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Now showing items 21-30 of 40
Waar het om gaat in Zuid-Afrika : een woord tot het Nederlandsche volk
(Haarlem : De Erven F. Bohn, 1899)
Boers or English : who are in the right?
(London : Leadenhall Press, 1900)
English translation of "Boers et Anglais: du est le droit?"
Britain and the Boers: who is responsible for the war in South Africa
(London : Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent and Co., 1899)
Pamphlet on the responsibility of the war between Great Britain and the South African Republic from 1881 to 1899.
From Boer to Boer and Englishman
(London : Hugh Rees, 1900)
Paul Botha's appeal to his fellow-country-men to admit their own faults and to recognize that it is best for South Africa, under the present circumstances, to become one harmonious whole, under the British flag, for under ...
Transvaal contra Grossbritannien : kurze Erlauterung zur Niederlandischen Adresse an die Volker Grossbritanniens
(Leipzig : Moderner Belletristik, 1900)
A short commentary by Willem van der Vlugt, on the Dutch address to the British people regarding the growing rumours of an impending war.
Een der oorzaken van den oorlog in Zuid-Afrika en iets over het onderwijs in Transvaal
(Amsterdam : Hoveker & Wormser, 1900)
According to the Dutch author, the British nation had been misinformed about the situation in S.A. He also discusses education in the Z.A.R.
Engeland en de Boeren : de Johannesburger comedie : naar authentieke bronnen met gebruikmaking van ambtelijke stukken
(Utrecht : A.W. Bruna & Zoon, 1899)
Dutch pamphlet on the Jameson Raid.
La politique Boer : faits et documents en reponse au Docteur Kuyper
([Paris] : Aux bureaux du "Siecle", 1900)
The Transvaal trouble
(New York : Abbey Press, 1900)
An address by John Hammond, attempting to correct the erroneous impressions prevailing on the South African question.
Chamberlain's war
Statement submitted by Mr. C.A.V. Conybeare regarding Mr. Joseph Chamberlain, the Colonial Secretary, whom he believes is a traitor to the best interests of this Country and that the dishonesty, duplicity, and chicanery ...