Britain's Moment in the Middle East: was it an imperial triumph
or a decisive staging post in the end-of-empire story? Sir Percy
Cox (1864-1937) was a vital figure in the history of the British
Empire in the Middle East, part of the pantheon with such legends
as T.E. Lawrence and Gertrude Bell. As High Commissioner in Iraq
from 1920 to 1923 he presided over the birth of modern Iraq - the
climax of his career -- but left an infant state fraught with
political, ethnic and religious problems which have bedevilled Iraq
and the Middle East to the present day.
John Townsend paints a convincing picture of Britain's global
empire and brings Cox to life as an archetypal patrician proconsul.
This is the first major biography of Cox, based on extensive
research in original sources and long experience in the region. It
strikingly illustrates the troubled contemporary history of Iraq
and the modern Middle East and will become the standard work on
Cox.
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