The British Empire and the German Colonies, 1914-1919 |
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Page 153
... France , Germany , and the United States , operating under an American executive . Britain and France would turn over an equivalent area of tropical African territory to this multi- national administration , which would purchase the ...
... France , Germany , and the United States , operating under an American executive . Britain and France would turn over an equivalent area of tropical African territory to this multi- national administration , which would purchase the ...
Page 157
... France to resist -- leaving Britain without a concrete 46 gain to show for three years of bloody , costly war . While on a lecture tour in southern France in early 1917 , Wickham Steed noted a disturbing atmosphere of distrust ...
... France to resist -- leaving Britain without a concrete 46 gain to show for three years of bloody , costly war . While on a lecture tour in southern France in early 1917 , Wickham Steed noted a disturbing atmosphere of distrust ...
Page 272
... France was forced to cede to Germany in 1911 , and should now regain in full sovereignty . " The United States would be the most sat- isfactory mandatory , " but if this proved impossible , France should be selected . German East Africa ...
... France was forced to cede to Germany in 1911 , and should now regain in full sovereignty . " The United States would be the most sat- isfactory mandatory , " but if this proved impossible , France should be selected . German East Africa ...
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Common terms and phrases
accepted acquisition administration aims Allied Alsace-Lorraine American Asquith attitude Austra Australian Balfour Belgian Belgium Boer Borden Botha Britain British Empire Cameroons campaign captured Central Africa chap claims colo colonial annexation colonial trusteeship Congo declaration demands desires Diary Diplomacy discussion disposal Dominions European ex-German colonies Foreign France French future George's German colonial empire German East Africa German New Guinea German Samoa Germany's Hansard Hughes Hughes's Ibid Imperial War Cabinet insisted interests internationalization Japanese Labor Labour Party League of Nations Lloyd George London Lord mandate system mandatory Massey Memoirs memorandum ment military negotiated neutrality opinion overseas Pacific islands Parl Peace Conference Peace Proposals peace settlement peace terms possessions powers Prime Minister principle propaganda question referred regarded representatives restoration retention Round Table Samoa Senate Smuts Socialist South Africa Southwest Africa sovereignty speech statement territory tion Togoland Union United Empire vols Woodrow Wilson York Zealand