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Reshid, Richard Wood, and the Edict of Gülhane

  • Jonathan Parry
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Promised Lands
This chapter is in the book Promised Lands
© 2022 Princeton University Press, Princeton

© 2022 Princeton University Press, Princeton

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents vii
  3. List of Maps xi
  4. Preliminary Note xiii
  5. Introduction
  6. The Lands, Their Rulers, and Their Aggressors 1
  7. Strategies and Visions 7
  8. The Claims of Chronology 12
  9. A Tale of Two Obelisks 19
  10. Chapter 1
  11. Napoleon, India, and the Battle for Egypt 22
  12. Grenville, the Eurocentric Approach, and Sidney Smith 23
  13. Dundas, India, and the Blue Water Strategy 36
  14. Chapter 2
  15. Sealing off Egypt and the Red Sea 46
  16. The Search for Stability in Egypt, 1801–3 47
  17. Egyptian Chaos, the French Threat, and the British Response, 1803–7 57
  18. The Red Sea: Popham and Valentia, Arabs and Abyssinians 67
  19. Chapter 3
  20. Striving for Leverage in Baghdad 80
  21. Harford Jones: Failure of the Dundas Strategy 82
  22. Claudius Rich: Pomp and Mediation in an Indian Outstation 88
  23. The Wahhabi, the Qawasim, and British Sea Power in the Gulf 98
  24. “Our Koordistan”: The Extraordinary Ambitions of Claudius Rich 103
  25. Rich’s Legacy 108
  26. Chapter 4
  27. Filling the Arabian Vacuum: Steam, the Arabs, and the Defence of India in the 1830s 111
  28. Ottoman Collapse and Russian Threat 112
  29. Steam and Plague: Progress and Decay 117
  30. Steamers and Arabs in Mesopotamia 123
  31. Steam, the Red Sea, and Southern Arabia 130
  32. Hobhouse, Palmerston, the Middle East, and India 136
  33. Chapter 5
  34. Britain, Egypt, and Syria in the Heyday of Mehmet Ali 144
  35. Samuel Briggs and the Afterlife of the Levant Company 145
  36. Economic and Cultural Exchanges 149
  37. Steam and the Two Faces of Mehmet Ali’s Egypt 153
  38. Benthamism, Islam, and the Pursuit of Good Government in Egypt 158
  39. Syria, Liberalism, and the Russian Threat to Asia 161
  40. New Voices on Syria: Embassy Ottomanists and Christian Tourists 168
  41. Chapter 6
  42. Constantinople, London, the Eastern Crisis, and the Middle East 174
  43. David Urquhart, Islam, and Free Commerce 177
  44. Factional Gridlock at Constantinople 182
  45. Ending the Stalemate 185
  46. Britain, France, and the Future of Syria 189
  47. Reshid, Richard Wood, and the Edict of Gülhane 193
  48. Napier or Wood, Smith or Elgin, Cairo or Constantinople? 198
  49. Chapter 7
  50. The Brief History of British Religious Sectarianism in Syria and Kurdistan 206
  51. Protestant Missions and Eastern Christians 209
  52. Jerusalem, City of Sin 215
  53. The Appeal to Jews and Its Limits 219
  54. The War of Institutional Christianity over Syria 224
  55. The Druze and the Perils of Sectarianism in Syria 232
  56. The Nestorians of Kurdistan 239
  57. Chapter 8
  58. Confining the Sectarian Problem: Syria, Kurdistan, France, and the Porte 249
  59. Finding a Balance in Lebanon 251
  60. Persecution, Protestantism, and the Tanzimat 257
  61. Institutionalising Protestant Weakness 262
  62. The Problem of Order in Kurdistan 264
  63. Britain, France, and Religious Protection in the New Kurdistan 271
  64. Chapter 9
  65. Stratford Canning and the Politics of Christianity and Islam 278
  66. Canning, Russia, and Islam 279
  67. Palmerston, Canning, and the Liberal Project 283
  68. Henry Layard and the Lessons of Nineveh 290
  69. Chapter 10
  70. The Ring of Steam, the Lands of Islam, and the Search for Order 298
  71. Ottoman Sovereignty and the Persian Border 299
  72. Conflicts with Ottomanism: Muhammara and the Gulf 304
  73. Steam Power, Economic Improvement, and Regional Security in Baghdad 309
  74. Aden: A New Centre of Stability 317
  75. The French, the Ottomans, and the Western Red Sea Harbours 323
  76. Chapter 11
  77. The British Corridor in Egypt 334
  78. England in Egypt, Egypt in England 335
  79. Mehmet Ali and the Transit 341
  80. Abbas and the Railway Project 346
  81. A Rage for Order 349
  82. The French and the Sultan 353
  83. Chapter 12
  84. Jerusalem and the Crimean War 356
  85. Unholy Places 356
  86. Whose War? 362
  87. Conclusion 373
  88. Acknowledgments 405
  89. Bibliography 409
  90. Index 435
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