« The concept of the Middle East » : différence entre les versions

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=Middle East, Near East and Greater Middle East=
=Middle East, Near East and Greater Middle East=
À la fin de la Première Guerre mondiale, des mandats vont être distribués aux Anglais, alors basés en Inde. Lors de la Deuxième Guerre mondiale, tous les combats ayant eu lieu dans les Balkans, en Afrique, etc. sont appelés "du Middle East", le terme de "Near East" disparaît. L'arrivée des Américains sur le territoire avec le développement d'un "Middle East Institute" renforce le concept (et est la promesse d’un intérêt grandissant pour cette région). Avec la guerre froide, on voit apparaître le "Grand Moyen-Orient" (du Sahara occidental jusqu'à l'Inde, en allant jusqu'à l'Éthiopie).  
At the end of the First World War, money orders were distributed to the British, then based in India. During the Second World War, all the fighting that took place in the Balkans, Africa, etc. was called "Middle East", the term "Near East" disappeared. The arrival of the Americans on the territory with the development of a "Middle East Institute" reinforces the concept (and is the promise of a growing interest in this region). With the Cold War, the "Greater Middle East" appears (from Western Sahara to India and as far as Ethiopia).  


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Malgré la popularisation du terme, Winston Churchill regrette cette prolifération qui ne désigne pas la même étendue. À l'ONU, on parle de "Western Asia". D'un autre côté, les anciennes appellations n'ont pas disparu : le Maghreb, le Machrek, l'Anatolie, la Mésopotamie (jusqu'en 1921), le croissant fertile …
Despite the popularization of the term, Winston Churchill regrets this proliferation, which does not designate the same extent. At the UN, we talk about "Western Asia". On the other hand, the old designations have not disappeared: Maghreb, Mashrek, Anatolia, Mesopotamia (until 1921), the Fertile Crescent ...


=Annexes=
=Annexes=

Version du 7 mai 2020 à 21:27


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The concept of the Middle East

There is a "Middle East" only according to a given point, i.e. with a European point of view. This notion appeared in 1902, when Sir Thomas Edward Gordon used it in an article. In fact, in 1842, Alfred Tayer Mahan used it for the first time in the form of "Middle East". Valentin Chirol, head of the foreign affairs department at the New York Times, popularized the concept through his articles. None of them defines precisely, except the "Great Game": Central Asia as a British and Russian issue. The intermediate zone between the "Far East" and the "Near East" is thus understood as the "Middle East".

Middle East, Near East and Greater Middle East

At the end of the First World War, money orders were distributed to the British, then based in India. During the Second World War, all the fighting that took place in the Balkans, Africa, etc. was called "Middle East", the term "Near East" disappeared. The arrival of the Americans on the territory with the development of a "Middle East Institute" reinforces the concept (and is the promise of a growing interest in this region). With the Cold War, the "Greater Middle East" appears (from Western Sahara to India and as far as Ethiopia).

Despite the popularization of the term, Winston Churchill regrets this proliferation, which does not designate the same extent. At the UN, we talk about "Western Asia". On the other hand, the old designations have not disappeared: Maghreb, Mashrek, Anatolia, Mesopotamia (until 1921), the Fertile Crescent ...

Annexes

References