The Suez Crisis in 1956 has been identified as a critical turning point for Britain as the global spheres of powers shifted after the war. Although the crisis marks a deterioration of Britain’s geopolitical reputation during the 20th Century, it is not clear that the British population was aware of the severity of the crisis as it unfolded. An interrogation of the newspaper coverage of this event shows that the British were clinging on to a lingering sense of power that was rooted in their declining empire. This collective sense of identity obscured the serious implications of Britain’s military failure in the Suez Crisis
The seizure and subsequent war over the Suez Canal in 1956 is the major theme of this work. The effe...
The Abadan crisis was the initial phase of the protracted crisis in Anglo-Persian relations 1951–54,...
By the 1950s, the Suez Canal was crucial for Britain's trade in the Middle East, for its communicati...
This study examines the Suez Crisis of 1956. In July of 1956, President Gamal Abdel Nasser ordered E...
This thesis attempts to demonstrate that, far from being of little or even no importance as some aut...
The nationalization of the Suez Canal in 1956 triggered one of the gravest international crises sinc...
The thesis is an analysis of how and why British colonial policy changed after the Suez Crisis in 19...
The aim of this thesis is two-fold. Firstly, using recently-released American, British, and Israeli ...
More than a quarter of a century has elapsed now since British and French troops stormed the beaches...
The Suez Crisis of 1956 was an unmitigated disaster for the United Kingdom. For the vast majority of...
When Anthony Eden became British Prime Minister on 6 April 1955 it seemed the culmination of a brill...
This analysis re-instates the importance of the 1958 British intervention in Jordan within the study...
Bakalářská práce "Suezská krize: dopady na politiku Velké Británie a vývoj mezinárodních vztahů" se ...
Traditional historiographies of the Cold War Middle East read into Britain's postwar economic declin...
Traditional historiographies of the Cold War Middle East read into Britain's postwar economic declin...
The seizure and subsequent war over the Suez Canal in 1956 is the major theme of this work. The effe...
The Abadan crisis was the initial phase of the protracted crisis in Anglo-Persian relations 1951–54,...
By the 1950s, the Suez Canal was crucial for Britain's trade in the Middle East, for its communicati...
This study examines the Suez Crisis of 1956. In July of 1956, President Gamal Abdel Nasser ordered E...
This thesis attempts to demonstrate that, far from being of little or even no importance as some aut...
The nationalization of the Suez Canal in 1956 triggered one of the gravest international crises sinc...
The thesis is an analysis of how and why British colonial policy changed after the Suez Crisis in 19...
The aim of this thesis is two-fold. Firstly, using recently-released American, British, and Israeli ...
More than a quarter of a century has elapsed now since British and French troops stormed the beaches...
The Suez Crisis of 1956 was an unmitigated disaster for the United Kingdom. For the vast majority of...
When Anthony Eden became British Prime Minister on 6 April 1955 it seemed the culmination of a brill...
This analysis re-instates the importance of the 1958 British intervention in Jordan within the study...
Bakalářská práce "Suezská krize: dopady na politiku Velké Británie a vývoj mezinárodních vztahů" se ...
Traditional historiographies of the Cold War Middle East read into Britain's postwar economic declin...
Traditional historiographies of the Cold War Middle East read into Britain's postwar economic declin...
The seizure and subsequent war over the Suez Canal in 1956 is the major theme of this work. The effe...
The Abadan crisis was the initial phase of the protracted crisis in Anglo-Persian relations 1951–54,...
By the 1950s, the Suez Canal was crucial for Britain's trade in the Middle East, for its communicati...