- Type:
- Book Chapter
- Author:
- Christopher Andrew
- Published:
- 1968
- Publisher:
- Palgrave Macmillan UK
EVEN at the beginning of 1903 there were still occasional reminders of the animosity towards England which had been widespread in France at the beginning of the Boer War. On 23 January, for example, Reuter reported that successful English exhibitors at the Paris Exhibition of 1900 had still not received their medals: 'Unfortunately, the engraver to whom the work was entrusted was an ardent pro-Boer, and every time he saw on the lists an English looking name, he coolly put his pen through it'. For the most part, however, the passions that had prevailed at the turn of the century had by now largely subsided. During Chamberlain's much-publicised visit to South Africa early in 1903, Lavino, the new Times correspondent in Paris, reported that 'it would be vain to seek in any of the more respectable newspapers a trace of that vituperation without which his very name was but two years ago seldom pronounced on the continent'. This, Lavino believed, was 'a significant sign of the times, inasmuch as it corresponds with a tendency on the part of many French politicians to return to a more reasonable and just estimate of the old ally of their country'.1 In England the mood of public opinion had changed even more than in France.KeywordsForeign PolicyHague ConventionState VisitGerman PolicyTariff ReformThese keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.
Get this book
ⓘ These are affiliate links; if you make a purchase, we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.
Sıkça sorulan sorular
- What is "The Entente Cordiale" about?
- EVEN at the beginning of 1903 there were still occasional reminders of the animosity towards England which had been widespread in France at the beginning of the Boer War.
- Who wrote "The Entente Cordiale"?
- Christopher Andrew