The beginnings of Jewish settlement thought in Palestine from Napoleon’s campaign against Egypt in 1798 to the end of the reign of Abdul Hamid II in 1908
| Title | The beginnings of Jewish settlement thought in Palestine from Napoleon’s campaign against Egypt in 1798 to the end of the reign of Abdul Hamid II in 1908 |
|---|---|
| Author | Issa, Mahasen Hussein |
| Type | Book |
| Language | Arabic |
| Digital | Yes |
| Manuscript | No |
| Library: | Royal Danish Library |
| Library Asset ID | ISSN: 1024-9834 |
| Record ID | cdi_almandumah_primary_1532759 |
| Library Location | EBSCOhost Academic Search Complete |
| Notes | This research sheds light on the beginnings of Jewish settlement thought in Palestine, since Napoleon Bonaparte’s campaign against Egypt in 1798, during which he called on the Jews to return to the “land of their ancestors,” and on the major role played by foreign consulates in the Ottoman Empire to encourage Jews to immigrate to Palestine to establish their national homeland on its land, taking advantage of the turmoil that the Ottoman Empire was suffering from. This research also addresses the role that Britain played in supporting the Jews and bringing them to Palestine, until the Zionist movement was able after the Basel Conference in the late era of Sultan Abdul Hamid II to attract the Jews to organized and successive migrations to Palestine. |
| Görüntüle | al-Mustaqbal al-ʻArabī, 2025, Vol.47 (551), p.11-30 |