Israel Boundary Disputes with Arab Neighbours 1946–1964
The documents focus on two different types of borders; those that coincided with the British Mandate for Palestine, and the lines that resulted from the war-won divisions of land following the 1949 cease-fire and the final location of the opposing armies. The armistice lines basically followed the course of mandate boundaries with Transjordan, Syria and Lebanon with small modifications. The operative border between Israel and Jordan on the West Bank was based exclusively on an armistice line that had no geographical or historical foundations; other complications arose because of the vagueness of the original definitions of the mandatory boundaries. The major events, in this period, which established Israel´s modern borders were the 1947 United Nations Partition Plan, the war that followed the creation of Israel in 1948 and the subsequent United Nations Armistice Agreements negotiated between Israel and each of its Arab neighbours: Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and Egypt.
- Provides a unique collection of historical primary source documents from British archive sources
- Previously unknown or fragmented material is now available in a coherent collection
- Targeted on the boundaries between Israel and her Arab neighbours in what is perhaps its most contentious period
Product details
November 2019Multiple copy pack
9781788060684
7000 pages
360 × 488 × 235 mm
13.74kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Arrangement of volumes: Volume 1: April 1946 to December 1947, Volume 2: January to December 1948, Volume 3: January to December 1949, Volume 4: January to December 1950, Volume 5: January 1951 to December 1952, Volume 6: January 1953 to December 1954, Volume 7: January to June 1955, Volume 8: July to December 1955, Volume 9: January 1956 to December 1959, Volume 10: January 1960 to December 1964.