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The Papers of Nabih Al-Azmah. Box 8 (viii)
Index to Nabih Al-Azmah's Arab Papers - Transjordan, Iraq and general
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The Papers of Nabih Al-Azmah. Box 9 (i)
Photocopied pages from the Syrian papers of Nabih Al-Azmah, including handwritten biographical notes, an exchange of letters in Turkish and Arabic with Fevzi Amal of the Cezayir Pazari in Istanbul (1948) and other documents.
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The Papers of Nabih Al-Azmah. Box 9 (ii)
Photocopied pages from the Syrian papers of Nabih Al-Azmah, including handwritten notes on Arab personalities, details of those invited to the Arab and Islamic conferences in the 1930s.
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The Papers of Nabih Al-Azmah. Box 9 (iii)
Photocopied pages from the Syrian papers of Nabih Al-Azmah, individually numbered from 17 to 123, and including letters from his father, from Rashid Rida, editor of Al-Manar magazine, (64, 67, 71), copies of letters from the High Commission of Syria and Lebanon, telegrams from Egypt and Syria, and a copy of the statutes of the Officers Club in Damascus.
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The Papers of Nabih Al-Azmah. Box 9 (iv)
Photocopied pages from the Syrian papers of Nabih Al-Azmah, individually numbered from 124 to 192, and including letters and telegrams from both Palestine and Syria, a copy of small personal card written from Othman Kassam to Nabih Al-Azmah, communications from the National Bloc (including a typed letter in French signed by Hashim al-Atassi ) and the League of Nationalist Action, a short note from the offices of the Palestinian political newspaper Al-Liwaa and the Syrian paper Al-Djazireh, as well as correspondence from Shukri El-Tagi El-Faruki of Wadi Hinen in Palestine, and others.
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The Papers of Nabih Al-Azmah. Box 9 (ix)
Photocopied pages from a lined notebook, part of the Syrian papers of Nabih Al-Azmah. The year 1956 is written on the first page.
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The Papers of Nabih Al-Azmah. Box 9 (v)
Photocopied pages from the Syrian papers of Nabih Al-Azmah, individually numbered from 193 to 310, and including a telegram from Palestine, letters from the Arab Palestinian Committee in Cairo (257) and correspondence and papers from the Arab Bank . There is also a fragment of an original envelope (not photocopied), posted in Damascus on 2 October 1937 and with a Jerusalem postal stamp on the reverse, on which Nabih Al-Azmah has written comments in Arabic.
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The Papers of Nabih Al-Azmah. Box 9 (vi)
Photocopied pages from the Syrian papers of Nabih Al-Azmah, individually numbered from 311 to 432, and including correspondence from Nabih Al-Azmah in his role as Deputy Chairman of the Committee for the Defense of Palestine, letters and telegrams from Palestine, Syria and Geneva, communications from the Ministry of the Interior, as well as a Swiss presscutting (315), and letters from organisations including L'Union Feministe Arabe, the All Arab Youth Congress (371) and the Bureau National Arabe de Recherches et d'Informations in Damascus (376).
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The Papers of Nabih Al-Azmah. Box 9 (vii)
Photocopied pages from the Syrian papers of Nabih Al-Azmah, individually numbered from 433 to 484, and including a letter from the Orphelinat Musulman [Muslim orphanage] in Beirut, a telegram from Turkey (468), a letter from the Syrian Legation in Washington, and a series of letter sent from Turkey to both Adil and Nabih Al-Azmah, with copies of the envelopes included.
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The Papers of Nabih Al-Azmah. Box 9 (viii)
Photocopied pages from the Syrian papers of Nabih Al-Azmah, individually numbered from 485 to 639, including letters from Dr Ardman Ard (USA Press Center, Berlin), Abdulhamid Mouhafel (Aleppo), the Cairo offices of Arabic newspaper Aschoura (488), a large collection of Syrian telegrams (495-589), a letter from Fawzi Youssef of the Al-Andalus Library in Jerusalem (592), a letter from Dr Ph. Freu of Jerusalem (598) and other corespondence.
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Two postcards depicting the Mosque of Ibn Tulun, Cairo.
The Mosque of Ibn Tulun was commissioned by the Abbasid governor of Egypt, Ahmad Ibn Tulun, and designed by architect Saiid Ibn Kateb Al-Farghany. Built in 876, it is one of the oldest mosques in Egypt. The postcards show a person standing in an archway, looking outwards towards a dome and minaret.
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Two postcards of Straight Street, Damascus
Two postcards, one showing Midhat Pasha Souq, of Straight Street in Damascus.