Ahmad Fathy Zaghlul
Politician
Intro | Politician | ||
Places | Ottoman Empire | ||
was | Translator Politician Lawyer Judge | ||
Work field | Law Politics | ||
Gender |
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Birth | February 1863, Egypt | ||
Death | 27 March 1914Cairo, Egypt (aged 51 years) | ||
Family |
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Ahmad Fathy Zaghlul (1863–1914) was an Egyptian nationalist lawyer and politician. The brother of Saad Zaghloul, Fathy Zahlul studied law in Paris and wrote several law texts. He had several administrative and government posts, and at one point was Deputy Minister of Justice.
In 1906 he was amongst the Egyptian judges at the summary trial for the Denshawai Incident, which damaged his popular reputation in Egypt.
An anti-populist liberal, Fathy Zaghlul also translated several works of European social science into Arabic, including À quoi tient la supériorité des Anglo-Saxons? by Edmond Demolins. A translation of Herbert Spencer's The Man Versus the State was left unfinished and unpublished at his death.