whose members succeeded the Ma'ns in their traditional emirate and tax farms
Children Mulhim had two sons, Qurqumaz and
Ahmad. His daughter Fa'iza was married to the traditional Druze emir of the Gharb, Salim ibn Yusuf (d. 1708) of the
Arslan family, according to the Arslan family records. They had a son, Yusuf. According to the 19th-century local historian
Tannus al-Shidyaq, a daughter of Mulhim (unclear if Fa'iza or another) was married to the emir Husayn, of the
Sunni Muslim Shihab family in 1629. Ahmad's daughter was married to another Shihab emir, Musa, in 1674.
Assessment Together with his Druze and Maronite confederates, including his uncle's former assistants, the Khazens, Mulhim reestablished Ma'nid control over the core area of Fakhr al-Din's former domain, namely the combined tax farms of the Chouf, Gharb, Jurd, Matn and Keserwan. Except for his confrontation with Mustafa Pasha in 1642, Mulhim "was fully obedient to the sultanate", according to the contemporary historian
Muhammad al-Muhibbi, and did not rebel against Ottoman authority, a view shared by the modern historian
Abdul-Rahim Abu-Husayn. Although there is no record of correspondence with his uncle's European partners, Mulhim's Maronite subordinates on a number of occasions communicated his honors to the Tuscans and the
Pope. Correspondences between the Tuscans and Maronite clergymen and notables commended Mulhim for safeguarding the
Maronite Church and its followers, a Ma'nid policy begun by Fakhr al-Din II. Qurqumaz and Ahmad succeeded Mulhim in his tax farms in Mount Lebanon. In 1660 the Ottomans moved to strengthen imperial control over the sanjaks of Sidon-Beirut and Safed and its largely autonomous rural communities, especially the Druze. They combined the two sanjaks into a single
eyalet (province), separate from Damascus, called the
Sidon Eyalet. Shortly after, an imperial expedition, attended in person by the reformist Grand Vizier
Koprulu Mehmed Pasha, was launched against the Ma'ns and their allies the Shihabs of Wadi al-Taym and the Shia Muslim Hamade lords of the Tripoli region. The Ma'ns' Druze rivals, the Alam al-Dins, the
Sawwafs of the Matn, and Sirhal Imad gained control of southern Mount Lebanon, while Ahmad and Qurqumaz went into hiding in Hamade territory. Qurqumaz was killed by the Ottomans in 1662, while Ahmad went on to defeat his Druze rivals in 1667. Between then and his death in 1697 he held the tax farms and practical control of the Druze Mountain and Keserwan. Ahmad's son Mulhim had died young in 1680 and so Ahmad left no male heir. His factional allies among the Druze resolved to elect Ahmad's maternal nephew
Bashir Shihab I to serve as their chief and take over his tax farm. The transfer of the tax farms of southern Mount Lebanon were sanctioned by Sidon Eyalet's governor and the imperial government. Ahmad's grandson, the son of his daughter and Musa Shihab,
Haydar Shihab, later succeeded Bashir.
Building works Mulhim built the Khan al-Dabbagha
caravanserai in the commercial center of Sidon's port at an undetermined date during his career. He is also credited by
Laurent d'Arvieux, a 17th-century French diplomat and traveler, for building the city's Barrani Mosque. The mosque was built in the
Ottoman style with a dome in the center, a portico topped with a dome and a "pencil-shaped
minaret", according to the historian
Stefan Weber. ==Notes==