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Die auswärtige Gewalt der britischen DominienKemnitz, Martin, January 1937 (has links)
Inaug.-diss.--Göttingen. / "Schrifttum": 3d prelim. leaf.
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De rechtsbetrekkingen der leden van het Britsche Gemeenebest, onderling en in het volkenrecht ...Tammes, A. J. P. January 1937 (has links)
Thesis--Groningen, 1937. / Summary in English, p. [142]-152.
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Parque Xafkintu: plataforma de integración comunal de Nueva ImperialCarrasco Molina, César January 2016 (has links)
Memoria para optar al título de Arquitecto
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John Bull’s proconsuls: military officers who administered the British Empire, 1815-1840Smith, Robert J. January 1900 (has links)
Doctor of Philosophy / Department of History / Michael A. Ramsay / At the conclusion of the Napoleonic Wars, Britain had acquired a vast empire that
included territories in Asia, Africa, North America, and Europe that numbered more than a
quarter of the earth's population. Britain also possessed the largest army that the state had ever
fielded, employing nearly 250,000 troops on station throughout this empire and on fighting
fronts in Spain, southern France, the Low Countries, and North America. However, the peace of
1815 and the end of nearly twenty-five years of war with France brought with it significant
problems for Britain. Years of war had saddled the state with a massive debt of nearly £745,000;
a threefold increase from its total debt in 1793, the year war with the French began.
Furthermore, the rapid economic changes brought on by a the state that had transitioned from a
wartime economy to one of peacetime caused widespread unemployment and financial
dislocation among the British population including the thousands of officers and soldiers who
had fought in the Napoleonic Wars and were now demobilized and back into the civilian sector.
Lastly, the significant imperial growth had stretched the colonial administrative and bureaucratic
infrastructure to the breaking point prompting the Colonial Office and the ruling elites to adopt
short-term measures in running its empire.
The solution adopted by the Colonial Office in the twenty-five years that followed the
Napoleonic Wars was the employment of proconsular despotism. Proconsular despotism is the
practice of governing distant territories and provinces by politically safe individuals, most often
military men, who identified with and were sympathetic to the aims of the parent state and the
ruling elites. The employment of this form of colonial governance helped to alleviate a number
of problems that plagued the Crown and Parliament. First, the practice found suitable
employment for deserving military officers during a period of army demobilization and sizeable
reduction of armed forces. The appointment of military officers to high colonial administrative
positions was viewed by Parliament as a reward for distinguished service to the state. Second,
the practice enabled Colonial Office to employ officials who had both previous administrative
and military experience and who were accustomed to make critical decisions that they believed
coincided with British strategic and national interests. Third, the employment of knowledgeable
and experienced army officers in colonial posts fulfilled the Parliamentary mandates of curtailing
military spending while maintaining security for the colonies.
Military officers of all ranks clamored for the opportunities of serving in the colonies.
General and field grade officers viewed service in the colonies as a means of maintaining their
status and financially supporting their lifestyles. Company grade officers, who primarily came
from the emerging middle class, saw colonial service as a means of swift promotion in a
peacetime army and of rising socially. Competition for overseas administrative positions was
intense and officers frequently employed an intricate and complex pattern of patronage
networking.
The proconsular system of governing Britain's vast network of colonies flourished in the
quarter century following the Battle of Waterloo. In the immediate aftermath of the Napoleonic
Wars the British officer corps contributed men who became the principal source for trained
colonial administrators enabling Britain to effectively manage its immense empire.
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British policy towards Bahrein and Qatar (1871-1914)Abdel aal, I. A. January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
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Masculinity, hybridity and nostalgia in French colonial fiction films of the 1930sHertaud-Wright, Marie-Helene January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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Micer Francisco Imperial: A Genoese-Sevillano Poet of Dream VisionsAquilano, Mark Thomas January 2010 (has links)
Chapter one provides a multifaceted panorama of the Genoese community in medieval Seville that helps to link Francisco Imperial, an early 15th century poet, to a group of foreigners and naturalized Castilian subjects who, despite their marginality, contributed greatly to the kingdom's emergence as a global superpower by the end of the Middle Ages. Chapter two examines materialist and scientific dream theories from the classical, medieval and contemporary periods side by side, yielding a complementary platform from which to plumb the depths of dream vision texts. The third and fourth chapters place Imperial's most important poem, his Dezir a las siete virtudes (c. 1407) within the spiritually vital literary tradition of the dream vision, a genre with roots in classical antiquity and early Christian accounts of otherworld journeys. An examination of several representative Western European, Islamic and Castilian literary dream visions in Chapter 3 and of Imperial's Dezir in Chapter 4 is grounded in the insightful theoretical perspectives on the genre developed by Kathryn Lynch, Paul Piehler and Robert McMahon. The fourth and final chapter also offers a biographical sketch of Francisco Imperial and an overview of the Imperiale family that are based in part on original documentation, allowing a new vantage point from which to appreciate the rich life circumstances that gave birth to a uniquely resonant poetic voice.
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An examination of the relationship between philosophy and society in Rome between AD 161 and 181 : a case study of the public and private roles of the Emperor Marcus AureliusMcLeay, Lucy Katrina January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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An artery of empire : the British Post Office and the postal and telegraphic service to India and AustraliaForbes, Andrew Stephen January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
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Wartime currency stabilisation in China 1937-1941 : economic expediency and political realityOoh, Che Chang January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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