The Cambridge History of the British Empire, Volume 3John Holland Rose, Arthur Percival Newton, Ernest Alfred Benians, Henry Dodwell Macmillan, 1929 - Great Britain |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 85
Page xxiv
... India . India fitted into neither of the categories described . It was neither a national settlement nor an occupation for use . It was not yet seen as a partner in a commonwealth of nations , nor was it likely to be willingly abandoned ...
... India . India fitted into neither of the categories described . It was neither a national settlement nor an occupation for use . It was not yet seen as a partner in a commonwealth of nations , nor was it likely to be willingly abandoned ...
Page 7
... India and Britain were moving rapidly apart . The outbreak of war in 1914 acted and reacted on these conditions . India responded loyally to the common cause . But the war and the feelings which it excited , the new importance which it ...
... India and Britain were moving rapidly apart . The outbreak of war in 1914 acted and reacted on these conditions . India responded loyally to the common cause . But the war and the feelings which it excited , the new importance which it ...
Page 205
... India . Sugar , refined and unrefined , came almost entirely from foreign countries , though the West Indies , India and Mauritius sent a small part of the unrefined . Australia and British North America had begun to send apples . In ...
... India . Sugar , refined and unrefined , came almost entirely from foreign countries , though the West Indies , India and Mauritius sent a small part of the unrefined . Australia and British North America had begun to send apples . In ...
Contents
Dual character of the Empire by 1870 | 5 |
The Commonwealth of the 1920s as the project of a worldstate | 11 |
Lord Kimberley | 31 |
Copyright | |
126 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
accepted Admiralty agreement American annexation Army Asquith Australia Bismarck Boers Britain British Empire British Government Cabinet Canada Canadian Cape Carnarvon Cecil Chamberlain chap China claims Coast Colonial Conference Colonial Office commercial Commission Committee concessions Council crisis Dilke discussion Dominions Dual Alliance East Africa economic Egypt entente Europe European exports favour federation force Foreign Office France free trade French frontier Garvin Germany Germany's Gladstone Granville Hansard Hicks Beach Ibid imperial defence imperialist important increased India industrial interests Italy Joseph Chamberlain labour Langer Laurier Liberal London Lord Mediterranean ment military Milner native naval Navy negotiations organisation Pacific Parl Parliament political Powers Prime Minister problem proposals protection protectorate question 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 troops Uitlander United Kingdom West Zealand