ABSTRACT

Egypt was the first Arabic-speaking country to throw off the yoke of Turkish rule, with an attendant growth in European influence. The impact of the West was most obvious in the political-constitutional field, with the gradual adoption of Western patterns of government and political life. This book, first published in 1953, is the first work to trace the development of parliamentary institutions and political parties in Egypt and to consider the extent of Western influence on their inception, evolution and disruption. Based on both Arabic and European sources, it is a comprehensive examination of the subject, and is key to the understanding of the development of the modern Middle East.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

part |66 pages

Parliamentary Institutions

chapter |9 pages

The 1866-1867 Assembly

chapter |5 pages

The 1879 Assembly

chapter |13 pages

The 1881-1882 Assembly

chapter |4 pages

The Legislative Assembly

chapter |12 pages

The 1924 Parliament

part |123 pages

Political Parties

chapter |11 pages

The Secret Societies

chapter |17 pages

The National Party

chapter |3 pages

Young Egypt262

chapter |32 pages

Al-Hizb Al-Watani

chapter |21 pages

The Wafd