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Journal ArticleDOI

A Memorandum Concerning Cyprus, 1878

Dwight E. Lee
- 01 Jun 1931 - 
- Vol. 3, Iss: 2, pp 235-241
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This article is published in The Journal of Modern History.The article was published on 1931-06-01. It has received 3 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Memorandum.

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Citations
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Nationalism amongst the turks of cyprus: the first wave

Altay Nevzat
TL;DR: This paper argued that Turkish nationalism in Cyprus did not first emerge in the 1950's, but instead grew gradually from the late nineteenth century onwards; that nationalism amongst the island's Turks was first discernible in a 'civic' form founded on Ottomanism which was gradually, though progressively replaced by Turkish ethno-nationalism; and that while both British colonial policies and especially the threat perceived from the rise of Greek nationalism on the island may have helped spur nationalism among the Turks, the continued cultural and political interaction with Ottoman, and even non-Ottoman Turks, and later with the

The gordian knot: american and british policy concerning the cyprus issue: 1952-1974

TL;DR: Forsyth as discussed by the authors examines the role of both the United States and Great Britain during a series of crises that plagued Cyprus from the mid 1950s until the 1974 invasion by Turkey that led to the takeover of approximately one-third of the island and its partition.
Book ChapterDOI

The First Period of British Administration: 1878–1939

TL;DR: The factors that led to the cession of Cyprus to the British Empire in 1878 are to become comprehensible, one must take into account the more general geographical and military context of the time as discussed by the authors .
References
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Nationalism amongst the turks of cyprus: the first wave

Altay Nevzat
TL;DR: This paper argued that Turkish nationalism in Cyprus did not first emerge in the 1950's, but instead grew gradually from the late nineteenth century onwards; that nationalism amongst the island's Turks was first discernible in a 'civic' form founded on Ottomanism which was gradually, though progressively replaced by Turkish ethno-nationalism; and that while both British colonial policies and especially the threat perceived from the rise of Greek nationalism on the island may have helped spur nationalism among the Turks, the continued cultural and political interaction with Ottoman, and even non-Ottoman Turks, and later with the

The gordian knot: american and british policy concerning the cyprus issue: 1952-1974

TL;DR: Forsyth as discussed by the authors examines the role of both the United States and Great Britain during a series of crises that plagued Cyprus from the mid 1950s until the 1974 invasion by Turkey that led to the takeover of approximately one-third of the island and its partition.
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