the cambridge history of the british empire, Band 5

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CUP Archive, 1932 - 660 Seiten

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Inhalt

The AngloRussian agreement and its effects
7
Dual character of the Empire by 1870
11
CHAPTER XV
15
CHAPTER II
17
Lord Kimberley as Colonial Secretary
33
West Africa and East Africa 18714
39
British and French adjustments in West Africa
46
Sir Henry Taylor R W Hay Sir James Stephen
47
The Zulu Rebellion of 1906
373
42
379
British East Africa 18951914
385
Plans for development in the West Indies
393
DOMINION NATIONALISM AND THE EMERGENT COMMONWEALTH
397
43
402
Discussions of Imperial defence
403
Plans for further conferences
410

PAGE
53
British Residents established in the Malay States
77
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
The case of Angra Pequeña
117
29
118
Frontier disagreements with Russia in Central Asia
123
The Forward school expansionists and federationists
129
The Liberals and the Transvaal War 18801
136
The Forward school gain control in the Cabinet 18845
142
PROBLEMS OF INDIAN SECURITY
145
The occupation and the Mahdist Revolt
151
Effects of trade depression on public opinion
158
Cautious movements in East Africa in the 1870s
165
The South Africa Company as a strategic factor Administration of South
172
Declining supremacy of the Imperial Parliament
178
Fiscal autonomy in the selfgoverning colonies
184
PAGE
185
Emigration
191
Railways and telegraphs
199
The Suez Canal coaling stations
200
32
208
Trade with West Indies
214
34
217
the Fair Trade League
220
Salisburys imperial policy
226
IMPERIAL DEFENCE 18971914
230
A new defence policy for seaborne trade and coaling stations
232
The Barbados unrest of 1876
236
The Imperial Defence Act 1888
240
Naval contributions from the colonies in the 1890s
246
The Army in South Africa 1899 and its weaknesses
252
The Army under Lord Wolseley
253
The diplomatic isolation of England Salisburys effort to regain German
255
Salisbury attempts to come to terms with France
261
The Heligoland agreement over East Africa
268
Rosebery at the Foreign Office
276
37
280
Colonial rivalry between Britain and Germany
282
German criticism of Rosebery
288
The negotiation and reception of the Treaty
294
The American Tariff
301
The Venezuela boundary dispute President Cleveland and Lord Salisbury
304
A general Arbitration Treaty proposed
311
the arbitration award
318
American interests in China the RussoJapanese War
326
British interests in Mexico
332
CHAPTER X
339
The old Liberal view
345
Philanthropic imperialism Shades of opinion
351
Recrimination after Jamesons Raid
357
39
364
legal business of the Office
365
Chamberlains tariff schemes again rejected
419
Procedure The Constitutional resolutions of 1907
426
The Imperial Conference becomes an institution
433
The ratio of imperial to other trade in the 1890s
440
Laurier and the Conference of 1897
446
Federation or dominion autonor
453
Preferential agreements within the Empire
459
The Middle East Division 1921
464
Treasury control
465
Cocoa palmoil The Colonial Office preserves peasant economy
468
Wireless telegraphy
475
Asiatic migration
481
British Trade still preeminent in 1914
487
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
Rapprochement with France
530
CHAPTER XIV
538
The Algeciras Conference 1906
545
The new alignment after 1904
577
The demand for an Australian Navy
585
The Strategic Conference 1909
594
CHAPTER XVI
605
Strategy in the outer seas
611
FOUR COLONIAL CAMPAIGNS IN AFRICA
617
WAR POLICY AND ORGANISATION
628
Secretaries and permanent officials in the twentieth century
632
Manpower and Conscription
634
DESTRUCTION OF THE TURKISH EMPIRE
640
The form of signature to the Treaty
660
Attempts to regulate international action in principle
667
The Berlin Act and the Congo State
674
Dominion status within the League of Nations
679
The right of occupation and administration
683
The aloof attitude of the Office staff
685
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
The degree of preparedness discussed
712
Reform of the Civil Service 18479
717
PAGE
722
PAGE
740
Carnarvons manoeuvres in Parliament
819
CHAPTER III
836
THE OPENING OF TROPICAL AFRICA 18701885
850
Africa still the Dark Continent in 1870
873
649
917
The white mans grave
922
654
923
86
931
662
933
INTERNATIONAL RIVALRY IN THE COLONIAL
941
665
946
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