Author
Moussa, Ghada Khamis Shaaban
Type
Book
Language
Arabic
Digital
Yes
Manuscript
No
Library
Royal Danish Library
Library Asset ID
ISSN: 1110-614X
Record ID
cdi_almandumah_primary_1510341
Library Location
DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals
Notes
The research dealt with the circumstances of the Ottoman Empire sending an official delegation to Egypt following the Egyptian army’s demonstration in Abdeen on September 9, 1881 AD, in light of the doubts and doubts that dominated the Khedive, the Egyptian government, and the English and French circles regarding the Ottoman intervention in Egypt, which in turn succeeded in ruling out the issue of sending Ottoman military forces, as well as sending a delegation of a military nature. The matter ended with sending a civilian Ottoman delegation, albeit one with previous military backgrounds and someone close to Sultan Abdul Hamid II personally. The research presented the declared and undeclared motives of the Ottoman Sultan for sending this delegation, while shedding light on the positions of the Egyptian ruler, the Egyptian government, and European circles, especially Britain and France, as well as public opinion in Egypt, the Ottoman Empire, and Europe, through reading British documents and contemporary newspapers and magazines in Arabic, English, and French. The research concluded that the Egyptian, British and French circles had imposed strict control on the movements of the Ottoman delegation so that it would not be able to obtain information that would affect the interests of these parties, and it revealed Britain’s success in eliminating Ottoman military intervention and putting France in the confrontation with Istanbul and Cairo until it had the opportunity to intervene militarily in Egypt, which is what actually happened in 1882 AD, less than a year after the Ottoman delegation left Egypt and Britain prepared to occupy it. Militarily.
Görüntüle
Mağallaẗ Kulliyyaẗ Al-Adāb Bi-Qinā, 2024 (63), p.632-679