138 résultats
1961178445Bonn: Delegation der Liga der Arabischen Staaten November 1961. First edition first printing of this introduction to Saudi Arabia. It contains biographies and photographic illustrations of Ibn Sa'ud and other members of the royal family. We have traced no institutional copies outside of Germany Austria and Denmark. This pamphlet was produced by the Arab League's delegation in Switzerland as part of a series introducing its members their economies political systems and histories. The introduction opens by emphasizing Saudi Arabia's importance among the Arab states both for its oil resources and religious significance. The chapters then go on to cover geography infrastructure education oil and industry. Octavo. Half-tone photographic illustrations throughout; text in German. Original white printed wrappers wire-stitched and hole-punched as issued front wrapper lettered and decorated in black and green Wrappers lightly toned at edges a few scuff marks minor offsetting internally contents bright: a very good copy. Philipp 796. unknown
1976171424Dhahran: Arabian American Oil Co. Exploration Department 1976. A scarce map showing the locations of oil wells pipelines and refineries in the region surrounding Aramco's headquarters. We have traced only one copy US Library of Congress. The discovery of commercial quantities of oil in Dhahran at the Dammam Number 7 well in 1938 kick-started the industry in Saudi Arabia. The city is now one of the major centres of oil production in the region and has been the centre of Aramco's now Saudi Aramco's activities since the early 1950s. This map shows the Abqaiq-Dhahran Dhahran-Ras Tanura and Saudi Arabia-Bahrain pipelines. It also maps the road network airport powerlines and drainage systems. Six different types of wells are marked from observational to structural suspended and abandoned examples. It was drawn by Aramco employee Kei Inouye and first released in December 1975 with revisions published on 20 September 1976. The 1:1000000 scale key shows the connections between Dhahran and other major cities such as Dammam Safwa and al-Khobar. Large map 1366 x 845 mm key on recto. Folds toned edges a little nicked one small hole neatly repaired: a very good copy. unknown
1930ABC_485971930. Kept in a brown kraft paper envelope. With 13 gelatin silver prints various sizes. A collection of thirteen press photographs from the 1930s showing Saudi Arabian leaders during diplomatic visits to Europe. The beautifully sharp and clear photographs give a good impressions of what these events must have been like at the time. Most of the photographs come with the text that would have accompanied them when they were published in a newspaper and are stamped on the back by the press agency that had the rights for publication. We have not been able to find any of these photographs in online archives.Four of the images show Faisal bin Abdulaziz Al Saud 1906-1975 during a diplomatic visit to Great Britain. Faisal was the third son of King Abdulaziz the founder of modern Saudi Arabia. Faisal was very intelligent and was given numerous important duties as a result. He was sent on a five-month long diplomatic visit to Great Britain and France when he was just 13 and achieved his first military successes when he was 16. He succeeded his half brother as king of Saudi Arabia in 1964 and became a well-loved ruler. The present photographs however show his visit to Great Britain in 1939. In particular his visit to the Royal Air Force stations in Middlesex and Northolt where he viewed the Hawker Hurricane planes which he considered to buy for the Royal Saudi Air Force. After his return however he decided against it.The other photographs show Fuad Bey Hamza 1899-1951 the Saudi ambassador in France and Fakry Pacha dates unknown the Egyptian ambassador in France during an Eid al-Fitr celebration in Paris in 1939 a portrait of Sheikh Sir Abdullah al-Salim al-Sabah 1895-1965 the 11th ruler of the Sheikhdom of Kuwait and the Kaaba in Mecca during hajj.Some of the photographs are slightly discoloured or creased around the corners. Mostly in very good condition. unknown
1966187021Jeddah: Dar Al Asfahani & Co. 1966. The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia in 1966 A substantial run of this scarce weekly newsletter on the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia issued by the Ministry of Information. WorldCat lists other similar collections at Exeter the UN Library Geneva and NLI. The newsletter ran from 1964 to 1976 based on surviving copies. The news focuses on internal and foreign politics with accounts of King Faisal's and Prince Salman's policies and diplomatic activities at home and abroad. These include King Faisal's visit to Pakistan and Turkey where he advocated for "Islamic solidarity" the visit of the Somali president the acquisition of modern jet fighters for the army KSA's stand at the United Nations concerning South Africa's white supremacists and education especially the opening of girls' schools. Several articles report news in the oil world including the creation of refineries in Jeddah and Riyadh the role of Petromin and Aramco in the Saudi economy the drilling of water wells the expansion of Jeddah's seaport Saudi-Kuwaiti boundaries urban town planning and the full texts of Royal Decrees on the Railways Organisation Ordnance and banking control. 11 non-consecutive issues each a printed bifolium approx. 690 x 500 mm folding into 350 x 250 mm dating April to August 1966. With half-tone photographic images. Edges occasionally chipped occasional tiny holes to text and along central folds: very good copies. unknown
1950171429Saudi Arabia: c.1950. A record of Aramco's formative era A collection of ground and aerial shapshots apparently taken by a Saudi Aramco manager stationed at the Mahasin camp just outside al-Hofuf showing the site's early years several scenes of local life and the drilling rig. Collectively the images provide a window onto the early years of Saudi Arabia's development. Seven images depict the camp itself including one picture taken from atop the radio tower overlooking the barracks mess halls powerhouse water trucks and wells. The structures are all surrounded by black lines which the annotations to the verso of the image inform us are "oil to keep the scorpions and snakes out - we hope". Other snapshots show the view up to the top of the radio mast the view down to ground and a panorama across to the nearest town presumably al-Mubarraz. One picture shows the drilling rig with cars in front and a crane to the right. The remaining six images were taken at leisure and show a rocky outcrop several camels locusts on the fender of a jeep local camel drivers and a view from a water tank in an oasis. Accompanying the photographs is a handwritten note from two Aramco employees to a "Mr Canady" perhaps the photographer. The employees complain of a colleague who is proposing to charge the company rent for the use of a dysfunctional bulldozer leased by the Bin Laden company. Muhammad Bin Laden was Saudi Arabia's most successful construction magnate of the mid-20th century and was famously the world's largest importer of Caterpillar bulldozers. 13 gelatin silver photographs c.120 x 92 mm 1 slightly trimmed and numbered on the print in ink manuscript captions relating to numbering on verso. Housed in developer's buff paper sleeve. Numbered image creased and slightly trimmed several others with slight striations: a very good collection. unknown
1985163227Riyadh: General Department of Antiquities and Museums 1985. The capital of the first Saudi state First edition first impression of this richly illustrated bilingual guide for visitors to the historic earthen city of Diriyah recording its history and restoration to date. This work is institutionally uncommon with WorldCat tracing only four locations Library of Congress Smithsonian Bilkent University Library and Bibliotheque Geneve. The Emirate of Diriyah often referred to as the First Saudi state had the town of Diriyah as its capital. Located on the northwestern outskirts of Riyadh its At-Turaif district served as the original home of the Saudi royal family. The town was "founded in the 15th century and bears witness to the Najdi architectural style which is specific to the centre of the Arabian Peninsula. In the 18th and the early 19th century its regional political and religious role increased and the citadel of at-Turaif became the centre of the temporal power of the House of Saud and the spread of the Islamic reform movement in Arabia Salafiyya. The property includes the remains of many palaces and an urban ensemble built on the edge of the ad-Dir'iyah oasis" UNESCO. The At-Turaif District in Diriyah was included on the list of World Heritage Sites in 2010. Quarto. With 2 folding maps numerous illustrations in the text. Original light yellow wrappers illustrations from photographs; text in Arabic and English. Some marks to covers neat repair at foot of spine. A very good copy. "At-Turaif District in ad-Dir'iyah" UNESCO available online. unknown
1945165179London: Geographical Section General Staff 1945. A detailed early map of central Arabia Second edition of this pilot's map of Riyadh and the surrounding region reissued by Britain's general staff for the use of the Royal Air Force at the end of the Second World War and annotated by a member of 53 Squadron. Revised from its first publication in 1922 the map was photolithographed in 1942 and then updated in 1945 to include new information on roads airfields landing grounds and seaplane stations. The topographical features that are referenced include all the salient information a pilot might expect such as rivers marshes areas liable to flooding mountains ruins lava flow and sandy desert. A glossary explains the English meanings of the Arabic terms included in the map such as darb road jabal mountain and qasr fort. The owner's inscriptions to the lower corners read "Riyadh" and "E. Skemp" most likely Eric Skemp who "flew Liberators on 53" Squadron Mulder p. 298. Although the squadron spent the war years stationed in Britain and the eastern United States it was assigned to carry troops home to India in 1945. Photolithographed map 630 x 790 mm. General light creasing more marked at head and foot of central fold scuff at top left corner: a very good example. Rob J. M. Mulder The Fokker Fours 2019. unknown
190830Saudi Arabia and Bahrain: 1979. The first trip to the Gulf by a British sovereign An interesting archive with the original confidential printed programme issued by the Master of the Household of Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip's two-week visit to Saudi Arabia in 1979. It was the first-ever visit to the Gulf by a female head of state. The official printed programme for internal circulation only given to each participants includes detailed information on the composition of the party. It also features arrangements for the Concorde flight cabin and room arrangement on H.M.Y. Britannia and the Nasiriya Palace in Riyadh and the full logistics of the royal tour with a schedule of the commitments and visits in Kuwait Bahrain Saudi Arabia Qatar Abu Dhabi Dubai and Oman travel protocols and mail delivery to the royals on tour. The photographic images include the landing of the British Airways Concorde in Bahrain the welcome delegation led by Sheikh Isa bin Salman Al Khalifa of Bahrain and the Saudi royal welcome by King Khalid Prince Fahd and Prince Abdullah. Together 11 items: with 7 monochrome photographs 167 x 122 mm H.M.Y. Britannia's red ink stamp "Royal Navy Official Photograph Crown Copyright Reserved" on verso of all but one; booklet 161 x 98 mm original printed wrappers gilt monograph "ER II" embossed on upper wrapper; and 3 colour photographs 89 x 85 mm. Traces of adhesive on versos of photographs two small light water stains on rear wrapper colour photographs a trifle faded: very good exemplars. unknown
1810PHO-1119Paris, Crapart, 1810. In-8, demi-basane bleu, dos lisse avec titre et date en pied, tranches jaunes (reliure postérieure). 4ff-viii-222pp-2ff
1956185255Philadelphia: Aero Service Corp. 1956. Exceptional photo map An impressive aerial view of Jeddah and its environs which shows Jeddah's urban development less than ten years from the demolition of the old walls in 1947 and the start of the oil boom in 1950. It illustrates the expansion of residential areas northward and eastward of the airport runways and the dock area as well as what appears to be oil well infrastructure. It was produced for the surveying work of Glen F. Brown a US specialist in surface geology and natural resources. Hired by Ibn Saud in 1945 Brown carried out geological investigations in Saudi Arabia until well into the 1950s to identify sites with water oil and minerals. The ground-breaking cartographic and photographic surveys prepared by Brown were the basis for the most detailed maps of Saudi Arabia ever produced up to that time. Established in Philadelphia in 1919 Aero Services Corporation - "the oldest flying corporation in the world" Storms p. 1279 - specialized in large-scale aerial photography photogrammetry and photographic surveying through the creation of photo-mosaics. "High-altitude photography on a scale of 1:60000 of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia was initiated during 1949 by the Aero Service Corp. and completed in 1959. Both third-order vertical and horizontal control and Shoran were utilized in compiling the photography. This controlled photography resulted in highly accurate geographic maps at the publication scale which then served as a base for the geologic overlay. The topography of the sedimentary areas was depicted by hachuring and that of the shield region by shaded relief utilizing the airbrush technique" Powers p. iii. In this view airbrushing covers the lands east of Jeddah towards Mecca where the Arabian-Nubian Shield stretches out. Half-tone photograph 402 x 499 mm. Right-hand half airbrushed. English caption date and scale. Mounted framed and glazed. Couple of minor marginal creases: a very good example. R. W. Powers et al. "Geology of the Arabian Peninsula: Sedimentary Geology in Saudi Arabia" U. S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 560-D 1966 with foreword by O.A. Seager et al.; C. Eric Storms et al. "Aero Service Corporation: The Early Years-1919-1940" Photogrammetric Engineering & Remote Sensing vol. 50 1984. unknown
120370Calcutta Superintendent Government Printing 1917. . First edition; small 8vo 18 x 13 cms; publisher's original green printed cloth wrappers black lettering to upper cover a few marks to upper cover else a very good copy internally clean; 43 pp.<br /> This scarce intelligence pamphlet includes significant chapters on the neighbours of Iraq namely 'The Bakhtiari' the 'Pusht-i-Kuh' Pot-e Kuh and 'Central Arabia and the Shamiyah'. Scattered throughout are extensive references to the history of Arabia and Saudi Arabia with the 'Central Arabia' chapter including an account of Ibn Saud and Wahhabism as well as mentions of relations with Bahrain Oman and Kuwait. It was only five years later that the borders of Saudi Arabia with Iraq and Kuwait would be agreed under the Uqair Protocol.<br /><br />Sir Arnold Talbot Wilson 1884-1940 was a critical figure in the British administration of Iraq and its relations with its neighbours. He was deputy chief political officer under Sir Percy Cox and then acting commissioner when Cox transferred to Persia in 1918. The pamphlet describes itself as being 'prepared to meet the request of certain Officers of Indian Expeditionary force "D" for some account of the political status of Mesopotamia and neighbouring countries' and was likely commissioned as part of the broader reaction to the British disaster at Kut in requiring up-to-date intelligence on the region.<br /><br />Scarce with only 6 copies known in institutions.<br /> Calcutta, Superintendent Government Printing, 1917. hardcover
1958151710Geneva: Printed in Switzerland 1958. Scarce document relating to the 1958 Saudi-Aramco arbitration talks First edition preceding the English and Arabic translations presentation copy from Professor Georges Sauser-Hall with his compliments slip laid in. Production may have been restricted to principal participants for review before preparation of the official versions. We have traced only six institutional copies. The document records the Geneva tribunal established under the Aramco Concession Agreement to resolve a major dispute between the Saudi government and Aramco early in the reign of King Saud. Significant both for Saudi-Aramco relations and as an early modern test of sovereignty and concessionary rights the case arose from the concession granting Aramco 60 years exclusive rights to explore extract transport and export petroleum together with an arbitration clause. Amid surging post-war demand Aramco concluded offtake agreements for future exports which Saudi Arabia challenged in 1954 by granting Aristotle Onassis priority tanker-transport rights through the Saudi Arabian Maritime Tankers Company a Saudi-flag fleet with tax exemptions royalties and preferential access to Aramco exports. Aramco refused compliance as impractical and contrary to the concession and arbitration commenced on 23 February 1955. Saudi Arabia first appointed Dr Helmy Badawi succeeded after his death by Judge Mahmoud Hassan; Aramco appointed Dr Saba Habachi. The arbitrators selected the Swiss jurist Georges Sauser-Hall as referee and Pierre Lalive as secretary general after which both parties assembled leading international counsel. Empowered to state the law but not reconcile the competing agreements the tribunal considered separate submissions addressing maritime transport rights assignment of concessionary privileges preferential treatment for Saudi-flag shipping and the compatibility of the Onassis agreement with the concession. Proceedings comprised three rounds of written exchange and forty-two sittings over eight weeks in Geneva during summer 1956 drawing on Hanbali and international law. On 23 August 1958 the tribunal ruled overwhelmingly for Aramco holding that Satco's priority rights contravened the concession that Aramco had not assigned its rights and that Saudi Arabia could neither compel use of Satco tankers nor disregard Aramco's export and offtake arrangements; the Onassis agreement was therefore ineffective against Aramco. Despite dissent the Saudi government complied with the award abandoned enforcement of the Onassis arrangement and avoided international arbitration for decades. This document presents the proceedings in full. Quarto. Original pale grey printed wrappers. Spine lightly toned and palely stained a few other minor marks. An excellent copy. An online search of institutional libraries cites UN Geneva University of Basel Bibliotheque cantonale et universitaire Lausanne Peace Palace Library University of Chicago University of California. unknown
156758Saudi Arabia: Royal Saudi Armed Forces 1983. Destroy when no longer needed First editions of this extensive and institutionally rare set of large aerial charts produced for the Royal Saudi Air Force covering northeastern Saudi Arabia the Arabian Gulf region Iraq and Iran. Strictly confidential they bear the legend: "For distribution to Royal Saudi Defence Forces only. Destroy when no longer needed". The year of their publication saw the first joint military exercises of the Gulf Cooperation Council headquartered in Riyadh. Saudi Arabia relied on significant foreign assistance to augment its military during the 20th century as it sought to increase its influence in the Middle East. US involvement within the country was formalized through the establishment of a Military Training Mission in 1951. By the mid-1980s when these charts were produced a "45000-strong Saudi army received training and logistical support from some 38000 advisors of US British and French origin" Cronin. Based on extensive maps produced by the British Geographical Services General Staff GSGS the charts contain updated indices of elevations populated places roads railroads boundaries terrain elevations hydrography and vegetation and an Arabic-English glossary. The collection comprises: 1. NG38-2445 Saudi Arabia. 2. NG38-2645 Saudi Arabia. 3. NG39-2448 Saudi Arabia & Qatar. 4. NG39-2648 Saudi Arabia. 5.NG40-2454 Oman United Arab Emirates. 6.NG40-2657 Iran. 7. NH38-2845 Saudi. 8. Arabia Kuwait Iraq. 9. NH38-3045 Iran Iraq Kuwait. 10. NH39-2848 Saudi Arabia Iran Kuwait Iraq. 11. NH39-2851 Iran. 12. NH39-3048 Iran Iraq Kuwait. 13. NH39-3051 Iran. 14. NH40-2854 Iran. 15. NI38-3242 Iraq. 16. NI38-3245 Iraq Iran. 17. NI39-3248 Iran. 18. NI39-3251 Iran. 19 colour charts each 890 x 1230 mm. Some pencillings to the margins. A few small creases occasional finger soiling large section excised from centre of NH39-3048. Overall in excellent condition. Stephanie Cronin "Tribes Coups and Princes: Building a Modern Army in Saudi Arabia" Middle Eastern Studies vol. 49 no. 1 2013. unknown