The Berlin-Baghdad Railway and the Ottoman Empire : industrialization, Imperial Germany and the Middle East / Murat Özyüksel.
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Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode |
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Female Library | HE3078 .O99 2016 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | 1 | Available | STACKS | 51952000231714 | |
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Main Library | HE3078 .O99 2016 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | 1 | Available | STACKS | 51952000231707 |
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HDST MALE Headset | HDST MALE Headset | HDST MALE Headset | HE3078 .O99 2016 The Berlin-Baghdad Railway and the Ottoman Empire : industrialization, Imperial Germany and the Middle East / | HE333 .C79 2001 Introduction to traffic engineering : a manual for data collection and analysis / | HE3380.3.Z8 .H45613 2014 The Hejaz Railway and the Ottoman Empire : modernity, industrialisation and Ottoman decline / | HE355 .M43 2011 Traffic engineering / |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 240-306) and index.
Railway expansion was the great industrial project of the late 19th century, and the Great Powers built railways at speed and reaped great commercial benefits. The greatest imperial dream of all was to connect the might of Europe to the potential riches of the Middle East and the Ottoman Empire. In 1903 Imperial Germany, under Kaiser Wilhelm II, began to construct a railway which would connect Berlin to the Ottoman city of Baghdad, and project German power all the way to the Persian Gulf. The Ottoman Emperor, Abdul Hamid II, meanwhile, saw the railway as a means to bolster crumbling Ottoman control of Arabia. Using new Ottoman Turkish sources, Murat Ozyuksel shows how the Berlin-Baghdad railway became a symbol of both rising European power and declining Ottoman fortunes. It marks a new and important contribution to our understanding of the geopolitics of the Middle East before World War I, and will be essential reading for students of empire, Industrial History and Ottoman Studies.
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