United Arab Republic


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Related to United Arab Republic: Six Day War, Baghdad Pact

United Arab Republic

A former union (founded 1958) of Egypt and Syria, confederated with Yemen in the United Arab States. The union and the confederation collapsed in 1961, but Egypt retained the name United Arab Republic until 1971.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

United Arab Republic

n
(Placename) the official name (1958–71) of Egypt
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

Unit′ed Ar′ab Repub′lic


n.
1. a name given the union of Egypt and Syria from 1958 to 1961.
2. the official name of Egypt from 1961 to 1971. Abbr.: U.A.R. Compare Egypt.
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.
ThesaurusAntonymsRelated WordsSynonymsLegend:
Noun1.United Arab Republic - a republic in northeastern Africa known as the United Arab Republic until 1971United Arab Republic - a republic in northeastern Africa known as the United Arab Republic until 1971; site of an ancient civilization that flourished from 2600 to 30 BC
Al Alamayn, Battle of El Alamein, El Alamein - a pitched battle in World War II (1942) resulting in a decisive Allied victory by British troops under Montgomery over German troops under Rommel
Aswan High Dam, High Dam - one of the world's largest dams on the Nile River in southern Egypt
al-Gama'a al-Islamiyya, Islamic Group - a terrorist organization of militant Islamists organized into tiny cells of extreme fundamentalists; emerged during the 1970s mainly in Egyptian jails; "al-Gama'a al-Islamiyya uses force to push Egyptian society toward Islamic rule"
al-Jihad, Egyptian Islamic Jihad, Vanguards of Conquest, Islamic Jihad - an Islamic extremist group active since the late 1970s; seeks to overthrow the Egyptian government and replace it with an Islamic state; works in small underground cells; "the original Jihad was responsible for the assassination of Anwar Sadat in 1981"
Arab League - an international organization of independent Arab states formed in 1945 to promote cultural and economic and military and political and social cooperation
OPEC, Organization of Petroleum-Exporting Countries - an organization of countries formed in 1961 to agree on a common policy for the production and sale of petroleum
Middle East, Mideast, Near East - the area around the eastern Mediterranean; from Turkey to northern Africa and eastward to Iran; the site of such ancient civilizations as Phoenicia and Babylon and Egypt and the birthplace of Judaism and Christianity and Islam; had continuous economic and political turmoil in the 20th century; "the Middle East is the cradle of Western civilization"
Sinai Peninsula, Sinai - a peninsula in northeastern Egypt; at north end of Red Sea
Lower Egypt - one of the two main administrative districts of Egypt; consists of the Nile delta
Upper Egypt - one of the two main administrative districts of Egypt; extends south from Cairo to Sudan
El Iskandriyah, Alexandria - the chief port of Egypt; located on the western edge of the Nile delta on the Mediterranean Sea; founded by Alexander the Great; the capital of ancient Egypt
Assouan, Assuan, Aswan - an ancient city on the Nile in Egypt; two dams across the Nile have been built nearby
Al Qahira, capital of Egypt, Egyptian capital, El Qahira, Cairo - the capital of Egypt and the largest city in Africa; a major port just to the south of the Nile delta; formerly the home of the Pharaohs
El Alamein - a village to the west of Alexandria on the northern coast of Egypt; the scene of a decisive Allied victory over the Germans in 1942
El Giza, Giza, Gizeh - an ancient Egyptian city on the west bank of the Nile opposite Cairo; site of three Great Pyramids and the Sphinx
Memphis - an ancient city of Egypt on the Nile (south of Cairo)
El-Aksur, Luxor - a city in central Egypt on the east bank of the Nile that is a center for visitors to the ruins of and around Thebes
Thebes - an ancient Egyptian city on the Nile River that flourished from the 22nd century BC to the 18th century BC; today the archeological remains include many splendid temples and tombs
Sakkara, Saqqara, Saqqarah - a town in northern Egypt; site of the oldest Egyptian pyramids
Suez - a city in northeastern Egypt at the head of the Gulf of Suez and at the southern end of the Suez Canal
Suez Canal - a ship canal in northeastern Egypt linking the Red Sea with the Mediterranean Sea
Arabian Desert, Eastern Desert - a desert in Egypt between the Nile River and the Red Sea
Libyan Desert - the northeastern part of the Sahara Desert in Libya and Egypt and Sudan
Africa - the second largest continent; located to the south of Europe and bordered to the west by the South Atlantic and to the east by the Indian Ocean
Lake Nasser, Nasser - lake in Egypt formed by dams built on the Nile River at Aswan
Nile, Nile River - the world's longest river (4150 miles); flows northward through eastern Africa into the Mediterranean; the Nile River valley in Egypt was the site of the world's first great civilization
Egyptian - a native or inhabitant of Egypt
Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
Who now closes an international waterway to the port of a neighboring State, Israel or the United Arab Republic? Does Israel refuse to negotiate a peace settlement with the Arab States, or do they refuse to do so with it?
Tlass' father and Mr Assad's father, Hafez, had been close friends since their days in the Syrian military academy in Homs and became even closer after being posted to Cairo in the late 1950s when Egypt and Syria merged into the United Arab Republic - a union that lasted three years.
Syria's sense of nationalism is weak - it's ruled by the Baath Party, which began as a pan-Arab socialist movement, and from 1958 to 1961 merged with Egypt as part of the United Arab Republic. Assad and his father before him, who took power in a 1970 coup, are Alawites, as are many of Syria's military and government leaders.
Arab unions such as this - the Egyptian-Syrian United Arab Republic of 1958-61, for instance - were short-lived, victims of the Arab world's notorious rivalries that have defeated all attempts to build such partnerships.
Following a brief civil war in 1958, the new President General Fouad Shehab, steered the country's foreign policy back towards a centrist stance friendly towards Egypt, Syria (which early in had in 1958 had merged into the United Arab Republic), the US and France, but tied to none of them.
S.W.R.D.Bandaranaike did not come to power in 1956, the Sri Lankan government would have supported the joint British-French invasion of Suez Canal, when President Gamal Nasser of Egypt (United Arab Republic - U.A.R) nationalized the Suez Canal.
Moreover, little has been revealed about the cost of the war effort, waged by many states including the United Arab Republic and Qatar.
The public want to see savings in the Town Hall but executive councillor Charles Rooney has recently authorised regeneration digital officers to visit Brazil, China, Germany, Holland, India, Japan, Sweden, Spain, Turkey, United Arab Republic, America and Canada.
For the next decade, Syria underwent a steady series of political and military coups until 1958 when the country "united" with Egypt to form the United Arab Republic (UAR).
By 1958, 11 anti-Nasserist stations were broadcast into Egypt as a result of its union with Syria to create the short-lived United Arab Republic. One such station, Sawt Al-Haq (Voice of the Truth) was broadcast from the home of Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri Said.
Thus, for example, he explains: why the Arab Revolt against the Ottomans was of lasting importance; assesses why Britain issued the Balfour Declaration supporting a Jewish national home in Palestine; and highlights the most important factors leading to the 1958 merger of Egypt and Syria into the United Arab Republic. This well-written interweaving of insight and description paints a vivid historical picture.
Yaqub also addresses the crises that revealed the shortcomings of the policy: the failure to topple the regime in Syria, the uniting of Syria and Egypt in the United Arab Republic, civil war in Lebanon requiring the intervention of U.S.

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