کورديپيديا أکبر مصدر کوردي للمعلومات بلغات متعددة!
حول كورديبيديا
امناء الأرشيف لکوردیپیدیا
 البحث
 ارسال
 الأدوات
 اللغات
 حسابي
 البحث عن
 مظهر
  الوضع المظلم
 الإعدادات الافتراضية
 البحث
 ارسال
 الأدوات
 اللغات
 حسابي
        
 kurdipedia.org 2008 - 2025
المکتبة
 
ارسال
   بحث متقدم
اتصال
کوردیی ناوەند
Kurmancî
کرمانجی
هەورامی
English
Français
Deutsch
عربي
فارسی
Türkçe
עברית

 المزيد...
 المزيد...
 
 الوضع المظلم
 شريط الشريحة
 حجم الخط


 الإعدادات الافتراضية
حول كورديبيديا
موضوع عشوائي
قوانين الأستعمال
امناء الأرشيف لکوردیپیدیا
تقيماتکم
المفضلات
التسلسل الزمني للأحداث
 النشاطات - کرديبيديا
المعاينة
 المزيد
 الاسماء الکوردية للاطفال
 انقر للبحث
أحصاء
السجلات
  582,217
الصور
  123,331
الکتب PDF
  22,030
الملفات ذات الصلة
  124,483
فيديو
  2,187
اللغة
کوردیی ناوەڕاست - Central Kurdish 
315,561
Kurmancî - Upper Kurdish (Latin) 
95,142
هەورامی - Kurdish Hawrami 
67,630
عربي - Arabic 
43,332
کرمانجی - Upper Kurdish (Arami) 
26,339
فارسی - Farsi 
15,454
English - English 
8,495
Türkçe - Turkish 
3,818
Deutsch - German 
2,018
لوڕی - Kurdish Luri 
1,785
Pусский - Russian 
1,145
Français - French 
359
Nederlands - Dutch 
131
Zazakî - Kurdish Zazaki 
92
Svenska - Swedish 
79
Español - Spanish 
61
Italiano - Italian 
61
Polski - Polish 
60
Հայերեն - Armenian 
57
لەکی - Kurdish Laki 
39
Azərbaycanca - Azerbaijani 
35
日本人 - Japanese 
24
Norsk - Norwegian 
22
中国的 - Chinese 
21
עברית - Hebrew 
20
Ελληνική - Greek 
19
Fins - Finnish 
14
Português - Portuguese 
14
Catalana - Catalana 
14
Esperanto - Esperanto 
10
Ozbek - Uzbek 
9
Тоҷикӣ - Tajik 
9
Srpski - Serbian 
6
ქართველი - Georgian 
6
Čeština - Czech 
5
Lietuvių - Lithuanian 
5
Hrvatski - Croatian 
5
балгарская - Bulgarian 
4
Kiswahili سَوَاحِلي -  
3
हिन्दी - Hindi 
2
Cebuano - Cebuano 
1
қазақ - Kazakh 
1
ترکمانی - Turkman (Arami Script) 
1
صنف
عربي
السيرة الذاتية 
6,080
الأماکن 
4,863
الأحزاب والمنظمات 
44
المنشورات 
33
المتفرقات 
10
صور وتعریف 
281
الخرائط 
19
المواقع الأثریة 
61
المطبخ الکوردي 
1
المکتبة 
2,888
نكت 
4
بحوث قصیرة 
21,340
الشهداء 
4,975
الأبادة الجماعية 
1,467
وثائق 
996
العشيرة - القبيلة - الطائفة 
6
احصائيات واستفتاءات 
12
فيديو 
64
بيئة كوردستان 
1
قصيدة 
38
الدوائر 
148
النصوص الدينية 
1
مخزن الملفات
MP3 
1,174
PDF 
34,580
MP4 
3,799
IMG 
232,007
∑   المجموع 
271,560
البحث عن المحتوى
Arnold Wilson
صنف: السيرة الذاتية
لغة السجل: English - English
يدّونُ كورديبيديا تاريخً كردستان والكورد يومياً..
شارک
Copy Link0
E-Mail0
Facebook0
LinkedIn0
Messenger0
Pinterest0
SMS0
Telegram0
Twitter0
Viber0
WhatsApp0
تقييم المقال
ممتاز
جيد جدا
متوسط
ليست سيئة
سيء
أضف الی مجموعتي
اعطي رأيک بهذا المقال!
تأريخ السجل
Metadata
RSS
أبحث علی صورة السجل المختار في گوگل
أبحث علی سجل المختار في گوگل
کوردیی ناوەڕاست - Central Kurdish3
Kurmancî - Upper Kurdish (Latin)1
عربي - Arabic0
فارسی - Farsi0
Türkçe - Turkish0
עברית - Hebrew0
Deutsch - German0
Español - Spanish0
Français - French0
Italiano - Italian0
Nederlands - Dutch0
Svenska - Swedish0
Ελληνική - Greek0
Azərbaycanca - Azerbaijani0
Catalana - Catalana0
Čeština - Czech0
Esperanto - Esperanto0
Fins - Finnish0
Hrvatski - Croatian0
Lietuvių - Lithuanian0
Norsk - Norwegian0
Ozbek - Uzbek0
Polski - Polish0
Português - Portuguese0
Pусский - Russian0
Srpski - Serbian0
балгарская - Bulgarian0
қазақ - Kazakh0
Тоҷикӣ - Tajik0
Հայերեն - Armenian0
हिन्दी - Hindi0
ქართველი - Georgian0
中国的 - Chinese0
日本人 - Japanese0
Arnold Wilson
Arnold Wilson
Sir Arnold Talbot Wilson KCIE CSI CMG DSO (18 July 1884 – 31 May 1940) was a British soldier, colonial administrator, Conservative politician, writer and editor. Wilson served under Percy Cox, the colonial administrator of Mesopotamia (Mandatory Iraq) during and after First World War, including an Iraqi revolt in 1920. Wilson was the first Member of Parliament to die in action in the Second World War. He was killed while serving as an aircrew member at the advanced age of 55.


$Early life and career$

Wilson was born in 1884 and educated in England at Clifton College, where his father James Wilson was a headmaster. His elder half-sister was the leading civil servant Mona Wilson and his younger brother was the tenor Sir Steuart Wilson.

Wilson (aka A.T.) was tall and strong. He began his military career as an army officer 19 August 1903, having been awarded the King's Medal and sword of honor at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst, being commissioned on the Unattached List for the British Indian Army. After he spent a year attached to the 1st battalion the Wiltshire Regiment in India, he was appointed to the Bengal Lancers and posted to the 32nd Sikh Pioneers, on 18 December 1904.

Wilson famously saved money travelling back to Britain on leave by working as a stoker to Marseilles and then cycling the rest of the way.

In 1904 he went to Iran as a lieutenant to lead a group of Bengal Lancers to guard the British consulate in Ahvaz and to protect the work of the D'Arcy Oil Company, which had obtained a sixty-year oil concession in Iran and was pursuing oil exploration in partnership with the Burmah Oil Company.

In 1907 Wilson was transferred to the Indian Political Department and sent to the Persian Gulf, where he served as a political officer. Wilson oversaw the discovery of the first oil site in the Middle East, Masjid-i-Suleiman in 1908. While serving as a senior administrator and consul-general of Muhammerah (1909–11), he was put in charge of the Turko-Persian Frontier Commission. He looked like the traditional figure of the Indian Rebellion of 1857 in a top buttoned bright red tunic, the British Indian Army uniform. His flashing eyes, his beetling eyebrows, his close-cropped hair, his biblical quotations, recalled Gertrude Bell, the British Oriental Secretary. Wilson was a hard worker, a workaholic, who was tirelessly energetic, shifting mountains of paperwork. He inspired a younger colleague, Harry Philby, while Hubert Young, a favored subordinate, found him domineering.

$First World War$

In January 1915, as the British were moving troops from India into Mesopotamia through the Persian Gulf and Basra, Wilson was designated as the assistant, and then deputy, to Sir Percy Cox, the British political officer for the region. Based in Baghdad, he then became the acting civil commissioner for Mesopotamia. The problem remained that there was no official Arab Policy; it had not been defined in law nor by the Civil Service. India wanted Mesopotamia as a province; but Arabists from Cox downwards wished for a semi-autonomous policy separate from the Arab Bureau in Cairo. Policy was made ad hoc; but Wilson disagreed.

During his tenure in Mesopotamia Wilson worked to improve the country's administration according to the principles he learned in India. In Wilson's view the priority was to reconstruct and stabilize the country, by establishing an efficient government and administration as well as a fair treatment and political representation of the various ethnic and religious communities (i.e. in the case of Iraq: Arabs, Kurds, Turkmen, of religions such as Islam Shiite and Sunni, Christianity and Judaism). In doing so, he was nicknamed The Despot of Mess-Pot.

Capt Wilson told me the staggering news that he had been appointed to Tehran ... Capt Wilson and I are excellent colleagues and the best of friends and I know I can do a good deal by seeing people ... I am going to compile an intelligence book on Persia.

However, after the First World War he found himself progressively opposed to other British officials who believed that Arab countries should be granted independence under British supervision. British policymakers debated two alternative approaches to Middle Eastern issues. Many diplomats adopted the line of thought of T. E. Lawrence favoring Arab national ideals. They backed the Hashemite family for top leadership positions. Wilson expressed the views of the India office. They argued that direct British rule was essential, and the Hashemite family was too supportive of policies that would interfere with British interests. The decision was to support Arab nationalism, sidetracked Wilson, and consolidate power in the Colonial Office.

$Post World War One$

In 1918, Wilson became acting civil commissioner over the territory that would become known as Iraq. In 1919, during the Paris Peace Conference, he was among the few who successfully recommended adopting the Arabic name Iraq, as it had been known for more than 1400 years by Muslim and Arab worlds, instead of the Greek name Mesopotamia which was only used by Westerners. This political entity covered the planned northern expansion of the newly created country under the British Mandate to include the oil rich Mosul region of northern Iraq, in addition to the Mesopotamian provinces of Baghdad and Basra.

In April 1920, at the Conference of San Remo, the League of Nations agreed to the British mandate over Iraq. In the spring and summer of 1920, a revolt against the Mandate erupted across central and southern Iraq. Wilson, as part of the Mandatory administration, took a direct role in suppressing the revolt.

Having achieved the rank of brevet lieutenant-colonel in August 1918, he retired from the Indian Army in August 1921.

In the summer of 1920 Wilson proposed a compromise, suggesting that Feisal, the former king of Syria, be offered the Iraqi throne. This proposal was intended to obtain support from the Iraqis as well as British officials who favored semi-independence. It was eventually accepted by the British government, but Wilson was not there to participate in its implementation. The British government decided not to follow Wilson's views, and instead granted independence to Iraq. The British government removed Wilson from his position in Iraq and knighted him. Deeply disappointed by the turn of events, he left the public service and joined the Anglo-Persian Oil Company as manager of their Middle Eastern operations. He worked for the company until 1932.

$Interwar decades$

Across the 1930s Wilson undertook a great number of extracurricular activities, such as chairman of the Parliamentary Scientific Committee (forerunner of the Parliamentary and Scientific Committee), an active role in the British Science Guild, the British Eugenics Society, the Industrial Health Research Board, and many more.

Wilson was responsible for the large exhibition of Persian art at Burlington House in London in 1931.

Wilson published his travelling and political diaries as Thoughts and Talks, More Thoughts and Talks and Walks and Talks Abroad with the Right Book Club. In addition to his writing, Wilson served as editor of The Nineteenth Century and After between 1934 and 1938.

$Politics$

In 1933 Wilson was elected in a by-election as the Conservative MP for Hitchin. He described himself as a left-wing radical Tory.

Like his half-sister Mona Wilson, Wilson published extensively on what he termed left wing issues such as workmen's compensation, the costs of funerals, industrial assurance, and old age pensions. These researches arguably influenced related postwar policies.

Before the Second World War his outspoken views on foreign policy evoked much criticism. In 1938 Wilson expressed support for the Spanish Nationalists, saying I hope to God Franco wins in Spain, and the sooner the better. After the beginning of the war, he made a speech at the 1922 Committee demanding a negotiated settlement with Nazi Germany. George Orwell called him a Fascist, although he also praised his courage and patriotism.

$Second World War$

However, in October 1939 after the outbreak of the war, he joined the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve, serving as a pilot officer (air gunner) in 37 Squadron of RAF Bomber Command. He stated that I have no desire to shelter myself and live in safety behind the ramparts of the bodies of millions of our young men. Still an MP, he was killed in northern France, near Dunkirk, on 31 May 1940 when the bomber he was serving on as an air gunner, Wellington L7791, piloted by Pilot Officer William Gray crashed near Eringhem, killing him instantly and fatally wounding Gray. He is buried at Eringhem churchyard, half-way between Dunkirk and Saint-Omer. [1]
دون هذا السجل بلغة (English)، انقر علی ايقونة لفتح السجل باللغة المدونة!
This item has been written in (English) language, click on icon to open the item in the original language!
تمت مشاهدة هذا السجل 3,767 مرة
اعطي رأيک بهذا المقال!
هاشتاگ
المصادر
[1] موقع الكتروني | کوردیی ناوەڕاست | Wikipedia
السجلات المرتبطة: 1
لغة السجل: English
تأريخ الولادة: 18-07-1884
تأريخ الوفاة: 31-05-1940 (56 سنة)
الجنس: ذکر
القومیة: اجنبي(ة)
اللغة - اللهجة: فارسي
اللغة - اللهجة: انجليزي
اللغة - اللهجة: ک. جنوبي
رتبة عسكرية: عقید
مستوى التعليم: الجامعة (بکالوريوس)
مكان الأقامة: خارج البلد
مکان الوفاة: فرنسا
نوع التعليم: علوم العسكرية
نوع الشخص: دبلوماسي
نوع الشخص: نائب في المجلس
نوع الشخص: کوردولوج
نوع الشخص: اداري
نوع الشخص: عسکري
نوع الشخص: مستشرق
البيانات الوصفية الفنية
جودة السجل: 99%
99%
تم أدخال هذا السجل من قبل ( هژار کاملا ) في 24-04-2022
تمت مراجعة هذه المقالة وتحریرها من قبل ( زریان سەرچناری ) في 24-04-2022
تم تعديل هذا السجل من قبل ( میلانۆ محەمەد ساڵح ) في 31-05-2022
عنوان السجل
لم يتم أنهاء هذا السجل وفقا لالمعايير کورديپيديا، السجل يحتاج لمراجعة موضوعية وقواعدية
تمت مشاهدة هذا السجل 3,767 مرة
QR Code
الملفات المرفقة - الإصدار
نوع الإصدار اسم المحرر
ملف الصورة 1.0.117 KB 24-04-2022 هژار کاملاهـ.ک.
  موضوعات جديدة
  موضوع عشوائي 
  خاص للسيدات 
  
  منشورات كورديبيديا 

Kurdipedia.org (2008 - 2025) version: 17.08
| اتصال | CSS3 | HTML5

| وقت تکوين الصفحة: 0.594 ثانية