The Cambridge History of the British Empire, Volume 3John Holland Rose, Arthur Percival Newton, Ernest Alfred Benians, Henry Dodwell The University Press, 1959 - Commonwealth of Nations |
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Page 184
... self - governing colonies did not in general follow the ideas of the mother country in regard to free trade or the functions of govern- ment . Except in foreign affairs their self - government covered the whole field of economic policy ...
... self - governing colonies did not in general follow the ideas of the mother country in regard to free trade or the functions of govern- ment . Except in foreign affairs their self - government covered the whole field of economic policy ...
Page 230
... self- governing colonies of the duty of providing for their own local defence . After the granting of the wide measures of self - government to Canada and to the Australasian and South African colonies , the garrisons of imperial troops ...
... self- governing colonies of the duty of providing for their own local defence . After the granting of the wide measures of self - government to Canada and to the Australasian and South African colonies , the garrisons of imperial troops ...
Page 407
... self - governing colonies . It also included representatives of the Crown colonies as well as a large number of public men associated , either officially or otherwise , with imperial affairs . Nor were the self - governing colonies ...
... self - governing colonies . It also included representatives of the Crown colonies as well as a large number of public men associated , either officially or otherwise , with imperial affairs . Nor were the self - governing colonies ...
Contents
CHAPTER I | 1 |
Dual character of the Empire by 1870 | 11 |
CHAPTER II | 17 |
Copyright | |
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accepted administration agreement American annexation arbitration Army Australia Boers Britain British Empire British Government Cabinet Canada Canadian Canal Cape Carnarvon Chamberlain chap China Coast Colonial Conference Colonial Office commercial Commission Committee Conference Corresp crisis Dilke Dominions Dual Alliance East Africa economic Egypt emigration Europe European exports favour force Foreign Office France French frontier Garvin Germany Germany's Gladstone Granville Hansard Hicks Beach Ibid Imperial Defence important India industrial interests July June Kimberley labour Langer Liberal London Lord March ment military native naval Navy negotiations Original Correspondence Out-Letters overseas Pacific Papers Parl political Powers Prime Minister proposed Protectorate question railway refused relations Report responsibility Rosebery Royal Russia Salisbury Salisbury's Secretary self-governing self-governing colonies seqq settlement ships South Africa Sudan Suez Canal tariff territory tion Transvaal treaty Triple Alliance troops Uganda Uganda Railway United Kingdom volumes West Zanzibar Zealand