Lebanon in history from the earliest times to the present / (Record no. 26055)

MARC details
000 -LEADER
fixed length control field 08496cam a2200205 a 4500
003 - CONTROL NUMBER IDENTIFIER
control field OSt
005 - DATE AND TIME OF LATEST TRANSACTION
control field 20240207084015.0
008 - FIXED-LENGTH DATA ELEMENTS--GENERAL INFORMATION
fixed length control field 130303s1957 enka g b 001 0 eng d
040 ## - CATALOGING SOURCE
Transcribing agency DSQC
043 ## - GEOGRAPHIC AREA CODE
Geographic area code a-le---
050 #0 - LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CALL NUMBER
Classification number DS80.9
Item number .H58 1957
100 1# - MAIN ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name Hitti, Philip K.
Fuller form of name (Philip Khuri),
Dates associated with a name 1886-1978.
245 10 - TITLE STATEMENT
Title Lebanon in history from the earliest times to the present /
Statement of responsibility, etc. by Philip K. Hitti.
260 ## - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC.
Place of publication, distribution, etc. London :
Name of publisher, distributor, etc. Macmillan ;
Place of publication, distribution, etc. New York :
Name of publisher, distributor, etc. St. Martin's Press,
Date of publication, distribution, etc. 1957.
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Extent 548 p. :
Other physical details ill. ;
Dimensions 23 cm.
504 ## - BIBLIOGRAPHY, ETC. NOTE
Bibliography, etc. note Includes bibliographical references and index.
505 ## - FORMATTED CONTENTS NOTE
Formatted contents note PART I. IN PREHISTORY : CHAPTER I. Lard PAGE DISTINCTIVE FEATURES: GEOGRAPHIC, HISTORICAL, CULTURAL -- CHAPTER II. THE MOUNTAIN AND THE PLAIN : La The maritime plain - The Lebanon proper - Gorges and valleys - Al-Biqa' - Eastern Lebanon - Rock formation - In geologic times - A haven of refuge -- CHAPTER III. CLIMATE, PLANT AND ANIMAL LIFE : Winds and rain – Temperature - Erosion and streams - Vegetation - Floral zones - The olive tree - The cedar: patriarch of the Lebanese forest-Fauna - Natural resources -- CHAPTER IV. IN PRE-LITERARY TIMES : Old Stone Age - The oldest skeletal remains - Way of life - Two great achievements: fire and language - Middle and Late Stone Ages - Animals tamed, plants domesticated - Settled life - Higher life – Pottery -- CHAPTER V. THE METAL AGE : Chalcolithic - Ghassûlian - Culture Ethnic relations – PART II. ANCIENT SEMITIC TIMES : CHAPTER VI. THE CANAANITES: FIRST MAJOR COMMUNITY IN LEBANON : Dim beginnings - Land of Canaan - City-states - Relation with Egypt - Egyptian suzerainty - Tale of Sinuhe - Hyksos domination - Lebanon incorporated into the Egyptian empire - Mitannians in Syria - A new world power, the Hittites - International mêlée - Diplomatic double dealing - The pathetic case of Rib Addi - Final settlement - Loss of Egypt's control – CHAPTER VII. PERIOD OF INDEPENDENCE: TRADE, ARTS AND COLONIES : Aramaeans - The Philistines - The Hebrews - The golden age: full independence -Political leagues - Sea and land routes - Sidon and Tyre - Economy: agriculture-Crafts and arts - Architecture - Music - Industry: glass - Textiles - Purple – Navigation - Africa circumnavigated – Colonies - In Iberia - In Greece – Carthage -- CHAPTER VIII. LITERATURE, RELIGION AND OTHER CULTURAL ASPECTS :. The alphabet – Literature – Ugarit - Fertility cult - Tammuz and Ishtar – Gods - Temples - Idols -"High Places" - Future life - Canaanite influence on the Hebrews -- CHAPTER IX. WITHIN THE SPHERE OF ASSYRO-BABYLONIAN INFLUENCE : Relations|: with early Babylonia - With Assyria - Tyre's heroic stand - Sidon and Tyre succumb - Neo-Babylonians replace Assyrians - Cultural radiation -- CHAPTER X. A PERSIAN PROVINCE : Sidon, capital of Syrian satrapy - Federation and struggle for independence - Cultural aspects – PART III. THE GRECO-ROMAN PERIOD : CHAPTER XI. ALEXANDER AND HIS SUCCESSORS, THE SELEUCIDS : Persian rout at Issus - Phoenician cities open their gates - Tyre in ruins - An empire destroyed - East meets West - Between an upper and a nether millstone - Sidon again at the forefront - Under the Seleucids - Autonomy - Last convulsions of the Seleucid kingdom - Tigranes followed by Pompey -- CHAPTER XII. ECONOMIC AND CULTURAL ASPECTS: HELLENIZATION : Trade - Agriculture and industry - Colonial activity - Cultural interpenetration - Philosophers and poets - Zeno, founder of Stoicism -- CHAPTER XIII. UNDER ROMAN SWAY : A subdivision of a province - Lebanon acquires a "new look" - Economic productivity - Trade relations and colonization -- CHAPTER XIV. INTELLECTUAL INTERESTS : Philosophers and scholars - Rhetoricians - Contributions to Neo-Platonism - Latin literature – Syriac -- CHAPTER XV. LEBANON CHRISTIANIZED : Tyre, first Christian centre - Northward penetration and persecution - Christianity, official religion -- CHAPTER XVI. HELIOPOLIS A RELIGIOUS AND BERYTUS AN EDUCATIONAL CENTRE : Two Roman colonies - The great temple - Berytus, a Roman colony -Seat of a law academy-Student life -- PART IV. THE ARAB ERA : CHAPTER XVII. IN THE EMBRACE OF ISLAM : Military operations - The Jabiyah conference - Military districts -- CHAPTER XVIII. MARONITES, DRUZES AND OTHER SECTARIANS : Aramaic survivals - The Mardaites - Saint Maron - John Maron - The spread of Maronitism - The East Syrian Church - The West Syrian Church - The Melkites - A Christian island in a sea of Islam - Druzes - Spread of Druzism – Nusayris – Matawilah -- CHAPTER XIX. UNDER THE ABBASID CALIPHATE AND SUCCESSOR STATES : 'Abbasids supersede the Umayyads - The decisive battle of al-Zab - Uprising in Lebanon - Al-Awza'I - Qusta ibn-Luqa - Disintegration of the 'Abbasid state - The Tülünid dynasty - The Ikhshidid dynasty - The Fatimids - Byzantine incursions - Saljuq Turks - "Land of hermits and fruits" -- CHAPTER XX. WEST MEETS EAST - THE CRUSADES : Papal appeal - Early success - On the way to Jerusalem - Tyre spared - Jerusalem, capital of the Latin kingdom - The Lebanese seaports occupied - Tripoli of the banu-'Ammar - Fortifications - Qal'at al-Shaqif - Moslem reaction: Zangi - Enter Salah-al-Din - The struggle for 'Akka - Under Salah-al-Din's successors - Mamlüks replace Ayyübids - Mongol incursions - Hero of a new counter-Crusade: Baybars - Qalawun, a worthy successor – ‘Akka regained -- CHAPTER XXI. LATIN-LEBANESE INTERRELATIONSHIP : What the Franks learned - General effect on the East: architecture - Economy - Cultural and social impact - Language and religion - Maronites, France and the pope - Indirect results: missionary activity - Mamlük reprisals -- CHAPTER XXII. LIFE IN THE FOURTEENTH AND FIFTEENTH CENTURIES : Lebanon divided - The Buḥturs of al-Gharb - Feudalism in Lebanon - Tripoli, capital of a province - Agriculture - Industry and trade - Last Mongol onslaught - Intellectual aspects – Schools - Christian education - Intellectual output – CHAPTER XXIII. ON THE EVE OF OTTOMAN ASCENDANCY : All-sea route to India - Advent of Ottoman Turks - Duel with Persia - Marj Dabiq, a decisive encounter - Destruction of the Mamluk régime - The caliphal episode – PART V. UNDER THE OTTOMAN TURKS : CHAPTER XXIV. UNDER THE CRESCENT AND THE STAR : Ottoman administration - Ra'iyah and millah - Capitulary rights - Zenith of Ottoman power - Inherent and acquired elements of weakness - Turkish culture – CHAPTER XXV. THE PRINCES OF THE MOUNTAIN : THE MA'NS : The 'Assäfs and Sayfas - Turkish invasion of Lebanon - Fakhr-al- Din II, grand amir of Lebanon - In Italy – CHAPTER XXVI. THE PRINCES OF THE MOUNTAIN: THE SHIHABS : The Shihabs succeed - New alignment of feudal aristocracy - Greater Lebanon re-established - Zahir al-'Umar - Al-Jazzar, the butcher – CHAPTER XXVII. FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC RELATIONS : Foreign trade - A Lebanese family of French consuls - Maronite students in Rome - Al-Sam'äni - The synod of al-Luwayzah - South Lebanon - Druze socio-religious organization – Matawilah -- CHAPTER XXVIII. THE NINETEENTH: A CENTURY OF CHANGE : Bashir the Great, second architect of Greater Lebanon - Ibrahim - Pasha in Syria - Beirut takes the lead - Early British residents - Imperial attempts at reform – CHAPTER XXIX. The DECADES OF CIVIL DISTURBANCE: 1840 TO 1860 : The first outburst - Solutions that created more problems than they solved - A year that has lived in infamy – Pacification - Reorganization -- CHAPTER XXX. THE MUTASARRIFIYAN OF JABAL LUBNAN : Daud Pasha and Yusuf Karam - Seven other mutagarrifs -The silver lining -- CHAPTER XXXI. THE IMPACT OF THE WEST AND THE MODERN AWAKENING : Educational work: Catholic and Protestant - The printing press – Libraries and bookshops - Indigenous modern schools - Pioneers in modern scholarship - Newspapers and magazines – Drama – CHAPTER XXXII. ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL UPHEAVALS : Transformation in economy - Tensions and dislocations – Lebanon the emigrant - Nationalism and political democracy - The Young Turks and Ottomanism -- CHAPTER XXXIII. Two WORLD WARS AND THE MANDATE BETWEEN : Deserted villages - Under the French - Greater Lebanon resuscitated - Nominal independence - Under martial law - Full independence achieved -- CHAPTER XXXIV. A UNDER THE CEDAR FLAG: PROBLEMS AND PROGRESS : In the political arena - Trade and transit - Beirut, gateway of the East – Agriculture - Industrial development - An effective peaceful revolution.
651 #0 - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--GEOGRAPHIC NAME
Geographic name Lebanon
General subdivision History.
942 ## - ADDED ENTRY ELEMENTS (KOHA)
Source of classification or shelving scheme Library of Congress Classification
Koha item type Books
Holdings
Source of classification or shelving scheme Not for loan Home library Current library Date acquired Total Checkouts Full call number Barcode Date last seen Price effective from Koha item type
Library of Congress Classification   القاعة الأجنبية | The Foreign Hall القاعة الأجنبية | The Foreign Hall 12/09/2018   DS80.9 .H58 1957 0009874 12/09/2018 12/09/2018 Books

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