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Reference CO 879/42
Department/Office Colonial Office
Title War and Colonial Department and Colonial Office: Africa, Confidential Print: Nos. 480-486 and 488-489
Notes See individual sections for details of contents.
Date 1894-1895
Collection Confidential Print: Africa
Region Africa
Countries Swaziland, South Africa, United Kingdom, Zimbabwe, Botswana
Places Banjul (Bathurst); Blood River; Botswana (Bechuanaland); Bulawayo; Cairo; Cape of Good Hope (colony/province); Cape Town; Congo, Democratic Republic of (Belgian Congo); Dakar; Durban; Egypt; France; Freetown; French West Africa; Gambia; Germany; Ghana (Gold Coast); Guinea; Guinea-Bissau (Portuguese Guinea); Italy; Ivory Coast; Johannesburg; Kalahari Desert; Ladysmith; Lagos; Liberia; Limpopo River; Lisbon; London; Mafikeng (Mafeking); Mali; Mashonaland; Matabeleland; Monrovia; Mozambique; Namibia; Natal; Orange Free State; Paris; Port Said; Portugal; Rhodesia; River Niger; Senegal; Sierra Leone; South Africa; Sudan; Swaziland; Transvaal (South African Republic); United Kingdom; United States; Zambezi River; Zululand
People Cetshwayo; Devonshire, 9th Duke of (Victor Cavendish); Hely-Hutchinson, Sir Walter; Kimberley, 1st Earl of (Sir John Wodehouse, Bt); Knutsford, 1st Viscount (Henry Holland); Kruger, (Stephanus) Paul; Lansdowne, 5th Marquess of (Henry Petty-Fitzmaurice); Ripon, 1st Marquess of (George Robinson); Robinson, Sir Hercules, 1st Baron Rosemead; Rosebery, 5th Earl of (Archibald Primrose); Salisbury, 3rd Marquess of (Robert Gascoyne-Cecil); Shepstone, Sir Theophilus; Smuts, Jan; Sprigg, Sir (John) Gordon; Wolseley, Sir Garnet, 1st Viscount Wolseley
Topics (British) Commonwealth; administration; agriculture; alcohol; army; assassination; banking; battle; boundary; boundary dispute; British Empire; British Government; British South Africa Company; business; capitalism; Catholicism; chartered company; chiefs; Christianity; church; civil war; coffee; communications; concessions; conferences; conquest; constitution; consular representation; currency; customs; debt; diplomacy; diplomatic representation; disease; dominion; drought; education; elections; electricity; emigration; empire; evacuation; execution; exile; exploration; exports; food; forced labour; forts; gold; governor; governor-general; grazing; hospitals; hunting; immigration; independence; industry; international border; invasion; judicial system; kings; labour; landlords; language; massacre; medicine; migration; military; mining; missionaries; navigation; oil; parliament; political parties; protectorate; Protestantism; railway; refugees; repatriation; republic; riots and disturbances; roads; rubber; schools; secessionism; ship; slave trade; slavery; tariffs; telegraph lines; trade; transport; treaty; trek; tribes; universities; war; weapons; women
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