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Key thinkers across history — grouped by era, colour-coded by discipline. Click any card to explore ideas, quotations, and classroom contexts.

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Modern — 1800 to 1950
Umm Kulthum c. 1898 - 1975 · Egypt
Umm Kulthum was an Egyptian singer. She was probably the most famous Arab cultural figure of the 20th century. She was born around 1898 in a small village called Tamay az-Zahayra, in the Egyptian Nile Delta. Her exact date of birth is uncertain, partly because village births were not always carefully recorded. Her father was a village imam, a Muslim religious leader. He led prayers and sometimes sang religious songs at weddings to earn extra money. He noticed that his young daughter had an extraordinary voice. He taught her to sing religious songs and then took her with him to perform. To make this socially acceptable in conservative villages, she dressed as a boy when she sang in public. She was known as 'the boy with the strong voice'. In the 1920s she moved to Cairo, the capital and cultural centre of Egypt. She took singing lessons, dropped the boy disguise, and quickly became a star. Egyptian radio began broadcasting her concerts in the 1930s. By the 1940s she was the most famous singer in the Arab world. She gave a concert on the first Thursday of every month for decades. Across the Arab world, streets emptied as people gathered around radios to listen. She sang for kings, presidents, and ordinary villagers. She supported Egyptian independence and President Gamal Abdel Nasser. After Egypt lost the 1967 war with Israel, she gave concerts across the Arab world to raise money for the country. She died in 1975. Around four million people attended her funeral in Cairo, one of the largest in human history.
"Sing a beautiful song with a strong meaning, and the people will love you."