- AFRICA (46)
- Egypt (158)
- ASIA (51)
- China (58)
- India (111)
- Japan (20)
- Korea, North (5)
- Korea, Republic of (6)
- Palestine (1)
- Russia (85)
- Southeast Asia (32)
- Tibet (8)
- Canada (47)
- EUROPE (26)
- Europe .476-1000: Early Middle Ages (43)
- Europe .300-700: Migration period (10)
- Europe 1001-1299: High Middle Ages (66)
- Europe 1300-1453: Late Middle Ages (64)
- Europe 1300-1699: Renaissance (64)
- Europe 1454-1500: The New World (25)
- Europe 1501-1600: The Reformation (54)
- Europe 1601-1788: Enlightenment (73)
- Europe 1619-1648: Thirty Years' War (13)
- Europe 1789-1848: The Age of Revolutions (37)
- Europe 1849-1913: The Age of Liberalism (53)
- France (9)
- Germany (38)
- Ireland
- Poland (28)
- United Kingdom (181)
- Greco-Roman World (85)
- Byzantium (667 BC-1453 AC) (6)
- Carthage (10)
- Greece (3650 BC-146 BC) (74)
- Macedonia (800s BC-146 BC) (19)
- Rome (753 BC-1453 AC) (94)
- Troy (3000 -100 BC) (9)
- History of Science (283)
- LATIN AMERICA (84)
- MIDDLE EAST (41)
- Afghanistan (26)
- Israel (83)
- Mesopotamia (22)
- Persia / Iran (67)
- Saudi Arabia (8)
- OCEANIA (11)
- Prehistory (14)
- United States (335)
- American Revolution (20)
- Civil War (1861-1865) (108)
- Vietnam War (1959-1975) (11)
- World History (94)
- World post-war (1946-Today) (144)
- War on Terrorism (69)
- World War I (1914-1918) (55)
- World War II (1939-1945) (387)
- D-Day: June 6, 1944 (49)
- Operation Barbarossa (31)
- WWII Footage: Canada (18)
- WWII Footage: Germany (38)
- WWII Footage: UK
- WWII Footage: United States (26)
- World Wars: Interwar (1918-1939) (8)
Topics: MIDDLE EAST
MIDDLE EAST
Middle East comprise the lands around the southern and eastern shores of the Mediterranean Sea, extending from Morocco to the Arabian Peninsula and Iran and sometimes beyond. The central part of this general area was formerly called the Near East, a name given to it by some of the first modern Western geographers and historians, who tended to divide the Orient into three regions. Near East applied to the region nearest Europe, extending from the Mediterranean Sea to the Persian Gulf; Middle East, from the Gulf to Southeast Asia; and Far East, those regions facing the Pacific Ocean.
The change in usage began to evolve prior to World War II and tended to be confirmed during that war, when the term Middle East was given to the British military command in Egypt. Thus defined, the Middle East consisted of the states or territories of Turkey, Cyprus, Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, Iran, Israel, Jordan, Egypt, The Sudan, Libya, and the various states of Arabia proper (Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Yemen, Oman, Bahrain, Qatar, and the Trucial States, or Trucial Oman [now United Arab Emirates]. Subsequent events have tended, in loose usage, to enlarge the number of lands included in the definition. The three North African countries of Tunisia, Algeria, and Morocco are closely connected in sentiment and foreign policy with the Arab states. In addition, geographic factors often require statesmen and others to take account of Afghanistan and Pakistan in connection with the affairs of the Middle East.
Occasionally Greece is included in the compass of the Middle East because the Middle Eastern (then Near Eastern) question in its modern form first became apparent when the Greeks rose in rebellion to assert their independence of the Ottoman Empire in 1821 (see Eastern Question). Turkey and Greece, together with the predominantly Arabic-speaking lands around the eastern end of the Mediterranean, were also formerly known as the Levant.
Use of the term Middle East, nonetheless, remains unsettled, and some agencies (notably the United States State Department and certain bodies of the United Nations) still employ the term Near East.
Source: http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/381192/Middle-East

