The Cambridge History of the British Empire, Volume 3John Holland Rose, Arthur Percival Newton, Ernest Alfred Benians |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 74
Page 277
Germany knew little or nothing of the negotiations ; what she knew was enough .
After September 1892 she ... Germany ' s change of attitude was not , however ,
the only or even the chief danger to Great Britain . It is true that it soon showed ...
Germany knew little or nothing of the negotiations ; what she knew was enough .
After September 1892 she ... Germany ' s change of attitude was not , however ,
the only or even the chief danger to Great Britain . It is true that it soon showed ...
Page 288
Secretary , admitted to the Austrian ambassador , was to alarm Germany and
make her more amenable . On the Austrian Government , on the German
ambassador in London , these manoeuvres had the desired effect . The
ambassador ...
Secretary , admitted to the Austrian ambassador , was to alarm Germany and
make her more amenable . On the Austrian Government , on the German
ambassador in London , these manoeuvres had the desired effect . The
ambassador ...
Page 510
from serious divergences between the outlook and interests of Great Britain and
Germany which Chamberlain , with his narrow experience at the Colonial Office
and his absorption in the Far East and with trade , did not wholly appreciate and ...
from serious divergences between the outlook and interests of Great Britain and
Germany which Chamberlain , with his narrow experience at the Colonial Office
and his absorption in the Far East and with trade , did not wholly appreciate and ...
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Contents
CHAPTER I | 1 |
Dual character of the Empire by 1870 | 11 |
CHAPTER II | 17 |
Copyright | |
90 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
accepted action agreement Alliance already American Army Australia become Britain British British Government Cabinet Canada Canadian Chamberlain claims Coast Colonial Office colonies Committee Commons Conference continued defence demands dependencies discussion division Dominions East economic effect Egypt Empire established European exports fact followed force foreign France French further Germany Gladstone Government Granville hand Hansard History imperial important increased India industrial influence interests Italy land Langer later less Liberal London Lord March matter ment military Minister native naval Office Parl period political position possible Powers principle problem proposed question refused regarded relations remained Report representatives responsibility result Russia Salisbury Secretary secure seemed seqq settlement ships South Africa territory tion took trade treaty United United Kingdom volumes West whole Zealand