Academic literature on the topic 'Egypt History Intervention'

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Journal articles on the topic "Egypt History Intervention"

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Curry, John C. "Book Review: Rachida Chih, Sufism in Ottoman Egypt: Circulation, Renewal and Authority in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Century, London: Routledge 2020." Netsol: New Trends in Social and Liberal Sciences 7, no. 2 (November 1, 2022): 52–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.24819/netsol2022.10.

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The study of Ottoman Sufism has grown exponentially in recent years, but has tended to focus more on the Balkan or Anatolian contexts than those of the Arab provinces, leaving broad gaps in our understanding of the religious history of the Arab provinces after the sixteenth century. Rachida Chih’s study of the history of Sufism in Ottoman Egypt is, for this reason alone, a welcome intervention in the historiography of early modern Ottoman society and culture. However, it is also a critical intervention into a historiography that has often portrayed the Ottoman era as a period of religious sclerosis and decline for Egypt and the Maghreb. To replace this outdated trope, she uncovers a transformational shift in Egyptian Sufism that should be recognized as one of the most consequential since the foundation of its earliest Sufi movements in the medieval period of the twelfth and thirteenth century.
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Ferris, Jesse. "Soviet Support for Egypt's Intervention in Yemen, 1962–1963." Journal of Cold War Studies 10, no. 4 (October 2008): 5–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/jcws.2008.10.4.5.

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Drawing on documents and memoirs in Russian and Arabic, this article tells the unknown story of Soviet-Egyptian cooperation in the early phases of the Yemeni Civil War, a war that broke out while much of the world's attention was focused on the Cuban missile crisis and the war between India and Pakistan. Egypt's fateful decision to intervene in the conflict was dependent on substantial Soviet backing, which strengthened the relationship between the USSR and Gamal Abdel Nasser's government in Egypt. In response to a plea from Nasser, Nikita Khrushchev authorized the military transport branch of the Soviet Air Force to embark on a clandestine airlift operation ferrying Egyptian troops into Yemen to shore up the new government there.
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Mulligan, William. "Decisions for Empire: Revisiting the 1882 Occupation of Egypt*." English Historical Review 135, no. 572 (February 2020): 94–126. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ehr/ceaa003.

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Abstract The decision of Gladstone’s government to invade and occupy Egypt in 1882 remains one of the most contentious in late nineteenth-century British political and imperial history. This article examines the decision-making process in June and July 1882, revisiting Robinson and Gallagher’s influential study in the light of more recent historiographical research and previously unused sources. It looks at who made the critical decisions, what their preoccupations were, and how they were able to get Cabinet approval. Hartington and Northbrook were the two key figures, who co-operated to overturn Gladstone’s and Granville’s policy in June 1882. Yet their co-operation was momentary and they found themselves on different sides of the argument over the participation of Indian forces and international support. Although they shared a sense of Egypt’s importance to British imperial security, they each had a distinctive approach, so that the decision to occupy cannot be reduced to a conflict between Whig pragmatists and Radical idealists. The article also shows how the Alexandria riot on 11 June altered the context of decision-making by shifting the mood in the parliamentary Liberal party towards intervention. Parliament, not the press, was the crucial site of ‘public opinion’ in the Egyptian crisis in June and July 1882.
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Vetter, Thomas, Anna-Katharina Rieger, and Alexander Nicolay. "Ancient rainwater harvesting systems in the north-eastern Marmarica (north-western Egypt)." Libyan Studies 40 (2009): 9–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0263718900004489.

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AbstractIn arid and semi-arid regions runoff-fed agriculture has been common for millennia. Recent geographical and archaeological investigations in the north-eastern part of ancient Marmarica (north-western Egypt) revealed a dense network of water harvesting systems associated with settlements and production sites dating back to Ptolemaic times. The environmental conditions and the ancient water management strategies are characterised by minimal intervention but maximised effect and optimised utilisation of the scarce water (100–150 mm seasonal discharge) and soil resources of the region.
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Khalil, Ahmed, Naglaa Hammouda, and Khaled El-Deeb. "Implementing Sustainability in Retrofitting Heritage Buildings. Case Study: Villa Antoniadis, Alexandria, Egypt." Heritage 1, no. 1 (May 22, 2018): 57–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/heritage1010006.

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Sustainable design is believed to stand on the opposite side of heritage conservation. This view is supported by the fact that sustainable design requires invasive measures to implement new technologies and treatments that challenge the principle of minimum intervention in heritage conservation. Another point of view sees heritage conservation as an already act of sustainable development that protects and preserves social and cultural resources such as heritage buildings and their intangible values. On the other hand, research and practice have proven that heritage buildings can be the subjects of sustainable design projects that achieve outstanding measures of sustainability and energy efficiency while not compromising the authenticity of the heritage value of the building. This sustainable conservation reaches its peak in adaptive-reuse projects of heritage buildings as reusing the building guarantees its ongoing maintenance and promotes its social, cultural and economic values to society, while giving it the ability to withstand modern users’ comfort and energy efficiency standards. This research presents a case study of the adaptive-reuse project of Villa Antoniadis in Alexandria; a heritage building built in the mid-nineteenth century and in the process of a major adaptive-reuse project. The history and significance of the building will be studied as well as the conservation values of the current project, then some proposals for interventions that could achieve more energy efficiency for the project while conserving the building are discussed. The research included a simulation of the building, using building energy modelling software for the current adaptive-reuse project as a base case, and the hypothetical application of different proposed sustainable interventions such as thermal insulation, double glazing, shading, lighting control, natural ventilation, and photovoltaic energy generation, where the energy savings potentials for each proposed intervention were studied. The simulation proved a possible reduction of 36.5% in the cooling, heating and lighting energy consumption as well as generated 74.7% of the energy required for cooling, heating and lighting from renewable energy sources.
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Saleh, Marlis J. "Government Intervention in the Coptic Church in Egypt during the Fatimid Period." Muslim World 91, no. 3-4 (September 2001): 381–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1478-1913.2001.tb03723.x.

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Endelman, Jonathan. "In the Shadow of Empire: States in an Ottoman System." Social Science History 42, no. 4 (2018): 811–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ssh.2018.3.

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What is the origin of the Middle Eastern state? Although social scientists have traditionally emphasized the role of the European colonial experience, especially the British and French mandates following World War I, the late Ottoman era from the Edict of Gülhane in 1839 that inaugurated the Tanzimat reforms until World War I represents a period at least as critical to understanding origins of the state in the region. Certain Ottoman provinces known as Eyalet-i Mümtaze or exceptional/special provinces developed under the aegis of the Ottoman Empire that acquired many statelike attributes without becoming independent polities. Moreover, the nature of the Ottoman Imperial center changed to become more similar to that of a territorially delimited state as opposed to the classic multifaceted polity that had been the earlier norm. These developments resulted in a blurring of lines that had traditionally defined state and empire during the nineteenth-century Ottoman Empire. To illustrate this change, economic, administrative, and political examples are presented from Egypt and Turkey. This comparative analysis will identify ways the evolution of the two states was similar as well as critical differences such as the extent of foreign intervention and the role played by representative assemblies. The formation of imperial states within the empire as well as the transformation of the empire to become more statelike resulted in strong state institutions in places such as Egypt and Turkey that long preceded the main European colonial intervention in the region after World War I.
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Schroeder, Caroline T. "Women in Anchoritic and Semi-Anchoritic Monasticism in Egypt: Rethinking the Landscape." Church History 83, no. 1 (March 2014): 1–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0009640713001650.

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Outside of hagiography, the evidence for female anchorites in early Christian Egypt remains scarce. House ascetics in cities survive for us in documentary and other sources, but women monks in non-coenobitic, nonurban environments are more difficult to locate, to the point at which some scholars have begun to question their very existence. This essay seeks to change the parameters of the scholarly debate over the nature of non-coenobitic female monastic experience. It examines hagiography, monastic rules and letters, and documentary papyri to reassess the state of the field and to produce a fuller portrait of anchoritic and semi-anchoritic female asceticism. Non-coenobitic women's monasticism existed, and it crossed boundaries of geography and social status, as well as the traditional categories of lavra, eremitic, coenobitic, and house asceticism. This interdisciplinary approach provides insights not only into women ascetics’ physical locations but also into their class, education, and levels of autonomy. An intervention into the historiography of women's asceticism in late antique Egypt, this study ultimately questions the advisability of using traditional categorizations of “anchoritic,” “lavra,” and “coenobitic” to classify female monasticism, because they obscure the particularities and diversity of female ascetic history.
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Nabila E. Sabola, Marwa A. Shahin, Khaled A. Khader, Hanan M. Metwally, and Mervat M. Desoky. "SEXUAL NURSING CARE FOR THE POSTPARTUM PERIOD AND ITS IMPACT ON SEXUAL DYSFUNCTION AND LIFE SATISFACTION AMONG EGYPTIAN WOMEN." Malaysian Journal of Public Health Medicine 20, no. 2 (October 1, 2020): 108–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.37268/mjphm/vol.20/no.2/art.491.

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Many couples experience postpartum period of decreasing sexual satisfaction. Postpartum sexual dysfunction is a very common and relevant clinical problem, with significant adverse effects on women's health. The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of sexual nursing care for the postpartum period on sexual dysfunction and life satisfaction among Egyptian women. A quasi-experimental design was used to study 219 women selected using a purposive sample. The study was conducted in out-patients maternity clinic at Zagazig university hospitals, Sharkia Governorate, Egypt, between the periods from February 2019 to February 2020. Data was collected using three tools. The first: Structured interview questionnaire that consist from three parts, part one: socio demographic characteristics , part two obstetric history and part three sexual history, the second: Female Sexual dysfunction index (FSDI), and the third: Satisfaction with Life Scale (SWLS).Four session about sexual education was done. The Results showed an improvement in sexuality and life satisfaction after application of sexual nursing care for the postpartum period including kegel’s exercise, positioning and distractions techniques post intervention compared to pre intervention. The study concluded that sexual nursing intervention for postpartum period improve sexual functioning and create enjoyable intercourse and there was high positive correlation between sexuality and life satisfaction after implementation of the sexual nursing care intervention. The study recommended to provide counselling /training program about sexual nursing care intervention during postpartum period for nurses working in different health care settings.
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Daniel, Afkera, and Ami Bhatt. "Schistosomiasis and Bladder Cancer in Egypt: A Historical Analysis." Journal of Global Oncology 2, no. 3_suppl (June 2016): 50s. http://dx.doi.org/10.1200/jgo.2016.004580.

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Abstract 8 Background: Schistosoma haematobium has an extensive history in Egypt, with certain regions of the country reporting infection rates as high as 70%. This parasite has also been linked to bladder cancer since the beginning of the 20th century. However, little was done to elucidate a causal linkage between schistosomiasis and bladder cancer prior to the 1940s. This paper examines the reasons for this lack of attention, and the conditions that eventually stimulated research in Egypt on the connection between the two diseases. Methods: Through a review of secondary sources, interpretation of primary sources, and archival research at the Rockefeller Foundation, I have been able to trace and analyze the relationship between schistosomiasis and bladder cancer in Egypt. Results: Much of the research spearheaded by imperial powers during the colonial era focused on maintaining the short-term health of agricultural workers crucial to the colonial economy. As a long-term sequelae of infection, bladder cancer did not immediately impede the efficiency of this labor force. Thus, while research into schistosomiasis infection boomed throughout the colonial period, inquiry into its relationship to bladder cancer was stifled until power transitioned to Egyptians themselves and reforms took hold that brought Egyptian scientists to the forefront. Conclusion: Renewed interest in the link between schistosomiasis and bladder cancers from the 1940s followed an important shift in the political structures that governed scientific research in Egypt and led to the ascendancy of Egyptian scientists and physicians. This shift changed research agendas. As public health and medical practitioners work globally to advance health systems, lessons learned from Egypt's early experiences in schistosomiasis control and bladder cancer intervention are a reminder of the importance of including local scientific communities and internal organizations in the process of producing medical knowledge and public health infrastructures. AUTHORS' DISCLOSURES OF POTENTIAL CONFLICTS OF INTEREST: Afkera Daniel No relationship to disclose Ami Bhatt Patents, Royalties, Other Intellectual Property: I have a patent pending focused on therapeutic, diagnostic and interventional approaches to targeting of Bradyrhizobium enterica, a novel bacterium I and colleagues discovered that appears to be associated with a complication of stem cell transplantation.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Egypt History Intervention"

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Gafuik, Nicholas. "More than a peacemaker : Canada's Cold War policy and the Suez Crisis, 1948-1956." Thesis, McGill University, 2004. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=83103.

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This paper will rather seek to uncover and emphasize Cold War imperatives that served as significant guiding factors in shaping the Canadian response to the Suez Crisis. The success of Canadian diplomacy in the 1956 Suez Crisis was in the ability of Secretary of State for External Affairs Lester B. Pearson and his Canadian colleagues to protect Western interests in the context of the Cold War. Suez threatened Anglo-American unity, and the future of the North Atlantic alliance. It also presented the Soviets an opportunity to gain influence in the Middle East. The United Nations Emergency Force ensured that Britain and France had a means to extricate themselves from the Crisis. Canada wished to further protect Western credibility in the eyes of the non-white Commonwealth and Afro-Asian bloc. It was, therefore, important to focus international attention on Soviet aggression in Hungary, and not Anglo-French intervention in Egypt.
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Wichhart, Stefanie Katharine 1975. "Intervention : Britain, Egypt, and Iraq during World War II." 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/2152/13272.

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Wichhart, Stefanie Katharine. "Intervention : Britain, Egypt, and Iraq during World War II /." Thesis, 2007. http://www.lib.utexas.edu/etd/d/2007/wichharts70798/wichharts70798.pdf#page=3.

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Thesis (Ph. D.) -- University of Texas at Austin, 2007.
Includes vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 420-428). Available electronically via the University of Texas at Austin's web site.
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Books on the topic "Egypt History Intervention"

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1936-, Louis William Roger, and Owen Roger 1935-, eds. Suez 1956: The crisis and its consequences. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989.

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The Suez affair. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1986.

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Hungary and Suez, 1956: An exploration of who makes history. Lanham: University Press of America, 1991.

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Cutting the lion's tail: Suez through Egyptian eyes. New York: Arbor House, 1987.

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Cutting the lion's tail: Suez through Egyptian eyes. London: A. Deutsch, 1986.

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Heikal, Mohamed. Cutting thelion's tail: Suez through Egyptian eyes. London: Deutsch, 1986.

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Hinnebusch, Raymond A. Egyptian politics under Sadat: The post-populist development of an authoritarian-modernizing state. Boulder: Lynne Rienner Publishers, 1988.

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Hinnebusch, Raymond A. Egyptian politics under Sadat: The post-populist development of an authoritarian-modernizing state. Cambridge [Cambridgeshire]: Cambridge University Press, 1985.

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Lewis, Johnman, ed. The Suez crisis. London: Routledge, 1997.

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Suez: Britain, France and the endgame in Egypt. London: I.B. Tauris, 2001.

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Book chapters on the topic "Egypt History Intervention"

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Baldwin, James E. "Conclusion: Ottoman Cairo’s legal system and grand narratives." In Islamic Law and Empire in Ottoman Cairo. Edinburgh University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474403092.003.0008.

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The conclusion reflects on the implications of the book’s findings for longer-term narratives of Islamic legal history and Ottoman history. Drawing on recent studies of the medieval period and the nineteenth century, the chapter sketches a revised grand narrative of Islamic legal history in which political and military officials play a much more prominent role, and the modernizing reforms of the nineteenth century build on indigenous precedents as well as western influences. The conclusion also refines the prevailing model of decentralization in the historiography of the seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Ottoman Empire. Although the imperial government often found itself unable to impose its will on powerful provincial elites, provincial subjects continued to demand the intervention of imperial institutions, in particular legal institutions, into their affairs. In many ways, Istanbul’s authority in Egypt was invited, rather than imposed.
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Booth, Marilyn. "Theatre and Morality, Passion and Fidelity (1893)." In The Career and Communities of Zaynab Fawwaz, 446–96. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192846198.003.0011.

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This chapter analyses Fawwaz’s one play, which as far as we know was never performed. As her first published work, and as an intervention on the question of young people’s rights over their own futures, it intersected with her essays and many profiles in her biographical dictionary. The chapter contextualizes Fawwaz’s play by thinking through the history of theatre in nineteenth-century Egypt in gendered terms, including reformist enthusiasm for theatre as a public ‘school’, a theme Fawwaz exploited in introducing her play and writing on theatre. It considers press coverage of theatre at the time and compares Fawwaz’s approach to that of her mentor al-Tuwayrani’s, and also returns to her debate with him on ‘love’ as a commentary paralleling the approach to marriage as a social institution that she follows in the play.
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Young, Robert J. C. "4. History and power, from below and above." In Postcolonialism: A Very Short Introduction, 49–60. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/actrade/9780198856832.003.0005.

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‘History and power, from below and above’ addresses the continuing interference by former colonial powers in the internal affairs of independent decolonized states. Indeed, countries that achieved sovereignty in their independence struggles still find that they are the object of interventions by the Western countries that had once ruled them. Has the Middle East ever really been free of Western interference since Napoleon invaded Egypt in 1798 or the remnants of the Ottoman Empire were divided up between Britain and France at the end of the First World War? An interesting example can be seen in the intermittent bombing of Baghdad and Iraq by Western powers since 1920.
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El Dessouky, Naglaa Fathy. "Corporate Social Responsibility of Public Banking Sector for Sustainable Development." In Corporate Social Responsibility, 467–88. IGI Global, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-6192-7.ch025.

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Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) has become a significant field of studies to stress the importance of the new role of organizations towards the society for sustainable development. Nowadays, an enormous number of authors have been participating in this field to highlight the responsibility of organizations towards the community, society and the natural environment where they are operating. Despite the growing number of researches related to CSR in the developed countries little empirical studies have been devoted to examine CSR concept and practice in the African countries, the MENA region (Middle-East and North Africa), as well as in the Golf countries. This chapter seeks to study CSR concept and practice in the emerging market economies (EMEs). It will mainly focus on the implementations of CSR by the public banking sector. We will investigate the role of the public banking sector existing in an Arab country in comparison to an Asian country to explain and analyze the similarities and differences of CSR activities in both experiences. In this comparative study we will primarily examine Banque Misr, as one of the oldest and largest public bank in Egypt and the Malayan Banking Berhad (trading as Maybank) as the largest public bank in Malaysia. After a meticulous review of literature, we propose a systemic framework to study CSR practices and policy implementations. We illustrated the CSR as a constant process where all variables are interrelated and are affecting each other in a mutual approach. In this systemic framework we advocated to study all significant variables related to CSR practice as: the history/philosophy development, core-values, CSR adopted definition, motives, key players, approaches, stakeholders focus, sectors of intervention and mechanisms of policy implementations. The chapter concludes that common CSR policies exist between the Malaysian and the Egyptian experience. Nevertheless the Malaysian model has formulated an elaborated and further sophisticated CSR public banking program. Meanwhile, the Egyptian model needs to adopt more global oriented CSR public banking policies, in particular to assure the sustainable development requirements.
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Mackowiak, Philip A. "Therapeutics." In Patients as Art, 51–76. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190858216.003.0003.

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Chapter 3 (“Therapeutics”) contains a series of works that reflect the long history of medical treatments, beginning with therapeutic rituals and progressing to modern intensive care. Whereas there is a current tendency to think of drug therapy as a recent innovation, written records of the use of salicylates, cannabis, mandrake, and opioids in ancient Egypt, Greece, and China attest to the fact that some of the earliest physicians gave patients drugs that were both effective and surprisingly modern. For over 1500 years, however, these were less important than interventions directed at correcting humoral disproportions. Some of this chapter’s most engaging works depict the bleeding, purging, cupping, and burning that were performed in an effort to achieve a proper balance between the various corporal humors. Also depicted in stunning works are the roles played by nurses, hospitals, and quacks in the evolution of medical practice.
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Morse, Heidi. "Roman Studios." In Classicisms in the Black Atlantic, 133–62. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198814122.003.0006.

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The Roman residencies of two American artists, nineteenth-century sculptor Edmonia Lewis and contemporary photographer Carrie Mae Weems, illustrate the value of locating classical receptions in the African diaspora in unexpected places and mediums. Rome’s status as the epicenter of ancient imperialism, as well as a hub for the intertwined legacies of race and neoclassicism in transatlantic modernity, makes it a particularly charged site for black women artists. Analyzing photographs in Weems’s 2006 series Roaming as portals into the cultural and geographic spaces occupied by Lewis as she designed her 1876 sculpture Death of Cleopatra, this chapter demonstrates the breadth and vibrancy of black women’s visual interventions into modern perceptions of the classical past. Inspired by the enduring material and cultural presences of ancient Egypt in modern Rome, both artists mark out Roman spaces as historic as well as contemporary spaces for blackness, rather than facades performing whiteness.
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Conference papers on the topic "Egypt History Intervention"

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Kareem, E. Abdel, M. Salah, A. El Farran, B. Conrad, and A. El Beltagy. "Coiled Tubing Deployed Multistage Horizontal Fracturing Technology: Lesson Learned and Case History in Egypt." In SPE/ICoTA Coiled Tubing & Well Intervention Conference & Exhibition. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/173653-ms.

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Karmany, Putu Anggi Widia, Setyo Sri Rahardjo, and Bhisma Murti. "Effect of Low Birth Weight on the Risk of Pneumonia in Children Under Five: Meta-Analysis." In The 7th International Conference on Public Health 2020. Masters Program in Public Health, Universitas Sebelas Maret, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.26911/the7thicph.01.61.

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ackground: Pneumonia remains the foremost cause of death from infectious diseases in children under five. Previous studies reported the association between low birth weight and pneumonia in children under five. The purpose of this meta-analysis study was to assess the effect of low birth weight on the risk of pneumonia in children under five. Subjects and Method: This was meta-analysis and systematic review. The study collected published articles from Google Scholar, PubMed, and Springer Link databases. Keywords used “birth weight” AND “pneumonia children under 5” OR “pneumonia” AND “case control”. The inclusion criteria were full text, using English language, and using case control study design. The study subject was children under five. Intervention was low birthweight with comparison normal birthweight. The study outcome was pneumonia. The data were analyzed using RevMan 5.3 program. Results: 6 studies from Nepal, Ethiopia, India, Tanzania, Brazil, and Egypt. This study reported that children with history of low birthweight had the risk of pneumonia 1.96 times than those with normal birthweight (aOR = 1.96; 95% CI= 0.99 to 3.86; p= 0.050). Conclusion: Low birthweight increases the risk of pneumonia in children under five. Keywords: pneumonia, low birth weight, children under five Correspondence: Putu Anggi Widia Karmany. Masters Program in Public Health, Universitas Sebelas Maret. Jl. Ir. Sutami 36A, Surakarta 57126, Central Java. Email: putuanggiwidiakarmany@-gmail.com. Mobile: 087864306006
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Reports on the topic "Egypt History Intervention"

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Postabortion case load study in Egyptian public sector hospitals. Population Council, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/rh1997.1016.

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There is an absence of reliable data on the incidence of incomplete abortion in Egypt. A diagnostic, descriptive study that neither tests an experimental intervention nor evaluates in a comprehensive manner the quality of postabortion medical care was undertaken to address this issue. The study is a cross-sectional observation of the volume and nature of the postabortion case load in Egyptian public-sector hospitals, and it responds to the following objectives: 1) Accurately estimate the number of women who present for postabortion treatment in ob/gyn in-patient facilities as a percentage of ob/gyn admissions in a representative sample of Egyptian public-sector hospitals during one month; 2) Describe the medical and sociodemographic characteristics of the postabortion patients, including the cause(s) of the lost pregnancies, whether the pregnancy was wanted, the medical treatments received, and contraceptive-use history. As stated in this report, the study's sampling frame consists of the approximate 569 public-sector hospitals in Egypt. Approximately 15 percent of the hospitals were randomly selected with the probability of selection proportionate to the average number of beds in each hospital, using standard sampling procedures.
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