A History of the Modern Middle East

Höfundur William L. Cleveland; Martin Bunton

Útgefandi Taylor & Francis

Snið ePub

Print ISBN 9780367516468

Útgáfa 7

Útgáfuár 2024

6.090 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Cover
  • Half Title
  • Endorsements
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • List of Illustrations
  • Preface to the Seventh Edition
  • Acknowledgements
  • A Note About Place Names and Transliteration
  • Part One The Development of Islamic Civilisation to the Eighteenth Century
  • 1 The Rise and Expansion of Islam
  • Pre-Islamic Arabia
  • Muhammad and the Foundations of Islam
  • The Arab Conquests and the First Empire
  • The First Civil War and the End of the Rashidun Caliphate
  • From Arab Exclusivism to Islamic Universalism: The Umayyad and Abbasid Empires
  • Conclusion
  • 2 The Development of Islamic Civilisation to the Fifteenth Century
  • Patterns of Islamic History
  • The Creation and Uses of Wealth
  • Islamic Rituals and Institutions
  • Two Versions of Leadership: Sunni Caliph and Shi’a Imam
  • The Middle East From the Eleventh to the Fifteenth Centuries: An Overview
  • Conclusion
  • 3 The Ottoman and Safavid Empires: A New Imperial Synthesis
  • The Rise of the Ottoman Empire
  • Ottoman Ruling Institutions and Attitudes
  • The Loss of Ottoman Superiority
  • The Triumph of Shi’ism: The Safavid Empire of Iran, 1501–1736
  • Conclusion: The Sunni-Shi’a Struggle for Iraq
  • Part Two The Beginnings of the Era of Transformation
  • 4 Forging a New Synthesis: The Pattern of Reforms, 1789–1849
  • Selim III (1789–1806): Between Old and New
  • A Revived Centre of Power: The Egypt of Muhammad Ali, 1805–1848
  • Nationalism and Great Power Intervention: The Greek Revolt, 1821–1829
  • Sultan Mahmud II (1808–1839): Centralisation and Transformation
  • Conclusion
  • 5 The Ottoman Empire and Egypt During the Era of the Tanzimat
  • The Tanzimat: Continued Ottoman Reform Under the Bureaucrats
  • The Arab Provinces of Greater Syria During the Tanzimat
  • Egypt During the Era of Civilian Reform
  • Conclusion: The Dualism of the Nineteenth-Century Reforms
  • 6 Egypt and Iran in the Late Nineteenth Century
  • England on the Nile: The British Occupation of Egypt, 1882–1914
  • Iran During the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century
  • Conclusion
  • 7 The Response of Islamic Society
  • Religious Assertiveness and Authoritarian Reform: The Era of Abdul Hamid II
  • Islamic Puritanism on the Tribal Frontiers: The Wahhabi, Sanusi, and Mahdiyyah Movements
  • The Reform of High Islam
  • Emerging Currents of Arab Cultural Distinctiveness
  • Conclusion
  • 8 The Era of the Young Turks and the Iranian Constitutionalists
  • The Revolt of 1908 and the Young Turks in Power
  • The Period of the Iranian Constitutional Revolution
  • Conclusion
  • 9 World War I and the End of the Ottoman Order
  • The Middle East in World War I: An Overview of Military and Diplomatic Initiatives
  • The Peace Settlement
  • Conclusion: The End of the Ottoman Order in the Middle East
  • Part Three The Struggle for Independence: The Inter-war Era to the End of World War II
  • 10 Authoritarian Reform in Turkey and Iran
  • The Atatürk Era in Turkey
  • Iran Under Reza Shah
  • Turkey and Iran During World War II: Sovereignty and Occupation
  • Conclusion
  • 11 The Arab Struggle for Independence: Egypt, Iraq, and Transjordan From the Inter-war Era to 1945
  • The Struggle for Power in Egypt in the Inter-war Period
  • An Overview of World War II
  • Egypt During World War II: Pivot of the British Defence System
  • Iraq Between the Wars
  • Iraq During World War II
  • Transjordan: The Desert Mandate
  • Conclusion
  • 12 The Arab Struggle for Independence: Syria, Lebanon, and Saudi Arabia From the Inter-war Era to 1945
  • The French Mandate in Syria and Lebanon
  • Lebanon Under the Mandate: The Establishment of Confessional Politics
  • Syria and Lebanon During World War II: The Troubled Path to Independence
  • New Kingdom in Arabia: The Rise of the Saudi State
  • The Search for Identity: Regionalism, Arabism, Islam
  • Conclusion
  • 13 The Palestine Mandate and the Birth of the State of Israel
  • The Emergence of Political Zionism
  • The Balfour Declaration
  • The Mandate for Palestine: British Administration
  • The Palestinian Arab Community: Leadership and Institutions
  • The Jewish Community: Leadership and Institutions
  • Immigration and Land
  • Communal Conflict and the British Response
  • World War II and the Birth of the State of Israel
  • The First Arab-Israeli War
  • Conclusion
  • Part Four The Independent Middle East From the End of World War II to the 1970s
  • 14 Democracy and Authoritarianism: Turkey and Iran
  • The Role of the United States in the Post-war Years
  • Turkey: The Transition to a Multiparty System
  • Turkish Foreign Policy and the Cyprus Question
  • Iran: The Re-establishment of Royal Autocracy
  • Conclusion
  • 15 The Middle East in the Age of Nasser: The Egyptian Base
  • The Paralysis of the Old Regime, 1945–1952
  • The Free Officers and the Coup d’État of 1952
  • Foreign Relations After 1952
  • The Adoption of Arab Socialism
  • Conclusion
  • 16 The Middle East in the Age of Nasser: The Radicalisation of Arab Politics
  • Syria: The Military in Politics
  • Iraq: The End of the Monarchy
  • The Hashimite Kingdom of Jordan: The Survival of Monarchy
  • Lebanon: The Precarious Sectarian Balance
  • Israel, the Arab States, and the June War
  • Conclusion: The Nasser Era in Perspective
  • 17 Israel and the Palestinians From 1948 to the 1970s
  • The Israeli Political System and Political Culture
  • The Elections of 1977: Israel in Transition
  • The Palestinian Factor After 1948
  • Conclusion
  • Part Five The Resurgence of Islam: The Middle East From the 1970s to the 1991 Gulf War
  • 18 The Iranian Revolution and the Revival of Islam
  • The Stages of Revolution in Iran
  • The Revival of Islam
  • Conclusion
  • 19 Changing Patterns of War and Peace: Egypt and Lebanon in the 1970s and 1980s
  • Egypt Under Sadat: Domestic and Diplomatic Realignments
  • The Lebanese Civil War, 1975–1990
  • Egypt in the 1980s
  • Conclusion
  • 20 The Arabian Peninsula in the Petroleum Era
  • The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
  • Kuwait, Oman, and the Smaller Gulf States
  • Conclusion
  • 21 The Consolidation of Authoritarian Rule in Syria and Iraq: The Regimes of Hafiz al-Asad and Saddam Husayn
  • Syria in the al-Asad Era
  • Iraq in the Era of Saddam Husayn and the Ba’th
  • The Iran-Iraq War, 1980–1988
  • Conclusion
  • Part Six Challenges to the Existing Order: The Middle East in the 1990s and 2000s
  • 22 The Palestinian Intifada and the 1991 Gulf War
  • The Intifada From 1987 to 1991
  • The Gulf Crisis of 1990–1991
  • The Aftermath of the Gulf War
  • Conclusion
  • 23 A Peace So Near, a Peace So Far: Israeli-Palestinian Relations Since the 1991 Gulf War
  • The Road to the Oslo Peace Accords
  • The Unravelling of the Oslo Peace Process
  • The One-State Reality
  • Conclusion
  • 24 Patterns of Continuity and Change in Turkey, Iran, and Lebanon Since the 1990s
  • Turkey and Iran: Nations at a Crossroads
  • Hizbullah and the Struggle for Lebanon
  • Conclusion
  • 25 America’s Troubled Moment in the Middle East
  • The Policy of Dual Containment
  • Al-Qa’ida and the Attacks of September 11, 2001
  • The Occupation of Iraq
  • Iran’s Nuclear Program
  • Conclusion
  • Part Seven Revolution and Counter-Revolution: The Middle East Since 2011
  • 26 The 2011 Arab Uprisings and Their Aftermath
  • Understanding the Uprisings’ Dynamics
  • Egypt
  • Syria
  • Yemen and Libya
  • Saudi Arabia and the Gulf Monarchies
  • Conclusion: Connecting Threads
  • 27 A Shifting Geopolitical Landscape
  • The Gulf Divided
  • Saudi-Qatar Rift
  • Saudi-Iranian Rivalry
  • Multipolarity
  • Conclusion
  • List of Major Leaders
  • Glossary
  • Select Bibliography
  • Index

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