Promised lands : the British and the Ottoman Middle East /

Napoleon's invasion of Egypt in 1798 showed how vulnerable India was to attack by France and Russia. It forced the British Empire to try to secure the two routes that a European might use to reach the subcontinent-through Egypt and the Red Sea, and through Baghdad and the Persian Gulf. Promised...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Parry, J. P. (Jonathan Philip), 1957-
Published: Princeton University Press,
Publisher Address: Princeton, New Jersey :
Publication Dates: [2022]
Literature type: Book
Language: English
Subjects:
Summary: Napoleon's invasion of Egypt in 1798 showed how vulnerable India was to attack by France and Russia. It forced the British Empire to try to secure the two routes that a European might use to reach the subcontinent-through Egypt and the Red Sea, and through Baghdad and the Persian Gulf. Promised Lands is a panoramic history of this vibrant and explosive age.0Charting the development of Britain's political interest in the Middle East from the Napoleonic Wars to the Crimean War in the 1850s, Jonathan Parry examines the various strategies employed by British and Indian officials, describing how they sought influence with local Arabs, Mamluks, Kurds, Christians, and Jews. He tells a story of commercial and naval power-boosted by the arrival of steamships in the 1830s-and discusses how classical and biblical history fed into British visions of what these lands might become. The region was subject to the Ottoman Empire, yet the sultan's grip on it appeared weak. Should Ottoman claims to sovereignty be recognised and exploited, or ignored and opposed? Could the Sultan's government be made to support British objectives, or would it always favour France or Russia? Promised Lands shows how what started as a geopolitical contest became a drama about diplomatic competition, religion, race, and the unforeseen consequences of history.
Carrier Form: xviii, 453 pages : maps ; 25 cm
Bibliography: Includes bibliographical references (pages 409-433) and index.
ISBN: 9780691181899
0691181896
Index Number: DS63
CLC: D856.123.7-09
K107.8-095.61
K370.4
Call Number: K370.4/P264
Contents: The Lands, Their Rulers, and Their Aggressors --
Strategies and Visions --
The Claims of Chronology --
A Tale of Two Obelisks --
Napoleon, India, and the Battle for Egypt --
Grenville, the Eurocentric Approach, and Sidney Smith --
Dundas, India, and the Blue Water Strategy --
Sealing off Egypt and the Red Sea --
The Search for Stability in Egypt, 1801-3 --
Egyptian Chaos, the French Threat, and the British Response, 1803-7 --
The Red Sea: Popham and Valentia, Arabs and Abyssinians --
Striving for Leverage in Baghdad --
Harford Jones: Failure of the Dundas Strategy --
Claudius Rich: Pomp and Mediation in an Indian Outstation --
The Wahhabi, the Qawasim, and British Sea Power in the Gulf --
"Our Koordistan": The Extraordinary Ambitions of Claudius Rich --
Rich's Legacy --
Filling the Arabian Vacuum: Steam, the Arabs, and the Defence of India in the 1830s --
Ottoman Collapse and Russian Threat --
Steam and Plague: Progress and Decay --
Steamers and Arabs in Mesopotamia --
Steam, the Red Sea, and Southern Arabia --
Hobhouse, Palmerston, the Middle East, and India --
Britain, Egypt, and Syria in the Heyday of Mehmet Ali --
Samuel Briggs and the Afterlife of the Levant Company --
Economic and Cultural Exchanges --
Steam and the Two Faces of Mehmet Ali's Egypt --
Benthamism, Islam, and the Pursuit of Good Government in Egypt --
Syria, Liberalism, and the Russian Threat to Asia --
New Voices on Syria: Embassy Ottomanists and Christian Tourists --
Constantinople, London, the Eastern Crisis, and the Middle East --
David Urquhart, Islam, and Free Commerce --
Factional Gridlock at Constantinople --
Ending the Stalemate --
Britain, France, and the Future of Syria --
Reshid, Richard Wood, and the Edict of Gülhane --
Napier or Wood, Smith or Elgin, Cairo or Constantinople? --
The Brief History of British Religious Sectarianism in Syria and K