| Sir Alfred Comyn Lyall - 1893 - 320 páginas
...became the universal principle of public policy that every State in India (outside the Punjab and Sinde) should make over the control of its foreign relations...internal management so far as might be necessary to cure disorders or scandalous misrule. A British Resident was appointed to the courts of all the greater... | |
| Sir Alfred Comyn Lyall - 1894 - 930 páginas
...became the universal principle of public policy that every State in India (outside the Punjab and Sinde) should make over the control of its foreign relations...internal management so far as might be necessary to cure disorders or scandalous misrule. A British Resident was appointed to the courts of all the greater... | |
| Sir Alfred Comyn Lyall - 1894 - 438 páginas
...became the universal principle of public policy that every State in India (outside the Punjab and Sinde) should make over the control of its foreign relations...external disputes to British arbitration, and should ^efer to British advice regarding internal management so far as might be necessary to cure disorders... | |
| Abraham Valentine Williams Jackson - 1907 - 580 páginas
...became the universal principle of public policy that every state in India (outside the Panjab and Sind) should make over the control of its foreign relations...internal management so far as might be necessary to cure disorders or scandalous misrule. A British Resident was appointed to the courts of all the greater... | |
| J. T. Taylor, Presbyterian Church in Canada. Board of Foreign Missions - 1916 - 274 páginas
...became the universal principle of Eublic policy that every State in India (outside the Punjab and inde) should make over the control of its foreign relations to the British Government, should submit al! external disputes to British arbitration, and should defer to British advice regarding internal... | |
| Sir Alfred C. Lyall - 1920 - 438 páginas
...became the universal principle of public policy that every State in India (outside the Punjab and Sinde) should make over the control of its foreign relations...internal management so far as might be necessary to cure disorders or scandalous misrule. A British Resident was appointed to the courts of all the greater... | |
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