Britain and Imperial Rivalry in the Red Sea, 1906-1927

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Britain and the World

Britain and Imperial Rivalry in the Red Sea, 1906-1927

James N. Tallon | Justin Quinn Olmstead

History / Middle East / General

This volume examines the rivalry between the British Empire and numerous local powers in the Red Sea region during the first quarter of the twentieth century. The strategic importance of the Red Sea grew significantly following the completion of the Suez Canal in 1869, making it a critical linchpin of the British imperial system. At the dawn of the twentieth century, Britain and its Empire faced a range of challengers across the Red Sea Basin and its surrounding regions. An increasingly assertive Ottoman Empire contested British influence in South Arabia, while Italian and French interests competed with Britain in East Africa alongside the Ethiopian Empire. These imperial powers were, in turn, challenged by the rise of Muslim revivalist movements and emerging state actors, including Sayid Mohamed Abdullah Hassan (Somalia), Ibn Saud (Arabia), Ali Dinar (Sudan), and Yahya Muhammad Hamid al-Din (Yemen), among others. Although the First World War disrupted these dynamics, it did not resolve them: while some powers withdrew, many actors and underlying tensions remained. Set against the backdrop of the ‘Scramble for Arabia’ from 1906 to 1919—the contest for dominance over the Arabian Peninsula—this volume highlights the interactions between Cairo, Khartoum, Aden, Asmara, London, and Istanbul in the early twentieth century.

James N. Tallon is Professor of History at Lewis University. His research interests focus on conflict and state-building in the late Ottoman Empire and Turkey. He co-edited The Eastern Mediterranean and the ‘Long’ First World War: 1911-1923 forthcoming with Bloomsbury in 2026. He has also authored several book chapters and articles, most recently “International Actors Intervening in a Local War: The Long World War I of the Eastern Mediterranean, 1911–23” in Boundaries of War: Local and Global Perspectives in Military History. Marine Corps University Press (2024).
 
Justin Quinn Olmstead is a historian for Sandia National Laboratories, in Albuquerque, USA. Prior to that, he was Associate Professor of History and Director of History Education at the University of Central Oklahoma, with a Concurrent Appointment at Swansea University, in the UK. He has authored multiple books, chapters, and articles on diplomacy, foreign policy, and counterterrorism including The United States' Entry into the First World War: The Role of British and German Diplomacy (Boydell & Brewer, 2018), From Nuclear Weapons to Global Security: 75 Years  of Research and Development at Sandia National Laboratories (Lynn Rienner Publishing, 2024). He has edited two books, Reconsidering Peace and Patriotism during the First World War (Palgrave, 2017), and Britain in the Islamic World (Palgrave, 2019).

Publication Date: 11 December 2026
Publisher: Springer Nature Switzerland
Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan
ISBN-13: 9783032349989
Format: Hardback

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