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In 1920 an Arab revolt came perilously close to inflicting a
shattering defeat upon the British Empire's forces occupying Iraq
after the Great War. A huge peasant army besieged British garrisons
and bombarded them with captured artillery. British columns and
armoured trains were ambushed and destroyed, and gunboats were
captured or sunk. Britain's quest for oil was one of the principal
reasons for its continuing occupation of Iraq. However, with around
131,000 Arabs in arms at the height of the conflict, the British
were very nearly driven out. Only a massive infusion of Indian
troops prevented a humiliating rout. Enemy on the Euphrates is the
definitive account of the most serious armed uprising against
British rule in the twentieth century. Bringing central players
such as Winston Churchill, T. E. Lawrence and Gertrude Bell vividly
to life, Ian Rutledge's masterful account is a powerful reminder of
how Britain's imperial objectives sowed the seeds of Iraq's tragic
history.
There has been considerable controversy amongst social and economic
historians, anthropologists, economists, sociologists, political
scientists and other specialists concerning the nature and
structure of Latin American agrarian society. An increasing number
of studies have come to challenge the traditionally accepted view
that the backwardness of rural Latin America and its resistance to
'modernisation' are due to the persistence of feudal or non-feudal
forms of social and economic organisation. Instead attention has
shifted to an examination of the social and economic dislocations
resulting from attempts to impose capitalist forms of agrarian
enterprise on peasant or pre-capitalist societies. This book of
essays by an international group of scholars represents a
substantial empirical contribution to the ongoing debate. This book
will be of interest not only to specialists in the field, but also
to anyone wishing to understand the historical processes underlying
contemporary Latin America's complex land tenure and rural
employment problems.
In the mid-eighteenth century, most of the Mediterranean coastline
and its hinterlands were controlled by the Ottoman Empire, a vast
Islamic power regarded by Christian Europe with awe and fear. By
the end of the First World War, however, this great civilisation
had been completely subjugated, and its territories occupied by
European powers. Sea of Troubles is the definitive account of the
European conquest of the Levant and North Africa over three
centuries. Ian Rutledge reveals the intense imperial rivalry
between six European powers - Britain, France, Italy, Spain,
Austria-Hungary and Russia - who all jostled for control of the
trade, lands and wealth of the Islamic Mediterranean. The
competition between these states made their conquest a far more
difficult and extended task than they encountered elsewhere in the
world. Yet, as new contenders entered the contest, and as rivalries
intensified in the early twentieth century, events would spiral out
of control as the continent headed towards the First World War.
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