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 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 83
Page 296
... claims , for which that treaty provided , at Geneva . When this fact is borne in mind it can be understood why the Commission almost immediately ran into difficulties over certain principles of international law put forward by the ...
... claims , for which that treaty provided , at Geneva . When this fact is borne in mind it can be understood why the Commission almost immediately ran into difficulties over certain principles of international law put forward by the ...
Page 298
... claims only to destroy them - were accurately guessed and analysed by Lord Blachford at the time , although Fish himself never seems to have put forward in so many words the plan , ultimately adopted by C. F. Adams and Bancroft Davis ...
... claims only to destroy them - were accurately guessed and analysed by Lord Blachford at the time , although Fish himself never seems to have put forward in so many words the plan , ultimately adopted by C. F. Adams and Bancroft Davis ...
Page 389
... claim equal rights with Europeans . Moreover , in reply to these Indian claims , though he acknowledged that in view of the limited area suitable for European colonisation some " reason- able discretion " was necessary as a matter of ...
... claim equal rights with Europeans . Moreover , in reply to these Indian claims , though he acknowledged that in view of the limited area suitable for European colonisation some " reason- able discretion " was necessary as a matter of ...
Contents
TABLE OF CONTENTS | 1 |
Dual character of the Empire by 1870 | 11 |
CHAPTER II | 17 |
Copyright | |
120 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
administration agreement American annexation Australia B.M. Add Bismarck Boers Britain British Government Cabinet Canada Canadian Canal Cape Cape Colony Carnarvon Cecil Chamberlain chap claims Coast Colonial Office commercial Commons Company Conference Congo danger Derby Dilke Dominion East Africa economic Egypt Empire England Europe European expansion exports favour federation force Foreign Office France free trade French frontier Garvin German Germany's Gladstone Gladstone's Granville Hansard Harcourt Hicks Beach Ibid imperialist important increased India industrial influence interests July Kimberley labour Laurier Liberal London Lord March ment Milner ministry mission Natal native naval negotiations Pacific Parl Parliament political Powers Prime Minister problem proposal protection protectorate Queen Victoria question Radical railway refused relations responsibility Rosebery Russia Salisbury Salisbury's Secretary secure self-governing colonies seqq settlement ships South Africa Sudan tariff territory tion Transvaal treaty Triple Alliance Uganda Uitlander United Kingdom West Zanzibar Zealand