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Archive Search Results
Your search for
Bernard Lewis
returned 8 results
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Issue Date |
Author |
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Europe, Asia, and Africa are the three continents into which, by ancient tradition, the world was divided.
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December 1994 |
Bernard Lewis |
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Since 1945, certain Arab countries have been the only places in the world where hard-core, Nazi-style anti-Semitism is publicly and officially endorsed and propagated.
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May 1986 |
Bernard Lewis |
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Western travelers, almost unanimously, confirm the impression that the period from the end of the 18th into the second half of the 19th century was the lowest point in the existence of the Jews in the Muslim lands. At a time when Jews in Western Europe were beginning to enjoy the fruits of emancipation, several of the Christian travelers marked the contrast between the Jews they met in Muslim lands and those whom they knew at home.
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June 1984 |
Bernard Lewis |
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For a few months in 1975 and 1976, Daniel Patrick Moynihan was United States Ambassador to the United Nations. His brief tenure, which forms the theme of this book, attracted to the United Nations a degree of attention which they have not often received before or since.
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March 1979 |
Reviewed by Bernard Lewis |
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SINCE the war of October 1973, Egypt's President Sadat has increasingly thrown in his lot with the United States. His westward reorientation of Egyptian policy seems to have been supported...
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July 1978 |
Bernard Lewis |
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The future of the Arab-Israel conflict will be shaped by the course of events at three levels: first, that of relations between the state of Israel and the Arab states, more particularly those which are its neighbors; second, the relationship between the Israelis and the Palestinians; and third, the policies and actions of the great powers, and in particular of the United States and the Soviet Union.
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June 1977 |
Bernard Lewis |
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In the great medieval French epic of the wars between Christians and Saracens in Spain, the Chanson de Roland, the Christian poet endeavors to give his readers, or rather listeners, some idea of the Saracen religion. According to this vision, the Saracens worshipped a trinity consisting of three persons, Muhammad, the founder of their religion, and two others, both of them devils.
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January 1976 |
Bernard Lewis |
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The name "Palestine" is first attested in the history of Herodotus, and appears in the works of later Greek and Latin writers. Palestine does not occur in the Old Testament. Palestine does not occur in the New Testament.
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January 1975 |
Bernard Lewis |
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