ROBERT D. MCCHESNEY, Kabul under Siege: Fayz Muhammadʼs Account of the 1929 Uprising (Princeton, N.J.: Marcus Weiner, 1999). Pp. 319. $49.95 cloth, $25.95 paper.
Canfield, Robert L.; Canfield Robert L.; Washington University in Saint Louis
Журнал:
International Journal of Middle East Studies
Дата:
2000
Аннотация:
The year 1929 was a particularly disruptive period for the city of Kabul (perhaps the only comparable time was when the mujahedin fought over it in the 1990s). In January of that year, under pressure from a band of Tajik rebels who entered Kabul almost unopposed, the ruler of Afghanistan, Amir Aman Allah, abdicated his throne and fled the capital. The man who occupied his office was a former soldier-turned-highwayman from the village of Kalakân some twenty miles north of Kabul. He was named Habib Allah (and is so called throughout the work under review), but he is better remembered by the epithet “Bacha-i Saqqaw,” or “Water Carrierʼs Son,” his father having once served in that role for the military. A Tajik, he was the first non-Pushtun to occupy the throne since the birth of Afghanistan in the 18th century. He would hold it for only nine months.
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