'Tripolitania' or 'Tripolitana' (
Arabic: 'طرابلس',
transliterated: 'Tarābulus') is a historic region and an ex Province or State ("
muhafazah" or "
wilayah") of
Libya (alongside
Cyrenaica and
Fezzan [1]), in an old system of administrative divisions which was abolished in the early
1970s in favour of a system of smaller-size
municipality or "
baladiyat" singular "baladiyah") . The "Baladiyat"-system was subsequently changed many times and has lately become "
Sha'biyat"-system. What used to be Tripolitania in the old system became divided up into several "Baladiyat" or "Sha'biyat", see
administrative divisions in ''Libya''. In the old system, Tripolitania included
Tripoli, the capital city of Libya and a vast north-western portion of the country; in the subsequent systems, the "Baladiyah" or "Sha'biyah" of Tripoli has became much smaller than the original Tripolitania to include merely the city of Tripoli and its more immediate surroundings. Because the City and the "Sha'biyah" are nowadays almost coextensive, the term Tripolitania is of more value for historical contexts than for contemporary ones. In Arabic the same word ( طرابلس ) is used for both the City and the region, and that word alone would be understood to mean only the City; in order to designate Tripolitania in Arabic, a word like "State", "Province" or "Sha'biyah" must be used as a qualifier.

This 1-lire airmail stamp, depicting an Arab horseman pointing to an airplane passing overhead, was used in 1937.
Historical Background
The region was originally inhabited by
Berbers; in the
7th century BC Phoenicians settled in colonies along the coast, which later came under the control of
Carthage.
Numidia captured it in
146 BC, then the
Romans came a century later, under whom Tripolitania became a prosperous area. The
Vandals took over in
435, and were in turn supplanted by the
Byzantine Empire in the
6th century. The
Arabs swept through in the
7th century. The
Ottoman Turks took charge in
1553, and kept it as the "
vilayet of Tripoli" until
1911, when it was captured by
Italy in the
Italo-Turkish War.
Italy officially granted autonomy after the war, but gradually occupied the region. Originally administered as part of a single colony, Tripolitania was a separate colony from
26 June 1927 to
3 December 1934, when it was merged into "Libya".
During
World War II Libya was occupied by the Allies and until
1947 Tripolitania (and the region of
Cyrenaica) were administered by the
United Kingdom. Italy formally renounced its claim upon the territory in the same year.
Colonial and Post-Colonial Heads of Tripolitania
It is important to note here that Tripolitania existed as an entity (State or "welaiya") at least since early Ottoman times (if not before in Islamic or Roman times), the list below starts from
1911 (onset of the Italian colonization era), for a more comprehensive and detailed lists, check these two links:
[2] [3]. (Dates in italics below, indicate ''de facto ''continuation of office).
| Term | Incumbent | Notes | | 1911 | ''Independent government'' | In rebellion against Ottoman sovereignty |
| 3 October 1911 | 'Italian occupation' |
| 1911 to March 1913 | 'Sulayman ibn ‘Abd Allah al-Baruni', Ruler of Tripolitania |
| 16 November 1918 | 'Tripolitanian Republic' |
| 16 November 1918 to November 1920 | 'Ahmad Tahir al-Murayyid', Chairman of the Council of the Republic |
| 18 May 1919 | ''nominally under Italian Suzerainty'' |
| November 1920 to 1923 | 'Ahmad Tahir al-Murayyid', Chairman of the Central Reform Board |
| 12 November 1922 | ''Annexed by Italy'' |
| October 1911 | 'Raffaele Borea Ricci d'Olmo', Governor |
| 11 October 1911 to 1912 | 'Carlo Francesco Giovanni Battista Caneva', Governor |
| 1912 to 1913 | 'Ottavio Ragni', Governor |
| 2 June 1913 to 1914 | 'Vincenzo Garioni', Governor |
| 1914 to 1915 | 'Luigi Druetti', Governor |
| 1915 to 1915 | 'Iulio Cesare Tassoni', Governor |
| 1915 to 1918 | 'Giovanni Battista Ameglio', Governor |
| 6 July 1920 to July 1921 | 'Luigi Mercatelli', Governor |
| July 1921 to July 1925 | 'Giuseppe Volpi, conte di Misurata', Governor |
| July 1925 to 24 January 1929 | 'Emilio De Bono', Governor |
| 24 January 1929 to 31 December 1933 | 'Pietro Badoglio', Governor |
| 1 January 1934 | ''Incorporated into Libya'' |
| 23 October 1942 | ''British Administration'' |
| December 1942 to 26 January 1943 | 'Maurice Stanley Lush', Governor |
| 1943 to ''1946'' | 'Travers Robert Blackley', Administrator |
| 1946 | ''UN Administration'' |
| ''1946'' to ''April 1949'' | 'Travers Robert Blackley', Administrator |
| ''April 1949'' to 24 December 1951 | 'Travers Robert Blackley', Resident |
| 24 December 1951 | ''Incorporated into Libya'' |
See also
★
Postage stamps of Tripolitania
★
Karamanli dynasty
★ In addition to
Tripoli the following are among the largest and most important cities of Tripolitania:
Misratah,
Az Zawiyah,
Gharyan,
Al Khums Tarhuna and
Sirt.
External links
★
Map of Tripolitania showing its important cities and towns.
★
Worldstatesmen.org's History and list of rulers of Tripolitania.
★
Hostkingdom.net's History and list of rulers of Tripolitania.