CALLED BY T.E. LAWRENCE, 'THE MOST BRILLIANT ENGLISHMAN IN THE MIDDLE
EAST', RONALD STORRS WAS A PROMINENT BRITISH DIPLOMAT AND GOVERNOR WHO
PLAYED A LEADING ROLE IN THE ANGLO-EGYPTIAN GOVERNMENT AND THE ARAB
BUREAU IN THE YEARS IMMEDIATELY BEFORE AND DURING THE FIRST WORLD WAR.
IN 1917, STORRS BECAME MILITARY GOVERNOR OF JERUSALEM UNDER THE
BRITISH MANDATE, IN HIS WORDS, THE FIRST SUCH GOVERNOR 'SINCE PONTIUS
PILATE'.
This book tells the story of Storrs's life in the Middle East by
weaving together international affairs, regional geopolitics,
statecraft and biography to reassess his influence on British policy
during the early years of the twentieth century. During this period,
he witnessed the rise of Arab nationalism, the end of the Ottoman
Empire and the emergence of Zionism in Palestine. Storrs's
governorship of Jerusalem came at a critical juncture in the city's
post-war history, and C. Brad Faught analyses his attempts to forge a
working peace between Arabs and Jews while seeking also to preserve
and protect the Holy City's many sacred spaces. Storrs's record as a
colonial governor is examined, and the sharp divisions within
Jerusalem's body politic – some of which were created or exacerbated
by Britain's own policies – are explored.
Included in the book are many of the leading figures in British and
Middle East politics of the time, such as Edmund Allenby, Gertrude
Bell, Winston Churchill, King Faisal, Sharif Hussein, David Lloyd
George, Chaim Weizmann and Lawrence, By probing the life of an
important but understudied British diplomat, the book makes an
important contribution to deepening our understanding of the
complicated history of the modern Middle East.
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Governing British Jerusalem
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780755653423
Publisert
2025
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter