Samuel Lyde (1825–1860) was an English people writer and Church of England missionary who lived and worked in Syria in the 1850s and wrote a pioneering book on the Alawite sect. In 1856, he sparked months of anti-Christian rioting in Ottoman Palestine when, during a visit there, he killed a beggar.
Lyde was persuaded by the idea. From 1853 to 1859, he lived among the Alawite Kalbiyya community, and established a mission and school in Bhamra, a village overlooking the Mediterranean port of Latakia. However, he later wrote that living among them convinced him that the Alawites fulfilled St Paul's description of the heathen: "filled with all unrighteousness, fornication, wickedness, covetousness, maliciousness".
Lyde travelled to Palestine in 1856, and as he rode on his horse into Nablus he shot and killed a beggar who was trying to steal his coat. It was either an accidental discharge of the gun or Lyde had lost his nerve and fired. An anti-Christians riot ensued during which Christian houses were burned and several Greeks and Prussians were killed. Lyde took refuge in the town governor's house but was eventually put on trial for murder. The only witnesses were three women who accused him of attacking and deliberately killing the beggar. However, the testimony of women was inadmissible in Ottoman law and he was acquitted of murder, although he was ordered to pay compensation to the man's family. The violent rioting continued for several months and even spread to Gaza City.
Lyde developed a deranged mental state and had delusions that he was John the Baptist, Jesus Christ or God himself. However, he subsequently recovered sufficiently to write a book on the Alawites, which he completed in Cairo shortly before his death. He died in Alexandria in Egypt in April 1860. He was 35 years old. He bequeathed his mission at Bhamra to two American missionaries, R. J. Dodds and J. Beattie of the Reformed Presbyterian Church.
His description of Alawite doctrines was based on a document called Kitab al-mashyakha ("The Manual of the Shaykhs"), which he said he had bought from a Christian merchant from Latakia. This document appears to have differed in certain respects from other sources on Alawite doctrine. For many years it was thought to have been lost and only available through the extracts quoted in translation by Lyde. In 2013, it was announced that the document Lyde had used had been discovered in the archives of the Old Library of Jesus College, Cambridge. Lyde had bequeathed it to his old college, and, apparently, had sent it to Cambridge shortly before his death.
His writing reveals a negative view of the Alawites and, in particular, he was critical of what he saw as their brigandage, feuds, lying and divorce. He went as far as saying that "the state of Alawi society was a perfect hell upon earth". The Asian Mystery became a popular book and has been described as "colourful" but "unreliable" in some respects. Nevertheless, Lyde's account remains an influential source on Alawites, and, for instance, is widely quoted on the internet.
Publications and influence
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