Lawrence of Arabia's Secret Dispatches during the Arab Revolt, 1915-1919
T. E. Lawrence’s dispatches during the Arab Revolt have been published before, but only in an edited and incomplete form, as they were printed for a strictly limited wartime readership in the Arab Bulletin. Now, in this scholarly edition, they are published in full for the first time. They give us a direct inside view of his dealings with the Arab leaders and show us how he presented them to his superiors in Cairo. These wartime writings reveal vividly his impressions of the periods he spent in the desert and the conditions he found there, and they record how the Arab uprising developed and how he became increasingly involved in it. They make fascinating reading for, in his sometimes outspoken way, he reported on the military potential of the Arab fighters and recommended how they should be supported in their struggle against the Ottoman empire.

This new collection of his dispatches is a valuable addition to the literature on Lawrence for it allows readers to trace the course of the revolt as he wrote about it at the time. They are printed in chronological order with full explanatory notes. The editor Fabrizio Bagatti provides a perceptive introduction which sets them in their wartime context, fills in the military and political background to the strategic situation in the Middle East and describes Lawrence’s important role as an intermediary between the Arabs and the British.
1140151659
Lawrence of Arabia's Secret Dispatches during the Arab Revolt, 1915-1919
T. E. Lawrence’s dispatches during the Arab Revolt have been published before, but only in an edited and incomplete form, as they were printed for a strictly limited wartime readership in the Arab Bulletin. Now, in this scholarly edition, they are published in full for the first time. They give us a direct inside view of his dealings with the Arab leaders and show us how he presented them to his superiors in Cairo. These wartime writings reveal vividly his impressions of the periods he spent in the desert and the conditions he found there, and they record how the Arab uprising developed and how he became increasingly involved in it. They make fascinating reading for, in his sometimes outspoken way, he reported on the military potential of the Arab fighters and recommended how they should be supported in their struggle against the Ottoman empire.

This new collection of his dispatches is a valuable addition to the literature on Lawrence for it allows readers to trace the course of the revolt as he wrote about it at the time. They are printed in chronological order with full explanatory notes. The editor Fabrizio Bagatti provides a perceptive introduction which sets them in their wartime context, fills in the military and political background to the strategic situation in the Middle East and describes Lawrence’s important role as an intermediary between the Arabs and the British.
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Lawrence of Arabia's Secret Dispatches during the Arab Revolt, 1915-1919

Lawrence of Arabia's Secret Dispatches during the Arab Revolt, 1915-1919

Lawrence of Arabia's Secret Dispatches during the Arab Revolt, 1915-1919

Lawrence of Arabia's Secret Dispatches during the Arab Revolt, 1915-1919

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Overview

T. E. Lawrence’s dispatches during the Arab Revolt have been published before, but only in an edited and incomplete form, as they were printed for a strictly limited wartime readership in the Arab Bulletin. Now, in this scholarly edition, they are published in full for the first time. They give us a direct inside view of his dealings with the Arab leaders and show us how he presented them to his superiors in Cairo. These wartime writings reveal vividly his impressions of the periods he spent in the desert and the conditions he found there, and they record how the Arab uprising developed and how he became increasingly involved in it. They make fascinating reading for, in his sometimes outspoken way, he reported on the military potential of the Arab fighters and recommended how they should be supported in their struggle against the Ottoman empire.

This new collection of his dispatches is a valuable addition to the literature on Lawrence for it allows readers to trace the course of the revolt as he wrote about it at the time. They are printed in chronological order with full explanatory notes. The editor Fabrizio Bagatti provides a perceptive introduction which sets them in their wartime context, fills in the military and political background to the strategic situation in the Middle East and describes Lawrence’s important role as an intermediary between the Arabs and the British.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781399010184
Publisher: Pen and Sword
Publication date: 08/06/2021
Pages: 272
Sales rank: 703,978
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.25(h) x (d)

Table of Contents

List of Plates ix

Acknowledgements x

Maps xi

Historical Truth and Textual Truth (by Fabrizio Bagatti) 1

Lawrence of Arabia's Secret Dispatches during the Arab Revolt, 1915-1919 19

1 L. Woolley to Foreign Office (August 1914) 21

2 Syria. The Raw Material (25 February 1915) 21

3 Lawrence to Crosthwaite (12 September 1915) 29

4 Lawrence to Crosthwaite (14 September 1915) 29

5 Lawrence to Crosthwaite (11 November 1915) 30

6 Lawrence to Crosthwaite (11 November 1915) 30

7 The Politics of Mecca (End of January 1916) 30

8 Cablegram from Chief Direction Military Intelligence, London to Intrusive Cairo (29 March 1916) 33

9 Lawrence to Intrusive (8 April 1916) 34

10 Lawrence to Intrusive (9 April 1916) 35

11 The conquest of Syria. If complete (First half 1916) 36

12 Telegram from Viceroy, Foreign (28 May 1916) 39

13 Intelligence. I.E.F. 'D' (End of May 1916) 40

14 [Arab Bureau Summaries will deal] (6 June 1916) 52

15 Mesopotamia (14 June 1916) 53

16 Draft letter to the Sherif (23 June 1916) 54

17 [The blockade on the Hejaz coast] (9 July 1916) 56

18 Note by Cairo on Arab Labour (5 September 1916) 58

19 Hejaz Narrative (5 September 1916) 60

20 Note (16 October 1916) 61

21 Wilson to Gray (16 October 1916) 62

22 Lawrence to Parker (24 October 1916) 62

23 Translation of the letter from Sherif Feisal (26 October 1916) 65

24 Wilson to Edward Grey (25 October 1916) 66

25 The Sherifs (27 October 1916) 67

26 Feisul's Operations (30 October 1916) 69

27 Hejaz Administration (3 November 1916) 76

28 Military Notes (3 November 1916) 78

29 When Sherif Feisul was in Damascus (3 November 1916) 83

30 Route (3 November 1916) 85

31 Report by Sykes (8 November 1916) 92

32 Note (17 November 1916) 92

33 Nationalism among the Tribesmen (17 November 1916) 96

34 The Turkish Hejaz Forces and Their Reinforcement (26 November 1916) 98

35 Report by Sykes (29 November 1916) 102

36 Lawrence to Hogarth (2 December 1916) 103

37 Lawrence to Hogarth (5 December 1916) 103

38 Lawrence to Wilson (6 December 1916) 105

39 [Left Yenbo on Saturday Dec. 2] (After 6 December 1916) 107

40 Lawrence to Wilson (7 December 1916) 113

41 Lawrence (via Wilson) to Arab Bureau (7 December 1916) 113

42 Sherif Feisal's Army (11 December 1916) 114

43 Lawrence to Director Arab Bureau (Around 11 December 1916) 115

44 Lawrence (via Wilson) to Arab Bureau (Around 12 December 1916) 116

45 Lawrence to Cornwallis (19 December 1916) 117

46 Lawrence to Wilson (19 December 1916) 117

47 Lawrence to Wilson (25 December 1916) 119

48 Lawrence to Wilson (25 December 1916) 120

49 Lawrence to Cornwallis (27 December 1916) 121

50 Lawrence to R. Fitzmaurice (2 January 1917) 122

51 Intelligence Report (4 January 1917) 123

52 Lawrence to Wilson (5 January 1917) 124

53 Lawrence to Director Arab Bureau (7 January 1917) 126

54 Route Notes (8 January 1917) 126

55 Lawrence to Wilson (8 January 1917) 133

56 [A meeting was held] (12 January 1917) 135

57 Lawrence to Fitzmaurice (First part of January 1917) 136

58 Lawrence to Fitzmaurice (Beginning of January 1917) 137

59 Um Leji to Weij (6 February 1917) 139

60 The Arab Advance On Wejh (6 February 1917) 144

61 The Sherifial Northern Army (6 February 1917) 147

62 Feisal's Order of March (6 February 1917) 149

63 Nejd News (6 February 1917) 150

64 [Local situation] (11 February 1917) 151

65 [Weij Feb. 12 Asi ibn Atiyeh came in] (After 18 February 1917) 152

66 Lawrence to Clayton (28 February 1917) 160

67 Lawrence to Fitzmaurice (5 March 1917) 160

68 Hejaz: The Present Situation (11 April 1917) 161

69 Lawrence to Wilson (11 April 1917) 161

70 Lawrence to Wilson (24 April 1917) 168

71 Lawrence to Wilson (24 April 1917) 174

72 Lawrence to Wilson (24 April 1917) 180

73 Lawrence to Wilson (24 April 1917) 185

74 Lawrence to Wilson (26 April 1917) 188

75 Wilson to Clayton (28 May 1917) 193

76 Report by Clayton (29 May 1917) 193

77 [Note by Cornwallis] (9 July 1917) 193

78 Lawrence to Clayton (10 July 1917) 194

79 Clayton to War Office (11 July 1917) 199

80 Clayton to Director of Military Intelligence (11 July 1917) 200

81 Wilson to Arab Bureau (13 July 1917) 201

82 Wingate to Lawrence (14 July 1917) 201

83 The Howeitat and Their Chiefs (24 July 1917) 201

84 [At an interview on July 27th] (28 July 1917) 204

85 Lawrence to Wilson (28 July 1917) 206

86 The Sherif's Religious Views (29 July 1917) 207

87 [On July 29th the Sherif] (30 July 1917) 210

88 [The Sherif and His Neighbours] (End of July, 1917) 211

89 The Occupation of Akaba (First days of August 1917) 213

90 Twenty-seven articles (Before 20 August 1917) 217

91 Lawrence to Clayton (After 21 August 1917) 223

92 Lawrence to Clayton (27 August 1917) 224

93 Report by Clayton (7 September 1917) 227

94 Lawrence to Clayton (23 September 1917) 228

95 Lawrence to Clayton (10 October 1917) 232

96 [Notes by Cornwallis] (21 October 1917) 235

97 Clayton to Joyce (24 October 1917) 236

98 Joyce to Clayton (4 November 1917) 236

99 A Raid (After 11 November 1917) 237

100 [Notes by Cornwallis] (27 November 1917) 239

101 Abdullah and the Akhwan (After 4 December 1917) 239

102 Akhwan Converts (After 4 December 1917) 241

103 Arab Bureau to G.S.I. (15 December 1917) 242

104 Syrian Cross-Currents (Around 8 January 1918) 243

105 Lawrence to Clayton (22 January 1918) 248

106 Tafileh (26 January 1918) 248

107 Arabia, North-West. Intelligence. Northern Operations (11 February 1918) 252

108 Lawrence to Clayton (12 February 1918) 253

109 Lawrence to Akaba (18 February 1918) 256

110 Notes on Kasr El Azrak and the country lying between that place and the Hejaz Railway (After 12 March 1918) 257

111 Wingate to King Husein (18 June 1918) 259

112 Tribal politics in Feisal's area (24 June 1918) 259

113 Notes. Khurma (9 July 1918) 264

114 Lawrence to Akaba (30 August 1918) 265

115 Notes (October 1918) 266

116 [The destruction of the 4th Army] (22 October 1918) 271

117 Note by Wilson (8 December 1918) 279

118 Notes on Camel-Journeys (24 May 1919) 279

Bibliography 283

Index 291

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