Questo sito usa cookie di analytics per raccogliere dati in forma aggregata e cookie di terze parti per migliorare l'esperienza utente.
Leggi l'Informativa Cookie Policy completa.

Sei in possesso di una Carta del Docente o di una Carta della Cultura? Scopri come usarli su Maremagnum!

The unknown Turks. Mustafa Kemal Pasa, Nationalist Ankara & daily life in Anatolia. January - March 1921. Rewised, Edited & Annoted by Heath W. Lowry.

Libri antichi e moderni
Clarence K. Streit.
Bahçesehir Üniversitesi Yayinlari, 2011
29,00 €
Parla con il Libraio

Metodi di Pagamento

Dettagli

  • Anno di pubblicazione
  • 2011
  • ISBN
  • 9786055461058
  • Luogo di stampa
  • Istanbul
  • Autore
  • Clarence K. Streit.
  • Pagine
  • 0
  • Editori
  • Bahçesehir Üniversitesi Yayinlari
  • Formato
  • 4to - over 9¾ - 12" tall
  • Soggetto
  • Turks & Turcology, Atatürk & War of Independence, History of Turkey
  • Descrizione
  • Hardcover
  • Stato di conservazione
  • Nuovo
  • Lingue
  • Inglese
  • Legatura
  • Rilegato

Descrizione

Original bdg. 4to. (29 x 22 cm). In English. Ills. [xviii], 268 p. The unknown Turks. Mustafa Kemal Pasa, Nationalist Ankara & daily life in Anatolia. January - March 1921. Rewised, Edited & Annoted by Heath W. Lowry. In 1983, while living in Washington, D.C., I received a telephone call from a former student named Ugur Dogan, who was then serving as a young diplomat at the Turkish Embassy. He told me that he had recently met a most interesting man, who not only had traveled to Ankara and interviewed Mustafa Kemal Pasha [Atatürk] in 1921, but had also written an unpublished manuscript about the seven weeks he spent in Anatolia during the winter of that year. This was Clarence K. Streit, who was one of the very first foreign journalists to visit Ankara at the height of the Turkish War of Independence, and the first foreign correspondent to personally interview Mustafa Kemal Pasha after he was elected President of the Grand National Assembly. Streit's connection to Turkey did not end with his 1921 visit. At the end of the following year he covered the Lausanne Treaty negotiations in Switzerland, after which he returned to Istnabul as the Public Ledger's correspondent for the Near East and the Balkans, a position he held for the next two years. TURKISH NATIONAL STRUGGLE Ankara City Capital of Turkey Ataturk.

Logo Maremagnum it