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 81
Page 460
1916 , xxx [ Cd . 8329 ) ; preceding numbers cover the period after 1895 , e.g. no . 47 : Parl . Pap . 1910 , cvi ( Cd . 5420 ) . A new Statistical Abstract for the British Empire , no . 1 , Parl . Pap .
1916 , xxx [ Cd . 8329 ) ; preceding numbers cover the period after 1895 , e.g. no . 47 : Parl . Pap . 1910 , cvi ( Cd . 5420 ) . A new Statistical Abstract for the British Empire , no . 1 , Parl . Pap .
Page 682
In 1898 Great Britain was granted a lease of Wei - hai - wei " for so long a period as Port Arthur shall remain in the occupation of Russia ” , and there was no stipulation for compensation to China . Other leases of Chinese territory ...
In 1898 Great Britain was granted a lease of Wei - hai - wei " for so long a period as Port Arthur shall remain in the occupation of Russia ” , and there was no stipulation for compensation to China . Other leases of Chinese territory ...
Page 735
In this period Colonial Secretaries were for the first time required to cultivate personal relations with prominent colonists . Canadian ministers from 1857 and Australians from 1866 onwards began to make the long journey across the ...
In this period Colonial Secretaries were for the first time required to cultivate personal relations with prominent colonists . Canadian ministers from 1857 and Australians from 1866 onwards began to make the long journey across the ...
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Contents
CHAPTER I | 1 |
Cocoa palmoil The Colonial Office preserves peasant economy | 3 |
The AngloRussian agreement and its effects | 7 |
Copyright | |
80 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
accepted action administration agreement Alliance already American Australia become Britain British Cabinet Canada Canadian Cape Chamberlain claims Coast colonies Commons Company Conference continued danger defence demands dependent Dilke direct discussion Dominion economic effect Egypt Empire England established Europe European exports fact federation followed force foreign France French frontier further German Gladstone Government Granville hand Hansard History imperial important increased India industrial influence interests issue Italy July land later less Liberal London Lord March matter ment Minister native Office opinion Parl party period political position possible Powers principle problem proposed protection question Radical railway refused regarded relations remained representatives responsibility Russia Salisbury Secretary secure seemed self-governing seqq settlement ships South Africa territory tion trade treaty union United United Kingdom West whole