Publication Date: 1962
Seller: Geographicus Rare Antique Maps, Brooklyn, NY, U.S.A.
Map
Good. Laid down on archival tissue. A few margin repairs and points of soiling. Closed tear, stabilized, from left margin above legend. Size 26.5 x 38.75 Inches. This is a scarce 1962 Arabic-language wall map of the Arab World and environs, prepared by Dr. Muhammad Sobhi Abdel Hakim and colleagues and published by Dar al-Qalam in Cairo. The map was prepared at the height of the pan-Arab movement that emerged after World War II (1939 - 1945), shaped by the dynamics of Decolonization and the early Cold War (1947 - 1991). A Closer Look This map employs a Lambert Conformal Conic Projection that covers from southern Europe to central Africa (Kenya, the Congo) and from the Atlantic Ocean in the west to Persia in the east. A red line outlines the Arab world, encompassing all of North Africa, including Mauritania and Sudan, as well as Arabia, Iraq, and the Levant. Color-shading is used to indicate elevation both above and below sea level, making this primarily a physical map, though with political borders, capital cities, rail lines, and oil pipelines indicated. The elevations of some of the tallest mountains in the region are noted. Egypt is labeled as the United Arab Republic (????????? ??????? ???????), while Syria (?????) is not, reflecting its secession from the polity after the September 1961 coup d'etat. The map is likewise up-to-date on the evolving and complex divisions of southern Arabia, split at this time between the Aden Protectorate, North Yemen, and the Protectorate of South Arabia, although the use of 'Yemen' (?????) for North Yemen makes it unclear if this was produced before or after the September 1962 coup that overthrew the monarchy and established a republic in the pan-Arab style. Pan-Arabism In the 1960s, Pan-Arabism reached its height as a political and cultural movement aimed at uniting the Arab world under shared language, history, and identity, with Egypt's Gamal Abdel Nasser (1918 - 1970) as its most prominent champion. Nasser promoted Arab socialism, independence from Western influence, and solidarity with the Palestinian cause, gaining immense popularity through measures such as the nationalization of the Suez Canal (1956). His rhetoric was broadcast widely throughout the region via the 'Voice of the Arabs' radio station. The short-lived United Arab Republic (1958 - 1961), a union between Egypt and Syria, symbolized both the appeal and difficulties of Arab unity. Pan-Arabism also inspired intervention abroad, such as Egypt's role in the North Yemen Civil War (1962 - 1970), and helped bring about the creation of the Palestine Liberation Organization (1964) under Arab League sponsorship. However, the decisive Six-Day War (1967), in which Israel dealt a crushing defeat to Egypt, Syria, and Jordan and seized additional territory, including East Jerusalem, shattered much of the credibility of Pan-Arabism, exposing its limitations and undermining confidence in Nasser's vision. Although Nasser remained an iconic leader until his death in 1970, the war cemented Pan-Arabism's decline as many Arab states shifted toward narrower state-based nationalism, and also opened the door for the emergence of Islamism as an alternative ideology. Publication History and Census This map was prepared by Dr. Muhammad Sobhi Abdel Hakim (????? ???? ???? ??? ??????), with colleagues Yusuf Khalil (???? ????), Halim Jirish (???? ????), and Abdel Aal Rashdan (??? ????? ?????). It was printed by the short-lived (c. 1960 - 1964) and curiously named NATO Press, and was published by Dar al-Qalam (??? ????? , House of the Pen) in Cairo in 1962. It is labeled at top-left as 'Arab World No. 1' and at top-right as 'First Group,' suggesting that it was the first in a series of maps, though it is unclear if other maps in this series were indeed produced, and catalog records of Dar al-Qalam's output in the following years suggest not. The present map is noted in the OCLC among the holdings of Harvard University, the University of Utah, Yale Univers.