The Dependent Empire, 1900-1948 by Frederick Madden, Hardcover, 9780313273186 | Buy online at The Nile
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The Dependent Empire, 1900-1948

Colonies, Protectorates, and Mandates Select Documents on the Constitutional History of the British Empire and Commonwealth Volume VII

Author: Frederick Madden, John Darwin and Gowher Rizvi   Series: Documents in Imperial History

The penultimate volume in this series covers the first part of 20th century decolonization of the British Empire, illustrating developments in Ceylon, the Caribbean, Malta, Mauritius, Hong Kong, Malaya, Fiji, Cyprus, Africa, and the Middle East.

This volume covers the first part of the 20th-century processes of decolonisation within the British Empire, concluding with the independence of Ceylon, the first of the non-European-settled colonies. An introductory section demonstrates changes in attitude to colonial rule.

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Summary

The penultimate volume in this series covers the first part of 20th century decolonization of the British Empire, illustrating developments in Ceylon, the Caribbean, Malta, Mauritius, Hong Kong, Malaya, Fiji, Cyprus, Africa, and the Middle East.

This volume covers the first part of the 20th-century processes of decolonisation within the British Empire, concluding with the independence of Ceylon, the first of the non-European-settled colonies. An introductory section demonstrates changes in attitude to colonial rule.

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Description

The penultimate volume in this documentary series covers the first part of the 20th century processes of decolonization within the British Empire, concluding with the independence of Ceylon, the first of the non-European-settled colonies. It also illustrates constitutional developments in the West Indies (particularly Jamaica, Trinidad, and British Guiana), Mauritius and Seychelles, Hong Kong, Fiji, the Western Pacific, Gibraltar, the Falklands, and West, East, and Central-Southern Africa, as well as advance and retreat in Malta and Cyprus. There is a section on Egypt and on the mandates of Palestine, Transjordania, and Mesopotamia.

An introductory section demonstrates the changes both in attitudes to and the dimensions of colonial rule during the period from the deep freeze of trusteeship to partnership. The concluding date saw, in addition to Ceylon's full membership in the Commonwealth, the speedy replacement of an abortive union of Malaya by a federation, a failed initiative in Cyprus, and what proved to be abortive reform in Hong Kong and Fiji, treaty revision in Egypt, a policy change in the Sudan, the surrender of the Palestine mandate, and the establishment of Israel. By 1948, though doubts remained about a closer association of the colonies, protectorates, and mandates in West, East, and Central Africa, there was optimism about a possible federation of the Caribbean.

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About the Author

FREDERICK MADDEN has retired as Professorial Fellow and Reader in Commonwealth Government at Nuffield College. Previously, he was Beit Lecturer in Colonial History. He is the author of several books, including the earlier volumes in this series, Oxford and the Idea of Commonwealth: Australia and Britian: Imperial Constitutional Documents, 1765-1965, A Supplement and British Colonial Developments.

JOHN DARWIN is Beit Lecturer in the History of the British Commonwealth and a Faculty Fellow of Nuffield College, Oxford. He is the author of Britain, Egypt and the Middle East: Imperial Policy in the Aftermath of War (1981), Britain and Decolonization: The Retreat From Empire in the Post-War World (1988), and The End of the British Empire: The Historical Debate (1991).

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More on this Book

The penultimate volume in this documentary series covers the first part of the 20th century processes of decolonization within the British Empire, concluding with the independence of Ceylon, the first of the non-European-settled colonies. It also illustrates constitutional developments in the West Indies (particularly Jamaica, Trinidad, and British Guiana), Mauritius and Seychelles, Hong Kong, Fiji, the Western Pacific, Gibraltar, the Falklands, and West, East, and Central-Southern Africa, as well as advance and retreat in Malta and Cyprus. There is a section on Egypt and on the mandates of Palestine, Transjordania, and Mesopotamia. An introductory section demonstrates the changes both in attitudes to and the dimensions of colonial rule during the period from the deep freeze of trusteeship to partnership. The concluding date saw, in addition to Ceylon's full membership in the Commonwealth, the speedy replacement of an abortive union of Malaya by a federation, a failed initiative in Cyprus, and what proved to be abortive reform in Hong Kong and Fiji, treaty revision in Egypt, a policy change in the Sudan, the surrender of the Palestine mandate, and the establishment of Israel. By 1948, though doubts remained about a closer association of the colonies, protectorates, and mandates in West, East, and Central Africa, there was optimism about a possible federation of the Caribbean.

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Product Details

Publisher
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc | Greenwood Press
Published
30th December 1994
Pages
912
ISBN
9780313273186

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