Author
Saad, Mahmoud Abdullah Muhammad
Type
Book
Language
Arabic
Digital
Yes
Manuscript
No
Library
Royal Danish Library
Library Asset ID
ISSN: 2536-9504
Record ID
cdi_almandumah_primary_1098231
Library Location
DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals
Notes
This study aims to shed light on the most important changes that occurred in the port of Haifa during the era of the British Mandate until it was opened for international trade on October 31, 1933 AD. We addressed the issue in a number of axes: In the first axis, we discussed the port of Haifa during the Ottoman era. Then, in the second axis, we discussed the political and military motives that prompted Britain to cling to the port of Haifa in the Sykes-Picot Agreement of 1916. The third axis focused on the change in the commercial situation in Palestine after the war and how that led Britain to develop the port of Hafa, and the most important studies and permits that were conducted on the Palestinian coast in 1923 AD and the results that resulted from them. We also studied the most important developments that occurred in the port as a result of the renovation operations that began in 1929 AD and ended in 1933 AD. As for the fourth axis, we discussed the opening ceremony of the port on October 31, 1933 AD, and then we concluded. The study included the fifth axis, in which we addressed the repercussions of the opening of the port at the economic and military levels. Finally, we presented the most important results we reached in the conclusion of the study.
Görüntüle
Majallat buḥūth al-Sharq al-Awsaṭ fī al-ʻulūm al-insānīyah wa-al-adabīyah, 2020 (58), p.2-42