OWLS Quarterly, Ninth Edition

Page 18

HOW DO MAPS

British Foreign Secretary, when asked about the border agreement: “I would like to draw a line from the ‘e’ in Acre to the last ‘k’ in Kirkuk,” Sykes stated, bringing to mind a fiction writer creating a fantasy world from their imagination, rather than a diplomat whose actions have real consequences on the lives of real people. After the war, this abstract line became the border between Iraq, Syria, and Jordan, splitting up communities and forcing groups together that were previously separated by religious, ethnic, and linguistic divides. This ‘divide and rule’ tactic allowed Britain to maintain complete control by exacerbating ethnic and religious differences and not allowing any one group to get too powerful.

PRIORITIZING IMPERIAL INTERESTS STOKE TERRORISM TODAY? Kate McKeough (WHS) When we think about maps today, we think about nations and provinces separated by borders, defined by boundaries which are fixed in place. But in the early and mid 20th century, when empires around the world still held significant influence and power, maps were displays of potential. They illustrated countries to dominate, territories to expand into, and competition to eliminate. The people of the places under empires’ spheres of influence were very rarely considered, while the division of territory was prioritized. Diplomats, politicians, and cartographers alike pored over maps, reimagining the borders which would define lives.

The agreement was doubly malicious as the British had promised, in the event of the Ottoman empire falling, to support King Hussein and his sons in the formation of an Arab state. Thinking they were fighting for a future with a united Arab nation, the Arabs secured key victories for the Allies at the port city of Aqaba and aided in the capture of Jerusalem. Furthermore, the British pledged to support the establishment of a Jewish national home in Palestine in the Balfour Declaration of 1917. They did this in order to gain the support of the Jews in the fight against the Ottomans. At this point, the British had promised nearly the same set of land to both the Jews and the Arabs, all the while knowing the land was to be theirs, as denoted by the secret Sykes-Picot agreement.

But what happens when, over a century later, those borders have modern day consequences?

The duplicity of the British was revealed just weeks after the Balfour agreement, when the Imperial Russian government was removed from power following the Russian Revolution of 1917. The Imperial Russian government had helped approve the Sykes-Picot agreement, and then had filed it away in state archives. The new Bolshevik leaders discovered the secret map, acted as whistle-blowers, and published it. Because of this, much controversy surrounded the League of Nations mandates for Iraq and Syria as they were given to Britain and France. The mandates didn’t last for long, with Iraq being granted independence in 1932, and Syria’s mandate being lifted in 1943. However, the map’s impact remained in the form of its borders between Syria and Iraq, which were formalized at the San Remo Conference of 1920. On May 16th, 1916, a secret agreement was ratified between France and Britain, with assent from the Russian Empire and the Kingdom of Italy. The agreement in question was a map of the Middle East, crudely and simplistically divided using a ruler and blue and red coloured pens. British and French diplomats Sir Mark Sykes and François Georges-Picot represented the interests of their respective empires, creating the Sykes-Picot Agreement based on this map. The British and French empires had plans to split the Middle East after the fall of the Ottoman empire, post World War l. It was decided that the French would take the North under their sphere of influence, and the British would gain the South. The nature of this agreement is epitomized in a quote from Sykes to the

Today, we can still see the effects of that fateful SykesPicot map. One of the main goals of the Islamic State terrorist group, more commonly known as ISIS, is to restore Muslim unity in the Middle East. ISIS believe that this unity was taken away by imperial and Western intervention. Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the leader of ISIS from 2014 until his death in 2019, said “This blessed advance will not stop until we hit the last nail in the coffin of the Sykes–Picot conspiracy.” Furthermore, in a 2014 ISIS propaganda video named ‘The End of Sykes-Picot’, militants bulldozed a part of the SyriaIraq border in a symbolic show of resistance against imperialism. This shows the importance of the SykesPicot agreement in the propaganda machine of ISIS, as 18


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Articles inside

HOW DOES COUNTERMAPPING REVEAL AND CHALLENGE POWER INEQUALITIES?

4min
pages 45-46

A LINE IN THE SAND - THE MAP THAT DEFINED THE MIDDLE EAST

6min
pages 49-50

THE HUMAN DEVELOPMENTS WHICH HAVE INFLUENCED MAPPING THE MOST SIGNIFICANTLY

6min
pages 47-48

HOW HAVE MAPS REFLECTED THE IMPERALIST NATURE OF EUROPE DURING THE AGE OF EXPLORATION?

5min
pages 41-42

HOW HAS MODERN TECHNOLOGY CHANGED THE WAY WE MAP THE WORLD?

4min
pages 39-40

SOMATOTOPIC MAPS: MAPS OF THE BODY

4min
pages 43-44

HOW DOES THE BRAIN MAP AND FUNCTION OF AN INTROVERT DIFFER TO THAT OF AN EXTROVERT?

5min
pages 37-38

CONNECTING EAST AND WEST

4min
pages 35-36

WHY GOOGLE MAPS STILL USES THE MERCATOR

5min
pages 24-25

WHAT ROLE DO MAPS PLAY IN CLASSIC CHILDREN’S BOOKS?

7min
pages 21-23

MAPPING THE ELEMENTS

4min
pages 26-27

HOW HAVE MAPS BEEN USED AS A POLITICAL VEHICLE?

3min
page 20

GLOBAL MAPPING OF FASHION

7min
pages 28-30

THE KNOWLEDGE VS GOOGLE MAPS

4min
pages 33-34

MAPPING ILLYRIA

5min
pages 31-32

HOW DO MAPS PRIORITIZING IMPERIAL INTERESTS STOKE TERRORISM TODAY?

5min
pages 18-19

A BRIEF INSIGHT INTO THE REPRESENTATIONS OF THE WORLD THROUGH EIGHT DIFFERENT PROJECTIONS

2min
page 9

THE BEGINNING OF MAPS

6min
pages 10-12

HOW DO MAPS NEGATIVELY IMPACT THE CHARACTERISTICS OF A PLACE?

5min
pages 7-8

THE MAP OF EUROPE’S MYTHICAL BEINGS

4min
pages 13-14

MAPPING DIVIDES: EXPLORING THE NEGATIVE SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC IMPACTS OF PARIS’S URBAN LAYOUT

6min
pages 5-6

THE ROLE OF GEOSPATIAL DATA IN THE COVID-19 RESPONSE

5min
pages 16-17

THE NEW WAY OF MAPPING – MAPS THAT ARE TOUCHABLE AND HEARABLE

4min
page 15

HOW DOES MAPPING HELP TO CREATE A FICTIONAL WORLD?

5min
pages 3-4
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