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Justin Marozzi

Justin Marozzi

Contributor
Justin Marozzi is a historian of the Middle East

Articles

The earthquake in Turkey destroyed the 2,200-year old Gaziantep Castle. Photo: Getty
The unspeakable loss of Gaziantep's glorious heritage

History is full of lessons of rebirth after destruction - but only if we learn from past mistakes

CommentFebruary 16, 2023
Justin Marozzi
People practise social distancing in New York City's Domino Park. AFP
Metropolitan life in a time of malady

Covid-19 will not be the end of cities, nor will it be a brand new beginning

CommentJuly 08, 2021
Justin Marozzi
Picture from the 1950s shows a general view of Martyrs Square, also known as Sahet el-Burj, in down town Beirut which has remarkably changed after the 1975-90 Lebanese civil war and the reconstruction plan that covered the heart of the city afterwards. Beirut's city centre, where the green line dividing it into eastern and western hostile sectors was drawn in the first months of the civil war, witnessed some of the period's fiercest battles and got the brunt of destruction. (Photo by AFP)
How the world fell in love with Beirut

There was a time when Lebanon's leaders truly cared for their city, turning it into the jewel of the Middle East

CommentNovember 16, 2020
Justin Marozzi
Despite the result of the US election, US President Donald Trump has refused to concede. AFP
How to lose the presidency in style

Donald Trump is having difficulty facing the music

CommentNovember 16, 2020
Justin Marozzi
The Chitral District of Pakistan is one of the many areas that Wilkinson explores, ever-eager to leave his desk in Islamabad. AFP
Isambard Wilkinson’s book hums with humanity and humour

The evident love and knowledge of Pakistan and its people, a prerequisite for the best travel writing, dances across every page of this book

BooksOctober 02, 2017
Justin Marozzi
Novelist Robert Irwin. Courtesy Ketchum Raad PR
British Arabist and author Robert Irwin to reveal tales that made Arabian Nights

The novelist speaks ahead a series of lectures he will deliver in Dubai.

July 21, 2017
Justin Marozzi
Mohamoud Nur, left, was mayor of Mogadishu, and a bit of a national celebrity, from 2010 to 2014. Kathrine Houreld / AP Photo
Book review: Go inside the world’s most troubled country with The Mayor of Mogadishu

The Mayor of Mogadishu is not just the story of one mercurial politician. It peels back the layers of a proud, intensely troubled country that continues to baffle foreigners.

August 30, 2016
Justin Marozzi
The Nekton mission, funded by the insurer XL Caitlin, deploys two submersibles, Nemo and Nomad, with a team of divers from Project Baseline (Global Underwater Explorers), to plumb the depths for environmental data. Courtesy of Nekton and the XLC Deep Ocean Survey.
Nekton: an international scientific mission plumbing the depths to help save our oceans

Mission Nekton is a scientific expedition to survey the unexplored deep ocean and establish a baseline for its health. We meet the crew and go for a ride in a submersible.

August 17, 2016
Justin Marozzi
Jaballa Matar was an 18-year-old student at the Teachers’ College of Cyrenaica in Benghazi and the co-editor of its literary journal, The Scholar, when this photo was taken in 1957. He was taken from the family's Cairo apartment in the 1990s and has not been heard of since. Courtesy Hisham Matar.
Book review: Hisham Matar’s The Return tells tale of a son’s search for a missing father in Libya

Hisham Matar’s memoir about his missing father in Libya is a searing work of family history, political portrait and personal mourning.

July 12, 2016
Justin Marozzi
A sculpture in the ancient city of Palmyra, Syria, in the 1930s. AFP.
The National Book Club: The awakening of Gertrude Bell, Queen of the Desert

This month's The National Book Club title is a breathtaking journey through Syria at the turn of the last century by the ‘female Lawrence of Arabia’, Gertrude Bell, which still enchants and resonates today.

June 02, 2016
Justin Marozzi
Sykes-Picot at 100: Arabs must take the lead

It is no apology for Sykes-Picot to observe that it is too easy to lump all the problems of the Middle East at the feet of Britain and France.

May 12, 2016
Justin Marozzi
Libyan soldiers manning a military outpost, stop a car at a checkpoint in Wadi Bey, west of the city of Sirte, which is held by Islamic State militants. Ismail Zitouny / Reuters
In post-revolution Libya, people are still struggling in the long shadow of Qaddafi’s dictatorship

The anniversary of the dictator's fall was supposed to have been marked with celebrations, but Libya still languishes instead under instability and violence.

February 25, 2016
Justin Marozzi
A street scene in Tripoli from 1970, a year after Qaddafi's coup overthrew Libya's short-lived monarchy. Keystone-France / Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images
Book review: Translating Libya by Ethan Chorin opens a window into a diverse country

An exhaustively excavated array of short stories provides a rare and vibrant survey of a misunderstood country - it's a collection of humour, grief and soul.

December 31, 2015
Justin Marozzi
Year in review 2015: The migrant crisis - tales of personal tragedy and political chaos
Year in review 2015: The migrant crisis - tales of personal tragedy and political chaos
WorldDecember 26, 2015
Justin Marozzi
An Iraqi soldier records the aftermath of a suicide attack near Mosul. Mohammed Ibrahim / AP Photo
The long read: why the battle for Syria and Iraq is often a war waged with words

The destruction of Palmyra’s Temple of Bel shows how ISIL is trying to crush tolerance and diversity - Justin Marozzi looks at the responses of two authors to extremist attacks on human decency. 

September 03, 2015
Justin Marozzi
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