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  1. 19 de oct. de 2020 · Both American and Lebanese government forces teamed up to successfully recuperate the Port of Beirut and the Airport and restore peace in the country. However, the decade of the 1950s in Lebanon wasn’t all that bad.

  2. 22 de jun. de 2015 · Named after The Sporting Club in Monte Carlo, Beiruts version of the beach club was founded in 1952 when Georges Abou Nassar took over a “tiny shack with a small nargileh cafe and a small ...

  3. 1950 – Population: 181,271. Beirut in 1950; 1951 – Lebanese University and Lycée Franco-Libanais Verdun founded. 1952 George Assi takes office as Governor of Beirut. The Daily Star newspaper begins publication. 1954 – Beirut Rafic Hariri International Airport opens. 1956 – Bachour Haddad takes office as Governor of Beirut.

  4. On 8 May 1958 a Lebanese journalist, Nasib Al Matni, was assassinated in his office in Beirut. He was a pro-Nasserist and anti-Chamoun Maronite. Following this incident intensive protests occurred in Beirut and Tripoli. In 1958, Camille Chamoun was in the sixth and final year of his term as President of Lebanon.

  5. Explore Authentic Beirut 1950 Stock Photos & Images For Your Project Or Campaign. Less Searching, More Finding With Getty Images.

  6. Hace 6 días · Between 1952 and 1975 Beirut was the hub of economic, social, intellectual, and cultural life in the Arab Middle East. In an area dominated by authoritarian or militarist regimes, the Lebanese capital was generally regarded as a haven of liberalism, though a precarious one.

  7. La primera referencia histórica a Beirut data del siglo XV a. C., cuando se la menciona en las tablas cuneiformes de las Cartas de Amarna, tres cartas que el rey Ammunira de Biruta (Beirut) envió al faraón de Egipto.