The British Empire and the German Colonies, 1914-1919 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 56
Page
... concern . Although the focus is necessarily on Great Britain and the Dominions , the attitudes assumed by other major powers , particularly the United States and Germany , are inextricably involved in the problem and warrant ...
... concern . Although the focus is necessarily on Great Britain and the Dominions , the attitudes assumed by other major powers , particularly the United States and Germany , are inextricably involved in the problem and warrant ...
Page 114
... concern , since the ques- tion of the German colonies was not as pressing as others and was covered under the general heading of " compensations and equitable indemnities . " Considerations of humanity would preclude return of the ...
... concern , since the ques- tion of the German colonies was not as pressing as others and was covered under the general heading of " compensations and equitable indemnities . " Considerations of humanity would preclude return of the ...
Page 234
... Concern in the Union of South Africa was not limited to the question of the adjacent German colony , which most South Africans assumed would rain attached to the Union . German East Africa was the object of the most concentrated South ...
... Concern in the Union of South Africa was not limited to the question of the adjacent German colony , which most South Africans assumed would rain attached to the Union . German East Africa was the object of the most concentrated South ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
accepted administration aims Allied Alsace-Lorraine American Asquith attitude Australian Balfour Belgian Belgium Berlin Boer Borden Botha Britain British Empire Cameroons campaign captured Central Africa chap claims colo colonial annexation colonial trusteeship Congo declaration demands desire Diary Diplomacy discussion disposal Dominions European ex-German colonies Foreign France French future George's German colonial empire German East Africa German New Guinea Germany's Government Hansard Hughes Hughes's Ibid Imperial War Cabinet interests Japanese Labor Labour Party League of Nations Lloyd George London Lord mandate system mandatory Massey Memoirs memorandum ment military native negotiated neutrality opinion overseas Pacific islands Paris Paris Peace Conference Parl Peace Conference Peace Proposals peace settlement peace terms possessions powers Prime Minister principle propaganda question regarded restoration retention Review Round Table Samoa Secretary Senate Smuts Socialist South Africa Southwest Africa sovereignty speech territory tion Togoland Treaty Union United Empire vols Woodrow Wilson York Zealand