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THE LIMITS OF EUROCENTRICITY Imperial British Foreign and Defence Policy in the early twentieth century
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| Author Name |
Keith WILSON |
| Other Informations |
2006 222 p. |
| ISBN |
975-428-331-1 |
| Price |
25.00 USD |
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Introduction: The Limits of Eurocentricity ? the case of the British Empire 1904-1914. 1. Prologue to Policy-Making: Sir E. Grey and the National Review articles 1901-2. 2. Found and Lost in Translation: Bertie, Cambon, Landsdowne, Delcassé and the Anglo-French ?alliance? of May 1905 3. The Anglo-Japanese Alliance of 1905 and the defending of India: the case of the worst-case scenario 4. Creative Accounting: the place of loans to Persia in the commencent of the negotiation of the Anglo-Russian Convention of 1907 5. Passing on the Straits: the Dardanelles and the Bosphorus in Anglo-Russian relations 1904-1907 6. Sir E. Crowe on the origins of the Crowe memorandum of 1 January 1907 7. The Anglo-French Entente re-visited, 1906-1914. 8. Hankey's Appendix: inter-service rivalry during and after the Agadir crisis, 1911. 9. Understanding the ?misunderstanding? of 1 August 1914. 10. Curzon outwith India: a note on the lost committee on Persia, 1915-1916. 11. General Wilson and the Channel Tunnel before and after the Great War Map: Persia as divided by the Anglo-Russian Convention of 1907 |
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