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The Transvaal question : some views of Mr. Frank Watkins
([London : Transvaal Committee], 1900)
According to Mr. Frank Watkins, the outcome of the policy of imperialism is so rampant in England on one side and the ultra-conservation of the Boers on the other side. He urges the English to press the necessity of taking ...
The Transvaal Committee : report of six months' work
([London : Transvaal Committee], 1900-02-01)
Six months' work report by the Transvaal Committee, formed at a meeting of the Executive Committee of the Liberal Forwards, to watch the proceedings of the Colonial Office and to rouse public opinion to prevent a war between ...
The question of right between England and the Transvaal
(London : Imperial South African Association, 1900-04-29)
Letters by the Right Hon. F. Max Muller on the question of right between England and the Transvaal, with rejoinders by Professor Theodore Mommsen.
De crisis in Zuid-Afrika
(Amsterdam : Hoveker & Wormser, 1900)
Dutch pamphlet on the causes of the Anglo-Boer War.
A critique on Bishop Hartzell’s great lecture in Chicago, May 2, 1900 on The Briton and the Boer
(Brattleboro, Vt. : Phoenix, 1900-06)
A critique on Bishop Hartzell’s great lecture, "The Briton and the Boer".
Our Boer policy : an historical sketch
(Westminster : Transvaal Committee, 1900)
L'Angleterre et les republiques unies de l'Afrique Australe
(Paris : A. Pedone, 1900)
French pamphlet on the causes of the Anglo-Boer War.
Boers or English : who are in the right?
(London : Leadenhall Press, 1900)
English translation of "Boers et Anglais: du est le droit?"
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.