The Routledge Atlas of the Arab-Israeli Conflict

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Psychology Press, 2002 - 156 páginas
This atlas offers a balanced and comprehensive visual history of the age-old Arab-Israeli conflict, spanning from the early history of the region (c. 1,000 B.C.) to the foundation of the state of Israel, the intifada, and the peace initiatives of the 1990s. Clear, informative, and accessible maps detail the course of major events, including the Six Day War, the October War, and the Arab world's reaction to the Camp David agreements, and offer useful insight into the social, political, military, and diplomatic dimensions of the current situation. Powerful and telling quotations from those involved on both sides, and detailed annotations provide important historical background on this volatile conflict.
 

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Contenido

Britain and the Arabs 19171971
6
The AntiJewish Riots of 1929
12
1939
28
Arab Attacks and the Jewish Reaction
38
The Battle for the Jerusalem Roads
43
The Israeli War of Independence 1948
45
Israels Sense of Insecurity 19491967
51
Terrorist Raids into Israel 19511956
57
The Israeli Conquest of the Golan
69
THE YOM KIPPUR
83
Military Supplies to the Middle East
101
States Condemning Zionism
103
Camp David the West Bank and
109
The Israeli Withdrawal from Sinai
115
The Arab Boycott of Companies
121
Derechos de autor

Syrian Activity against Israeli
63

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Acerca del autor (2002)

Martin Gilbert, 1936 - Martin Gilbert was born in London in 1936 to a jeweler. He was sent to Canada at the age of 3 and a half in an effort to escape the war, but was returned home soon thereafter. He attended Highgate School from 1945 til 1954. Gilbert then joined the British Army for a few years, and went on to Magdalen College at Oxford. He graduated from Oxford in 1960 and wrote his first book, called "The Appeasers." In 1961, after a year of research and writing, Gilbert was asked to join a team of researchers working for Winston Churchill. At the age of 25, he was formally inducted into the team, doing all of his own research. Gilbert became known as Churchill's official biographer and has remained so for thirty years. He is a fellow of Oxford College at Merton and has written over 40 books, some on Churchill, such as his multivolume treatise called "Churchill" as well as books on the Holocaust, "Surviving the Holocaust" and books on the war itself, "The Second World War." Long after Churchill died, Gilbert chronicled his efforts in the war and in making the world a better place for all her people to exist. He continues to write on the struggles of Jews during the war and the histories of this world, from culture to culture.

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