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E-grāmata: German Diplomatic Documents 1871-1914 Volume 2: From Bismarck's Fall to 1898

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Originally published in English in 1929, this second volume of the German Diplomatic Documents covers a much shorter period: 1890–1898. During this period there was no war or revolution in Europe, but the sphere of German and indeed European politics became enlarged. The documents in this volume deal with questions raised by diverse regions such as Armenia, Morocco, Tunisia, Tripoli, South Africa, Crete and Cuba. The papers here reissued show that colonial expansion is a recognised part of the official German programme. As with the first volume, the policy exhibited in the despatches of this volume are governed almost exclusively by the ultimate idea of war.



Originally published in English in 1929, this second volume of the German Diplomatic Documents covers a much shorter period: 1890–1898. During this period there was no war or revolution in Europe, but the sphere of German and indeed European politics became enlarged.

Recenzijas

Original Reviews of German Diplomatic Documents 18711914, Volume 2:

The student of British foreign policy will welcome it as a very interesting and helpful collection of source material. Dwight E. Lee, The Journal of Modern History, Vol 1, No. 2 (1929)

'...a task of unusual value, discharged with an erudition and a discrimination for which no praise is too high.' The Sunday Times

'Captain Dugdale deserves our warmest congratulations on the skill with which he has selected the documents now widely available in this fascinating volume.' Journal of the Royal Institute of International Affairs.

Historical Preface Charles Eliot.
1. The Balkan Question, 1890
2. The
Zanzibar and Heligoland Treaty
3. The French opposition to the Heligoland
Treaty
4. Renewal of the Triple Alliance
5. Egypt, February 1891 to April
1892
7. Italy and the Mediterranean, April to August 1891
8. The Armenian
Question
9. The Tunis-Tripolis Question, 18901
10. The German Emperors
Visit to England, July 1891
11. The Morocco Question, December 1890 to July
1892
12. Italy and Abyssinia, April 1890 to March 1895
13. Italy and the
Mediterranean, July to September 1892
14. Mr. Gladstones Government and
Egypt, 1892-3
15. Liberal Foreign Policy, November 1892 to June 1893
16. The
Armenian Question, 1893-5
17. The Siamese Dispute and its Reactions on
European Politics, July to December 1893
18. Austrian Anxieties Regarding
British Intentions in the Near East, November 1893 to March 1894
19. The
Morocco Question, 1892-5
20. The German Colonies and Samoa, June 1893 to May
1894
21. Egypt, April 1894 to March 1895
22. The Congo Dispute May 1894 to
August 1895
23. Lord Salisbury and the Future of Turkey, July to October 1895
24. The Armenian Failure, September 1895 to January 1897
25. The Jameson
Raid, January 1896
26. The Kruger Telegram and its Consequences, January
to March, 1896
27. The Near East and Egypt, 1896
28. The Straits Question,
and the Turkish Reforms June 1896 to February 1897
29. The Cretan Question,
May 1896 to November 1898
30. Anglo-German Relations October 1896 to May 1897
31. The United States, Hawaii and Samoa July to December 1897
32. The
Spanish-American War, September 1897 to April 1898.
E. T. S. Dugdale (18761964) chose and translated these four volumes of selections from the stupendously large collection of diplomatic documents held in Berlin after the First World War. Dugdale was a keen shot, an academic, a pipe-smoking stamp-collector, and an ardent admirer of Dickens, who for a time made the translation of German texts his métier. On leaving Balliol, he had hoped to join the British Foreign Office; and to that end in the late 1890s spent two years in Germany perfecting his grasp of German an experience which admirably qualified him for the more literary occupation. In the event, having married in 1902, he instead became an underwriter at Lloyds, and ended the War, wounded, as a captain in the Leicester Yeomanry. The four volumes of Diplomatic Documents were Dugdales chefs duvre. The very many and generous contemporary reviews of these are as uniformly struck by their historical importance as by the skill of their presentation and choice.