The Cambridge History of the British Empire, Volume 2John Holland Rose CUP Archive, 1929 - Commonwealth countries |
From inside the book
Try this search over all volumes: established
Results 1-0 of 0
Contents
CHAPTER I | 9 |
India a political unit of another character | 14 |
A sense of responsibility restrained by economy | 22 |
Annexation of Fiji approved | 33 |
Colonial tariff policies and British Free Trade principles | 39 |
Annexation of Fiji completed | 46 |
British Residents established in the Malay States | 52 |
PAGE | 53 |
Cocoa palmoil The Colonial Office preserves peasant economy 468 | 394 |
DOMINION NATIONALISM AND THE EMERGENT COMMONWEALTH | 397 |
43 | 402 |
Discussions of Imperial defence | 403 |
Plans for further conferences | 410 |
Chamberlains tariff schemes again rejected | 419 |
Procedure The Constitutional resolutions of 1907 | 426 |
44 | 432 |
17 | 77 |
The United States matures as a Great Power | 84 |
19 | 88 |
INTERNATIONAL RIVALRY 18851895 | 95 |
The Treaty of San Stefano | 97 |
26 | 102 |
The Russians provoke the Second Afghan War | 104 |
British occupation of Egypt | 110 |
DrummondWolffs negotiations with Turkey | 115 |
Bismarcks use of the colonial question in diplomacy | 116 |
29 | 118 |
The second phase of the Afghan War | 122 |
Parliament neither Jingoist nor Little Englander | 128 |
Gladstone declares for confederation | 134 |
Sir Charles Warrens expedition | 141 |
PROBLEMS OF INDIAN SECURITY | 145 |
The occupation and the Mahdist Revolt | 151 |
Effects of trade depression on public opinion | 158 |
Bismarck and East Africa | 165 |
The Matabele War Swaziland | 174 |
CHAPTER VI | 181 |
PAGE | 185 |
Britains supremacy in the 1860s and her new competitors | 191 |
The Suez Canal coaling stations | 200 |
32 | 208 |
Trade with West Indies | 214 |
34 | 217 |
the Fair Trade League | 220 |
Salisburys imperial policy | 226 |
A new defence policy for seaborne trade and coaling stations | 232 |
The Imperial Defence Act 1888 | 240 |
Naval contributions from the colonies in the 1890s | 246 |
The Hartington Commission | 253 |
Concessions to Italy in northeast Africa | 272 |
The AngloFrench dispute over Siam | 278 |
37 | 280 |
CHAPTER IX | 293 |
Export of capital | 300 |
Preliminaries of the Washington Treaty | 302 |
CHAPTER X | 339 |
SOUTH AFRICA | 354 |
39 | 364 |
Milners reconstruction | 367 |
Chinese slavery the Liberal victory | 373 |
42 | 379 |
The representative principle in India the West Indies Ceylon | 386 |
British West Africa 18951914 | 392 |
Closer cooperation foreign policy discussed | 433 |
The ratio of imperial to other trade in the 1890s | 440 |
Laurier and the Conference of 1897 | 446 |
Federation or dominion autonomy | 453 |
Railways and telegraphs | 458 |
Preferential agreements within the Empire | 459 |
The Imperial Department of Agriculture | 461 |
Treasury control | 465 |
Cables and cable stations | 473 |
Asiatic migration | 481 |
Statistics of capital exports | 488 |
Britains money on the wrong horse | 494 |
The Italian defeat in Abyssinia and the Dongola expedition | 501 |
Chamberlains initiative during Salisburys absence 1898 | 509 |
Britain Germany and Portugal 1898 | 515 |
The alliances in Europe draw apart | 522 |
Public hostility to Germany | 530 |
CHAPTER XIV | 538 |
Plans for development in the West Indies | 541 |
The Algeçiras Conference 1906 | 545 |
Attempts to regulate international action in principle | 667 |
The Berlin Act and the Congo State | 674 |
The right of occupation and administration | 683 |
The Alabama case and its juridical consequences | 689 |
British disputes with other countries put to arbitration | 695 |
The Second Hague Conference 1907 | 702 |
CHAPTER XIX | 711 |
Reform of the Civil Service 18479 | 717 |
Sir Henry Taylor R W Hay Sir James Stephen | 722 |
Separation of the War Office | 729 |
Closer relations between the Office and the Colonies | 735 |
The arrangement of Departments | 742 |
The Colonial Office building | 749 |
The formation of a distinct Dominions Department 1907 | 755 |
Scientific and research committees | 761 |
The aloof attitude of the Office staff | 767 |
357 | 799 |
361 | 819 |
367 | 826 |
THE OPENING OF TROPICAL AFRICA 18701885 | 850 |
370 | 861 |
CHAPTER IV | 879 |
909 | |
916 | |
922 | |
931 | |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
administration 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 Conference Colonial Office commercial Commons Company Congo danger defence Derby Dilke Dominion East Africa economic Egypt Empire 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 imperial imperialist important India industrial influence interests July Kimberley labour Laurier Liberal London Lord March ment Milner ministry mission Natal native naval negotiations Pacific Parl Parliament party political Powers Prime Minister problem proposals protection protectorate Queen Victoria question Radical railway refused relations responsibility Rosebery Russia Salisbury Salisbury's Secretary secure self-governing colonies self-government seqq settlement ships South Africa Sudan tariff territory tion Transvaal treaty Triple Alliance Uganda Uitlander United Kingdom West Zanzibar Zealand