Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 55British Academy, 1971 - Humanities |
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Page 326
... Foreign Office were delighted and Sir William Tyrrell wrote a little later : ' We welcomed his appoint- ment , as he had been one of the most persistent critics of the foreign policy of this country . ' In an interview at the Archives ...
... Foreign Office were delighted and Sir William Tyrrell wrote a little later : ' We welcomed his appoint- ment , as he had been one of the most persistent critics of the foreign policy of this country . ' In an interview at the Archives ...
Page 329
... Foreign Office were to be angrier still when similar ob- jections by the French happened to coincide with the assertions of French historians that the British were doctoring their records . ) The editors were particularly incensed at ...
... Foreign Office were to be angrier still when similar ob- jections by the French happened to coincide with the assertions of French historians that the British were doctoring their records . ) The editors were particularly incensed at ...
Page 330
... Foreign Office , and how greatly these officials sympathized with their point of view . But the Foreign Office failed to see that the intransigence of the editors played its part in the story , and itself provided the means of putting ...
... Foreign Office , and how greatly these officials sympathized with their point of view . But the Foreign Office failed to see that the intransigence of the editors played its part in the story , and itself provided the means of putting ...
Contents
ANNUAL REPORT 19689 | 4 |
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS By Sir Kenneth Wheare | 45 |
NATIONAL | 77 |
Copyright | |
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