Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Hace 2 días · The British administration was formalized by the League of Nations under the Palestine Mandate in 1923, as part of the Partitioning of the Ottoman Empire following World War I.

  2. Hace 4 días · Britain‘s drive to partition the Ottoman Empire after World War One was the product of a complex interplay of strategic, economic, and ideological factors. From the need to secure imperial lifelines to India to the desire to control vital oil resources, British policymakers saw the postwar Middle East as a crucial arena for extending and ...

  3. Hace 6 días · Demographic data for most of the history of the Ottoman Empire is not quite precise. For most of the five centuries of its existence, the empire did not have easily computable valid data except figures for the number of employed citizens. Until the first official census (1881–1893), data was derived from extending the taxation ...

  4. Hace 2 días · The long-lasting effect of this campaign was the Partitioning of the Ottoman Empire, when France won the mandate for Syria and Lebanon, while the British Empire won the mandates for Mesopotamia and Palestine.

  5. Hace 4 días · "The breakup of the Ottoman Empire and the subsequent partition of its Arab provinces between Britain and France laid the foundations for the modern political map of the Middle East. Britain acquired mandates for Iraq, Transjordan and Palestine, while France took control of Syria and Lebanon."

  6. 9 de may. de 2024 · Osman I (born c. 1258—died 1324 or 1326) was the ruler of a Turkmen principality in northwestern Anatolia who is regarded as the founder of the Ottoman Turkish state. Both the name of the dynasty and the empire that the dynasty established are derived from the Arabic form (ʿUthmān) of his name.

  7. 22 de may. de 2024 · The first, The Ottoman Empire 1300–1481 (Istanbul, 1990), is densely factographic and linear, recalling, in its approach to the subject, the now largely forgotten traditions of sound east European scholarship embodied in such works as Klyuchevsky’s Course of Russian History or (albeit on a much larger scale) Hrushevsky’s ...