ABSTRACT

First published in 1966- The history of a foreign policy is not the same thing as the biography of a Foreign Minister. The former aims at showing what a foreign policy was, the latter at what a Foreign Minister was. The latter is pure biography, while this book aims at placing the individual in his proper relation to other diplomatic personalities and to events. The book shows in general a hearty approval of the spirit of nationality, and Temperley writes with patriotic fervour when he defends the British attack on Copenhagen during Canning's first career as a Foreign Minister in 1807 and this fervour is expanded in this research work.

part |2 pages

PART I THE NEO-HOLY ALLIANCE AND THE NEW MAN

part |2 pages

PART II FRANCE, THE NEO-HOLY ALLIANCE, AND BRITISH NON-INTERVENTION

part |2 pages

PART III NEW WORLDS FOR OLD

chapter VI|26 pages

CALLING THE NEW WORLD INTO EXISTENCE

chapter VII|30 pages

THE LATER AMERICAN POLICY

part |2 pages

PART IV PORTUGAL AND THE NEW WORLD

part |2 pages

PART V CANNING AND ENGLAND

chapter |2 pages

INTRODUCTION

chapter X|9 pages

CANNING, THE MAN

chapter XI|18 pages

CONQUERING THE KING

chapter XII|39 pages

THE DAY'S WORK AT THE FOREIGN OFFICE

chapter XIII|22 pages

The British and Foreign Press (1820-7)

part |2 pages

PART VI GREECE, THE NEO-HOLY ALLIANCE, AND THE DIPLOMATIC REVOLUTION

part |2 pages

PART VII THE RESULTS OF THE DIPLOMATIC REVOLUTION

chapter XVI|25 pages

CANNING'S TRIUMPH IN PORTUGAL (1826)

chapter XVII|21 pages

The Terms of the Protocol (4th April 1826)

part |4 pages

PART VIII THE TRIUMPH AND LEGACY OF CANNING

chapter XVIII|34 pages

The Prologue

chapter XIX|30 pages

MR CANNING'S 'SYSTEM OF POLICY'

chapter |54 pages

NOTES TO CERTAIN CHAPTERS

chapter |78 pages

APPENDICES I–IX