The joint British-Ottoman campaign and the end of the French in Egypt

Title The joint British-Ottoman campaign and the end of the French in Egypt
Author Al-Dulaimi, Waiting for Hadi Jassim, Al-Dulaimi, Qabas Natiq Muhammad
Type Book
Language Arabic
Digital Yes
Manuscript No
Library: Royal Danish Library
Library Asset ID ISSN: 2536-9504
Record ID cdi_almandumah_primary_1174925
Library Location DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals
Notes The Arab states subject to Ottoman rule were not attacked by European political forces until the French campaign to Egypt in 1798 AD. In the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, Egypt was subjected to a French invasion led by Napoleon Bonaparte, as a result of French ambitions as well as French-British competition. The French campaign demonstrated the importance of the Middle East, especially Egypt's great strategic importance between the Mediterranean and the Red Seas, which made it an important center for East-West trade. In addition to its geographical location in the middle of the three continents: Asia, Africa and Europe. This aroused the ire of major European countries, including Britain, which increased its interest, thus increasing colonial competition. Napoleon's control of Egypt made it a French colony that could be used as a base for launching attacks on the British colonies in India. Which greatly affects Britain's trade. Therefore, British diplomacy played an essential role in establishing European balance, so it began working to support Ottoman sovereignty over Egypt and expel the French from it, not only to guarantee its interests, but to establish its footing in the Middle East region.
Görüntüle Majallat buḥūth al-Sharq al-Awsaṭ fī al-ʻulūm al-insānīyah wa-al-adabīyah, 2021 (64), p.30-64
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Royal Danish Library - Ottoman library catalog search Royal Danish Library

The joint British-Ottoman campaign and the end of the French in Egypt

Author Al-Dulaimi, Waiting for Hadi Jassim, Al-Dulaimi, Qabas Natiq Muhammad
Type Book
Language Arabic
Digital Yes
Manuscript No
Library Royal Danish Library
Library Asset ID ISSN: 2536-9504
Record ID cdi_almandumah_primary_1174925
Library Location DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals
Notes The Arab states subject to Ottoman rule were not attacked by European political forces until the French campaign to Egypt in 1798 AD. In the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, Egypt was subjected to a French invasion led by Napoleon Bonaparte, as a result of French ambitions as well as French-British competition. The French campaign demonstrated the importance of the Middle East, especially Egypt's great strategic importance between the Mediterranean and the Red Seas, which made it an important center for East-West trade. In addition to its geographical location in the middle of the three continents: Asia, Africa and Europe. This aroused the ire of major European countries, including Britain, which increased its interest, thus increasing colonial competition. Napoleon's control of Egypt made it a French colony that could be used as a base for launching attacks on the British colonies in India. Which greatly affects Britain's trade. Therefore, British diplomacy played an essential role in establishing European balance, so it began working to support Ottoman sovereignty over Egypt and expel the French from it, not only to guarantee its interests, but to establish its footing in the Middle East region.
Görüntüle Majallat buḥūth al-Sharq al-Awsaṭ fī al-ʻulūm al-insānīyah wa-al-adabīyah, 2021 (64), p.30-64
Royal Danish Library - Ottoman library catalog search
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