In the first days of the
Egyptian conquest of
Ottoman Syria, Husayn Abd al-Hadi welcomed the Egyptian commander Ibrahim Pasha after first coordinating a response to the conquest with Emir
Bashir Shihab II of
Mount Lebanon. He accompanied Ibrahim Pasha in his siege of
Acre, where the Wali of
Sidon Eyalet,
Abdullah Pasha was holding out. Ibrahim viewed the Abd al-Hadi family as a rising star among the rural nobility of
Jabal Nablus and selected Husayn, the head of the clan, to be his deputy in Palestine, while Acre was still under siege. Acre capitulated in May 1832. The elevation of a member of the Abd al-Hadi clan came at the expense of the
Tuqan family's traditional and influential position in Jabal Nablus. Ibrahim Pasha spent most of his time in other parts of Syria and Husayn administered Palestine on his behalf. During the 1834
peasants' revolt in Palestine, Husayn supported Ibrahim Pasha. The revolt was suppressed by the end of the year and Husayn was rewarded for his loyalty and effective service by being promoted to Mudir of Sidon Eyalet, which included all of Palestine. In October 1834, shortly after the execution of the main rebel leader of the revolt,
Qasim al-Ahmad, Husayn purchased both his home and
soap factory in
Nablus, where he relocated from his home village of
Arraba. Soap was a major source of revenue in the city and owning factories represented power and wealth. Shaykh Yusef Qadri of
Ya'bad served as Husayn's principal agent in Nablus, helped him acquire numerous prime commercial properties there and partnered with him in many of those investments. Husayn served as Mudir of Sidon until his death in 1835 or 1836 (1251 AH). He is buried in the courtyard of the Zaytuna Mosque in
Acre. A number of Husayn's sons also owned factories or served various administrative or political offices, including ٍSulayman (who succeeded his father as Wali), Mahmud, Muhammad and Abd ar-Rahman. ==References==