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Pelvic Floor Ultrasound - - Bog - Springer International Publishing AG - Plusbog.dk

Floor Coverings from Kashmir - Promil Pande - Bog - Niyogi Books - Plusbog.dk

Medical and Advanced Surgical Management of Pelvic Floor Disorders, An Issue of Obstetrics and Gynecology Clinics of North America - Cheryl B. Iglesia

Childbirth-Related Pelvic Floor Dysfunction - - Bog - Springer International Publishing AG - Plusbog.dk

Floor Plan Manual Housing - - Bog - Birkhauser - Plusbog.dk

Floor Plan Manual Housing - - Bog - Birkhauser - Plusbog.dk

Agriculture in Qajar Iran - Dr Willem Floor - Bog - Mage Publishers - Plusbog.dk

Agriculture in Qajar Iran - Dr Willem Floor - Bog - Mage Publishers - Plusbog.dk

Agriculture was the mainstay of Iran''s economy in the nineteenth century, yet little is known about it. Historians have rarely taken that important reality into account when writing on the economic or social history of that period, and until now there have been no comprehensive studies of Iranian agriculture. Now, in Agriculture in Qajar Iran, renowned scholar Willem Floor has compiled an all-encompassing analysis of nineteenth-century Iranian agriculture based on extensive research into previously untapped Persian and European archives. Floor presents farming in Iran from the ground up and in its every dimension. His investigation covers farming methods like irrigation and seeding, the raising of livestock, and the range of crops cultivated, from wheat, barley, and rice, to the more notorious cash crops of tobacco and opium. Floor also delves into methods of forestry and fishing, subjects about which very little is known and even less has been written, until now. Agriculture in Qajar Iran traces the commercialisation of Iranian farming, and explains how this process altered the structure of Iran''s economy. The change included the rise in cash crops, the growth of wage labor, the rise in off-farm employment, and the market economy''s growing influence in the countryside. Floor also highlights the importance of trade within this burgeoning system, and gauges the impact of the commercialisation of agriculture on the rural population''s socioeconomic status.

DKK 702.00
1

Evidence-Based Physical Therapy for the Pelvic Floor - Marijke Van Kampen - Bog - Elsevier Health Sciences - Plusbog.dk

Air Flow Management in Raised Floor Data Centers - Yogendra Joshi - Bog - Springer International Publishing AG - Plusbog.dk

The Sea Floor - Eugen Seibold - Bog - Springer International Publishing AG - Plusbog.dk

Specialist Floor Finishes - D Cattell - Bog - Taylor & Francis Ltd - Plusbog.dk

Persian Gulf - Willem Floor - Bog - Mage Publishers - Plusbog.dk

Persian Gulf - Willem Floor - Bog - Mage Publishers - Plusbog.dk

Bandar Abbas, once a small fishing village, became the gateway port for Iran after Shah Abbas defeated the Portuguese in 1622. However, with the fall of the Safavids and the withdrawal of the British East India Company in 1759 the port went into decline; by 1793 Bandar Abbas was under the direct control of Oman. In 1869 Iran had to resort to force of arms to take it back from Oman. Yet, this important port is hardly mentioned in the histories of Iran. For the first time in Bandar Abbas: The Natural Trade Gateway of Southeast Iran, Willem Floor, using primary sources, analyses the port''s morphology, population, water supply, health, education, and living conditions during the Qajar period. Furthermore, he discusses in detail how Bandar Abbas came under Omani control; how the Qajars assumed direct control; as well as the town''s vicissitudes under a parliamentary governed Iran, and the new centralizing Pahlavi state. The book also gives a detailed analysis of the nature of Bandar Abbas''s trade and the reasons for its ups and downs; the role of European political and economic activities; central government institutions that were present in Bandar Abbas and the many new institutions that were created in the twentieth century. A similar comprehensive analysis is offered for Minab (a nearby town) with which Bandar Abbas had a symbiotic relationship that changed in the twentieth century. Based on primary sources this study of a major Persian Gulf port offers a comprehensive view of the "growing-up" pains Iran had to suffer to find its way into a modernizing world. The previous volumes of the series are: The Persian Gulf: A Political and Economic History of 5 Port Cities, 15001750; The Rise of the Gulf Arabs, The Politics of Trade on the Persian Littoral, 17471792; The Rise and Fall of Bandar-e Lengeh, The Distribution Center for the Arabian Coast, 17501930

DKK 438.00
1

Persian Gulf - Dr Willem Floor - Bog - Mage Publishers - Plusbog.dk

Persian Gulf - Dr Willem Floor - Bog - Mage Publishers - Plusbog.dk

Muscat, the capital city of present day Oman, has had a long, and colorful history as a typical Indian Ocean port at the mouth of the Persian Gulf. International trade brought about a rich mix of various ethnic and religious groups including, besides Arabs, Africans, Baluchis, Mekranis, Sindis, Gujaratis, Persians and many others. At the turn of the twentieth century fourteen languages could be heard spoken in the city. As a result the people of Muscat tended to be more outward-looking, and tolerant of various cultures, than those of the hinterland. Nonetheless, the city remained a secondary port for most of its history. By 1750, due to anarchy in Iran and problems in Basra, Muscat became the most important Persian Gulf port, and very wealthy. This position was further enhanced by a strong Omani fleet built by the early Al Bu Sa`id rulers. By 1820, however, the Persian Gulf ports reasserted themselves and the Pax Britannica put an end to the use of Omani sea power, and Muscat started to decline. Sultan Sa`id II focused his energies on the development of Zanzibar on the African coast, but by 1868 revenues from Zanzibar and Bandar Abbas had all been lost. Furthermore, conflict between Muscat and the interior and the arrival of steam ships, which supplanted the smaller, local vessels, further sapped the citys strength, and its prosperity. By 1900, Muscat had become a sleepy steamer port with a considerably reduced population. In Muscat: City, Society, & Trade, Willem Floor marshals a wealth of historical documents and challenges some of the heretofore accepted wisdom about the city. Those interested in the socio-economic and medical history of the Indian Ocean and the Persian Gulf will find here a rich banquet of information.

DKK 410.00
1

The Lady on the Drawingroom Floor - Mary Elizabeth Coleridge - Bog - Fairleigh Dickinson University Press - Plusbog.dk

Food Security in Iran - Dr Willem Floor - Bog - Mage Publishers - Plusbog.dk

Food Security in Iran - Dr Willem Floor - Bog - Mage Publishers - Plusbog.dk

Until recent times, Iran regularly had to cope with local or national famines. The various governments, until the second decade of the twentieth century, had neither a policy nor institutional arrangements to deal with grain shortages, artificial or not, and the resulting famines. In severe cases of famine governments might have temporarily intervened in the market, but usually they left care for the hungry to private philanthropy. Invariably, this private effort was inadequate when compared to needs. Although there were earlier incidental efforts, it was only as of 1918 that a beginning was made for more permanent and structural pro-active measures to prevent rather than to combat famine. The creation of the Edareh-ye arzaq or Alimentation Service in Tehran and Tabriz to ensure food security saved thousands of lives in the years that followed. Despite this result, its work is almost totally ignored; there is not even an encyclopedia article about its activities. In this study, Willem Floor discusses the early efforts to combat famine as well as the beginning of a more targeted and structural approach developed by Lambert Molitor in Tabriz during 1917-18 as well as its application in Tehran as of 1918. Whereas in Tabriz, after 1918, the approach was reactive, in Tehran a pro-active program was developed, which as of 1922 became part of the tasks of the Millspaugh mission. During 1926-27 there was even a quasi-national food security program. After Millspaugh''s departure in 1927 the food security of Tehran became an entirely Iranian affair, which as of 1935 was transferred from the Alimentation Service to a State company that had a national food security responsibility.

DKK 576.00
1