Auguste Adib Pacha (Arabic: أوغست أديب باشا; 2 August 1859 – 9 July 1936) was the first Prime Minister of Lebanon, which at the time was a part of the Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon. He served in that capacity twice between 1926 and 1932.

Auguste Adib Pacha
أوغست أديب باشا
1st Prime Minister of Lebanon
In office
31 May 1926 – 5 May 1927
PresidentCharles Debbas
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byBechara Khoury
In office
25 March 1930 – 9 March 1932
PresidentCharles Debbas
Preceded byÉmile Eddé
Succeeded byCharles Debbas
Personal details
Born(1859-08-02)2 August 1859
Constantinople, Ottoman Empire
Died9 July 1936(1936-07-09) (aged 76)
Paris, France
NationalityLebanese
Political partyIndependent
SpouseRose Khayat

Life

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Auguste Charles Adib was born in Constantinople to Ibrahim Adib and Maddalena Veronica Collaro. His father was born to a Maronite family from the Lebanon mountains, while his mother was born to an Italian family living in Constantinople.[1] He first studied at the Jesuit School of Deir Mar Maroun in Ghazir, then upon completion he went to Saint Joseph University in Beirut.[2] In 1885 he moved to Egypt where he worked in the local administration.

He was one of the founding fathers of the Lebanese Alliance, which was founded in Cairo in 1908. This party demanded – like other Arab groups in the Ottoman Empire – that the Arab areas of the empire be granted independence. At the same time, it sought to create a Christian-dominated state called Greater Lebanon for the Christian Lebanese, who are actually descendants of the Phoenicians.[citation needed] Their desire for a Christian-dominated state set Adib and his compatriots apart from the Pan-Arab ideas of other proponents of independence among the Arabs of the Middle East.

He returned to Lebanon in 1920 after the First World War, having spent two and a half decades in Egypt. The collapse of the Ottoman Empire, which released the Arabic-populated areas in the Middle East from Ottoman dominion, is what prompted his return. In 1926, French colonialists divided the former mandated territory of Syria establishing the State of Lebanon. Charles Debbas was the first President and he, Auguste Adib, was the first prime minister, taking office on 31 May 1926. In December 1926, Adib traveled to Paris to take part in a Conference on resolving the outstanding debt the Ottoman Empire had left to her successors. Meanwhile, back in Lebanon, there was a power struggle between Émile Eddé, and Béchara El-Khoury as both sought to succeed him. Adib was not up to this pressure and resigned on 5 May 1927.[3] A few years later, he became Prime Minister again on 25 March 1930. He held the office this time until 9 March 1932. He was related to some other notable individuals, the most prominent of whom was his nephew Camille Chamoun, who would eventually become president.[4]

He died on 9 July 1936, in Paris, at the 8th arrondissement.[5]

Death

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On 9 July 1936, around noon, Auguste Adib was in a hotel room on the 5th floor of 29 rue de l'Arcade in Paris, that he had been renting for the past few years. As a result of a false move, he knocked over a lighted lamp on the carpet. His clothes caught fire and was seriously burned all over his body. He was transported, in an alarming state, to the Beaujon hospital, where he later died.[6]

References

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  1. ^ "Joseph and Adonis Naama Library" http://www.adonisnehme.info/nehmefamily/?id=3&lang=2#
  2. ^ Asher Kaufman. (2004) Reviving Phoenicia: in search of identity in Lebanon, S. 62, I.B. Tauris publishers ISBN 1-86064-982-3
  3. ^ Meir Zamir. (2000). Lebanon's quest: the search for a national identity, 1926-1939, S. 48, I.B. Tauris publishers ISBN 1-86064-553-4
  4. ^ Caroline Attie. (2004). Struggle in the Levant: Lebanon in the 1950s S. 43 I.B. Tauris Publishers ISBN 1-86064-467-8
  5. ^ Archives de Paris, acte de décès n°785, vue 18/31
  6. ^ Retronews, Journal des débats politiques et littéraires, July 10, 1936
Political offices
Preceded by
-
Prime Minister of Lebanon
1926-1927
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Lebanon
1930-1932
Succeeded by