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Creating nations, establishing states: ethno-religious heterogeneity and the British creation of Iraq in 1919-23 / Fontana, Guiditta   Journal Article
Fontana, Guiditta Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract This article explores the creation of modern Iraq in the period between the Armistice of Mudros in October 1918, marking the end of the First World War in the Middle East, and the conclusion of a formal peace treaty with Turkey in 1923. It looks at how far the British occupiers considered the ethno-religious character of the population while defining frontiers and political system in the territory, focusing on the three major ethno-religious groups in Iraq: Shia Arabs, Sunni Arabs and Kurds. It shows that British policy, influenced by the state of Anglo-Turkish relations, the relationship between officials in London and officials in Baghdad, and British economic necessities and public sentiments towards imperialism, evolved through three main phases: progressively, ethnic and religious factors receded in significance.
Key Words Iraq  Turkey  Kurds  British Policy  London  Creating Nations 
Ethno - Religious Heterogeneity  Sunni Arabs  Shia Arabs  World War I 
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