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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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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
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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.
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