the excellence of their administration (husn idaratihim), [and] the reform of their conduct towards their subjects'. But while progress was contingent on rulers' capacity to 'show consideration' towards those they ruled, it also depended on 'the people's knowledge of their own welfare, [and] avoidance of … excess in asking for what is forbidden by ethical government, true religion, and morals (siyasa wa diyana wa adaban)'.  At one level, this vision of restraint and mutual trust did track the reforming Ottoman state's own perception of itself. Thus, Bustani's language here followed that of the  Gülhane edict, with its declaration that only 'new laws' would ensure 'excellence of administration (hüsn-i idaresi)', enabling the well-protected domains to regain their 'prosperity and strength'.  However, it is telling that this expression, which did not recur in the  reform edict, was drawn from an older lexicon of  www.anayasa.gen.tr/reform.htm (last accessed  April ).  Bustani, Nafir Suriyya, .  I use here Halil İnalcık's translation in Sources in the History of the Modern Middle East, ed. Akram Khater (Belmont, ), ; and the Ottoman text in Latin characters available at www.muharrembalci.com/hukukdunyasi/belgeler/.pdf (last accessed  April ).
Islamic statecraft. For there are tantalising hints that Bustani's own understanding of the political was shaped by his engagement with this tradition. It is striking, for instance, that he expected ordinary subjects to obey not just the universal norms of religion and morals, but also the specific injunctions of siyasa. Now commonly translated as 'politics', this was still in the mid-nineteenth century a polysemic and fluid term, which denoted both statecraft and the administration of justice. It was in this latter sense that it was used in Khedivial Egypt, where majalis siyasiyya were established alongside the shari'a courts and granted 'discretionary powers' to adjudicate criminal cases using new bureaucratic procedure.  At another level, however, the term evoked a tradition of reflection on statecraft that included both works of counsel for rulers such as the Qabusnama and Nizam al-Mulk's Siyasat-nama, both written for eleventhcentury Seljuk rulers, and philosophical treatises such as al-Farabi's tenth-century al-Madina al-Fadila, the 'ideal city' or polis, and Nasir al-Din al-Tusi's thirteenth-century Akhlaq-i Nasiri. For al-Farabi, the ultimate end of the 'royal, political art' of siyasa was to lead man 'to happiness by having a philosopher-king as ruler'. In Edwin Rosenthal's gloss, the sovereign should 'rule with practical wisdom and experience … so that political … acts encourage virtue and good behaviour' in his subjects.  In similar fashion, al-Tusi saw the duty of the 'ideal ruler' as being to 'help his subjects' to 'reach potential wisdom'. Under his 'care and protection each member of society, secure in the best place suited for him, was to … struggle to achieve perfection'. For him, siyasat-i mudunthe management of the affairs of the polis, or statecraftwas one of the two central expressions of 'practical wisdom'hikmat-i 'amali.  We cannot know for certain whether Bustani had in mind the writings of Farabi and Tusi. As Peter Hill has noted, 'we should not assume that … particular passages' drawn from the classical canon 'were known to' nineteenth-century 'Arab literati'.  More work still needs to be done on nahda thinkers' reception of falsafa, the tradition born of Islamic engagement with Plato and Aristotle, and the ways this shaped their ideas of ethics, virtue and the state. At the same time, we do know that the sixteenth-century Ottoman writers Kınalızade Ali Çelebi and Hasan Kafi, who drew from Tusi and other medieval Persian writers of ethics their sense of the relationship between wise government and

VI Looking outwards: global comparison and imperial sovereignty
At other moments, Bustani looked not backwards into tradition, but outwards across the world to find evidence in support of his argument. This is apparent from a passage in November  in which he strove to distinguish between religion, understood as an intrinsically hierarchical relationship between 'a servant and his maker', and civil mattersal-madaniyyatunderstood as a dual contract, which entailed at once a horizontal relationship between 'man and his compatriot' and a vertical engagement between the individual subject and 'his government'. The relationship of one compatriot to another, and between subject and government, were not independent of one another. As Bustani wrote: So long as the sons of the country do not open the doors to knowledge and industry … they cannot wait for order along the lines of civilised countries or respect and consideration in the eyes of others, nor even in their own eyes, or expect to have the doors opened to them to lofty positions in government. For though the Arabs were, in times of old, sovereign and possessed the most well-considered positions, it cannot be hoped that they will progress higher than the rank of a scribe or translator or council member should they remain in their current position.
In short, 'the Arabs' owed it to each other to embark on the educational reforms Bustani had long espoused. But if this was in part because it would bring 'order' and civilisation to their own lands, it was also because it would allow them to earn the respect of others and integrate fully the institutions of state. had been confronting British and French military incursions. Its coastline was moth-eaten by the extraterritorial enclaves of the treaty ports.  But all this was beside the point, for it is clear that Bustani was writing here in the abstract. This passage, then, was fundamentally different from the comparative empirical accounts of Khayr al-Din al-Tunsi or the Egyptian Rif'at Rifa' al-Tahtawi, or even from later Ottoman writings on Meiji Japan.  Rather, Bustani saw in a stylised China the ideal type of the bureaucratic empire he longed for. This underscores the continuing openness and worldliness of mid-nineteenth-century Ottoman Arab political thought. Casting about for a normative basis for effective imperial governance, Bustani felt no need to look exclusively to the precedents offered by the 'civilised countries' of Europe and North America. On the contrary, he set his gaze eastwards across the globe.
This effort at global comparison was the product, to be sure, of what Peter Hill has described as Bustani's profound wariness of 'uncritical acceptance' of Europe as the 'universal standard of civilisation' and his fear that his compatriots would lose themselves in 'blind imitation' of 'all things' Western.  But if cultural considerations were at play, so too were political ones. As Bustani stressed in February , European powers' growing encroachments on Ottoman sovereignty rendered the task of reforming the state and rebuilding the trust between ruler and ruled all the more urgent. For only through fulfilling the Tanzimat's commitment to 'preserve the peace and comfort and prosperity' of its subjects could the Ottoman state 'convince them there is no need … to have recourse to foreigners and to place their livelihoods and interests under their protection and supervision'.  Here, too, we can feel Bustani's immediate lived context pressing into the text. He wrote, after all, in a city in which those displaced by violence remained reliant on European relief efforts, and in which many profited from the silk trade with France or found employment as dragomans or guards in European employ, as Bustani had done in the s.  It is clear that despiteor perhaps because ofhis earlier entanglements, Bustani retained a deep ambivalence about the role of foreign powers in Syria. On the one hand, he wrote in January , European 'intervention' had been 'necessary to stop the spread of turmoil and destruction that were spreading from place to place … like infectious disease'. There was no denying that 'misrule and disdain for the laws are among the greatest of harms to a country, no matter what its degree of civilisation and success, as wise government and virtuous laws are like health, one only knows their value when they are lost', so that 'those who transgress the bounds of humanity and moderation find themselves facing the opprobrium of the entire world, and it is necessary for a foreign hand to intervene in the affairs of their country'. On the other hand, interference by foreign hands in the political affairs (siyasa) of any country, and especially this country, where it strengthened the various conflicting parties … and where the causes of disagreement on the causes of intervention varied in accordance with the religious and civil interests of the intervening parties, will be harmful to the country, even if it brings temporary benefits to some individuals.  In this passage, Bustani again brought together the normative and the descriptive, the eventful and the speculative. Intervention in the sovereign matters of any given state, he contended, was always detrimental. But events had shown that it was especially so in Mount Lebanon and Syria, where Britain and France had shown contrasting attitudes towards Druze and Maronite, and where French endorsement of Maronite claims, in particular, had strengthened the latter's hand. Gone here is the sense of hopeful gratitude that marked Bustani's first wataniyya, in which he counselled his readers to 'look with trust' on the 'allied states coming to provide them with comfort and to make them secure in their dwelling places' and 'wait patiently for the good deeds that the great of the world had set in motion'.  By early , this optimism had been replaced by a growing sense of the dangers of foreign encroachment. If the Ottoman state appeared to him the guarantor of the welfare of Syria, then the European states that had assembled in Beirut to decide on the fate of Syria increasingly seemed not saviours and protectors, but threats to its well-being.