Loyalties
Author : Sir Arnold T. Wilson
Publisher :
Page : pages
File Size : 32,99 MB
Release : 1930
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Sir Arnold T. Wilson
Publisher :
Page : pages
File Size : 32,99 MB
Release : 1930
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Arnold T. Wilson
Publisher : Wipf and Stock
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 46,10 MB
Release : 2023-04-25
Category :
ISBN : 9781666774054
Author : Sir Arnold Talbot Wilson
Publisher :
Page : 552 pages
File Size : 13,9 MB
Release : 1931
Category : Great Britain
ISBN :
Author : Charles Tripp
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 356 pages
File Size : 15,18 MB
Release : 2002-05-27
Category : History
ISBN : 9780521529006
This updated edition of Charles Tripp's A History of Iraq covers events since 1998, and looks at present-day developments right up to mid-2002. Since its establishment by the British in the 1920s Iraq has witnessed the rise and fall of successive regimes, culminating in the dictatorship of Saddam Hussein. Tripp traces Iraq's political history from its nineteenth-century roots in the Ottoman empire, to the development of the state, its transformation from monarchy to republic and the rise of the Ba'th party and the ascendancy of Saddam Hussein.
Author : Arnold T. Wilson
Publisher : Wipf and Stock Publishers
Page : 442 pages
File Size : 24,28 MB
Release : 2023-04-25
Category : History
ISBN : 1666774049
Author : Jack Bernstein
Publisher : InterLingua Publishing
Page : 247 pages
File Size : 17,84 MB
Release : 2008
Category : History
ISBN : 1602990174
The story about the British invasion on Iraq in 1914.
Author : Harless D. Wagoner
Publisher :
Page : 230 pages
File Size : 25,73 MB
Release : 1900
Category : Great Britain
ISBN :
Author : Priya Satia
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Page : 473 pages
File Size : 48,9 MB
Release : 2008-04-02
Category : History
ISBN : 0199887101
At the dawn of the twentieth century, British intelligence agents began to venture in increasing numbers to the Arab lands of the Ottoman Empire, a region of crucial geopolitical importance spanning present-day Iraq, Jordan, Syria, and Saudi Arabia. They were drawn by the twin objectives of securing the land route to India and finding adventure and spiritualism in a mysterious and ancient land. But these competing desires created a dilemma: how were they to discreetly and patriotically gather facts in a region they were drawn to for its legendary inscrutability and by the promise of fame and escape from Britain? In this groundbreaking book, Priya Satia tracks the intelligence community's tactical grappling with this problem and the myriad cultural, institutional, and political consequences of their methodological choices during and after the Great War. She tells the story of how an imperial state in thrall to the cultural notions of equivocal agents and beset by an equally captivated and increasingly assertive mass democracy invented a wholly new style of "covert empire" centered on the world's first brutal aerial surveillance regime in Iraq. Drawing on a wealth of archival sources--from the fictional to the recently declassified--this book explains how Britons reconciled genuine ethical scruples with the actual violence of their Middle Eastern empire. As it vividly demonstrates how imperialism was made fit for an increasingly democratic and anti-imperial world, what emerges is a new interpretation of the military, cultural, and political legacies of the Great War and of the British Empire in the twentieth century. Unpacking the romantic fascination with "Arabia" as the land of espionage, Spies in Arabia presents a stark tale of poetic ambition, war, terror, and failed redemption--and the prehistory of our present discontents.
Author : Edwin Black
Publisher : Dialog Press
Page : 731 pages
File Size : 44,63 MB
Release : 2010-11-16
Category : History
ISBN : 091415365X
The Nazis needed oil. The Arabs wanted the Jews and British out of Iraq. The Mufti of Jerusalem forged a far-ranging alliance with Hitler resulting in the June 1941 Farhud, a Nazi-style pogrom in Baghdad that set the stage for the devastation and expulsion of the Iraqi Jews and ultimately almost a million Jews across the Arab world. The Farhud was the beginning of what became a broad Nazi-Arab alliance in the Holocaust.
Author : Bartle Bull
Publisher : Grove Press
Page : 414 pages
File Size : 48,6 MB
Release : 2024-09-10
Category : History
ISBN : 0802162517
The epic, five millennia history of the region between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers that was the birthplace of civilization and remains today the essential crossroads between East and West At the start of the fourth millennium BC, at the edge of historical time, civilization first arrived with the advent of cities and the invention of writing that began to replace legend with history. This occurred on the floodplains of southern Iraq where the great rivers Tigris and Euphrates meet the Persian Gulf. By 3000 BC, a city called Uruk (from which “Iraq” is derived) had 80,000 residents. Indeed, as Bartle Bull reveals in his magisterial history, “if one divides the 5,000 years of human civilization into ten periods of five centuries each, during the first nine of these the world’s leading city was in one of the three regions of current day Iraq”—or to use its Greek name, Mesopotamia. Inspired by extensive reporting from the region to spend a decade delving deep into its history, Bull chronicles the story of Iraq from the exploits of Gilgamesh (almost certainly an historical figure) to the fall of the Iraqi monarchy in 1958 that ushered in its familiar modern era. The land between the rivers has been the melting pot and battleground of countless outsiders, from the Akkadians of Hammurabi and the Greeks of Alexander to the Ottomans of Suleiman the Magnificent. Here, by the waters of Babylon, Judaism was born and the Sunni-Shia schism took its bloody shape. Central themes play out over the millennia: humanity’s need for freedom versus the co-eternal urge of tyranny; the ever-present conflict and cross-fertilization of East and West with Iraq so often the hinge. We tend to view today’s tensions in the Middle East through the prism of the last hundred years since the Treaty of Versailles imposed a controversial realignment of its borders. Bartle Bull’s remarkable, sweeping achievement reminds us that the region defined by the land between the rivers has for five millennia played a uniquely central role on the global stage.