Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-8ctnn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T18:48:14.668Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography of Essential Sources

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 May 2021

Raphaël Lefèvre
Affiliation:
Aarhus Universitet, Denmark
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Jihad in the City
Militant Islam and Contentious Politics in Tripoli
, pp. 476 - 480
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Primary Sources

Sha‘aban, Bilal, Minqara, Hashem, Naji, Kan‘an, Saleh, Ibrahim, Ghoshe, Ghassan, Mohammed, Mazen, Khassouq, Abu Meriam, Arnaout, Amer, Shawqi, Abu, Matar, Bilal, Allush, Aziz, Zghayar, Abu, Issa, Fahd, Hassan, Samir, Jandah, Abu, R‘ad, Jamil, Agha, Ali, Merkabawi, Abed, Othman, Abu, Antar, Ibrahim, Murad, Nasser, al-Rafe‘i, Salem, R‘ad, Amir, Sbat, Husam, al-Rafe‘i, Salem, Imam, Mohammed, Yaghmur, Hashim, Harrouq, Ahmed, Kouchari, Anistaz, Bashir, Abu, al-Kurdi, Khaled, Riad, Abu, Diqmaq, Bilal, Hozeifa, Abu.Google Scholar
Ali Dannawi, Mohammed, Babetti, Abdallah, Iyali, Fayez, Obeidi, Zuheir, al-Masri, Ibrahim, al-Ayubi, Azzam, Fahes, Hani, Hammud, Maher, Hidara, Bilal, Qarhani, Abdel Razzaq, Naf‘a, Iheb, Abdelqader, Khaled, Miqati, Rif‘at, Ibrahim, Mohammed, Z‘ubi, Safwan, Rahim, Nabil.Google Scholar
Majid al-Rifa‘i, Abdel, Shehade, Mahmud, Alameddine, Abdel Qader, Wannous, Bader, Jemali, Rashid, al-Dei, Bassam, Safiye, Jamil, Saba, Iqbal, Sabunji, Taha, Mawas, Bashir, Kheder, Kheder, Na‘ame, Adib, Sur‘ur, Gabi, Yasser, Abu, Ahmad, al-Ayyoubi, Khadem, Samir, Shawq, Abu Ali, Jellul, General.Google Scholar
Naqqash, Anis, Marwan, Abu, Lababidi, Selim, Fahes, Hani, Ta‘an, Abu, Salim, Mohammed, Hammud, Maher.Google Scholar
Chahal, Nahla, al-Amin, Ahmed, Monla, Hassan, Hajar, Moustafa, Khlat, Elias, Kayal, Maha, Uweida, Faruq, el-Yafi, Fathi, Nikoula, Hajj, Adhami, Mayez, Sur‘ur, Gabi, Touma, Jean, Droubi, Georges, Sarrouj, Père, Ratel, Jean, Jabbour, Jean, al-Sleiman, Hares, Khawja, Talal, al-Dada, Riad, Bissar, Leila, Arish, Umar, Daoud, Abu.Google Scholar
Harb Trablus 1985 [The war of Tripoli in 1985] (documentary produced by the Islamic Group, copy given to the author, 2013).Google Scholar
Undated videos of sermons by Khalil Akkawi in a mosque of Bab al-Tebbaneh.Google Scholar
Undated videos of sermons by Tawhid clerics in mosques of Tripoli.Google Scholar
Undated videos of Tawhid demonstrations during the Eid religious holiday.Google Scholar
Al-khutut al-asasia li-muntalaqat wa mabade wa ahdaf Harakat al-Tawhid al-Islami [The fundamental premises, principles and objectives of the Islamic Unification Movement] (copy given to the author, undated).Google Scholar
“Al-qiyada al-islamiya fi Trablus” [“The Islamic leadership in Tripoli”], Al-Taqwa (Vol. 20, April 1985).Google Scholar
Lebanon: arbitrary arrests, “disappearances” and extra-judicial killings by Syrian troops and Syrian-backed forces in Tripoli (Beirut: report published by Amnesty International, February, 1987).Google Scholar
UK Embassy in Beirut records (1944–80).Google Scholar
US Central Intelligence Agency records (1976–87).Google Scholar
US Embassy in Beirut records (1973–86).Google Scholar
Al-Incha (1979–88).Google Scholar
Al-Safir (1982–6).Google Scholar
Al-Tamaddon (1974–86 and 2002–18).Google Scholar
Al-Taqwa (1985).Google Scholar
Al-Tawhid (1984–6).Google Scholar
L’Orient Le Jour (1971–86).Google Scholar
Sawt al-Shabiba al-Wataniya (1979–81).Google Scholar

Secondary Sources

Sha‘aban, Bilal, Minqara, Hashem, Naji, Kan‘an, Saleh, Ibrahim, Ghoshe, Ghassan, Mohammed, Mazen, Khassouq, Abu Meriam, Arnaout, Amer, Shawqi, Abu, Matar, Bilal, Allush, Aziz, Zghayar, Abu, Issa, Fahd, Hassan, Samir, Jandah, Abu, R‘ad, Jamil, Agha, Ali, Merkabawi, Abed, Othman, Abu, Antar, Ibrahim, Murad, Nasser, al-Rafe‘i, Salem, R‘ad, Amir, Sbat, Husam, al-Rafe‘i, Salem, Imam, Mohammed, Yaghmur, Hashim, Harrouq, Ahmed, Kouchari, Anistaz, Bashir, Abu, al-Kurdi, Khaled, Riad, Abu, Diqmaq, Bilal, Hozeifa, Abu.Google Scholar
Ali Dannawi, Mohammed, Babetti, Abdallah, Iyali, Fayez, Obeidi, Zuheir, al-Masri, Ibrahim, al-Ayubi, Azzam, Fahes, Hani, Hammud, Maher, Hidara, Bilal, Qarhani, Abdel Razzaq, Naf‘a, Iheb, Abdelqader, Khaled, Miqati, Rif‘at, Ibrahim, Mohammed, Z‘ubi, Safwan, Rahim, Nabil.Google Scholar
Majid al-Rifa‘i, Abdel, Shehade, Mahmud, Alameddine, Abdel Qader, Wannous, Bader, Jemali, Rashid, al-Dei, Bassam, Safiye, Jamil, Saba, Iqbal, Sabunji, Taha, Mawas, Bashir, Kheder, Kheder, Na‘ame, Adib, Sur‘ur, Gabi, Yasser, Abu, Ahmad, al-Ayyoubi, Khadem, Samir, Shawq, Abu Ali, Jellul, General.Google Scholar
Naqqash, Anis, Marwan, Abu, Lababidi, Selim, Fahes, Hani, Ta‘an, Abu, Salim, Mohammed, Hammud, Maher.Google Scholar
Chahal, Nahla, al-Amin, Ahmed, Monla, Hassan, Hajar, Moustafa, Khlat, Elias, Kayal, Maha, Uweida, Faruq, el-Yafi, Fathi, Nikoula, Hajj, Adhami, Mayez, Sur‘ur, Gabi, Touma, Jean, Droubi, Georges, Sarrouj, Père, Ratel, Jean, Jabbour, Jean, al-Sleiman, Hares, Khawja, Talal, al-Dada, Riad, Bissar, Leila, Arish, Umar, Daoud, Abu.Google Scholar
Sha‘aban, Bilal, Minqara, Hashem, Naji, Kan‘an, Saleh, Ibrahim, Ghoshe, Ghassan, Mohammed, Mazen, Khassouq, Abu Meriam, Arnaout, Amer, Shawqi, Abu, Matar, Bilal, Allush, Aziz, Zghayar, Abu, Issa, Fahd, Hassan, Samir, Jandah, Abu, R‘ad, Jamil, Agha, Ali, Merkabawi, Abed, Othman, Abu, Antar, Ibrahim, Murad, Nasser, al-Rafe‘i, Salem, R‘ad, Amir, Sbat, Husam, al-Rafe‘i, Salem, Imam, Mohammed, Yaghmur, Hashim, Harrouq, Ahmed, Kouchari, Anistaz, Bashir, Abu, al-Kurdi, Khaled, Riad, Abu, Diqmaq, Bilal, Hozeifa, Abu.Google Scholar
Ali Dannawi, Mohammed, Babetti, Abdallah, Iyali, Fayez, Obeidi, Zuheir, al-Masri, Ibrahim, al-Ayubi, Azzam, Fahes, Hani, Hammud, Maher, Hidara, Bilal, Qarhani, Abdel Razzaq, Naf‘a, Iheb, Abdelqader, Khaled, Miqati, Rif‘at, Ibrahim, Mohammed, Z‘ubi, Safwan, Rahim, Nabil.Google Scholar
Majid al-Rifa‘i, Abdel, Shehade, Mahmud, Alameddine, Abdel Qader, Wannous, Bader, Jemali, Rashid, al-Dei, Bassam, Safiye, Jamil, Saba, Iqbal, Sabunji, Taha, Mawas, Bashir, Kheder, Kheder, Na‘ame, Adib, Sur‘ur, Gabi, Yasser, Abu, Ahmad, al-Ayyoubi, Khadem, Samir, Shawq, Abu Ali, Jellul, General.Google Scholar
Naqqash, Anis, Marwan, Abu, Lababidi, Selim, Fahes, Hani, Ta‘an, Abu, Salim, Mohammed, Hammud, Maher.Google Scholar
Chahal, Nahla, al-Amin, Ahmed, Monla, Hassan, Hajar, Moustafa, Khlat, Elias, Kayal, Maha, Uweida, Faruq, el-Yafi, Fathi, Nikoula, Hajj, Adhami, Mayez, Sur‘ur, Gabi, Touma, Jean, Droubi, Georges, Sarrouj, Père, Ratel, Jean, Jabbour, Jean, al-Sleiman, Hares, Khawja, Talal, al-Dada, Riad, Bissar, Leila, Arish, Umar, Daoud, Abu.Google Scholar
Harb Trablus 1985 [The war of Tripoli in 1985] (documentary produced by the Islamic Group, copy given to the author, 2013).Google Scholar
Undated videos of sermons by Khalil Akkawi in a mosque of Bab al-Tebbaneh.Google Scholar
Undated videos of sermons by Tawhid clerics in mosques of Tripoli.Google Scholar
Undated videos of Tawhid demonstrations during the Eid religious holiday.Google Scholar
Al-khutut al-asasia li-muntalaqat wa mabade wa ahdaf Harakat al-Tawhid al-Islami [The fundamental premises, principles and objectives of the Islamic Unification Movement] (copy given to the author, undated).Google Scholar
“Al-qiyada al-islamiya fi Trablus” [“The Islamic leadership in Tripoli”], Al-Taqwa (Vol. 20, April 1985).Google Scholar
Lebanon: arbitrary arrests, “disappearances” and extra-judicial killings by Syrian troops and Syrian-backed forces in Tripoli (Beirut: report published by Amnesty International, February, 1987).Google Scholar
UK Embassy in Beirut records (1944–80).Google Scholar
US Central Intelligence Agency records (1976–87).Google Scholar
US Embassy in Beirut records (1973–86).Google Scholar
Al-Incha (1979–88).Google Scholar
Al-Safir (1982–6).Google Scholar
Al-Tamaddon (1974–86 and 2002–18).Google Scholar
Al-Taqwa (1985).Google Scholar
Al-Tawhid (1984–6).Google Scholar
L’Orient Le Jour (1971–86).Google Scholar
Sawt al-Shabiba al-Wataniya (1979–81).Google Scholar
Abi Samra, Mohammed. Trablus: Sehat Allah wa mina al-hadatha [Tripoli: Allah Square and port of modernity] (Beirut: Dar al-Saqi, 2011).Google Scholar
Imad, Abdel Ghani. Islamiyu Lubnan: al-wahda wa al-ekhtilaf ‘ala ‘arad al-mustahil [Islamists of Lebanon: unity and divergence in the impossible land] (Beirut: Dar al-Saqi, 1998).Google Scholar
Imad, Abdel Ghani. Mujtam‘a Trablus fi zaman al-tahawulat al-‘othmaniya [The society of Tripoli at the time of the Ottoman transformations] (Tripoli: Dar al-Insha’, 1999).Google Scholar
Imad, Abdel Ghani. Al-harakat al-Islamiya fi Lubnan: al-din wa al-siyasa fi mujtam‘a mutanawe‘a [The Islamist movements in Lebanon: religion and politics in a diverse society] (Beirut: Dar al-Talia, 2006).Google Scholar
Itani, Amal, Ali, Abdel Qadir and Manna, Mu‘in. Al-Jama‘a al-Islamiya fi Lubnan mundhu al-nash’a hatta 1975 [The Islamic Group in Lebanon from the inception to 1975] (Beirut: Markaz al-Zeytuna, 2009).Google Scholar
Itani, Fida’. Al-jihadiyun fi Lubnan: min Quwwat al-Fajr ila Fatah al-Islam [The Jihadis in Lebanon: from Quwwat al-Fajr to Fatah al-Islam] (Beirut: Dar al-Saqi, 2008).Google Scholar
Kayal, Maha. Al-mai fi al-mujtam‘a [Water in Society] (Beirut: Mukhtarat, 2007).Google Scholar
Kayal, Maha and Atiya, Atef. Trablus min al-dahkal [Tripoli from the inside] (Beirut: Dar al-Mokhtarat, 2004).Google Scholar
Lagha, Ali. Fathi Yakan: ra’ed al-haraka al-islamiya al mu’asira fi Lubnan [Fathi Yakan: pioneer of the Islamic movement in Lebanon] (Beirut: Mu’assassat al-Risala, 1994).Google Scholar
N‘ame, Adib. “Al-amen fi Trablus, 1980–1985” [“The security in Tripoli, 1980–1985”], Nada’ al-Shamal (November 1985).Google Scholar
N‘ame, Adib. Al-Faqr fi madinat Trablus [Poverty in the city of Tripoli] (Beirut: United Nations, 2014).Google Scholar
Salem, Abdel Aziz. Trablus al-Sham fi al-tarikh al-Islami [Tripoli of Syria in Islamic history] (Alexandria: Dar al-Ma‘aref, 1967).Google Scholar
Tadmori, Omar. Tarikh wa athar masajed wa madares Trablus fi asar al-Mamalek [History and legacy of the mosques and the schools of Tripoli during Mamluk times] (Tripoli: Dar al-Bilad, 1974).Google Scholar
Tadmori, Omar. Tarikh Trablus al-siessi wa al-hadari ‘aber al-’asur [The political and cultural history of Tripoli through the ages] (Tripoli: Dar al-Bilad, 1978), Tomes 1, 2 and 3.Google Scholar
Tlass, Mustafa. The mirror of my life [Mirat Hayati] (Vol. 4) chapter 87 (Damascus: Dar Tlass, 2004).Google Scholar
Yakan, Fathi. Al-mas’ala al-lubnaniya min manzur islami [The Lebanese question through an Islamic perspective] (Beirut: al-Mu’assassa al-Islamiya, 1979).Google Scholar
Zein, Samih. Tarikh Trablus qadiman wa hadathan [Recent and ancient history of Tripoli] (Beirut: Dar al-Andalus, 1969).Google Scholar
Ziadeh, Khaled. Al-sura al-taqlidiya li al-mujtam‘a al-madani: qira’ manhajiya fi sijallat mahkamat Trablus al-shara‘iya [The traditional picture of civil society: methodological reading of the records of the Islamic tribunal of Tripoli] (Tripoli: Lebanese University Press, 1983).Google Scholar
Ziadeh, Khaled. Yum al-Jum‘a, yum al-ahad [Friday is Sunday] (Beirut: Dar al-Nahar, 1996).Google Scholar
Abi Samra, Mohammed. Trablus: Sehat Allah wa mina al-hadatha [Tripoli: Allah Square and port of modernity] (Beirut: Dar al-Saqi, 2011).Google Scholar
Imad, Abdel Ghani. Islamiyu Lubnan: al-wahda wa al-ekhtilaf ‘ala ‘arad al-mustahil [Islamists of Lebanon: unity and divergence in the impossible land] (Beirut: Dar al-Saqi, 1998).Google Scholar
Imad, Abdel Ghani. Mujtam‘a Trablus fi zaman al-tahawulat al-‘othmaniya [The society of Tripoli at the time of the Ottoman transformations] (Tripoli: Dar al-Insha’, 1999).Google Scholar
Imad, Abdel Ghani. Al-harakat al-Islamiya fi Lubnan: al-din wa al-siyasa fi mujtam‘a mutanawe‘a [The Islamist movements in Lebanon: religion and politics in a diverse society] (Beirut: Dar al-Talia, 2006).Google Scholar
Itani, Amal, Ali, Abdel Qadir and Manna, Mu‘in. Al-Jama‘a al-Islamiya fi Lubnan mundhu al-nash’a hatta 1975 [The Islamic Group in Lebanon from the inception to 1975] (Beirut: Markaz al-Zeytuna, 2009).Google Scholar
Itani, Fida’. Al-jihadiyun fi Lubnan: min Quwwat al-Fajr ila Fatah al-Islam [The Jihadis in Lebanon: from Quwwat al-Fajr to Fatah al-Islam] (Beirut: Dar al-Saqi, 2008).Google Scholar
Kayal, Maha. Al-mai fi al-mujtam‘a [Water in Society] (Beirut: Mukhtarat, 2007).Google Scholar
Kayal, Maha and Atiya, Atef. Trablus min al-dahkal [Tripoli from the inside] (Beirut: Dar al-Mokhtarat, 2004).Google Scholar
Lagha, Ali. Fathi Yakan: ra’ed al-haraka al-islamiya al mu’asira fi Lubnan [Fathi Yakan: pioneer of the Islamic movement in Lebanon] (Beirut: Mu’assassat al-Risala, 1994).Google Scholar
N‘ame, Adib. “Al-amen fi Trablus, 1980–1985” [“The security in Tripoli, 1980–1985”], Nada’ al-Shamal (November 1985).Google Scholar
N‘ame, Adib. Al-Faqr fi madinat Trablus [Poverty in the city of Tripoli] (Beirut: United Nations, 2014).Google Scholar
Salem, Abdel Aziz. Trablus al-Sham fi al-tarikh al-Islami [Tripoli of Syria in Islamic history] (Alexandria: Dar al-Ma‘aref, 1967).Google Scholar
Tadmori, Omar. Tarikh wa athar masajed wa madares Trablus fi asar al-Mamalek [History and legacy of the mosques and the schools of Tripoli during Mamluk times] (Tripoli: Dar al-Bilad, 1974).Google Scholar
Tadmori, Omar. Tarikh Trablus al-siessi wa al-hadari ‘aber al-’asur [The political and cultural history of Tripoli through the ages] (Tripoli: Dar al-Bilad, 1978), Tomes 1, 2 and 3.Google Scholar
Tlass, Mustafa. The mirror of my life [Mirat Hayati] (Vol. 4) chapter 87 (Damascus: Dar Tlass, 2004).Google Scholar
Yakan, Fathi. Al-mas’ala al-lubnaniya min manzur islami [The Lebanese question through an Islamic perspective] (Beirut: al-Mu’assassa al-Islamiya, 1979).Google Scholar
Zein, Samih. Tarikh Trablus qadiman wa hadathan [Recent and ancient history of Tripoli] (Beirut: Dar al-Andalus, 1969).Google Scholar
Ziadeh, Khaled. Al-sura al-taqlidiya li al-mujtam‘a al-madani: qira’ manhajiya fi sijallat mahkamat Trablus al-shara‘iya [The traditional picture of civil society: methodological reading of the records of the Islamic tribunal of Tripoli] (Tripoli: Lebanese University Press, 1983).Google Scholar
Ziadeh, Khaled. Yum al-Jum‘a, yum al-ahad [Friday is Sunday] (Beirut: Dar al-Nahar, 1996).Google Scholar
Atiyah, Najla Wadih. The attitude of the Lebanese Sunnis towards the state of Lebanon (London: University of London, unpublished PhD thesis, 1973).Google Scholar
Gade, Tine. The crisis of the political-religious field in Tripoli, Lebanon (1967–2011) (Paris: Institut d’Etudes Politiques Sciences Po Paris, unpublished PhD thesis, 2015).Google Scholar
Gade, Tine. “Sunni Islamists in Tripoli and the Asad regime; 1966–2014Syria Studies (Vol. 7, No. 2, 2015).Google Scholar
Gade, Tine. Urban Sunnism and the Sunni crisis: Tripoli 1920–2020 (forthcoming monograph).Google Scholar
Gulick, John. “Past and present in local histories of the Ottoman period from Syria and LebanonMiddle Eastern Studies (Vol. 35, No. 1, 1999).Google Scholar
Gulick, John. Tripoli: a modern Arab city (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1967).Google Scholar
Habibis, Daphne. A comparative study of the workings of a branch of the Naqshbandi Sufi order in Lebanon and the UK (London: London School of Economics and Political Science, unpublished PhD thesis, 1985).Google Scholar
Habibis, Daphne. “Millenarianism and Mahdism in LebanonEuropean Journal of Sociology (Vol. 30, No. 2, 1989).Google Scholar
Ismail, Salwa. Rethinking Islamist politics: culture, the state and Islamism (London: I.B.Tauris, 2003).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lawson, Fred. “Syria’s intervention in the Lebanese civil war, 1976: a domestic conflict explanationInternational Organization (Vol. 38, No. 3, 1984).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lefèvre, Raphaël. Ashes of Hama: the Muslim Brotherhood in Syria (London: Oxford University Press and Hurst, 2013).Google Scholar
Parsons, Laila. The Commander: Fawzi al-Qawuqji and the fight for Arab independence, 1914–1948 (New York: Hill and Wang, 2016).Google Scholar
Rabil, Robert. “Fathi Yakan, the pioneer of Islamic activism in LebanonLevantine Review (Vol. 2, No. 1, 2013).Google Scholar
Rabil, Robert. Salafism in Lebanon, from apoliticism to transnational jihadism (Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Reilly, James. The Ottoman cities of Lebanon: historical legacy and identity in the Middle East (London: I.B.Tauris, 2016).Google Scholar
Richard Yousaf, Timothy. The Muslim Brotherhood in Lebanon (al-Jama‘a al-Islamiya), 1948–2000 (Beirut: American University of Beirut, unpublished MPhil thesis, 2010).Google Scholar
Sayigh, Yezid. Armed struggle and the search for a Palestinian state: the Palestinian national movement, 1949–1993 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997).Google Scholar
Sing, Manfred. “Brothers in arms: how Palestinian Maoists turned JihadistsDie Welt des Islams (Vol. 51, 2011).Google Scholar
Sluglett, Peter and Weber, Stefan (eds.), Syria and Bilad al-Sham under Ottoman rule (Leiden: Brill, 2010).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weismann, Itzchak. The Naqshbandiyya: orthodoxy and activism in a worldwide Sufi tradition (London: Routledge, 2007).Google Scholar
Abdel Nour, Antoine. Introduction à l’histoire urbaine de la Syrie Ottomane (16eme-18eme siècle) (Beirut: Publication de l’Université Libanaise, 1982).Google Scholar
Abs, Jalal. Etude et propositions pour une utilisation rationnelle de l’espace à Tripoli-Liban (Paris: Université Paris VII, unpublished PhD thesis, 1981).Google Scholar
Al-Soufi Richard, Joumana. Lutte populaire armée: de la désobéissance civile au combat pour Dieu (Paris: University de La Sorbonne Nouvelle, unpublished PhD thesis, 1984).Google Scholar
Al-Soufi Richard, Joumana. “Le vieux Tripoli dans ses structures actuellesAnnales de Géographie (Vol. 2, 1981).Google Scholar
Bizri, Dalal. Introduction à l’étude des mouvements islamistes sunnites au Liban (Paris: Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, unpublished PhD thesis, 1984).Google Scholar
Bizri, Dalal. “Le mouvement Ibad al-Rahman et ses prolongements à Tripoli,” chapter 4 in Carré, Olivier and Dumont, Paul (eds.), Radicalismes Islamiques Tome 1: Iran Liban Turquie (Paris, L’Harmattan, 1985).Google Scholar
Dewailly, Bruno. Pouvoir et production urbaine à Tripoli al-Fayha (Liban) (Tours: Université Francois Rabelais de Tours, unpublished PhD thesis, 2015).Google Scholar
Dewailly, Bruno. “L’espace public à travers le prisme du pouvoir: quelques réflexions à partir du cas tripolitain (Liban)Geocarrefour (Vol. 77, No. 33, 2002).Google Scholar
Dot Pouillard, Nicolas. “De Pekin à Teheran en regardant vers Jerusalem: La singulière conversion à l’islamisme des ‘Maos du Fatah’” Cahiers de l’Institut Religioscope (No. 2, December 2008).Google Scholar
Douayhi, Chawqi. “Tripoli et Zgharta, deux villes en quête d’un éspace commun,” chapter 3 in Huybrechts, Eric and Douayhi, Chawqi (eds.), Reconstruction et réconciliation au Liban (Beirut: Presses de l’Ifpo, 1999).Google Scholar
Gade, Tine. “Conflit en Syrie et dynamiques de guerre civile à Tripoli, LibanMaghreb-Machrek (Vol. 218, No. 4, 2013).Google Scholar
Heloui, Khodr. La rue des églises (Paris: L’Harmattan, 2014).Google Scholar
Maha, Kayal. Le système socio-vestimentaire à Tripoli (Liban) entre 1885 et 1985 (Neuchâtel: Université de Neuchâtel, unpublished PhD thesis, 1989).Google Scholar
Mercadier, Sylvain. Logiques de la contestation et symbolique spatiale: l’exemple de la place Abdel el Hamid Karameh à Tripoli (Liban) (Beirut: Université Saint Joseph, unpublished Master’s thesis, 2015);.Google Scholar
Picaudou, Nadine. “Mutations socio-économiques du vieux TripoliAnnales de Géographie (Vol. 1, 1981).Google Scholar
Ploteau, Loïc. Les populations originaires du Haut-Dinniyé à Tripoli (Liban): les dynamiques de ségrégation de citadinisation (Tours: Université de Tours, unpublished MPhil thesis, 1997).Google Scholar
Rajab, Mousbah. Le vieux Tripoli (Liban), un espace historique en voie de mutation (Paris: Université de Panthéon La Sorbonne, unpublished PhD thesis, 1993).Google Scholar
Rougier, Bernard. L’Oumma en fragments: contrôler le sunnisme au Liban (Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 2015).Google Scholar
Seurat, Michel. “Le quartier de Bab Tebbane à Tripoli (Liban), étude d’une assabiya urbaine,” chapter 3 in Zakaria, Mona (ed.), Mouvements communautaires et espaces urbains au Machreq (Beirut: Presses de l’Ifpo, 1985).Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure no-reply@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×