It is known by historians that the Denshawai trial (June 1906) proved a turning point in the history of the British occupation of Egypt: it ignited a fierce political debate in Egypt and in Britain, and eventually caused the resignation of Lord Cromer, the redoutable British Consul General and de facto ruler of Egypt since 1882. This paper attempts a survey of the corpus of texts in English generated by the Denshawai trial, taking into account the records of the Parliamentary debates, and then focussing on the involvement of intellectuals and men of letters. It highlights the crucial role of Wilfrid Scawen Blunt, arabophile, poet and anti-imperialist, in making the facts known and provoking a public outcry in Britain; the mobilization which...
The First World War's 1916 Arab Revolt has become, in the West, a renowned episode in part because ...
This dissertation explores the experiences of Egyptian peasants from the Delta province of Minufiyya...
Amid the recent outpouring of books and articles rehabilitating the purposes and practices of empire...
In 1906, five British officers went on a pigeon hunt in a small ...
Wilfrid Scawen Blunt (1840-1922) was a member of the landed aristocracy well connected with the inne...
The British invasion and occupation of Egypt in 1882 has long been a subject of interest for British...
The 300th anniversary of William Shakespeare’s death in 1916 coincided with an unprecedented politic...
This study examines British strategies for social control during the Arab revolt in Palestine in 193...
By the 1880s, Wilfrid Scawen Blunt had become ‘the avatar for anti-imperial causes’ and an active fo...
After the failure of independence war in 1857 the British fully subjugated the sub-continent. Every ...
This article explores the role of both pro-nationalist and pro-imperialist voices in Egypt and Brita...
No phase of English or European history is more interesting than that which deals with imperialism. ...
Over the course of 1881–82, carefully constructed images of Ahmed Urabi became the face of the Anglo...
By the 1950s, the Suez Canal was crucial for Britain's trade in the Middle East, for its communicati...
This paper argues that the British colonial government\u27s use of propaganda played a key role in i...
The First World War's 1916 Arab Revolt has become, in the West, a renowned episode in part because ...
This dissertation explores the experiences of Egyptian peasants from the Delta province of Minufiyya...
Amid the recent outpouring of books and articles rehabilitating the purposes and practices of empire...
In 1906, five British officers went on a pigeon hunt in a small ...
Wilfrid Scawen Blunt (1840-1922) was a member of the landed aristocracy well connected with the inne...
The British invasion and occupation of Egypt in 1882 has long been a subject of interest for British...
The 300th anniversary of William Shakespeare’s death in 1916 coincided with an unprecedented politic...
This study examines British strategies for social control during the Arab revolt in Palestine in 193...
By the 1880s, Wilfrid Scawen Blunt had become ‘the avatar for anti-imperial causes’ and an active fo...
After the failure of independence war in 1857 the British fully subjugated the sub-continent. Every ...
This article explores the role of both pro-nationalist and pro-imperialist voices in Egypt and Brita...
No phase of English or European history is more interesting than that which deals with imperialism. ...
Over the course of 1881–82, carefully constructed images of Ahmed Urabi became the face of the Anglo...
By the 1950s, the Suez Canal was crucial for Britain's trade in the Middle East, for its communicati...
This paper argues that the British colonial government\u27s use of propaganda played a key role in i...
The First World War's 1916 Arab Revolt has become, in the West, a renowned episode in part because ...
This dissertation explores the experiences of Egyptian peasants from the Delta province of Minufiyya...
Amid the recent outpouring of books and articles rehabilitating the purposes and practices of empire...