Abdul Latif Tibawi

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Abdul Latif Tibawi (Arabic: عبد اللطيف الطيباوي, 1910–1981) was a Palestinian historian and educationalist.

Biography[edit]

Born in Taybet El-Muthalath, near TulKarem, he was one of the earliest graduates of the Arabic College, Dar Al-Mu’allimin, in Jerusalem. He read history and Arabic literature at the American University of Beirut and later earned a Ph.D from the University of London in 1948. Prior to the 1948 Palestinian expulsion and flight he was a senior education officer in Jerusalem. He was in London when the crisis of 1948 unfolded. He became a refugee and was appointed Lecturer in Comparative Education at the Institute of Education, London, where he taught until his retirement in 1977. Tibawi wrote extensively on many aspects of Middle Eastern history in both English and Arabic.

He established a fund for Palestinian postgraduate students at the School of Oriental and African Studies.

Select bibliography[edit]

  • Arab Education In Mandatory Palestine, Luzac, 1956
  • Jerusalem; Its Place in Islam and Arab History, Institute for Palestinian Studies, 1969
  • British Interests In Palestine, 1800-1901, Oxford University Press, 1961
  • Anglo-Arab Relations and The Question of Palestine, 1914-1921; Luzac, 1977
  • A Modern History of Syria, Including Lebanon and Palestine, Macmillan, St Martin's P., 1969
  • American interests In Syria, 1800-1901, Clarendon Press, 1966
  • Islamic Education: Its Traditions and Modernization into the Arab National Systems, Luzac, 1972
  • The Islamic Pious Foundations in Jerusalem: Origins, History and Usurpation by Israel, London, 1978

References[edit]