Letters from Jerusalem 1922-1935: During the Palestine Mandate
By (Author) Eunice Holliday
Volume editor John C. Holliday
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Radcliffe Press
31st December 1997
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Autobiography: historical, political and military
Middle Eastern history
City and town planning: architectural aspects
956.94404092
Hardback
224
Width 219mm, Height 276mm
Jerusalem in the inter-war period lay between the ancient rule of the Ottoman Empire and the creation of the modern State of Israel, between a relatively poor and under-developed city, steeped in old ways, and a modern metropolis. Into the intervening period came the British Mandate, restoring the old city, controlling the new, and living with the political and rioting consequences of the Balfour Declaration which promised the Jews a homeland. Cliff and Eunice Holliday came to Jerusalem in 1922. Cliff, an architect and town planner, had the tasks of restoring part of the old city, building control outside, the preparing of a town plan, and he was later to design several new public buildings. Eunice wrote home regularly to her mother, and her letters give an account of everyday life, portraying a city at a critical time in its history. This book contains the letters Eunice wrote during that time.
John C. Holliday, editor, is the second of Cliff and Eunice's four sons. He continued with the interests of his father and became a town planner and landscape architect.