Between 1820-1892, Britain’s interest in the Persian Gulf gradually expanded through a series of bilateral and multilateral treaties with the rulers of Oman, Bahrain and the emirates of the modern- day United Arab Emirates. These agreements identified the dual maritime irregularities of ‘piracy’ and slave trafficking as targets for eradication. This allowed officials in Bushire and Bombay to imagine themselves as the head of a humanitarian naval confederacy, whose justification was constructed around a new normative order, which measured itself against these inimical illegalities. To accomplish this, British officials constructed a ‘legal space’ to regulate the waters of the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman through a gradual process of Tru...
The boundaries between the seven constituents of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) form a territorial l...
By the 1920s the British Empire embraced substantially more than half the Muslim peoples of the worl...
British colonizers relied on chieftaincies as civilizing partners to implement indirect rule in the ...
For 150 years after 1820, Oman and the littoral sheikhdomsof the Arabian Gulf were known respectivel...
By 1800, the English East India Company at Bombay was, interested in achieving stability in the Pers...
In the middle of the 18th century AH/ 12th century AH, following the series of wars in India by the ...
The aim of this study is to examine the British policy toward the United Arab Emirates from 1820 unt...
The British government's announcement of its intention to withdraw 'East of Suez' by the end of 1971...
Począwszy od połowy XVIII wieku Imperium Brytyjskie było zaangażowane w budowanie silnej pozycji moc...
This article addresses the problem of jurisdiction and protection over certain categories of the loc...
This paper examines the evolution of the relationship between the territories on the southern shore ...
The 1913 Anglo-Ottoman Convention is remembered mostly for its direct political effects in Kuwait by...
Taking a closer look at a variety of human and other interconnections and especially at processes of...
This thesis explores the modern historical lineage of absolutism in Bahrain, and the history of chal...
This thesis considers the period from the establishment of regular contact between Britain and Bahra...
The boundaries between the seven constituents of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) form a territorial l...
By the 1920s the British Empire embraced substantially more than half the Muslim peoples of the worl...
British colonizers relied on chieftaincies as civilizing partners to implement indirect rule in the ...
For 150 years after 1820, Oman and the littoral sheikhdomsof the Arabian Gulf were known respectivel...
By 1800, the English East India Company at Bombay was, interested in achieving stability in the Pers...
In the middle of the 18th century AH/ 12th century AH, following the series of wars in India by the ...
The aim of this study is to examine the British policy toward the United Arab Emirates from 1820 unt...
The British government's announcement of its intention to withdraw 'East of Suez' by the end of 1971...
Począwszy od połowy XVIII wieku Imperium Brytyjskie było zaangażowane w budowanie silnej pozycji moc...
This article addresses the problem of jurisdiction and protection over certain categories of the loc...
This paper examines the evolution of the relationship between the territories on the southern shore ...
The 1913 Anglo-Ottoman Convention is remembered mostly for its direct political effects in Kuwait by...
Taking a closer look at a variety of human and other interconnections and especially at processes of...
This thesis explores the modern historical lineage of absolutism in Bahrain, and the history of chal...
This thesis considers the period from the establishment of regular contact between Britain and Bahra...
The boundaries between the seven constituents of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) form a territorial l...
By the 1920s the British Empire embraced substantially more than half the Muslim peoples of the worl...
British colonizers relied on chieftaincies as civilizing partners to implement indirect rule in the ...