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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Yaqub Sanu (1839-1912) also known as James Sanua, was an Egyptian Jew born to an Egyptian mother and an Italian father. He became famous as a journalist, an Egyptian nationalist and a playwright. Sanua became active as a journalist in Egypt, writing in a number of languages, of which, other than Arabic, the most important was French. He played an important role in the development of Egyptian theatre in the 1870s, both as a writer of original plays in Arabic and with…mehr

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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Yaqub Sanu (1839-1912) also known as James Sanua, was an Egyptian Jew born to an Egyptian mother and an Italian father. He became famous as a journalist, an Egyptian nationalist and a playwright. Sanua became active as a journalist in Egypt, writing in a number of languages, of which, other than Arabic, the most important was French. He played an important role in the development of Egyptian theatre in the 1870s, both as a writer of original plays in Arabic and with his adaptations of French plays, but it was as a satirical nationalist journalist that he became famous in his day, a thorn in the side of both the Khedive and the British interlopers. Early in 1877 Sanua founded the satirical magazine Abou Naddara, which had an immediate appeal to both those who could read and those who had it read to them. It was quickly suppressed as being liberal and revolutionary, and its author banished.