Show menu
Search form
Search the site
Explore Qatar Digital Library
Articles From Our Experts
Glossary
About
العربية
English
Search form
Search the site
العربية
English
Articles From Our Experts
Filter articles by:
What
Introductory Articles
(0)
Arabic Manuscripts
(0)
The British Empire in the Gulf
(4)
Commerce and Communication
(1)
People and Places
(0)
Culture and Religion
(0)
Sciences and Medicine
(0)
Power and Politics
(0)
Sound and Music
(0)
Introductory Articles
(0)
Arabic Manuscripts
(0)
The British Empire in the Gulf
(4)
Commerce and Communication
(1)
People and Places
(0)
Culture and Religion
(0)
Sciences and Medicine
(0)
Power and Politics
(0)
Sound and Music
(0)
Where
Bahrain
(0)
Egypt
(0)
India
(0)
Iran
(0)
Iraq
(4)
Kuwait
(0)
Oman
(0)
Pakistan
(0)
Qatar
(0)
Saudi Arabia
(0)
United Arab Emirates
(0)
Yemen
(0)
Bahrain
(0)
Egypt
(0)
India
(0)
Iran
(0)
Iraq
(4)
Kuwait
(0)
Oman
(0)
Pakistan
(0)
Qatar
(0)
Saudi Arabia
(0)
United Arab Emirates
(0)
Yemen
(0)
When
Pre-1600
(0)
1600–1649
(0)
1650–1699
(0)
1700–1749
(0)
1750–1799
(1)
1800‒1849
(1)
1850‒1899
(1)
1900–1949
(3)
1950–1999
(0)
Pre-1600
(0)
1600–1649
(0)
1650–1699
(0)
1700–1749
(0)
1750–1799
(1)
1800‒1849
(1)
1850‒1899
(1)
1900–1949
(3)
1950–1999
(0)
4
of
239
articles to explore
The uneasy union between British and Kurdish allies during the First World War gave way to hostilities in the war’s aftermath, as Britain failed to deliver on Kurdish hopes for independence.
Anglo-Kurdish Relations during the Mesopotamia Campaign (1914-1918)
The subject of railways appears time and again in the India Office Records. What was Britain’s obsession with them and how did they transform how Britain thought about, protected, and ran its empire?
Technologies of Power: Railway Records and What They Can Tell Us
From its foundation at the end of the eighteenth century, the British Residency in Baghdad occupied a strategically important position, linking together various strands of British imperial engagement in the region.
The British Residency in Baghdad
The British military constructed miles of railway in Mesopotamia during their war against the Ottoman Empire in the early twentieth century. In doing so, they also laid the foundations for a post-war colonial regime.
The Imperial Railway in British-Occupied Mesopotamia
http://www.qdl.qa/en/articles-from-our-experts?places_in_the_arab_world%5B3%5D=643&themes%5B3%5D=632