History does not fragment by accident. When vast regions once connected by faith, language, trade, and governance suddenly fracture into dozens of states, the question is not whether it happened, but who shaped the outcome and who gained from it.
For centuries, large parts of the Muslim world functioned within interconnected political and civilisational frameworks. Despite internal diversity, movement across regions from North Africa to the Levant, Anatolia, and beyond was fluid compared to what would follow. This continuity began to unravel decisively during the First World War.
The Lines That Redrew a Civilisation
In 1916, as the Ottoman Empire weakened under war pressure, Britain and France negotiated a secret arrangement known as the Sykes-Picot Agreement. It divided large swathes of Arab lands into spheres of influence, anticipating the post-war order.
These were not borders shaped by local realities. They were strategic demarcations designed to serve imperial interests, often cutting across tribal, economic, and cultural lines. The aftermath was formalised through mandates administered by European powers, embedding external influence into the very structure of emerging states.
The result was a transformation from a broad, interconnected region into a mosaic of newly defined political units.
The End of a Central Authority
The dissolution of the Ottoman framework and the subsequent Abolition of the Ottoman Caliphate removed a central symbolic and political reference point for many Muslims. While the Caliphate’s authority had evolved over time, its existence still represented a form of overarching unity.
In its place, nation-states emerged, each with its own administrative system, priorities, and external alignments. This shift did not simply decentralise power. It redefined it.
Governance moved from a layered, transregional structure to tightly bounded national systems. Identity, once more fluid across regions, became increasingly tied to state borders.
Strategic Interests and Material Gains
The fragmentation of the region coincided with the discovery and growing importance of oil. Control over energy resources became a central concern for global powers. Divided territories were easier to manage, negotiate with, and influence than a unified political entity.
From a strategic perspective, smaller states meant:
- Multiple points of entry for diplomatic and economic influence
- Reduced capacity for coordinated resistance
- Greater leverage in negotiations over resources and security arrangements
This dynamic was not limited to energy. Trade routes, military positioning, and regional alliances were all affected by the new geopolitical map.
Internal Dynamics and Local Agency
External influence alone does not explain the full picture. Internal movements also played a role. Arab nationalism, local leadership ambitions, and resistance to Ottoman centralisation contributed to the desire for change in certain regions.
Figures such as Sharif Hussein of Mecca engaged with British authorities during the war, seeking independence. However, the expectations of post-war autonomy did not fully align with the outcomes shaped by European agreements.
This intersection between local aspirations and external strategies created a complex transition. Some actors sought reform and independence, while others navigated or adapted to the emerging order.
The Long Shadow of Borders
The borders drawn in the early 20th century have proven durable. They define modern states, influence political systems, and shape regional relations. However, they have also been sources of tension.
Conflicts over territory, identity, and governance often trace back to these initial divisions. In some cases, borders have separated communities with shared histories. In others, they have grouped diverse populations within a single state framework, creating ongoing challenges for cohesion.
The legacy is not uniform. Some states have developed stable institutions, while others have faced repeated instability. Yet the foundational structure remains the same: a region organised into distinct national units that replaced a broader, interconnected system.
Reassessing the Narrative
The idea that the Muslim world moved seamlessly from unity to division oversimplifies a complex history. The Ottoman system itself was diverse and faced internal challenges. At the same time, the scale and speed of the fragmentation in the early 20th century were shaped by global conflict and external negotiation.
Understanding this history requires balancing multiple factors:
- Structural changes driven by war and diplomacy
- Strategic interests of global powers
- Internal movements seeking reform or independence
No single explanation fully captures the transformation. However, the reorganisation of the region aligned closely with the interests of those who held power at the negotiating table.
The Present and the Past
Today’s geopolitical landscape in the Middle East and broader Muslim world cannot be separated from these historical processes. State borders, alliances, and conflicts continue to reflect decisions made over a century ago.
At the same time, new dynamics have emerged. Regional organisations, economic cooperation, and transnational movements indicate that the question of unity has not disappeared. It has changed form.
Debates over identity, governance, and regional cooperation remain active. They are shaped both by inherited structures and by contemporary realities.
A Continuing Question
“Who benefited?” is not a question with a single answer. Different actors gained at different times, in different ways. External powers secured strategic advantages. Local elites consolidated authority within new states. Economic interests were redefined.
What is certain is that the transition from a broadly connected region to a system of defined borders reshaped political, economic, and social dynamics in ways that continue to influence the present.
History set the framework. The outcomes are still unfolding.
Sources & References
- Sykes-Picot Agreement
- Abolition of the Ottoman Caliphate
- Sharif Hussein of Mecca
- Eugene Rogan, The Fall of the Ottomans
- David Fromkin, A Peace to End All Peace
- Albert Hourani, A History of the Arab Peoples
- Academic research on colonial mandates and Middle Eastern state formation





