Abu Shadi lived in England from 1912 to 1922. He studied medicine at the
University of London and graduated with distinction in 1917. In 1919 he founded the Apis Club, an international organization of individual beekeepers and bee scientists in different countries, based at Port Hill House in
Benson, Oxfordshire. Abu Shadi launched and edited the Apis Club periodical
Bee World, 'an international monthly journal devoted to the progressive interests of modern bee culture', which was later edited by
Annie D. Betts (1929–1949) and by Dr.
Eva Crane (1950–1983). The Apis Club organized various international conferences in Europe, and the scientific content of the contributions and publications increased; these and the activities of the Apis Club were reported in
Bee World. The Apis Club was eventually transitioned to the
International Bee Research Association (IBRA). Its archives are currently held in the
National Library of Wales. In 1919, Abu Shadi filed his first patent in Great Britain for a removable, standardized aluminum honeycomb; he filed four patents in total for improvements made to beekeeping apparatuses. In January 1930, eight years after returning to Egypt, Abu Shadi established a bee husbandry organization called The Bee Kingdom League, which he operated out of his home in Alexandria. He launched, published and edited the bilingual English/Arabic monthly international journal,
The Bee Kingdom. He organized the first International Bee Exposition, which took place in Cairo in November 1931; its proceedings are documented in the December 1931 issue of
The Bee Kingdom journal. ==Life==