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         Libya History:     more books (100)
  1. Index Libycus: A Cumulative Index to Bibliography of Libya, 1915-1975 by Hans Schluter, 1981-01
  2. Jews in an Arab Land: Libya, 1835-1970 by Renzo De Felice, 1985-07
  3. Imagery and Ideology in U.S. Policy Toward Libya, 1969-1982 (Pitt Series in Policy and Institutional Studies) by Mahmoud G. Elwarfally, 1988-12
  4. Libya: From Colony to Independence by Ronald Bruce St. John, 2008-07-25
  5. Libya: The Struggle for Survival by Geoff Simons, 1993-04-15
  6. Libya: Qadhafi's Revolution and the Modern State (Nations of the Contemporary Middle East) by Lillian Craig Harris, 1986-10
  7. Libya: background and U.S. relations.(Country overview): An article from: Congressional Research Service (CRS) Reports and Issue Briefs by Christopher M. Blanchard, 2005-11-01
  8. Libya and Qaddafi (Impact Book) by Don Lawson, 1987-04
  9. The Islamic Cities in Libya: Planning and Architecture (Europaische Hochschulschriften Reihe Xxviii, Kunstgeschichte) by Abdalla Ahmed Abdalla Elmahmudi, 1998-02
  10. My president, my son: [or one day that changed the history of Libya] by Frederick Muscat, 1974
  11. Fezzan: A short history by M. S Ayoub, 1968
  12. Historical Dictionary of Libya (African Historical Dictionaries, No. 33) by Ronald Bruce St John, 1991
  13. Libya-a Modern History by John Wright, 1982
  14. Government & society in Tripolitania & Cyrenaica, Libya, 1835-1911: The Ottoman impact (Libyan studies centre historical publications in Foreign Languages Series) by Abdallah A Ibrahim, 1989

41. Libya EARLY HISTORY - Flags, Maps, Economy, Geography, Climate, Natural Resource
libya EARLY history Flags, Maps, Economy, Geography, Climate, Natural Resources,Current Issues, International Agreements, Population, Social Statistics,
http://workmall.com/wfb2001/libya/libya_history_early_history.html

  • HISTORY INDEX
  • Country Ranks
    Libya
    EARLY HISTORY
    http://workmall.com/wfb2001/libya/libya_history_early_history.html
    Source: The Library of Congress Country Studies
      < BACK TO HISTORY CONTENTS Archaeological evidence indicates that from at least the eighth millennium B.C. Libya's coastal plain shared in a Neolithic culture, skilled in the domestication of cattle and cultivation of crops, that was common to the whole Mediterranean littoral. To the south, in what is now the Sahara Desert, nomadic hunters and herders roamed a vast, well-watered savanna that abounded in game and provided pastures for their stock. Their culture flourished until the region began to desiccate after 2000 B.C. Scattering before the encroaching desert and invading horsemen, the savanna people migrated into the Sudan (see Glossary) or were absorbed by the Berbers. The origin of the Berbers is a mystery, the investigation of which has produced an abundance of educated speculation but no solution. Archaeological and linguistic evidence strongly suggests southwestern Asia as the point from which the ancestors of the Berbers may have begun their migration into North Africa early in the third millennium B.C. Over the succeeding centuries they extended their range from Egypt to the Niger Basin. Caucasians of predominantly Mediterranean stock, the Berbers present a broad range of physical types and speak a variety of mutually unintelligible dialects that belong to the Afro-Asiatic language family. They never developed a sense of nationhood and have historically identified themselves in terms of their tribe, clan, and family. Collectively, Berbers refer to themselves simply as
  • 42. ICL - Libya Index
    ICL provides copies of the Constitutional Proclamation (1969/1992) and Declaration on the Establishment of the Authority of the People (1977) along with background, history and news.
    http://www.oefre.unibe.ch/law/icl/ly__indx.html
    Libya Index Constitutional Background
    When the Government of King Idris was overthrown in 1969, the Revolutionary Command Council issued a Constitutional Proclamation on 11 Dec 1969. The Proclamation was supposed to be a temporary measure (see Article ), but a real constitution has not yet been published (1992). There is, however, as another important document, the Declaration on the Establishment of the Authority of the People from 2 March 1977.
    The General People's Congress is the legislator in Libya; some of its resolutions have the content of fundamental laws. Another important source is the Green Book of Colonel Quadhafi , originating in a speech of 3 April 1975. History and News
    • 9 July 1996: Soccer incident in Tripoli; a game between the teams of two sons of Quadhafi Muhammad and Saidi , resulted in violence and about 8-20 casualties. July 1995: Quadhafi arrests 2000 members of a militant islamic organization after violence in the harbor town of Bengasi. This threatens good relations with Sudan and Iran. 2 March 1977: Declaration on the Establishment of the Authority of the People.

    43. LIBYA: OUR HOME
    libya s Flag history in Flags of the World Web Site 9 August 1940 The establishment libya The City Of AlAssabe a; Its People, Tradition and history
    http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/dr_ibrahim_ighneiwa/
    Marhaba beekum. My name is Ibrahim Ighneiwa.
    I hope that this page provides some information about Libya, its people, its past, present and future.
    Send your comments to: dribrahim@earthlink.net

    Map of Libya

    Our culture in pictures

    Pictures (slide show)
    ...
    Libya: News and Views

    Locate 2612 Libyan town and cities on Libya's map
    Libya's Beautiful Capital: Information about Tripoli
    Information about Benghazi; a Beautiful Libyan City
    The Libyan Government Cabinet Members
    Embassies of Libya and Embassies in Libya Business in Libya contacts: NAJLABCA Visa Invitations for Libya Libya's Directory [al-Daleel] Libya's Yollow Pages In Libya, the religion is Al-Islam History: Libya: The Italian Occupation and the Libyan Resistance Libya: Pictures of the Italian Occupation Libya: A Libyan Hero: Omar al-Mukhtar [1862-1931] - Part I Libya: A Libyan Hero: Omar al-Mukhtar [1862-1931] - Part II Libya: The Secret Proceedings of the Italians' Trial of Omar al-Mukhtar Libya: Libyan Mujahed al-Sayed Ahmed al-Sherif al-Senousi Libya: 24 December, 2001; The 50th Anniversary Of Libya's Independence

    44. Libya
    Atlas libya Facts on libya flags, maps, geography, history, libyahistory - history Through the Nineteenth Century Throughout most of its history
    http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0107722.html
    in All Infoplease Almanacs Biographies Dictionary Encyclopedia
    Daily Almanac for
    Sep 23, 2005

    45. Libya - History
    UNTIL libya ACHIEVED independence in 1951, its history was essentially that oftribes, regions, and cities, and of the empires of which it was a part.
    http://countrystudies.us/libya/3.htm
    History
    Libya Table of Contents UNTIL LIBYA ACHIEVED independence in 1951, its history was essentially that of tribes, regions, and cities, and of the empires of which it was a part. Derived from the name by which a single Berber tribe was known to the ancient Egyptians, the name Libya was subsequently applied by the Greeks to most of North Africa and the term Libyan to all of its Berber inhabitants. Although ancient in origin, these names were not used to designate the specific territory of modern Libya and its people until the twentieth century, nor indeed was the whole area formed into a coherent political unit until then. Hence, despite the long and distinct histories of its regions, modern Libya must be viewed as a new country still developing national consciousness and institutions. Geography was the principal determinant in the separate historical development of Libya's three traditional regions Tripolitania, Cyrenaica, and Fezzan. Cut off from each other by formidable deserts, each retained its separate identity into the 1960s. At the heart of Tripolitania was its metropolis, Tripoli, for centuries a terminal for caravans plying the Saharan trade routes and a port sheltering pirates and slave traders. Tripolitania's cultural ties were with the Maghrib, of which it was a part geographically and culturally and with which it shared a common history. Tripolitanians developed their political consciousness in reaction to foreign domination, and it was from Tripolitania that the strongest impulses came for the unification of modern Libya.

    46. A Brief History Of Libya And The Civilizations It Played Host To Throughout Hist
    A Brief history of libya and the Civilizations it played host to throughout history.A Summary of the Great Civilizations that inhabited libya throughout
    http://www.angelfire.com/az/azartours/page3.html
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    A Brief History of Libya and the Civilizations it played host to throughout history
    A Summary of the Great Civilizations that inhabited Libya throughout history
    • 8000 B.C. : The earliest Neolithic Culture. Settlements of Fezzan is believed to have been forming early culture societies.
    • 5000 B.C. Rise of the Garamantian Empire. Reports of sedentary farming and the use of horse-drawn chariots used in wars.
    • 2000 B.C. : Berbers began their migration to North Africa
    • 2200-1700 B.C. Egyptian Pharaohs succedded in imposing control over Berbers
    • 950 B.C. A Berber Officier named Shishonk I, seized control of Egypt and ruled as Pharaoh.
    • 600-700 B.C Greek settlements began in North Africa
    • 631 B.C. Greeks found the city of Cyrene
    • 631-431 B.C. More important Greek cities were established such as Barce, Beranice, Teuchira, Apollonia and Cyrene (The five Cities named Pentapolis)
    • 525 B.C. The army of Cambyses (Son of Cyrus the Great King of Persia), overran Cyrenaica

    47. Libya (History) Was Occupied By British And French Troops. Cyrenaica And Tripoli
    libya (history) - Following an UN resolution, the country attained independence,as the United Kingdom of libya.
    http://www.arab.de/arabinfo/libyahis.htm

    Home page
    Arab Info Libya Info Libya Government ... Links to Libya
    Libya - History
    Formerly an Italian Colony, Libya was occupied in 1942 by British and French troops. Cyrenaica and Tripolitania were governed by the United Kingdom, while Fezzan was administered by France.
    Following an UN resolution in 1949, the country attained independence, as the United
    Kingdom of Libya on 24 December 1951.
    Muhammad Idris as-Sanusi, Amir of Cyrenaica, became King Idris of Libya. The country enjoyed Internal political stability and generally had good relations with both the Arab world and the West.
    The King was deposed in the bloodless revolution of September 1969. The perpetrators of the coup, a group of young nationalist army officers, established a Revolution Command Council (RCC), with Col Muammar al-Qaddafi as Chairman, and proclaimed the Libyan Arab Republic.
    Libya also strongly condemned the proposals for Middle East peace that were agreed by other Arab states in Fez, Morocco, in September 1982. None the less, in the 1990s Egypt and Libya sustained a close relationship, with Egypt acting an intermediary between Libya and Western nations, and Libya providing economic opportunity for Egyptians.
    In October 1986 Libya transferred its support from the rebels in Chad led by Goukouni to those belonging to another opposition faction. During the next year intense fighting took place for control of north-western Chad. In August 1987 President Habre´s forces advanced into the "Aozou strip" and occupied the town of Aozou.

    48. Encyclopedia: Libya/History
    The visible history of libya is a flux of stronger and weaker control by outsiders.The invisible unwritten history of libya includes the history of its
    http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Libya/History

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    Encyclopedia: Libya/History
    Updated 224 days 15 minutes ago. Other descriptions of Libya/History The visible history of Libya is a flux of stronger and weaker control by outsiders. The invisible unwritten history of Libya includes the history of its rich mix of peoples added to the indigenous Berber tribes. For most of their history, the peoples of Libya have been subjected to varying degrees of foreign control. The modern history of independent Libya begins in 1951. Contents 1 Ancient Libya (Tripolitania and Cyrenaica) to 647 CE
    2 Islamic Tripolitania and Cyrenaica 647-1911

    3 Italian Colony, 1911-1951

    4 Modern Libya
    Ancient Libya (Tripolitania and Cyrenaica) to 647 CE
    Since Neolithic times, the climate of North Africa has been drying. A reminder of the

    49. Detailed Country Profile: Libya
    for price history (1015 yrs.) for each of the nine various crude oil streamsproduced in libya. The EIA has history of Es Sider crude blend only.
    http://www.nationmaster.com/country/ly

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    Factoid #38 Ethopians are by far the most agricultural people on earth (both men and women Interesting Facts Make your own graph:
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    several. Compare All Top 5 Top 10 Top 20 Top 50 Top 100 Bottom 100 Bottom 20 Bottom 10 Bottom 5 All (desc) in category: Select Category Agriculture Crime Currency Democracy Disasters Economy Education Energy Environment Food Geography Government Health Identification Immigration Industry Internet Labor Language Lifestyle Media Military Mortality People Religion Sports Taxation Transportation with statistic: view: Correlations Printable graph / table Pie chart Scatterplot with ... * Asterisk means graphable.
    Africa Libya
    View full size
    Summary
    Libya is a country in North Africa . The main religion is islam. The main language is Arab. Libya became independent from Italy in 1951. The country is a 'grass-root democratic ' republic without parties where is no chance for the opposition. Background From the earliest days of his rule following his 1969 military coup , Col. Muammar Abu Minyar al-QADHAFI has espoused his own political system, the Third Universal Theory. The system is a combination of socialism and Islam derived in part from tribal practices and is supposed to be implemented by the

    50. Libya: The History Of Herodotus
    libya The history of Herodotus To send me the latest news or views pleaseclick here dribrahim@earthlink.net Back to libya Our Home.
    http://home.earthlink.net/~dribrahim/herode.htm
    Libya:
    The History of Herodotus:
    The history of Herodotus: To send me the latest news or views please click here: dribrahim@earthlink.net
    Back to: Libya: Our Home

    51. AllRefer.com - Libya : History : Through The Nineteenth Century, Libya (Libyan P
    AllRefer.com reference and encyclopedia resource provides complete informationon libya history Through the Nineteenth Century, libyan Political
    http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/L/Libya-history.html
    AllRefer Channels :: Health Yellow Pages Reference Weather September 23, 2005 Medicine People Places History ... Maps Web AllRefer.com You are here : AllRefer.com Reference Encyclopedia Libyan Political Geography ... Libya
    By Alphabet : Encyclopedia A-Z L
    Libya, Libyan Political Geography
    Related Category: Libyan Political Geography Libya E u Pronunciation Key History-
    Through the Nineteenth Century
    Throughout most of its history the territory that constitutes modern Libya has been held by foreign powers. Tripolitania and Cyrenaica had divergent histories for most of the period up to their conquest by the Ottoman Empire in the mid-16th cent. Fazzan was captured by the Ottomans only in 1842. The Ottomans gained control of most of N Africa in the 16th cent., dividing it into three regencies : Algeria, Tunisia, and Tripoli (which also included Cyrenaica). The Janissaries, professional soldiers of slave origins, became a military caste, wielding considerable influence over the Ottoman governor. From the early 1600s the Janissaries chose a leader, called the dey, who at times had as much power as the Ottoman governor sent from Constantinople. Numerous pirates who preyed on the shipping of Christian nations in the Mediterranean were based at Tripoli's ports. In 1711 Ahmad Karamanli, a Janissary, became dey, killed the Ottoman governor, and prevailed upon the Ottomans to name him governor. The post of governor remained hereditary in the Karamanli family until 1835. In the 18th cent. and during the Napoleonic Wars, the dey took in great revenues from the pirates and also extended the central government's control to much of the interior.

    52. AllRefer.com - Libya - Early History Of Libya | Libyan Information Resource
    allRefer Reference provides detailed information on this topic. Browse throughthis article and follow related links for complete research.
    http://reference.allrefer.com/country-guide-study/libya/libya9.html
    You are here allRefer Reference Libya
    History
    ...
    Libya
    Libya EARLY HISTORY Archaeological evidence indicates that from at least the eighth millennium B.C. Libya's coastal plain shared in a Neolithic culture, skilled in the domestication of cattle and cultivation of crops, that was common to the whole Mediterranean littoral. To the south, in what is now the Sahara Desert, nomadic hunters and herders roamed a vast, well-watered savanna that abounded in game and provided pastures for their stock. Their culture flourished until the region began to desiccate after 2000 B.C. Scattering before the encroaching desert and invading horsemen, the savanna people migrated into the Sudan (see Glossary) or were absorbed by the Berbers. The origin of the Berbers is a mystery, the investigation of which has produced an abundance of educated speculation but no solution. Archaeological and linguistic evidence strongly suggests southwestern Asia as the point from which the ancestors of the Berbers may have begun their migration into North Africa early in the third millennium B.C. Over the succeeding centuries they extended their range from Egypt to the Niger Basin. Caucasians of predominantly Mediterranean stock, the Berbers present a broad range of physical types and speak a variety of mutually unintelligible dialects that belong to the Afro-Asiatic language family. They never developed a sense of nationhood and have historically identified themselves in terms of their tribe, clan, and family. Collectively, Berbers refer to themselves simply as

    53. Libya - HISTORY
    The most significant milestones in libya s history were the introduction of Islamand Several factors, rooted in libya s history, affected the political
    http://www.mongabay.com/reference/country_studies/libya/HISTORY.html
    COUNTRY STUDIES
    Libya - HISTORY
    Libya - History
    Libya UNTIL LIBYA ACHIEVED independence in 1951, its history was essentially that of tribes, regions, and cities, and of the empires of which it was a part. Derived from the name by which a single Berber tribe was known to the ancient Egyptians, the name Libya was subsequently applied by the Greeks to most of North Africa and the term Libyan to all of its Berber inhabitants. Although ancient in origin, these names were not used to designate the specific territory of modern Libya and its people until the twentieth century, nor indeed was the whole area formed into a coherent political unit until then. Hence, despite the long and distinct histories of its regions, modern Libya must be viewed as a new country still developing national consciousness and institutions. Geography was the principal determinant in the separate historical development of Libya's three traditional regions Tripolitania, Cyrenaica, and Fezzan. Cut off from each other by formidable deserts, each retained its separate identity into the 1960s. At the heart of Tripolitania was its metropolis, Tripoli, for centuries a terminal for caravans plying the Saharan trade routes and a port sheltering pirates and slave traders. Tripolitania's cultural ties were with the Maghrib, of which it was a part geographically and culturally and with which it shared a common history. Tripolitanians developed their political consciousness in reaction to foreign domination, and it was from Tripolitania that the strongest impulses came for the unification of modern Libya.

    54. ALMISBAH: Regions, Nations And Peoples: Particular Regions: North Africa, Malta
    Keywords, research; libya; research center; history; culture; Keywords,bibliography; libya; history; bombardement, 1986; United States, DETAILS
    http://ssgdoc.bibliothek.uni-halle.de/vlib/ssgfi/subject/almisbah_ssg0302030703_
    ALMISBAH:
    Regions, Nations and Peoples: Particular Regions: North Africa, Malta and Cyprus: Libya: History, Politics (WWW)
    1. After Ghadafi's Declaration: The Impact of Changes in Libyan and Iranian WMD Policies on Israel and the Region Source Type Single Articles / Books URL http://www.jcpa.org/brief/brief3-12.htm Keywords Iran; Libya; weapons; politics; online articles DETAILS Contents Clarity Index Links 2. Electionworld : Elections around the world Source Type Virtual Libraries, Internet Directories and Link Lists URL http://www.electionworld.org/ Keywords politics; elections; political parties; directories; Afghanistan; Saudi Arabia; Kuwait; Qatar; United Arab Emirates; Oman; Bahrain; Iraq; Syria; Lebanon; Jordan; Mauritania; Algeria; Libya; Egypt; Sudan; Cyprus; Ethiopia; Eritrea; Djibouti; Somalia; Iran; Tajikistan; Turkey; Armenia; Georgia; Azerbaijan; Uzbekistan; Turkmenistan; Kazakhstan; Kyrgyzstan DETAILS Contents Clarity Index Links 3. Human Rights: Near East and North Africa Source Type Lists of Government Reports URL http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2002/c8699.htm

    55. ALMISBAH: Regions, Nations And Peoples: Particular Regions: North Africa, Malta
    Keywords, jews; libya; history; photographs; interviews; religion, DETAILS.Contents excellent, Clarity excellent, Index good, Links none
    http://ssgdoc.bibliothek.uni-halle.de/vlib/ssgfi/subject/almisbah_ssg0302030704_
    ALMISBAH:
    Regions, Nations and Peoples: Particular Regions: North Africa, Malta and Cyprus: Libya: Cultural History (WWW)
    1. Imazighen in Libya Source Type Topical Websites URL http://www.libyamazigh.org/ Keywords Libya; tamazight language; Tamazight DETAILS Contents Clarity Index Links 2. The Last Jews of Libya Source Type Topical Websites URL http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/JewsofLibya/ Keywords jews; Libya; history; photographs; interviews; religion DETAILS Contents Clarity Index Links Source Type Lists of Electronic Articles / Books URL http://www.libyanet.com/ Keywords Libya; art; literature; music; links; articles; news; photography; painting; arabic literature; poetry; poets; painters; photographers; poems; photographs DETAILS Contents Clarity Index Links
    SSG-FI Home ALMISBAH Source Type Subject This document created using allegro-C V20

    56. Central Bank Of LIBYA
    The monetary authority in the Great Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriya. Includes some recent laws, a brief history, and more content in Arabic.
    http://www.cbl-ly.com/
    document.write("" + day +myweekday ); document.write(month + ", " + year + "");
    © 2005 CBL.GOV.LY - All rights reserved

    57. History - Libya - Africa
    history, libya, africa. libya, history. The Phoenicians founded colonies onthe coast of Tripolitania, which were conquered by Carthage in the 6th
    http://www.countriesquest.com/africa/libya/history.htm
    you are here
    home
    Africa Libya History
    Libya, History
    The Phoenicians founded colonies on the coast of Tripolitania, which were conquered by Carthage in the 6th century bc. Greeks subsequently established settlements in Cyrenaica. The Greek historian Herodotus, writing in the 5th century bc, described the Garamantes people of the Fezzan, who were sedentary farmers and used horse-drawn chariots in warfare. His account has been verified in the 20th century by ancient cave art, discovered in the Jabal Akakus (jabal means “mountains”) of the western Fezzan and the Jabal al ‘Uwaynat near the Egyptian border. Libya later became a Roman possession. The region was conquered by the Vandals in ad 455, by the Byzantine Empire the following century, and by the Arabs under Amr ibn al-As in 643. Ruled successively by the Umayyads, Fatimids, and a Berber dynasty, the country was partly conquered by the Normans in 1146 but soon abandoned to Almohad control. During the following centuries Libya, or parts thereof, frequently changed hands until it was finally conquered, in the 16th century, by the Ottoman Empire. In the 19th century the puritanical Sanusi religious brotherhood arose in the interior of Cyrenaica. When Italian forces invaded Libya in 1911, the Sanusi led the Cyrenaican resistance against them. The Ottomans renounced their rights over Libya in 1912. Local leaders in Tripolitania resisted the Italians until the early 1920s, and the Sanusi resistance did not give out until 1931.

    58. Bibliography For Jews From Libya
    Jews history Rebellion, 115117. Hellenism. Jews libya Cyrenaica . Jews libya history. Jews libya Social life and customs.
    http://geography.berkeley.edu/ProjectsResources/Libya/biblio.html
    Jews from Libya Selected Bibliography
    'Al toldot kehilot Tunisiyah ve-Luv /
    ['arakh ve-hitkin li-defus A. Vasertail].
    Yerushalayim : Misrad ha-hinukh veha-tarbut Agaf ha-hinukh ha-dati, 1976.
    Series title: Sifriyat ha-moreh ha-dati.
    Series title: Toldot Yisra'el ; 2.
    Subjects:
    Jews Tunisia.
    Jews Libya.
    Tunisia Ethnic relations.
    Libya Ethnic relations. Applebaum, Shimon. Jews and Greeks in ancient Cyrene / by Shim'on Applebaum. Leiden : E. J. Brill, 1979. Series title: Studies in Judaism in late antiquity ; v. 28. Subjects:
    Jews History Rebellion, 115-117.
    Hellenism.
    Jews Libya Cyrenaica.
    Greeks Libya Cyrenaica.
    Cyrenaica Ethnic relations. Attal, Robert. A bibliography of the writings of Prof. Shelomo Dov Goitein / by Robert Attal ; with a foreward by R. Ettinghausen. Jerusalem : Israel Oriental Society and the Institute of Asian and African Studies, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, 1975. Subjects:
    Goitein, S. D., 1900- Bibliography. De Felice, Renzo, 1929-

    59. Country History - Libya
    The Great Socialist People s libyan Arab Jamahiriya, libya s official name,achieved independence from Italy on 24 December 1951, although it had been held
    http://africanhistory.about.com/od/libya/
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    Libya
    The Great Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriya, Libya's official name, achieved independence from Italy on 24 December 1951, although it had been held under British (for Tripolitania and Cyrenaica) and French (Fezzan) administration since 1943. Initially ruled as a monarchy under King Idris, the country became a republic when Gadaffi took power in 1969.
    Alphabetical
    Recent Up a category Libya - Library of Congress Country Studies The Library of Congress Country Study for Libya provides an excellent and fairly detailed history of the country. This information was originally compiled for the US Department of Army in case of potential deployment examining the historical, social, economic, and political background the country. (The only problem with this site is the awkwardness of navigating so many pages.) Background Notes: Libya A useful potted history is included with these US Department of State Background Notes on Libya. Also included is a range of political, economic, and geographical data, as well as information on its people, defence, and relations with the US.

    60. WoYaa!: COUNTRIES/LIBYA
    Welcome to http//www.arabinfoseek.com/libyahistory.htm http//www.arabinfoseek.com/libya-history.htm (Added Tue Nov 05 2002 Hits 10 Rating 0.00 Votes
    http://www.woyaa.com/links/COUNTRIES/LIBYA/more12.html
    Web Calendar Forums Classifieds ... LOGIN
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