The Annual Register, Volume 140Edmund Burke Rivingtons, 1899 Continuation of the reference work that originated with Robert Dodsley, written and published each year, which records and analyzes the year’s major events, developments and trends in Great Britain and throughout the world. From the 1920s volumes of The Annual Register took the essential shape in which they have continued ever since, opening with the history of Britain, then a section on foreign history covering each country or region in turn. Following these are the chronicle of events, brief retrospectives on the year’s cultural and economic developments, a short selection of documents, and obituaries of eminent persons who died in the year. |
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Page 14
... ment . It had been clear from the first that the Egyptian Army would require to be stiffened by British troops ; and he did not consider it was for the interest of this country to embark in the reconquest of the Soudan , which had never ...
... ment . It had been clear from the first that the Egyptian Army would require to be stiffened by British troops ; and he did not consider it was for the interest of this country to embark in the reconquest of the Soudan , which had never ...
Page 16
... ment had spontaneously given a written assurance that any port it might obtain as an outlet for its commerce should be a port free to the commerce of this country ; while the German Government had acted in a similar spirit in regard to ...
... ment had spontaneously given a written assurance that any port it might obtain as an outlet for its commerce should be a port free to the commerce of this country ; while the German Government had acted in a similar spirit in regard to ...
Page 19
... ment by the Government of certain claims made in respect of the port of Ta - lien - wan . There was , he asserted amid loud cheers , no foundation whatever for that statement . The order of events was as follows : The Chinese Government ...
... ment by the Government of certain claims made in respect of the port of Ta - lien - wan . There was , he asserted amid loud cheers , no foundation whatever for that statement . The order of events was as follows : The Chinese Government ...
Page 21
... ment . The fact that every slave was at liberty to go to a court and claim his freedom , seemed to the Under - Secretary and the British Agent to meet the requirements of Parliament ; and the former further went on to make some wild ...
... ment . The fact that every slave was at liberty to go to a court and claim his freedom , seemed to the Under - Secretary and the British Agent to meet the requirements of Parliament ; and the former further went on to make some wild ...
Page 23
... ment , on which they hoped to gain some support from the other side of the House . Practically , therefore , the amendment entrusted to Mr. Lawson Walton ( Leeds , S. ) , one of the most rising members of the Radical party , was an ...
... ment , on which they hoped to gain some support from the other side of the House . Practically , therefore , the amendment entrusted to Mr. Lawson Walton ( Leeds , S. ) , one of the most rising members of the Radical party , was an ...
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