- Gertrude Bell
Gertrude Margaret Lowthian Bell
CBE (July 14 ,1868 –July 12 ,1926 ) was a British writer, traveller, political analyst, administrator inArabia , and anarchaeologist who mapped and identified Anatolian and Mesopotamian ruins. She was appointed Commander of theOrder of the British Empire in 1917.Bell and
T. E. Lawrence (Lawrence of Arabia) are recognized as almost wholly responsible for creating theHashemite dynasty inJordan and the modern state ofIraq . During her life, she was an unsung force behind the success of theArab revolt inWorld War I . At the conclusion of the war, she drew up borders withinMesopotamia to include the three Ottoman Empirevilayet s that later became Iraq.Early life
Bell was born in Washington Hall,
County Durham ,England , to a family of great affluence. She was a granddaughter of industrialistIsaac Lowthian Bell . In her early years, she attended the newQueen's College, London , then at age 17, she enrolled inLady Margaret Hall, Oxford , where she gained a first class honors degree in history in only two years.Travels and writings
Bell's uncle, Sir
Frank Lascelles , was British minister atTehran ,Persia . In May 1892, after leaving Oxford, Bell travelled toPersia to visit him. She described this journey in her book, "Persian Pictures". She spent much of the next decade travelling around the world,mountaineering inSwitzerland , she developed a passion for archaeology and languages. She had become fluent in Arabic, Persian, French and German as well as also speaking Italian and Turkish.In 1899, Bell again went to the Middle East. She visited
Palestine andSyria in that year and in 1900 travelled toJerusalem to look for theDruze s. She reachedJebel Druze and befriended the Druze kingYahya Bey . In 1905, Bell was again in the Middle East and travelled widely, studying local ruins and staying with both the Druzes andBeni Sakhr and meeting many Arab chieftains,emir s and sheiks. She published her observations in the book "Syria: The Desert and the Sown" published in 1907 (William Heinemann Ltd, London). In this book she described, photographed and detailed her trip to GreaterSyria 's towns and cities likeDamascus ,Jerusalem ,Beirut ,Antioch andAlexandretta . Bell's vivid descriptions opened up the Arabiandeserts to the western world. In March 1907, Bell journeyed toTurkey and began to work with the archaeologist andNew Testament scholar SirWilliam M. Ramsey . Their excavations were chronicled in "A Thousand and One Churches".In January 1909, she left for
Mesopotamia . She visited the Hittite city ofCarchemish , mapped and described the ruin ofUkhaidir and finally went toBabylon andNajaf . Back in Carchemish, she consulted with the two archaeologists on site. One of them wasT. E. Lawrence . Her 1913 Arabian journey was generally difficult. She was the second foreign woman afterLady Anne Blunt to visit Ha'il.Anti-Suffrage League
Bell also became honorary secretary of the British Women's Anti-Suffrage League. Her stated reason for her anti-suffrage stand was that as long as women felt that the kitchen and the bedroom were their only domains, they were truly unprepared to take part in deciding how a nation should be ruled.
War and political career
At the outbreak of
World War I , Bell's request for aMiddle East posting was initially denied. She instead volunteered with theRed Cross inFrance .Work in the Middle East
In November 1915, however, she was summoned to
Cairo to the nascentArab Bureau , headed by GeneralGilbert Clayton . She also again metT. E. Lawrence . At first she did not receive an official position, but, in her first months there, helped LtCmdr David Hogarth set about organizing and processing her own, Lawrence's and Capt. W. H. I. Shakespear's data about the location and disposition ofArab tribes that could be encouraged to join the British against the Turks. Lawrence and the British used the information in forming alliances with the Arabs.On
March 3 ,1916 , after hardly a moment's notice, Gen. Clayton sent Bell toBasra , which British forces had captured in November 1914, to advise Chief Political OfficerPercy Cox regarding an area she had visited the most. She drew maps to help the British army reachBaghdad safely. She became the only female political officer in the British forces and received the title of "Liaison Officer, Correspondent to Cairo" (i.e. to the Arab Bureau where she had been assigned). She wasHarry St. John Philby 's field controller, and taught him the finer arts of behind-the-scenes political manoeuvering.When British troops took Baghdad (
March 10 1917 ), Bell was summoned by Cox to Baghdad and presented with the title of "Oriental Secretary." She, Cox and T. E. Lawrence were among a select group of "Orientalists" convened by Winston Churchill to attend a 1921 Conference in Cairo to find a way to reduce the expense of stationing British troops in its post-WWI mandates. Gertrude is supposed to have described T.E.L. as being able "to ignite fires in cold rooms", but so could she. Throughout the conference, the two worked tirelessly to promote the establishment of the countries of Transjordan and Iraq to be presided over by the Kings Abdullah and Faisal, sons of the instigator of theArab Revolt against Turkey (ca. 1915-1916),Hussein ibn Ali , Sharif and Emir of Mecca. Until her death in Baghdad, she served in the Iraq British High Commission advisory group there. Referred to by Iraqis as "Al Khatun" (a Lady of the Court who keeps an open eye and ear for the benefit of the State), she was a confidante of King Faisal of Iraq and helped introduce him to Iraq's tribal leaders at the start of his reign. He helped her to found Baghdad's great Iraqi Archaeological Museum from her own modest artifact collection and to establish The British School of Archaeology, Iraq, for the endowment of excavation projects from proceeds in her will. The stress of authoring a prodigious output of books, articles of correspondence, intelligence reports, reference works, white papers; of recurring bronchitis attacks brought on by years of heavy smoking in the company of English and Arab cohorts; of bouts with malaria; and finally, of coping with Baghdad's summer heat ... all took a toll on her health. Somewhat frail to start with, she became nearly emaciated.Like T. E. Lawrence, she had attended Oxford and earned First Class Honours in Modern History. Bell spoke Arabic, Persian, French and German. She was an archaeologist, traveller and photographer in the Middle East before World War I. Under recommendation by renowned archaeologist and historian David Hogarth, first Lawrence, then Bell, were assigned to Army Intelligence Headquarters in Cairo in 1915 for war service. Both Bell and Lawrence stood hardly 5'5", yet both could ride with great determination and endurance through the desert for hours on end. Both died prematurely after recurring bouts of depression, burn-out and exhaustion. Her work was specially mentioned in the
British Parliament , and she was awarded theOrder of the British Empire . Some consider the present troubles in Iraq are derived from the lines Bell helped draw to create its borders. Perhaps so, but Gertrude's reports indicate that problems were foreseen, and that it was clearly understood that there were just not many (if any) permanent solutions for calming the divisive forces at work in that part of the world. Unlike T. E. Lawrence, Bell did not have a Lowell Thomas to publicize her adventures and deeds in the United States, but she is well known in Britain.Creation of Iraq
When the
Ottoman Empire collapsed in late January 1919, Bell was assigned to conduct an analysis of the situation inMesopotamia and the options for future leadership inIraq . She spent the next ten months writing what was later considered a masterful official report. When her conclusion was largely favorable to Arabic leadership, her superior,A. T. Wilson , turned against her.On
October 11 ,1920 ,Percy Cox returned to Baghdad and asked her to continue as Oriental Secretary, acting as liaison with the forthcoming Arab government.Bell's influence led to the creation of a country inhabited by a
Shi'ite majority in the south, andSunni and Kurdish minorities in the centre and north respectively. By denying the Sunni Kurds a separate, autonomous area or state, the British tried to balance the heavy predominance of Shia in Iraq and keep control of the potentialoilfield s in their territory.The British thought that
Sunni s should lead the Iraqi nation, because the Shi'ite majority was regarded as too volatile to govern due to its largely tribal and nomadic base in Iraq, and hard to assimilate because of an unyielding religious bias for the "Ali" faction of the Muslim schism. "I don't for a moment doubt that the final authority must be in the hands of the Sunnis, in spite of their numerical inferiority," Bell once wrote in a letter to her father. "Otherwise you will have amujtahid -run,theocratic state, which is the very devil." [http://www.gerty.ncl.ac.uk/letters/l1380.htm Bell in a letter to her father, 3 October 1920.] ]The rivalries and differing religious attitudes continue to cause friction within Iraq.
Bell and T. E. Lawrence persuaded
Winston Churchill and 1921 Cairo conferees to endorseFaisal bin Hussein (the son of Hussein, Sherif of Mecca), former commander of the Arab forces that entered Damascus at the culmination of the Arab Revolt and recently deposed by France asKing of Syria , as the first King of Iraq,Faisal I . When Faisal arrived in Iraq in June 1921, Bell advised him in local questions, including matters involving tribal geography and local business. Bell also supervised the selection of appointees for cabinet and other leadership posts in the new government.Faisal was crowned king of Iraq on
August 23 1921 . Due to her influence with the new king, Bell earned the nickname, "the Uncrowned Queen of Iraq." Working with the new king was, however, not easy: "You may rely upon one thing — I'll never engage in creating kings again; it's too great a strain." [http://www.gerty.ncl.ac.uk/letters/l1434.htm Bell in a letter, 8 July 1921.] ]Baghdad Archaeological Museum
After the situation stabilized, Bell began forming what would later become the Baghdad Archaeological Museum, located at first within the confines of the royal palace.
She supervised excavations and examined finds and artifacts. Against European opposition, she insisted that excavated antiquities should remain in their country of origin, thereby ensuring that her museum would retain a collection of Iraq's antiquities. The museum was officially opened in June 1926.
Death
Bell briefly returned to Britain in 1925, and found herself facing family problems and ill health. Her family's fortune had begun to decline due to the onset of post-WWI worker strikes in the UK and economic depression in Europe. She returned to Baghdad and soon developed
pleurisy . When she recovered, she heard that her younger brother Hugo had died oftyphoid .On
July 12 ,1926 , Bell was discovered to have overdosed onsleeping pill s. It is unknown whether the overdose was an intentional suicide or accidental. She had never married or had children. She was buried at the British cemetery in Baghdad's Bab al-Sharji district. Her funeral was a major event, attended by large numbers of people. It has been suggested that she was diagnosed with a terminal illness during her last visit to England in 1925 — given her heavy smoking, perhaps lung cancer — and with the logic with which she had always applied to her life, chose an overdose rather than experience the unpleasant closing stages of cancer which may have started to appear.Fact|date=October 2008A year after her death, in 1927, her stepmother edited and published two volumes of Bell's collected correspondence written during the 20 years preceding World War I.
Notes
References
* Goodman, Susan, "Gertrude Bell" (1985)
* Howell, Georgina , "Gertrude Bell: Queen of the Desert, Shaper of Nations" (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2007) ISBN 0374161623.
* Meyer, Karl E. and Shareen Blair Brysac, "Kingmakers: the Invention of the Modern Middle East"(W.W. Norton, 2008) ISBN 978-0-393-06199-4.
* Wallach, Janet, "Desert Queen" (1999)
* Winstone, H.V.F., "Gertrude Bell" (Barzan Publishing, England, 2004) ISBN 0-9547728-0-6.External links
* [http://www.gerty.ncl.ac.uk/ The Gertrude Bell Project] based at [http://www.ncl.ac.uk/library/ Newcastle University Library]
* [http://www.writespirit.net/authors/gertrude_bell Gertrude Bell Biography] also Gertrude Bell on her translations of Hafiz
*worldcat id|lccn-n50-82912
*NRA|P2093
* [http://www.ibtauris.com/ibtauris/display.asp?K=183964597530723&sf_01=CAUTHOR&st_02=gertrude+bell&sf_02=CTITLE&sf_03=KEYWORD&m=1&dc=1 Liora Lukitz - "A Quest in the Middle East: Gertrude Bell and the Making of Modern Iraq" (2006)]
* [http://www.mirror.co.uk/tm_objectid=17061225%26method=full%26siteid=94762%26headline=british%2d%2dqueen%2dof%2diraq%2d%2drests%2din%2dbaghdad%2dcemetery-name_page.html/ British "Queen of Iraq" rests in Baghdad cemetery]
* [http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5552563 Gertrude Bell, a Masterful Spy and Diplomat]
* [http://www.economist.com/books/displaystory.cfm?story_id=7879942 Gertrude of Arabia] , Sep 7th 2006,The Economist , review of "Daughter of the Desert: The Remarkable Life of Gertrude Bell" by Georgina Howell
* [http://cgsc.cdmhost.com/cdm4/document.php?CISOROOT=/p4013coll7&CISOPTR=27&REC=2, Review of the Civil Administration of Mesopotamia, London: H.M. Stationery Office. I920]
*cite book
title=Syria
author=Gertrude Lowthian Bell, Gertrude Bell
year=1907
publisher=
isbn=
url=http://books.google.com/books?id=K-QTAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA1&dq=Gertrude+Lowthian+Bell&as_brr=1#PPR3,M1
* [http://www.presscom.co.uk/amrath/amurath.html Gertrude Bell (1911, rep.1924) 'From Amurath to Amurath'] , complete text with illustrations.
* [http://gutenberg.net.au/plusfifty-a-m.html#bell ebooks of works by Gertrude Bell] at [http://gutenberg.net.au Project Gutenberg Australia]
* [http://www.bib-arch.org/reviews/review-gertrude-bell.asp Gertrude Bell: Queen of the Desert, Shaper of Nations by Georgina Howell] review by "Biblical Archaeology Review"
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.