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Gentlemen's diplomacy: the foreign policy of Lord Lansdowne, 1845-1927

As British Foreign Secretary from November 1900 to December 1905, Lord
Lansdowne operated on a long-held coherent body of principles on which he based his
foreign policy. Throughout his political life, in fact, he pressed for the renewal of an
enlightened—if informal—‘Concert of Europe’ which he hoped could be implemented
worldwide. His ‘policy of the entente,’ which reflected his belief in the efficacy of
reasonable and ‘gentlemanly’ diplomacy to settle outstanding disputes, left him illsuited,
however, to manage Britain’s position as a world power during this period of
perceived relative decline.
If Lansdowne did indeed have some innate talent for diplomacy, he aspired not to
be the next Talleyrand, of whom he was reputedly a descendant, but to become an
appropriately detached liberal-minded arbiter. He was the true gentleman-diplomat who,
as enlightened reason dictated, always wished to play cartes sur table. In these waning
years of the supremacy of British power, the marquis believed in an empire forged no
longer through fire and sword, but through the example of free institutions, just
administration, and the influence of English culture. He certainly believed that foremost it was these aspects of Western civilization that brought Pax Britannica to the Khyber
Pass. In pursuing his ‘policy of the entente,’ Lansdowne presumed initially at least that
his fellow European gentlemen would aid him in the higher mission of preserving
civilization, and consequently, although secondarily to the Foreign Secretary, the status
quo. This, however, proved not to be the case.
Lansdowne was perhaps the right man to administer the empire, in much the
same manner he dutifully tried to look after and maintain his great estates and care for
his many tenants and servants. He was, however, not the right man to charge with its
preservation and defense. Fortunately, his policy proved impossible to carry out fully.
He received little cooperation from the leadership of other great powers, and in the end
the path of British foreign policy was impossible to guide or engineer in the direction he
wished.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:tamu.edu/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/ETD-TAMU-1133
Date15 May 2009
CreatorsWinters, Frank Winfield, IV
ContributorsAdams, R J Q
Source SetsTexas A and M University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typethesis, text
Formatelectronic, application/pdf, born digital

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