people
British Interest
Agreements
Responses
International
100

Can be applied to those who use Arabic as their language and identify with Arab causes and Arab culture

Arabs

100

Two of Britain's objectives by involving themselves in the middle east

- protecting access to trade routes in the eastern Mediterranean

 -maintaining stability in Iran and the Persian Gulf, 

-Guaranteeing the integrity of the Ottoman Empire.
-Suez Canal




100

The British occupation of territories previously ruled by the Ottoman Empire 1918-1948

British Mandate

100

Arab response to the Sykes-Picot agreement 

British Promised Palestine freedom from Ottoman Empire and helped them lead a revolt against Ottoman forces. 

They felt betrayed by Britain and felt that their freedom from colonialism was in jeopardy. 

100
Dissolution of the Ottoman Empire 

WWI

200

Originally referred to members of the tribe Judah (Son of Jacob-son of Isaac). Not a particular nationality or race. All have common origin culture and destiny. 

Jewish

200

Two reasons why the secret agreement between Arab community in Palestine and the British 

Protect Suez Canal;Link between Britain, India and British Empire east of Suez Canal  

Establish Allies within the region 

200

May 19, 1916, France and Britain divided up the Arab territories of the former Ottoman Empire into spheres of influence. 

 

Sykes-Picot agreement 

200

Impacts of the Balfour Declaration within Palestine 

Many Arabs, in Palestine were outraged by their failure to receive the nationhood and self-government they had been led to expect in return for their participation in the war against Turkey.

Jewish population in Palestine increased dramatically, along with the instances of Jewish-Arab violence.

200

League of Nations decision of Palestine after WWI

League of Nations said that Palestine was not ready for independence. it was given to England as a mandate, which was like a guardianship of a temporary nature. The goal was to eventually give the colony independence.



300

Believe they are the native peoples of the land. Israelis were intruders occupying land by force, immoral people

Palestinians

300

What was the British reason for constructing the Sykes -Picot Agreement. 

Wanted complete control over the Suez canal. Wanted to extend colonial power into the middle east, Palestine has access to ports. 

300

Agreement promising a homeland for the Jewish people within the region of Palestine 

Balfour Declaration

300

Zionist response to the Paris Peace Conference and League of Nations British Mandate

Giving it to England it raised the hopes of the Zionists and hopes of the Jewish people generally to soaring heights. The formation of the Jewish state would be a possibility under the British Mandate because of the Balfour Agreement. 

300

U.S response to a Jewish homeland after WWII

President Truman requested that the British grant 100,000 visas to Jews to enter Palestine, under the British Mandate. 

400

Jewish nationalist movement that has had as its goal the creation and support of a Jewish national state in Palestine, the ancient homeland of the Jews (Hebrew: Eretz Yisraʾel, “the Land of Israel”)

Zionists

400

Responsibilities of British after WWI and Paris Peace conference

Britain was entrusted with the temporary administration of Palestine, with the understanding that it would work on behalf of both its Jewish and Arab inhabitants.



400

Document formalised the creation of two British protectorates in 1923. 

Palestine, to include a national home for the Jewish people, under direct British rule

 Transjordan, an Emirate governed semi-autonomously from Britain, under the rule of the Hashemite family.

British Mandate

400

Arab response to the British Mandate

  • Arabs were angered by Britain’s failure to fulfill its promise to create an independent Arab state

  • Many opposed British and French control as a violation of their right to self-determination. The rising tide of European Jewish immigration, land purchases and settlement in Palestine generated increasing resistance by Palestinian Arab peasants, journalists and political figures. They feared that this would lead eventually to the establishment of a Jewish state in Palestine.Palestinian Arabs opposed the British Mandate because it hindered their aspirations for self-rule, and opposed massive Jewish immigration because it threatened their position in the country.

400

Britain wanted to withdraw from influence in the middle east to focus on homefront reconstruction after the war.

Appealed to the UN to help solve the issue of Palestine. Under the Mandate Britain is solely responsible for the overseeing of Palestine. UN is the only power to be able to intervene



Resolution 181

500

Member of the Zionist federation who held extreme influence within the British parliament and solidified the Balfour agreement. 

Lord Walter Rothschild

500

After WWII, Britain relinquished all governance of Palestine to

the United Nations

500

Put in place after the Arab revolt in 1936-39 to appease Jewish immigration debates

White Paper agreement. 

Limit Jewish immigration to Palestine to 6,000

500

The Arab Response to the Partition of Palestine

Arab nations reject the Partition and the establishment of a Jewish State. It increased tension to a full escalation of conflict in 1948 and the War for independence/Al Nakba

500

Founder of the Zionist Federation

Theodor Hertzl