: Hanna Batatu
: The Old Social Classes and the Revolutionary Movements of Iraq A Study of Iraq's Old Landed and Commercial Classes and of Its Communists, Ba'thists and Free Officers
: Saqi Books
: 9780863567711
: 1
: CHF 27.10
:
: Politikwissenschaft
: English
: 1283
: Wasserzeichen
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: ePUB
This comparative study analyses the traditional elite of Iraq and their successors - the Communists, the Ba'thists and Free Officers - in terms of social and economic relationships in each area of the country. The author draws on secret government documents and interviews with key figures, both in power and in prison, to produce an engrossing story of political struggle and change.

Hanna Batatu was born in 1926 in Jerusalem. He immigrated to the United States in 1948, receiving his PhD from Havard University in 1960. Apart from research fellowships at Havard, MIT and Princeton, Batatu held two major teaching appointments: at the American University of Beirut (1962-1981), and at Georgetown University (1982-1994), where he was named professor Emeritus upon retirement. He died in 2000.

LIST OF TABLES


2-1 The Calamities of Which We Have a Record and Which Overtook Baghdād in the 17th, 18th, and 19th Centuries

2-2 Population of Baghdād, Mosul, and Barah (1908-1977)

3-1 Religious and Ethnic Composition of the Population of Iraq in 1947, a Rough Estimate

4-1 Shī‘ī Ministerial Appointments under the Monarchy (1921-1958), Excluding Appointments to Premiership

4-2 Iraq’s Biggest Landowners in 1958, or Owners of More Than 100,000 Dūnums of Land

5-1 Distribution of Privately Held Agricultural Land before the July 1958 Revolution

5-2 Distribution of Landholdings in Kūt Province in 1958

5-3 Iraq’s Principal Landed Families in 1958, or Families Owning More Than 30,000 Dūnums

5-4 Summary of Table 5-3

6-1 Representation of Shaikhs and Aghas in Parliament in Selected Years

6-2 Land Revenue as Contrasted with Other Sources of Revenue in the Year 1911 and the Period 1918-1958

6-3 On Whom the Tea and Sugar Duties Weighed Most Heavily

6-4 Number and Category of Landholders in ‘Amārah Province in the Period 1906-1951

6-5 Rent Paid on Government or Crown Lands by the Biggest Shaikhs of ‘Amārah in 1906

6-6 Distribution of Rent Paid on Government and Crown Lands by the ‘Amārah Landholders in 1906

6-7 Land Revenue Demand of the Biggest Shaikhs of ‘Amārah Province in 1920 and 1921

6-8 Distribution of Land Revenue Demand of ‘Amārah Landholders in 1929

6-9 The Land Revenue Demand of the Big and Middling Shaikhs of ‘Amārah Province in 1929

6-10 The Land Revenue Demand of the Five Biggest Shaikhs of ‘Amārah Compared with the Land Revenue Payments of Five of Iraq’s Twelve Provinces in 1928-1929

6-11 Pump Ownership in the Province of ‘Amārah in 1929

6-12 Distribution of Landholdings in ‘Amārah Province in 1944

6-13 The Big and Middling Shaikhs of ‘Amārah Province in 1951

6-14 Labor Wages 1914-1953

7-1 Official List of the SunnīAshrāf Families of Baghdād in 1894

7-2 Appointments to Premiership under the Monarchy; Share of the Various Governing Classes and Strata

7-3 Ministerial Appointments under the Monarchy (Excluding Appointments to Premiership): Share of the Principal Governing Classes and Strata

7-4 Prime Ministers under the Monarchy (23 August 1921 to 14 July 1958)

7-5 Summary of Table 7-4

8-1 The Tenure in Office of theWālīs of Baghdād in the Period 1638-1917

8-2 Pashas of Baghdād in the Mamlūk Pe