Lawrence: The Uncrowned King of Arabia"Lawrence of Arabia" began World War I as a map clerk and ended it as one of the great figures of the war. He altered the face of the Middle East, and almost single-handedly formulated many of the precepts of modern guerrilla warfare. Yet he refused any honors for his achievements and spent much of the rest of his life in the ranks of the army and the Royal Air Force, in near obscurity. Lawrence deliberately turned his life into a conundrum and set out to mystify those who came after him-beginning with his own account of the Arab Revolt, The Seven Pillars of Wisdom, in 1926- thereby assuring his place as a mythical cult-figure for posterity. He saw himself as an intellectual rather than a soldier, and a wanderer after sensations rather than a man of action. He wore an endless series of masks. But who was the real man behind these disguises? Desert explorer and Arab scholar Michael Asher set out to solve this riddle of appearances. Retracing many of Lawrence's desert journeys, he gained startling new insights into his character. The result is a biography that captures the elusive man behind the myth. |
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Page 231
... Ma'an was the objective , for on 1 May he tele- graphed Cairo : ' in about 10 days time ... Sheikh Auda Abu [ Tayyi ] of the eastern [ Howaytat ] will proceed to his country east of [ Ma'an ] , probably accompanied by Captain Lawrence ...
... Ma'an was the objective , for on 1 May he tele- graphed Cairo : ' in about 10 days time ... Sheikh Auda Abu [ Tayyi ] of the eastern [ Howaytat ] will proceed to his country east of [ Ma'an ] , probably accompanied by Captain Lawrence ...
Page 250
... Ma'an . This was the news Lawrence's party had been waiting for , and within ten minutes they had mounted and were riding across the Jefer plain towards the station of Ghadir al - Haj on the Hejaz railway , en route for the head of the ...
... Ma'an . This was the news Lawrence's party had been waiting for , and within ten minutes they had mounted and were riding across the Jefer plain towards the station of Ghadir al - Haj on the Hejaz railway , en route for the head of the ...
Page 264
... Ma'an garrison , 6,000 strong , had been instructed only to cut Feisal's units off from the fertile highlands of Balqa , whose grain supplies were needed by the Turkish army in Palestine , and whose timber was required as fuel for ...
... Ma'an garrison , 6,000 strong , had been instructed only to cut Feisal's units off from the fertile highlands of Balqa , whose grain supplies were needed by the Turkish army in Palestine , and whose timber was required as fuel for ...
Contents
The Valley of the Moon I | 1 |
THE WANDERER 18881916 | 5 |
Apparent Queen Unveiled Her Peerless Light 723 | 7 |
Copyright | |
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Abdallah Agayl Aleppo Allenby Aqaba Arab Revolt armoured cars army Arnie arrived artillery attack Auda's Azraq Bedu Bedui Birejik bodyguard bridge British Brown Letters Bruce Cairo camels camp captured Carchemish castle claimed Clayton Dahoum Damascus Dara'a desert diary Egyptian enemy Feisal felt fire force Garnett Letters garrison Gasim Governor guns Hashemite Hejaz Hejaz railway hills Hittite Hogarth Howaytat Hussain ibid Jarablus Joyce Juhayna killed knew Lawrence later Lawrence of Arabia Lawrence thought Lawrence wrote Lawrence's Leeds London Ma'an machine-guns March Mecca Medina miles Mohammad Mudowwara Nasib Nasir never night Nuri officer once Ottoman Oxford Palestine Pasha peasants Rabegh raid railway ride ridge Robert Graves rode Rwalla Sarah sent Seven Pillars Sharif Sheikh shot Sinai station Storrs Syria T. E. Lawrence Tafilah told took town tribes tribesmen troops Turkish Turks village Wadi Sirhan Wejh Wilson Woolley Yanbu young Zayd