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The British Foreign Office and the Siamese Malay States, 1890–97*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 November 2008

Extract

Although the Foreign Office was theoretically the department of state responsible for British relations with the Kingdom of Siam, it has for some time been recognized that the strategic interests of both the Indian Empire and the Straits Settlements and Protectorates in the Malay Peninsula necessitated the active participation of the India and Colonial Offices in policy making. The role of the Calcutta authorities and their superiors in Whitehall in the formulation of British official attitudes towards Siam in the latter part of the nineteenth century has yet to be made known. But much has been done, including several recent attempts, to evaluate the extent of Colonial Office interference in the Siamese Malay States before 1909. To some extent, the renewed interest in the broader metropolitan implications of the subject is characterized by a desire to investigate the character of British imperialism itself.

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Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1971

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References

1 There is, for example, no comparable study of the north-east frontier such as the following on the north-west frontier: Greaves, R. L., Persia and the Defence of India, 1884–1892: a study in the foreign policy of the third Marquis of Salisbury, London, 1959Google Scholar; Alder, G. J., British India's Northern frontier, 1865–95: a study in imperial policy, London, 1963.Google Scholar

2 Thio, E., ‘Britain's Search for Security in North Malaya, 1886–1897’, Journal of Southeast Asian History (Singapore), Vol. X, No. 2 (09 1969), pp. 279303Google Scholar; Ira, Klein, ‘British Expansion in Malaya, 1897–1902’, Journal of Southeast Asian History (Singapore), Vol. IX, No.1 (03 1968), pp. 5368.Google Scholar

3 See also Thio, E., British Policy in the Malay Peninsula, 1880–1910, Vol. II (in press).Google Scholar

4 In the 1890s Siam came within the purview of the American and Asiatic Department at the Foreign Office and it would be interesting to know if the clerks in that Department held any strong opinions on British strategic interests in that area. Certainly, Francis Bertie, who was later to be the superintending Assistant Under-Secretary of that Department, was quick to identify the German menace to British interests in the Far East and in South-east Asia as the same danger that he had appre-hended in other parts of the world.

5 See Ira, Klein, ‘Britain, Siam and the Malay Peninsula, 1906–1909’, The Historical Journal, Vol. XII, No. 1 (1969), pp. 119–36, passimGoogle Scholar; Salisbury, Rosebery, and the Survival of Siam’, The Journal of British Studies, Vol. 8 (11 1968), pp. 119, 123–5, 136–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar Mr Klein's thesis is weakened by concentrating entirely on the Malay Peninsula and overlooking the prolongation of Anglo-French rivalry in South China long after the 1896 Declaration which settled the basic conflict in Siam.

6 Kiernan, V. G., ‘Britain, Siam and Malaya: 1875–1885’, The Journal of Modern History (Chicago), Vol. 28 (03 1956), pp. 120CrossRefGoogle Scholar; ‘The Kra Canal Projects of 1882–85; Anglo-French Rivalry in Siam and Malaya’, History, The Journal of the Historical Association, London, New Series, Vol. LXI (1956), pp. 137–57.Google Scholar

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8 Cross to Lansdowne, 30 January 1891, L[ansdowne] P[apers], MSS. Eur. D558/IX/III, [India Office Library, Commonwealth Relations Office, London]. Since about 1889 Salisbury had sought means of preventing the Siamese from granting any strategic concessions to foreign powers, but both the Bangkok government, which wanted too much, and the Indian authorities, who wanted to give nothing in return for such a guarantee, effectively frustrated the Foreign Secretary's plans.Google Scholar

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25 Rosebery, to Gladstone, , 26 August 1893, G[ladstone] P[apers], Add, MSS. 44290, [British Museum, London].Google Scholar

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27 ‘Affaires Coloniales’, Le Temps, 26 August 1893. My translation.Google Scholar

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32 Scott, to Rosebery, , No. 57, Secret, 28 November 1893 (received 8 January 1894); No. 1, Very Confidential, 28 January 1894 (received March 1894), F.O. 17/1219;Google ScholarScott, to Kimberley, , No. 9, Confidential, 3 April 1894 (received 14 May 1894), F.O. 17/1221.Google Scholar

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34 Kimberley, to Scott, , Tel., Secret, No. 16, 1894 May 1894, F.O. 17/1221. All attempts to gain access to the Kimberley Papers in 1966 were unsuccessful.Google Scholar

35 Memorandum ‘on the present political situation in Siam and the misleading nature of the current reports thereon and the grave condition of her internal affairs’, by Morant, R. L., July 1894, F.O. 17/1223. Morant was later to become a noted British civil servant as Permanent Secretary to the Ministry of Education.Google Scholar See Allen, B. M., Sir Robert Morant, a great public servant, London, 1934.Google Scholar

36 Minute by Grey, , 16 August 1894,Google Scholar on ibid.

37 Minute by Sanderson, , 17 August 1894,Google Scholar on ibid.

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39 Rosebery, to Kimberley, , 24 August 1894, Copy, RP, Letter Book, 18941895.Google Scholar

40 Rosebery, to Kimberley, , Secret, 21 October 1894, Copy, RP, Kimberley Box. This statement must not be taken to represent Rosebery's real opinion of the Siamese as he had never met any of them. He also had a low opinion of Verney.Google ScholarCf. Klein, Ira, ‘Britain, Siam and the Malay Peninsula, 1906–1909’, Historical Journal XII, 1, p. 126.Google Scholar

41 Kimberley, to Rosebery, , Private, 27 October 1894, RP, Kimberley Box.Google Scholar

42 Kimberley, to Bunsen, De, No. 65, Most Confidential, 27 October 1894, F.O. 17/1225.Google Scholar This despatch is also to be found in the biography of Bunsen, De, Dugdale, E. T. S., Maurice de Bunsen, Diplomat and Friend, London, 1934, pp. 117–18.Google Scholar

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45 Hanotaux, to Courcel, De, No. 141, 27 May 1895, Ang[leterre: Correspondence] Pol[itique, Volume] 904, [Service des Archives, Ministère des Affaires Etrangères, Quai d'Orsay, Paris]. These documents were only open for inspection up to 1897.Google Scholar

46 Bunsen, De to Bertie, Francis, Private, 20 June 1895, F.O. 17/1268.Google Scholar

47 Bunsen, De to Bertie, , Private, 1 October 1895, F.O. 17/1271,Google Scholar

48 Sanderson, to Curzon, , 6 July 1895, C[urzon] P[apers], MSS. Eur.F.111/87, [India Office Library, Commonwealth Relations Office, London].Google Scholar

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51 Salisbury, to Chamberlain, , 21 September 1895, Chamberlain Papers. Extracts from the Chamberlain Papers at Birmingham University kept on microfilm at the University of Singapore.Google Scholar

52 Memorandum entitled ‘Siam Negotiations’ by Salisbury, , possibly 18 October 1895, CP, MSS. Eur.F.111/87. This vital document has not been found in any of the official records or private papers. It is typewritten and was clearly Salisbury's defence of his decision to propose a limited guarantee of Siam's independence.Google Scholar

53 Draft letter to Baron De Courcel, undated, enclosed in Sanderson to SirLee-Warner, William (Head of the Political and Secret Department at the India Office), 31 October 1895, PSHC/163. This draft letter containing the heads of a possible Anglo-French agreement over Siam is also missing in the F.O. records although it was printed for the use of the Foreign Office and bears the Printing Department's date-stamp: 31 October.Google Scholar

54 Hanotaux, to Defrance, , 25 October 1895, Siam [: Correspondance] Pol[itique, Volume] 23, [Service des Archives, Ministère des Affaires Etrangères, Quai d'Orsay, Paris]; Marcelin Berthelot (French Foreign Minister, November 1895–June 1896)Google Scholar to Courcel, De, No. 317, 14 November 1895, Ang/Pol/909.Google Scholar

55 Memorandum on ‘The question of British interests in the country between the Bay of Bengal and the South China Sea’ by Hamilton, Lord George, Secret, 19 November 1895, Cabinet Papers, Series 1, Vol. 2, Miscellaneous Records, Public Record Office, London.Google Scholar

56 British relations with the United States of America and Germany became strained at this time over the Venezuelan boundary dispute and the Kruger telegram respectively.

57 Sanderson, to Dufferin, , Private, 20 December 1895, DP, D107H/04/2.Google Scholar

58 Salisbury, to Bunsen, De, Tel., No. 2, Secret, 24 January 1896. F.O. 69/169.Google Scholar

59 See Numnonda, Thamsook, ‘The Anglo-Siamese Secret Convention of 1897’, Journal of the Siam Society, January 1965, Vol. LIII, Pt. 1, pp. 4561.Google Scholar

60 Balfour, to Barrington, , 28 January 1896, Copy, Balfour Papers, Add. MSS. 49746, British Museum, London. This letter has been mistakenly taken as an indication of Balfour's opposition to a fuller guarantee of Siam which it certainly was not as the date on it clearly shows.Google ScholarCf. Klein, Ira, ‘British Expansion in Malaya, 1897–1902’, Journal of Southeast Asian History, IX, I, p. 55.Google Scholar

61 Bunsen, De to Curzon, , 14 May 1896, CP, MSS. Eur.F.111/81.Google Scholar

62 Bunsen, De to Curzon, , 11 July 1896, CP, Box 70, Kedleston Hall, nr. Derby. I am indebted to Viscount Scarsdale for permission to use the bulk of the original Curzon papers which are still kept at Kedleston.Google Scholar

63 Minute by Bertie, , 21 August 1896,Google Scholar on Bunsen, De to Salisbury, , No. 43, Confidential, 15 July 1896, F.O. 17/1295.Google Scholar

64 Salisbury, to Curzon, , 30 August 1896, CP, Box 70, Kedleston Hall.Google Scholar

65 It is not altogether clear when it was decided that the agreement should be secret and who was responsible for it. Dr Thio states that the Siamese requested it and cites as evidence a conversation between Curzon and Svasti of 27 July 1896 and Salisbury's minute on a memorandum of that conversation. Thio, , ‘Britain's search for Security in North Malaya’, Journal of Southeast Asian History, X, 2, p. 302. But Salisbury's letter to Curzon of 30 08 1896 cited above seems to go against Dr Thio's theory.Google Scholar

66 Godley, to Elgin, Lord (Viceroy of India), 21 May 1897, Elgin Papers, MSS. Eur.F.84/136, India Office Library, Commonwealth Relations Office, London.Google Scholar

67 Minute by Bertie, , 9 April 1897, on Colonial Office to Foreign Office, 8 April 1897, F.O. 69/187.Google Scholar

68 Foreign Office to Colonial Office, 10 April 1897, F.O. 69/187.Google Scholar

69 Swettenham, to Chamberlain, , Private, 23 July 1897, Chamberlain Papers, JC 9/6/1/5, Birmingham University Library.Google Scholar

70 Minutes by Chamberlain, , 25 August 1897Google Scholar, and C. P. Lucas (of the Colonial Office) on ibid.