T.E. Lawrence, the Arab Revolt and WWI in the Middle East - Dr. John Calvert

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  • Опубликовано: 7 июл 2024
  • Near the 100th anniversary of Britain’s surrender of Kut-al-Amara (present day Iraq), learn how World War I’s dark inheritance is especially apparent in a core territory made up of five countries - Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq, Israel - and one seemingly permanent non-state, Palestine. Dr. John Calvert, Professor of Middle East History at Creighton University will explore the emergence of the modern Middle East including the roles played by T.E. Lawrence (“Lawrence of Arabia”), the Arab Revolt and the Allies’ wartime agreements.
    Recorded April 27, 2016 in J.C. Nichols Auditorium at the National World War I Museum and Memorial.
    For more information about the National WWI Museum and Memorial visit theworldwar.org

Комментарии • 36

  • @brucevilla
    @brucevilla 5 лет назад +3

    Thanks for Uploading.

  • @mickhurley7305
    @mickhurley7305 2 года назад +3

    This was a very interesting presentation. Very impressed by Dr Calvert, obviously well informed and understands the nuances. Learned alot .

  • @davidcoleman2796
    @davidcoleman2796 Год назад

    Very interesting. Great questions afterwards .

  • @_pawter
    @_pawter 8 месяцев назад +1

    I loved 7 Pillars when I first read it long ago. Since then I've become aware of the many shadows that hang over it and it's creator. This was an excellent and nuanced presentation. I'm going to rip a copy for the future.

    • @Lemma01
      @Lemma01 7 месяцев назад

      TE was an oddball. Certainly a long way from the figure created by his book and the fashionable press...

  • @johnferguson7235
    @johnferguson7235 6 лет назад +15

    No one in the audience can come up with a question about Lawrence or WW I. Disappointing end to an excellent presentation.

    • @david2284180
      @david2284180 3 года назад +1

      Noteably, what would TEL make of the ISIS/ISIL?

    • @Ken-fh4jc
      @Ken-fh4jc 6 месяцев назад

      I just like hearing the talk not the Q and A.

    • @marcneef795
      @marcneef795 2 месяца назад

      The teacher was the worst. She did not even have a question, but just wanted to "correct" him.

  • @svenhoek
    @svenhoek 8 лет назад +2

    Fantastic talk! Especially the Q&A session

    • @4OHz
      @4OHz Год назад

      You’re right. So to often I have been disappointed in some of the presentations in this series as too often some of the historians read their lectures rather than present them. I may be wrong but it seems to show a lack of depth of understanding their material where they are supposed to be “domain experts.”

  • @MatthewSereysothea-hf1js
    @MatthewSereysothea-hf1js Год назад +2

    Why did that lady at 1:10:10 waste a question? She used the time for her personal opinion, rather tasteless,
    In My Opinion

  • @user-ut6ji8my2h
    @user-ut6ji8my2h 7 месяцев назад

    I am constantly amazed that nobody brings up the fact that the OTTOMANS sided with the Central Powers only after Winston Churchill who was the Lord of the admiralty glommed the two capitol ships being built for Turkey in Great Britain. This was a turning point in Ottoman/ British relations.

  • @healghana
    @healghana 3 года назад +1

    The Arabs wanted so much power as an ethnicity and were focused sorely on the power. The British and the French played them and the Arans still haven't learnt from this experience...Sad!!

    • @anabe3785
      @anabe3785 10 месяцев назад +1

      As a Turk, thats just betrayal.
      May Allah curse anyone who betrayed the Caliphate

    • @S0L12D3
      @S0L12D3 9 месяцев назад

      Does that not make the British look so much worse tho???

    • @Adi-tq5ui
      @Adi-tq5ui 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@anabe3785amin

  • @jeffersonwright9275
    @jeffersonwright9275 3 года назад +3

    Did our military leaders in the early 1960´s read his Seven Pillars of Wisdom even once?????????? We might have spared ourselves a great deal of money, prestige and human lives, American and Vietnamese, had they done so!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @kidmohair8151
    @kidmohair8151 3 года назад

    up until Dr Calvert opined that the UAR fell apart,
    because Pan-Arabism was not cohesive enough, that arabs were naturally fractious,
    I had not thought that what he was saying was really so far out or worth remarking on...
    but once that was stated without reference to British, French and specifically
    US efforts to undermine the desire of arabs to unite as a bloc
    so as to not be in thrall to either the west or the east in the years of the cold war,
    I could not let that go.
    That was just a little too much sweeping under the carpet for my liking,
    and a little too much US self-exculpatory propaganda.

  • @user-im1iw2dw1p
    @user-im1iw2dw1p 8 месяцев назад +2

    Presentation was fine. However, he quite a bit messed it up in the Q&A part. A total misperception of the Syrian issue. All wrong about Asad after 7 years. .

    • @avibhagan
      @avibhagan 6 месяцев назад +1

      His job depends on him being wrong about that ! He's be fired and could not work at any university if he spoke the truth about ONGOING geopolitics.
      He's only allowed to be "right" , about things that don't matter anymore.

  • @Fanakapan222
    @Fanakapan222 6 месяцев назад

    Worrying window on American academia ? Machiavelli tells politicians to deal with the world as it actually is, rather than how they might imagine it to be ? From an American perspective the world they seem to imagine is founded upon their own founding story, with the result that everything is viewed through the prism of a 'Popular' republic being the model that fits all humanity. Clearly the actions, and subsequent failure of the USA in trying to impose such a model in both Iraq and Afghanistan since the early years of the present century, ought to demonstrate the fallacy what amounts to a very myopic vision of the world ? Obviously this lecture is some years old now, but even so, the good Dr ought to have realised that ISIS came about precisely because of the USA's efforts in deposing that 'Bad Man' Sadaam, and was an unholy alliance between the displaced Iraqi regime groups, and an militant Islamic clergy who were themselves given relevance by the dogs breakfast that post war Iraq became. It was not an invention of the Assad government as seems to be suggested here.
    Given that one assumes that the US government is ultimately advised by people such a Dr Calvert, and likely some of the attendees to this lecture, it may be safe to assume that American foreign policy will continue to bear great similarity to that presented by Wilson's 14 points of WWI vintage, and continue to fall short of the mark.

  • @darthbigred22
    @darthbigred22 3 года назад +3

    I think this guy goes to show how bad modern academia is...the Arab Spring was about a natural revolt as the Lawrence of Arabia was involved with.

    • @adelaidegurwell1807
      @adelaidegurwell1807 2 года назад +2

      I fail to see the meaning of your comment but I do detect a grammatical error.

  • @johnnybates7580
    @johnnybates7580 4 года назад +3

    This guy is being censored. The conflicts in the middle east was always about oil. Not because Hitler wanted a third front. Weird how no one is allowed to say it. Not even historians.

    • @jogzyg2036
      @jogzyg2036 3 года назад +16

      I think there's a reason historians don't mention Hitler wanting a third front in world war 1.

    • @Souledex
      @Souledex 10 месяцев назад

      Because it was always more complicated than that you arrogant loon. It's not weird we just read more. It was a factor - one that he did mention but really super not the driving one until the late 70's.

    • @S0L12D3
      @S0L12D3 9 месяцев назад

      Maybe because Hitler is one of the most despicable people in the planets history and giving him any sort of credit would Ignite more antisemitism

  • @amazighdocumentary7625
    @amazighdocumentary7625 Год назад

    we alaways said .. this arabe world thing .. is a set up