The Cambridge History of the British Empire, Volume 3John Holland Rose, Arthur Percival Newton, Ernest Alfred Benians, Henry Dodwell The University Press, 1929 - Commonwealth of Nations |
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Page 110
In its anxiety to prevent unilateral action by France , it abandoned its preference for intervention by Turkey , as the suzerain , or , failing that , by France and Great Britain with a mandate from all the European Powers ...
In its anxiety to prevent unilateral action by France , it abandoned its preference for intervention by Turkey , as the suzerain , or , failing that , by France and Great Britain with a mandate from all the European Powers ...
Page 111
III FRANCO - BRITISH DIFFERENCES In any event , his action encouraged the real preference of the British Government for an international rather than a dual solution , which was itself the beginning of the rift between Great Britain and ...
III FRANCO - BRITISH DIFFERENCES In any event , his action encouraged the real preference of the British Government for an international rather than a dual solution , which was itself the beginning of the rift between Great Britain and ...
Page 501
He would do what he could to avoid a break with France by postponing action in the Sudan ; he preferred to wait in any case till Egypt could help to finance the reconquest and till the Uganda railway was ready .
He would do what he could to avoid a break with France by postponing action in the Sudan ; he preferred to wait in any case till Egypt could help to finance the reconquest and till the Uganda railway was ready .
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Contents
CHAPTER I | 1 |
DOMINION NATIONALISM AND THE EMERGENT COMMONWEALTH | 4 |
The AngloRussian agreement and its effects | 7 |
Copyright | |
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