The Rise and Fall of the British Empire

Home > Other > The Rise and Fall of the British Empire > Page 84
The Rise and Fall of the British Empire Page 84

by Lawrence, James


  38 Daily Telegraph, 11 November 1961.

  39 Daily Telegraph, 10 July 1956.

  40 New Statesman, 30 June 1956.

  3: The World as It Is: Middle Eastern Misadventures, 1945–56

  1 Clark and Wheeler, 116, 120; Leffler, 77, 113, 225.

  2 Leffler, 238, 286.

  3 Leffler, 238.

  4 Clark and Wheeler, 124.

  5 Hennessey, 262.

  6 Clark and Wheeler, 153.

  7 Navias, Nuclear Weapons &c., 41–3.

  8 PRO, Adm 1/26927.

  9 Constitutional Relations, 9, 432.

  10 W.R. Louis, The British Empire and the Middle East, 13.

  11 Time, 7, and 21 January 1952.

  12 McGhee, 342.

  13 Economist, 30 June 1951.

  14 Ibid., 23 June 1951.

  15 PRO, Adm 1/27285.

  16 Hansard, 5th Series, 491, 978.

  17 Ibid., 1020.

  18 Ibid., 1178.

  19 Brands, ‘The Cairo-Teheran Connection &c.’, IHR, 11, 440–1.

  20 Spectator, 5 October 1951.

  21 Shuckburgh, 27.

  22 McGhee, 339.

  23 Nixon, 134.

  24 Leffler, 124–5, 239, 288–9.

  25 McGhee, 270.

  26 Lawson, ‘The Iranian Crisis &c.’, IJMES, 21, 309–10.

  27 Khomeini, 214.

  28 Shuckburgh, 105.

  29 W.R. Louis, The British Empire and the Middle East, 586.

  30 McGhee, 371.

  31 Leffler, 477.

  32 Shuckburgh, 29.

  33 PRO, WO 216/799.

  34 Mason, ‘The Decisive Volley &c.’, JICH, 19, 50.

  35 Heikal, 29–30.

  36 Leffler, 484–5; Brands, ‘The Cairo-Teheran Connection &c.’, IJMES, 21, 446.

  4: Kick Their Backsides: The Suez War and Beyond

  1 Navias, Nuclear Weapons and British Strategic Planning, 42–3, 46.

  2 Shuckburgh, 318–19, 329.

  3 Horne, Macmillan 1894–1956, 395.

  4 Shuckburgh, 327, 341.

  5 Ibid., 344.

  6 Dooley, ‘Great Britain’s Last Battle &c.’, Int.HR, 11, 490–91.

  7 Ibid., 491; Times, 1 January 1987.

  8 Heikal, 187, 191.

  9 Cohen, ‘A Still Stranger Aspect &c.’, Int.HR, 10, passim.

  10 See page 271.

  11 Wright, Spycatcher, 84–5.

  12 Heikal, 154n., 215n.

  13 Ibid., 153 note 3.

  14 Pearson, 19–20.

  15 Shuckburgh, 163.

  16 Shaffy, ‘Unconcerned at Dawn &c.’, Intelligence and National Security, 5, 10–11, 49.

  17 Ibid., 30.

  18 Dooley, ‘Great Britain’s Last Battle &c.’, Int.HR, 11, 493.

  19 Daily Telegraph, 6 November 1956.

  20 New Statesman, 15 December 1956.

  21 Hansard, 5th Series, 559, 1631.

  22 Horne, Macmillan, 1894–1956, 393.

  23 Hansard, 5th Series, 559, 1618.

  24 Ibid., 1626; New Statesman, 17 November 1956.

  25 Dooley, ‘Great Britain’s Last Battle &c.’, Int.HR, 11, 504–6.

  26 PRO, Adm 1/26826.

  27 Cohen, ‘A Still Stranger Aspect &c.’, Int.HR, 10, 261.

  28 S. Lloyd, Suez, 170–94.

  29 Shaffy, ‘Unconcerned at Dawn &c.’, Intelligence and National Security, 5, 41, 56.

  30 Time, 17 November, 1956.

  31 Spectator, 9 November 1956.

  32 Observer, 4 and 11 November 1956.

  33 PRO, CO 1015/202, 1.

  5: The Old Red, White, and Blue: Reactions to a Dying Empire

  1 Sunday Times Magazine, 24 February 1963.

  2 Nixon, 134.

  3 PRO, CO 1027/317, 40, 43.

  4 Daily Telegraph, 24 August 1956.

  5 Hansard, 5th Series, 478, 2766.

  6 Daily Telegraph, 17 July 1956.

  7 Oliver, ‘The Two Miss Perhams &c.’, JICH, 19, 26.

  8 Navias, ‘Terminating National Conscription &c.’, JCont.H, 24, 202.

  9 Times, 2 April 1964.

  10 I am indebted to Professor Fred Crawford for these details of the Lawrence-Aldington affair.

  11 PRO, CO 1027/177, 1–3, 14–16.

  12 Listener, 30 October 1969.

  13 Daily Telegraph, 23 November 1967.

  14 H. Thomas, The Establishment, 10–11, 19.

  15 Ibid., 187.

  16 Daily Telegraph, 5 July 1956.

  17 Richards and Aldgate, 158.

  6: Uhuru: Tying up Loose Ends, 1959–80

  1 New Statesman, 10 May 1963.

  2 Hansard, 5th Series (House of Lords), 229, 305, 431.

  3 New Statesman, 10 May 1952.

  4 Mboya, 64.

  5 PRO, CO 822/474, 20.

  6 PRO, CO 1015/463 (Report April 1953).

  7 Southern Rhodesia: Facts and Figures &c., 1, 13.

  8 Listener, 31 July 1969.

  9 New Statesman, 30 January 1956.

  10 Darwin, ‘The Central African Emergency &c.’, JICH, 21, 223–4.

  11 Hansard, 5th Series, 602, 1506.

  12 Ibid., 1509–10.

  13 Horne, Macmillan, 1957–1986, 181.

  14 Hansard, 5th Series, 610, 237.

  15 Ibid., 422–3.

  16 Ibid., 426.

  17 Horne, Macmillan, 1957–1986, 181–2.

  18 McCracken, ‘Coercion and Control &c.’, JAH, 27,141.

  19 Fisher, Iain Macleod, 160, 163.

  20 Horne, Macmillan, 1957–1986, 187–8.

  21 Ibid.

  22 Sunday Times Magazine, 3 June 1962.

  23 Caute, 88.

  24 Hansard, 5th Series, 229, (House of Lords), 401, 409–10.

  25 Pimlott, 270.

  26 Listener, 5 December 1968.

  27 Pimlott, 451.

  28 Caute, 90.

  29 Sun, 15 November 1965.

  Index

  The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages in your eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.

  Abadie, Captain George

  Abbas II, Khedive

  Abdullah, King of Transjordan

  Abdullah bin Muhammad, Khalifah

  Abercromby, General Lord

  Aberdeen Chronicle

  aborigines

  Abu Klea, battle of (1885)

  Abukir Bay, battle of (1798)

  Abyssinia (Ethiopia): 19th-century campaigns; Italian ambitions; Mussolini invades; liberation

  Accra

  Achée, Comte D’

  Acheson, Dean

  Adams, John

  Addison, Richard

  Aden

  Admiralty

  advertising

  Afghanistan

  Africa; slave trade; ‘new imperialism’; ‘scrambles’ for; missionaries; British methods of control; newspaper accounts of; First World War; ‘backwardness’; Second World War; post-war expectations; proposed African army; Communist subversion; independence; see also East Africa; North Africa; West Africa and individual countries

  African National Congress

  African National Council

  Afrikaner Nationalist party

  Afrikaners

  Aga Khan

  Agra

  Air Ministry

  air travel

  Aix-la-Chapelle, Peace of (1748)

  Ajax, Operation

  Albania

  Albermarle, Lord

  Albert, Prince Consort

  Alcock and Brown

  Aldington, Richard

  Alexander, A.V.

  Alexandria

  Algeria

  Ali, Rashid

  Ali Dinar, Sultan of Darfur

  All-African Peoples Conference

  Allenby, Field-Marshal Viscount

  Amboina Island

  American Intercourse Bill (1781)
<
br />   American Union Pacific Railroad

  American War of Independence

  Amery, Julian

  Amery, Leo; and idea of imperial federation; supporter of Milner; First World War; and the Middle East; support for Zionism; and Lend Lease

  Amherst, Lord

  Amherst, Major-General Jeffrey

  Amin, General Idi

  Amoy

  Amritsar

  Andaman Islands

  Anderson, Lindsay

  Anglo-American War (1812)

  Anglo-Egyptian Treaty (1936)

  Anglo-Egyptian War (1882)

  Anglo-Iranian (Persian) Oil Company

  Anglo-Iraqi Treaty (1930)

  Anglo-Irish Treaty (1921)

  Anglo-Japanese alliance (1902)

  Anglo-Russian Convention (1907)

  Anglo-Saxon character

  Angola

  Anne, Queen

  Anson, Admiral Sir George

  Antarctica

  Anti-Jacobin

  anti-semitism

  Anti-Smoking League

  Antigua

  Anzac Day

  ANZACs

  ANZUS pact (1950)

  apartheid

  appeasement

  Arab Legion

  Arab Revolts

  Arabs: nationalism; independence movements; and Zionism; and Jewish immigration to Palestine; Second World War; and the creation of Israel; small-scale wars

  Arden, John

  Argentine

  Aristotle

  Arkwright, Richard

  Armitage, Sir Robert

  Arnold, Benedict

  Arnold, Dr Thomas

  Arrow

  Asante

  Ascension Island

  Asquith, Herbert

  Atatürk, Kamal

  Atiyah, Edward

  Atlantic, Battle of the

  Atlantic Charter

  atomic bombs

  Attenborough, Richard

  Attlee, Clement; and the Atlantic Charter; Yalta and Potsdam conferences; and the atomic bomb; wants to withdraw from Mediterranean and Middle East; proposed African army; Cold War; and Indian independence; Iranian crisis

  Auchinleck, Field-Marshal

  Aung San, Thain

  Australia: Cook claims for Britain; aborigines; convicts transported to; trade with Britain; independence movement; and imperial unity; self-government; expansionists; emigration to; distinctive identity; defences; and the Boer War; emotional kinship with Britain; First World War; air travel; cricket; and the League of Nations; and defence of Singapore; rearmament; anti-war sentinent; prelude to Second World War; war declared; Lend Lease; Second World War; and the Cold War

  Australian Labour party

  Austria

  Austria-Hungary

  Azikwe, Benjamin

  Aztecs

  Bacon, Sir Francis

  Bacon, Nathaniel

  Badahur Shah

  Baden-Powell, Major-General Sir Robert

  Baggal

  Baghdad Pact

  Bahamas

  Bahrain

  Baker, Sir Stanley

  Balcon, Michael

  Baldwin, Stanley

  Balfour, Arthur

  Balfour Declaration (1917)

  Balkans

  Ballantyne, R.M.

  Baltimore, Lord

  Baluchi tribesmen

  Banda, Dr Hastings

  Bangalore

  Bankes, Thomas

  Banks, Sir Joseph

  Barbados

  Barbados Company

  Barcelona

  Baring, Sir Evelyn see Cromer, Lord

  Barker, Lieutenant George

  Barnett, Correlli

  Barrow, General Sir Edmund

  Bart, Jean

  al-Barzani, Sheik Mahmud

  Basutoland

  Batavia

  Battle of Britain (1940)

  BBC

  BBC World Service

  ‘Beaconsfieldism’

  Beale, Anthony

  Bean, Charles

  Beatty, Admiral Lord

  Beatty, Lady

  beaver pelts

  Beaverbrook, Lord

  Bechuanaland

  Beckford, Sir William

  Bedford, Duke of

  Beduin

  Bee Hive

  Beirut

  Belgium

  Belize

  Bell, Gertrude

  Belloc, Hilaire

  Ben Gurion, David

  Benbow, Vice-Admiral John

  Bengal

  Bengal Gazette

  Bennett, Major-General Gordon

  Bentinck, Lord William

  Berkeley, Sir William

  Berlin-Constantinople-Baghdad railway

  Bermuda

  Bevan, Aneurin

  Beveridge, Senator A.J.

  Beveridge report

  Bevin, Ernest

  Bharatpur

  Bida

  Birley, Thomas, Bishop of Zanzibar

  Birmingham

  Bismarck, Prince Otto von

  Bismarck Archipelago

  Black and Tans

  blacks: slavery; ‘noble savage’; in First World War; ‘backwardness’; desire for self-government; stereotypes; colour bar; race riots; in Second World War; proposed African army; see also racism

  Blackstone, Chief Justice

  Blake, Admiral

  Blakiston, Lieutenant Robert

  Blamey, General Sir Thomas

  Blatchford, Robert

  Blathwayt, William

  Bligh, William

  ‘Blimp, Colonel’

  Blücher, Marshal

  ‘Blue Water’ school of foreign policy

  Blundell, Sir Michael

  Blunt, Wilfred Scawen

  Boer War

  Boers

  Boleyne, Anne

  Bombay

  Bonaparte, Joseph

  Boot, Operation

  Borden, Sir Robert

  Borgu

  Borneo; see also North Borneo

  Boscawen, Edward

  Bose, Chandra Subhas

  Boston

  ‘Boston Massacre’ (1770)

  Botany Bay

  Botha, Louis

  Bougainville, Louis-Anthoine de

  Boulton, Matthew

  Bounty

  Bourne, Colonel

  Boutros-Ghali, Boutros

  Bowrey, Thomas

  Bowring, John

  Boxer Rebellion

  Boy Scouts

  Boys Brigade

  Boys’ Own Paper

  Braddock, Bessie

  Braddock, General Edward

  Bradford Exchange

  Brazil

  Brazza, Savorgnan de

  Brereton, Captain F.S.

  Brereton, Major-General Lewis

  Bright, John

  Bristol

  British Board of Film Censors

  British Columbia

  British Communist party

  British Council

  British East Africa; see also Kenya

  British Empire Exhibition (1924–5)

  British Expeditionary Force

  British Guiana

  British Honduras (Belize)

  British Imperial East Africa Company

  British Nationality Act (1948)

  British South Africa Company

  Brockway, Fenner

  Brooke, Charles

  Brooke, Sir James

  Brown, George

  Brown, John

  Brown, William

  Browning, Robert

  Bruce, H.A.

  Bruce, Stanley

  Brunei

  buccaneers

  Buchan, John

  Buenos Aires

  Bulfin, General Sir Edward

  Buller, General Sir Redvers

  Bülow, Prince von

  Burgoyne, General

  Burke, Edmund

  Burma

  Burma National Army

  Burma Road

  Bu
rma War (1824)

  Burnaby, Colonel Frederick

  Burnet, Gilbert, Bishop of Salisbury

  Burton, Sir Richard

  Bute, Marquess of

  Butler, R.A.

  Byng, Admiral John

  Cabot, John

  Cadbury’s

  Cadogan, Sir Alexander

  Caetano, President

  Cairo Conference (1921)

  Calcutta

  Caledon, Lord

  Callaghan, James

  Cambridge Union

  Cameroons

  Campbell, Colin

  Campbell, General Sir Colin

  Campbell-Bannerman, Sir Henry

  Canada; conflicts between Britain and France in; Catholicism; and American War of Independence; North-West Passage; trade with Britain; independence movement; self-government; emigration to; French population; and the Boer War; defences; First World War; anti-war sentinent; Second World War; trade with America

  Canal Zone see Suez Canal

  Canary Islands

  Canton

  Cape Breton Island

  Cape Colony

  Cape Finisterre

  Cape Florida

  Cape of Good Hope

  Cape Horn

  Cape Town

  capital, overseas investment

  Capra, Frank

  Cardiff

  Cardwell, Edward

  Carib Indians

  Caribbean see West Indies

  Carleton, General Guy

  Carlyle, Thomas

  Carnarvon, Lord

  Carnatic

  Carolina

  Caroline Islands

  Carrington, Lord

  Carron ironworks

  Carson, Sir Edward

  Cartagena

  Cary, Joyce

  Castle, Barbara

  Castlereagh, Viscount

  Catherine, Tsaritsa

  Catherine of Weymouth

  Catholic Church

  Cavendish College, Cambridge

  Cawnpore

  Cayman Islands

  Cecil, Lord Robert

  Central Africa

  Central African Federation

  Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)

  Cetshwayo

  Ceylon

  Chamberlain, Austen

  Chamberlain, Joseph; background; imperialism; Royal Navy loses control of Mediterranean; and the Matabele Wars; and the Jameson Raid; East African railway; and West Africa; Irish Home Rule; tariff reform campaign

  Chamberlain, Neville; and Indian independence; Munich agreement; rearmament; Abyssinian crisis; becomes prime minister; appeasement; and Hitler’s claim to Sudetenland; supports Poland; declares war

  Chanak crisis (1922)

  Chandra Sahib

  Chapman, George

  charities, emigration help

  Charles I, King

  Charles II, King

  Charles Edward, Prince (the ‘Young Pretender’)

  Chartists

  Chatfield, Admiral Lord

  Chatham, Lord see Pitt, William

  Chelmsford, 2nd Baron

  Chelmsford, 1st Viscount

  Chesapeake Bay

  Chesney, Sir George

  Chesterton, G.K.

  Chetwode, General Sir Philip

  Chiang Kai-Shek, General

  Chicago Tribune

  Childers, Erskine

 

‹ Prev