Dinshaway Incident

The Dinshaway Incident occurred in Egypt in June 1906. It was an important impetus to the growing nationalist movement in that country. In 1906 Egypt was a de-facto British protectorate. In June of that year five British officers decided to go pigeon hunting near the Nile Delta village of Dinshaway. During the course of the expedition, one of the British officers started to shoot and set fire to a grain pile in a village threshing floor. The local owner tried to seize the gun, and in the process five villagers were wounded including the owner's wife. The villagers turned against the officers and two of them were badly wounded, one later dying. The British response was swift and harsh. Fifty-two members of the village were put on trial for premeditated murder. Thirty-two were found guilty, most were flogged, but four men of the village were hanged. The incident caused outrage amongst the Egyptian population. For the first time urban intellectual critics of the British regime found common cause with the local peasantry. In the upsurge of protest that followed, the long-time British administrator of Egypt, Lord Cromer, was forced to resign.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
grote reber
kinyarwanda language
filariasis
sertindole
bongzilla
e 6 process
bolivian gas war
ankle
teotihuacan spider woman
robert ward
plan colombia
function approximation
josiah bartlet
w.g. walden
moon (disambiguation)
topiltzin ce acatl quetzalcoatl
haslemere
fireside chats
m2 motorway
soufflage
ahmed urabi
m50 motorway (ireland)
m50
wireless art
spmc
relayer
a1 road (northern ireland)
kensington (disambiguation)
supermercados bahama
democratic women's league of germany
list of cities in pakistan
girsanov's theorem
axial
arthur nortje
coronal
share price
visible human project
a2 road
a2
a4 road
fingerpaint
veronica lake
patrick roy
chloramine