Introduction to the Modern Economic History of the Middle East |
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Page 326
... Imperial Government . It may , however , make good the deficit from the receipts of the following years . The boats of the concessionnaires , being considered as a section of the Mahsoussé , shall enjoy the same rights as the latter ...
... Imperial Government . It may , however , make good the deficit from the receipts of the following years . The boats of the concessionnaires , being considered as a section of the Mahsoussé , shall enjoy the same rights as the latter ...
Page 327
... Imperial Government before work is begun on each section . The Imperial Ottoman Bagdad Railway Company , on its part , further pledges , irrevocably and inalienably , to the holders of the said bonds the line from Konia to the Persian ...
... Imperial Government before work is begun on each section . The Imperial Ottoman Bagdad Railway Company , on its part , further pledges , irrevocably and inalienably , to the holders of the said bonds the line from Konia to the Persian ...
Page 347
... Imperial Persian Government the sum of £ 20,000 sterling in paid - up shares of the first company founded by virtue of the foregoing article . It shall also pay the said Government annually a sum equal to 16 per cent of the annual net ...
... Imperial Persian Government the sum of £ 20,000 sterling in paid - up shares of the first company founded by virtue of the foregoing article . It shall also pay the said Government annually a sum equal to 16 per cent of the annual net ...
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
The Process of Disintegration and Decay of the Ottoman Empire | 7 |
Summary 265 | 15 |
Copyright | |
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Other editions - View all
Introduction to the Modern Economic History of the Middle East Zvi Yehuda Hershlag Limited preview - 1980 |
Introduction to the Modern Economic History of the Middle East Zvi Yehuda Hershlag Limited preview - 1980 |
Common terms and phrases
19th century A. T. Wilson according administration agreement agriculture Arab Article Baghdad Baghdad Railway Bank Britain British budget capital capitulations commercial Company concession concessionnaires considerable Constantinople corvée cotton cultivation currency customs deficit Egypt Egyptian Empire's enterprises especially European expenditure exports feddan fellahin foreign France French granted hand Imperial important income increased industrialisation industry interest internal investments Iraq irrigation Islam Ismail Janissaries kharadj l'Egypte land League of Nations Lebanon loans London mainly Mamluk mandated Mehmed Ali's Middle East Midhat military million Turkish pounds modern monopoly Muslim official Ottoman Empire payments period Persia piastres political population port pounds sterling Powers production Public Debt railway reform regime revenue riyal Russian Shah Shuster structure Sublime Porte Suez Canal Sultan Syria Tanzimat taxes thirties tobacco tons trade Transjordan treasury Treaty Turkey Turkey's Turkish waqf World Young Turks