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international documents from the Foreign Relations of the United States (FRUS)
series and Documents on International Affairs 1956 were inspected.
The transliteration of Arabic names in the thesis is adapted from modern
usage. An effort was also made to use the accepted transliteration of family names
as adopted by each family’s descendants in Bahrain. In addition, personalities
mentioned here are referred to by their last names. However common usage
declares that sometimes certain figures in the Arab World are referred to by their
first names (e.g. ‘Nuri Al-Saeed’ as ‘Nuri’).
It is intended that this thesis will fill in the gap of public knowledge about the
political struggle that took place in Bahrain from 1953 to 1957. It must be said that
this has been a long quest to find substantive answers to the questions raised
around this complex moment in the long history of Bahrain.
It would not have been possible for this thesis to have been brought to light
without the assistance, support, and guidance of numerous people. I extend my
gratitude to my supervisor Professor John Charmley for his support and direction. I
also offer my appreciation to Professor Cathie Carmichael for her support and the
University of East Anglia for awarding me a studentship during my period of study.
I would also like to thank a number of universities, archives, and institutions
for their assistance in retrieving documents necessary for my research. I am deeply
grateful to the following individuals: Dr Rosie Llewellyn-Jones, Archivist at the Royal
Society for Asian Affairs; Paul Hastings and Helen Yates at the Incorporated Council
of Law Reporting; Catherine Martin, Martin Killeen, Helen Fisher, and Vicky Clubb at
the Cadbury Research Library in the University of Birmingham. Further, I extend
© Hamad E. Abdulla xv