James Whidden
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Imperialists and colonials
in Egypt
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The Egyptian revolt against the British Protectorate erupted in the spring of 1919. Vivien Jennings-Bramly used the expression 'Egypt of the English' during the war to distinguish the 'English' from the colonial. For liberal-minded colonials, the war ruined any chance of rebuilding international relations as represented by the 1936 treaty. This fact is probably best represented by the collapse of the Anglo-Egyptian Union. Colonial society unravelled during and after the Second World War when Egyptian and Levantine elites began to withdraw from the English schools and other integrative social relations with the British colony. Edward Said recalled that his family abandoned the Gezira Sporting Club for the Tawfiqiyya Club in 1949. When the last troops evacuated Egypt on 24 March 1956, some residents remained, most would be expelled and their properties confiscated after the invasion in October. The disaster at Suez terminated many of the institutions founded by the British.

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Egypt

British colony, imperial capital

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