Protectorate by the stronger of the two contracting parties,1 but it tacitly recognizes some sort of reversionary claim on the part of the latter. At the weakest, it is a sort of diplomatic manifesto to other Powers of a special degree of interest entertained... Frontiers - Page 47by Marquess George Nathaniel Curzon Curzon of Kedleston - 1908 - 58 pagesFull view - About this book
| Marquess George Nathaniel Curzon Curzon of Kedleston - 1907 - 72 pages
...nothing to do with exterior Frontiers. Some of the territories of the Sultan of Zanzibar were leased, first for a term of years and afterwards in perpetuity,...become perpetual; Spheres of Influence to develop into Protectorates ; Protectorates to be the forerunners of complete incorporation. The process is not so... | |
| Marquess George Nathaniel Curzon Curzon of Kedleston - 1908 - 70 pages
...may sometimes, imply the exercise of a Protectorate by the stronger of the two contracting parties, 1 but it tacitly recognizes some sort of reversionary...become perpetual; Spheres of Influence to develop into Protectorates; Protectorates to be the forerunners of ) complete incorporation. The process is not... | |
| 1908 - 1054 pages
...of protectorates, spheres of influence and of interest. Of this latter category as a whole he says : Of all the diplomatic forms or fictions which have...become perpetual; spheres of influence to develop into protectorates; protectorates to be the forerunners of complete incorporation. The process is not so... | |
| 1966 - 344 pages
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| Jonathan Haslam - 2002 - 278 pages
...naturally blended imperceptibly into another: "Of all the diplomatic forms or fictions which have . . . been described, it may be observed that the uniform...tend to become Spheres of Influence; temporary Leases become perpetual; Spheres of Influence to develop into Protectorates; Protectorates to be the forerunners... | |
| Vithal Rajan - 2006 - 329 pages
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