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Timeline of Pakistani History
1947 British colonial rule ends with partition of the subcontinent into Hindu-majority India and Muslim-majority Pakistan and East Pakistan. Pakistan and India dispute boundaries of mountainous region of Kashmir.…
Timeline of Sudanese History
1871-1874 Turkish and Egyptian forces conquer the territory of today’s Sudan. 1881-1885 Muhammed Ahmad declares himself al-Mahdi, or awaited guide, and begins reconquest of Sudan. Mahdi’s forces capture…
Tags: Britain, chronology, colonialism, Egypt, history, Khartoum, nationalism, Nile River, Nubia, Sudan, timeline
Timeline of Iranian History
550-330 B.C.E. Achaemenid dynasty rules the first Persian Empire. The city of Persepolis, was founded in 518 B.C.E. 1914-1918 Iran declares neutrality during World War I. 1923–1926 Reza Khan is named…
Veiling and the State in Iran, 1930s to 1979
The Age-Old Modesty of the Veil: Banning the Veil in Iran (1930s) By Sattareh Farman Farmaian When my mother had learned that she was to lose the age-old modesty of her veil, she was beside herself. She and all traditional people regarded Reza's…
Tags: colonialism, culture, gender, Iran, Islam, nationalism, revolution, shah, veil, women
Lady Mary Wortley Montagu's Visit to a Harem
To The Countess of Mar, Adrianople [now Edirne], April 18, 1717 ….I was invited to dine with the Grand Vizier's lady, and it was with a great deal of pleasure I prepared myself for an entertainment which was never given before to any…
Tags: bloomers, costume, culture, dress, England, feminism, gender, harem, Islam, Lady Montagu, letters, Ottoman Empire, pantaloons, travel narrative, Turkey
WPA Interview with Mike Abdullah, 19th Century Syrian Immigrant in North Dakota
Note: A WPA field worker, Everal J. McKinnon, interviewed Mike Abdullah in his home in Ross, North Dakota. I was born in Rufage, Rushia, Syria. I don't remember the date, nor the month[,] but I believe that it was in 1886. (People in the Old Country…
WPA Interview with Mary Juma, 19th Century Syrian Immigrant in North Dakota
Note: A WPA field worker, Everal J. McKinnon, interviewed Mary Juma in her home in Ross, North Dakota. Because she could not speak English, her son, Charles Juma, interpreted. I was born in Byria, Rushia, Syria. I don't know my exact age, but…
Ibn Battuta Describes Chinese Ships on the Indian Coast
We travelled to the town of Qāliqūṭ [Calicut], which is one of the chief ports in Mulaibār. It is visited by men from China, Jāwa, Ceylon, the Maldives, al-Yaman [Yemen] and Fārs [Persia], and in it gather merchants from all quarters. Its…
Tags: China, Hajj, Ibn Battuta, Ibn Juzayy, India, Indian Ocean, Malabar, monsoon, navigation, pilgrimage, trade, travel, travelers
The Harem and the Revolutionary Gentlewomen of Egypt
Because Muslim women in Egypt have controlled their property, or rather because some of the wealthy women controlled their property, we find women as well as men setting up charitable endowments which are known as awqaf [plural]. A waqf [singular] is…
Tags: Afaf Lutfi al-Sayyid Marsot, anthropology, charity, colonialism, culture, Egypt, family, gender, harem, hejab, imperialism, Islam, marriage, nationalism, Orientalism, revolution, seclusion, slavery, veil, waqf, women
Xuanzang’s Travels in the Western Regions
FAN-YEN-NA [BAMIYAN]. This kingdom is about 2000 li from east to west, and 300 li from north to south. It is situated in the midst of the Snowy Mountains. The people inhabit towns either in the mountains or the valleys, according to circumstances.…
Tags: Afghanistan, archaeology, arts, Bamiyan, Buddha, Buddhism, missionaries, Taliban, travel, travelers, Xuanzang
Portrait of Omar ibn Said
The handwriting on the front under the portrait reads, "Uncle Moro" (Omeroh), the African (or Arab) Prince whom Genl. Owen bought, and who lived in Wilmington N.C. for many years, and died in Bladen Co. in 1864, aged about 90…
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