The Gaysh

The Gaysh
Author: Frank Edwards
Publisher: Helion and Company
Total Pages: 282
Release: 2006-10-31
Genre: History
ISBN: 1908916826

The Gaysh tells the story of the emergence of an army following early attempts to protect the trade routes in and through Aden. From the first commercial treaty with the Abdali Sultan in 1802, various efforts were made to avoid looting, leading to the annexing of Aden Port by the East India Company in 1839. It was not until the Turks threatened to invade in the First World War that a regular army unit was formed. The 1st Yemen Infantry did not see action, and there was a move, on financial grounds, to disband it in 1928. Because a need remained, the decision was taken to replace its policing role by airpower, supported by a small force of levies to defend the bases, including a camel corps. The book takes that story on, chronologically, through the Aden Protectorate Levies' growing strength and its relationship with the British Government and its policies. It includes its part in the Silver Jubilee celebration parade in 1935, pre-1939 military operations, its role in WWII, its involvement in the evacuation of the Jews following the Arab/Jewish riots in Crater in 1947, and on to the creation of the Federation and the withdrawal of the British Army in 1967.

British Policy in Aden and the Protectorates 1955-67

British Policy in Aden and the Protectorates 1955-67
Author: Spencer Mawby
Publisher: Psychology Press
Total Pages: 232
Release: 2005
Genre: Aden (Protectorate)
ISBN: 9780714654591

This book provides the first detailed account of the confrontation which took place between Britain and Nasser in the Colony of Aden and the surrounding states prior to British withdrawal in 1967.

Aden Insurgency

Aden Insurgency
Author: Jonathan Walker
Publisher: Pen and Sword
Total Pages: 348
Release: 2014-11-19
Genre: History
ISBN: 1473827639

During the early 1960s the Cold War reached its climax. Britain's dwindling power in the Middle East was under siege from Arab nationalism, the Communist bloc and from American designs in the region. Aden, with its strategic military base and old Protectorate buffer zone, was soon the main battleground. The 1962 Egyptian-inspired coup in the neighbouring Kingdom of North Yemen further tightened the noose. So began a bitter and bloody insurgency war in South Arabia. British regular an special forces were soon pitted against growing and formidable insurgency forces, fighting both a war in the mountains and an urban conflict in the backstreets of Aden. Intelligence agencies vied for control of 'hearts and minds'. The British launched a clandestine war in Yemen to keep their enemies at bay. But still the situation in Aden spiralled out of control, culminating in a bloody slaughter in 1967. In that November, the British Army finally withdrew from South Arabia.??Aden Insurgency is the extraordinary story of Britain's last colonial conflict. Using a wide range of recently released archive and eye-witness accounts, the author charts the collapse of the South Arabian state. Set against a background of ruthless political ambition, these events shaped the Yemen of today.

The Two Yemens

The Two Yemens
Author: Robin Leonard Bidwell
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 238
Release: 2019-06-26
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1000306526

This book tells the story of the Yemeni people, treating them as a single people. It shows that all over South West Arabia a unique civilisation arose in antiquity and many of its manifestations so conformed to the Yemeni temperament that they have lingered, until the present day.

Flora of Aden

Flora of Aden
Author: Ethelbert Blatter
Publisher:
Total Pages: 418
Release: 1914
Genre: Botany
ISBN:

The History of Aden

The History of Aden
Author: Dr Z H Kour
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 347
Release: 2005-07-27
Genre: History
ISBN: 1135781141

First Published in 1980. The peninsula of Aden, on the south-west coast of Arabia, lies 100 miles east of the straits of Bab al-Mandab at the entrance to the Red Sea. It has an area of 21 square miles, the greater part of which is uninhabitable being covered by precipitous hills, the highest of which is Mount Shamsan, 1,775 feet. This book is a history of Aden from 1839 to 1872.

The Jews of the British Crown Colony of Aden

The Jews of the British Crown Colony of Aden
Author: Reuben Ahroni
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 328
Release: 2024-01-08
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9004679162

This volume focuses on the Jewish community of the British Crown Colony of Aden, a community which is mistakenly lumped with Yemenite Jewry. It provides a critical assessment of its history; salient dimensions of its sociopolitical, religious, socioeconomic, cultural and intellectual fabric; insights into the unique quintessential traits that determine the place of the Jewish community of Aden as a cultural and spiritual phenomenon within Yemenite and world Jewry. It also affords a glimpse into the relationship between Jews and Muslims in Aden. The volume is based on a study of hundreds of yet unpublished legal texts and documentary material.

A History of Modern Yemen

A History of Modern Yemen
Author: Paul Dresch
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 310
Release: 2000-12-07
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780521794824

An accessible and fast moving account of twentieth-century Yemeni history.

Without Glory in Arabia

Without Glory in Arabia
Author: Peter Hinchcliffe
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 352
Release: 2006-08-25
Genre: History
ISBN: 0857717944

'So we left without glory but without disaster ' Sir Humphrey Trevelyan, the last High Commissioner of the Federation of South Arabia In 1967, 139 years after their arrival in Aden, the British withdrew from the southern tip of the Arabian Peninsula. Their departure was abrupt, messy and controversial. Using important, previously unpublished material and original interviews with a range of individuals, both British and Yemeni, who lived through this defining period of colonial history, Without Glory in Arabia tells the story of the final few years of British rule in Aden and the neighbouring Eastern and Western Aden Protectorates. While some view British rule, on the whole, as beneficial to the local population, others insist that very little was achieved. Worse, Britain did not provide a structure of government constitution which met the conflicting needs of Aden and the Protectorate. This illuminating book brilliantly sets the 'scuttle – as the epidode came to be known – in context with a thorough re-examination of the background against which the events of the 1960s unfolded in this obscure backwater of the British Empire.