Government had hoped that Turkey would be undisturbed, and he hoped and thought that there would be no breach of the peace. The British Government, when pressing Macedonian reforms, had always been warned that they would be imperilled by any slighting... The Annual Register - Página 201editado por - 1909Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
| Albert Shaw - 1908 - 1200 páginas
...and the other powers in these words : His Majesty's government cannot admit the right of any power to alter an international treaty without the consent of the other parties to it, and it therefore refuses to sanction any infraction of the Berlin treaty and declines to recognize what... | |
| Edmund Burke - 1909 - 676 páginas
...Berlin. A revision of that Treaty would not be all in one direction, and this Government would doits best to see that the interest and status of Turkey...Liberal position regarding the House of Lords and Home Rule. But at Dundee next day he dealt specially with unemployment. He enumerated three vicious conditions... | |
| Geoffrey Drage - 1909 - 902 páginas
...advance to Turkey, who is the Power most ultimately concerned in the change. . . . We cannot recognize the right of any Power or State to alter an international...treaty without the consent of the other parties to it. ... In any case, it would be very desirable to lose no time in assuring Turkey that, in any revision... | |
| Alexander Pearce Higgins - 1910 - 64 páginas
...Great Britain on the occasion of the annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina by Austria : " We cannot recognise the right of any Power or State to alter...treaty without the consent of the other parties to it. We cannot ourselves recognise the result of any such actions till the other Powers have been consulted,... | |
| Charles Downer Hazen - 1910 - 932 páginas
...Foreign Minister, Sir Edward Grey, announced that Great Britain could not admit " the right of any power to alter an international treaty without the consent of the other parties to it, and it, therefore, refuses to sanction any infraction of the Berlin Treaty and declines to recognize what... | |
| Charles Downer Hazen - 1917 - 758 páginas
...Foreign Minister, Sir Edward Grey, announced that Great Britain could not admit "the right of any power to alter an international treaty without the consent of the other parties to it," and demanded that, as the public law of the Balkans rested upon the Treaty of Berlin of 1878, and that... | |
| Charles Downer Hazen - 1919 - 486 páginas
...Foreign Minister, Sir Edward Grey, announced that Great Britain could not admit " the right of any power to alter an international treaty without the consent of the other parties to it," and demanded that, as the public law of the Balkans rested upon the Treaty of Berlin of 1878, and that... | |
| Charles Downer Hazen - 1920 - 928 páginas
...Foreign Minister, Sir Edward Grey, announced that Great Britain could not admit "the right of any power to alter an international treaty without the consent of the other parties to it," and demanded that, as the public law of the Balkans rested upon the Treaty of Berlin of 1878, and that... | |
| Charles Downer Hazen - 1923 - 1026 páginas
...Foreign Minister, Sir Edward Grey, announced that Great Britain could not admit "the right of any power to alter an international treaty without the consent of the other parties to it," and demanded that, as the public law of the Balkans rested upon the Treaty of Berlin of 1878, and that... | |
| Charles Downer Hazen - 1923 - 1296 páginas
...Foreign Minister, Sir Edward Grey, announced that Great Britain could not admit " the right of any power to alter an international treaty without the consent of the other parties to it," and demanded that, as the public law of the Balkans rested upon the Treaty of Berlin of 1878, and that... | |
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