Yahoo España Búsqueda web

Search results

  1. Brigadier-General Sir Gilbert Falkingham Clayton KCMG KBE CB (6 April 1875 – 11 September 1929) was a British Army intelligence officer and colonial administrator, who worked in several countries in the Middle East in the early 20th century.

  2. 19 de may. de 2017 · Share. Issue Section: Book Reviews. In this substantial book Timothy J Paris has written the first biography of General Sir Gilbert Clayton, who was a British soldier, intelligence officer and diplomat in the Middle East for 33 years, until his death in service as High Commissioner in Iraq in 1929.

  3. 11 de ene. de 2022 · Man in the Middle, January, 11, 2022. In an interview, Timothy J. Paris discusses his biography of Gilbert Clayton, a key British official in the Middle East. English. by Michael Young. Published on January 11, 2022.

  4. Clayton, who would soon be named Civil Secretary of the Palestine Government in succession of Sir Wyndham Deedes, may have given Lawrence early notice of the appointment, or mentioned that he was involved in discussing Transjordanian affairs on behalf of the Colonial Office with Emir Abdullah, for Lawrence writes,

  5. Sir Gilbert Clayton. British statesman. Learn about this topic in these articles: negotiations with Ibn Saʿūd. In Saudi Arabia: Ibn Saud and the third Saudi state. …and a British special envoy, Sir Gilbert Clayton, placed Saudi relations with Great Britain on a permanent footing as the British fully acknowledged Saudi independence.

  6. 10 de nov. de 2023 · Sir Gilbert Falkingham Clayton (1875-1929) was a quiet, able soldier, administrator, and diplomat who had come out to eh Middle East during the reconquest of the Sudan and remained as a political officer in theSudan service, secretary to the Governor-General of the Sudan, Sir Reginald Wingate, and finally the Sudan agent at Cairo.

  7. It was the first Chief Political Officer, Major-General Gilbert Clayton, who most quickly warned of Arab resistance to the concept of the National Home. When a Zionist Commission, headed by Dr. Chaim Weizmann, asked His Majesty's Government for permission to travel to Palestine in December 1917, Clayton cautioned against such a move, arguing that