Abstract
The 1890s can easily be portrayed as the era of missed opportunities in Anglo-German relations. Before the Kruger telegram, the Boer War, the Boxer rebellion and the Berlin to Bagdad railway, and most particularly before the naval race, it seems possible that Britain and Germany might have drawn closer together and that areas of mutual interest might have led to co-operation rather than antagonism. The failure to draw together in the 1890s, it can be argued, precipitated the series of disputes that progressively embittered Anglo-German relations. If only an understanding had been reached before each side became convinced of the other's enmity, if only men on both sides had been more reasonable, more judicious, more temperate, perhaps Europe could have avoided the division into armed camps, and perhaps the cataclysm of 1914 could have been averted.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Reference21 articles.
1. Rosebery to Malet , private, 3 01 1894, Malet papers, FO 343/3
2. Rosebery to Dufferin , private, 2 01 1894, Dufferin papers, Public Record Office of Northern Ireland, D1071/H/02/2
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