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British and consular
The outstanding example was in Garibaldi And The Thousand, where he made use of unpublished papers of Lord John Russell and English consular materials to reveal the motives which led the British government to permit Garibaldi to cross the Straits of Messina.
* November 22 – William George Aston, British consular official ( b. 1841 )
* April 9 – William George Aston, British consular official ( d. 1911 )
With a senior colleague, Henry E. M. James ( on leave from his Indian Civil Service position ) and a young British consular officer from Newchwang, Harry English Fulford, Younghusband explored Manchuria, visiting the frontier areas of Chinese settlement in the region and the Changbai Mountains.
Fulford, born in Chepstow in 1859 of Australian parents, joined the British Foreign Service and for several decades occupied important consular posts in China.
Finkelstein asserted: " Quoting a statement depicting the miserable fate of Jews in mid-19th century Jerusalem, Peters cites a British consular letter from ' Wm.
In the third Labour Government under Tony Blair, Triesman was Parliamentary Under Secretary in the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, with responsibility for: relations with Africa, Latin America, the Caribbean, Overseas Territories, the Commonwealth, UK visas, migration policy, consular policy, the British Council, the BBC World Service and the Chevening Scholarships Scheme.
From 16 July 1884 this merged into the British protectorate over Brass, Bonny, Opobo, Aboh and Old Calabar ( excluding Lagos Colony ), which was confirmed on 5 June 1885 ), and named Oil Rivers Protectorate, where in August 1891 effective consular administration was established, headed by a consul general ( 5 June 1885 the aforementoned former consul Edward Hyde Hewett became the first ).
In cases where a Canadian needs an emergency travel document and Canada does not maintain a consular office, Canadians may obtain, as Commonwealth citizens, a British emergency passport.
It became a British consular in 1883 and attained municipality status by 1895, making it Malawi's oldest municipality .< ref ></</ ref > Blantyre is one of the oldest urban centre in east, central and southern Africa ; it pre-dates Nairobi, Harare and Johannesburg, hence has the longest historic and cultural heritage in the region.
John Harington Gubbins ( 1852-1929 ) was a British linguist, consular official and diplomat.
In 1950, the UK switched recognition from Taiwan to the People ’ s Republic of China ( PRC ), while maintaining the British Consulate in Tamsui, through which the UK continued to carry out consular and trade-related activities.
However the Tibets managed to get a British consular officer in Nanking to issue a British visa on their Tibetan passports, and, again, a US officer in Hong Kong, thus defeating the efforts of the US State Department and the British Foreign Office to deny use of the Tibetan passports, a small victory.
His suggestion was not adopted, but it led to his selection by the 2nd Earl of Halifax for the post of British consul at Algiers, with a commission to study the ancient ruins in that country, in which interest had been excited by the descriptions sent home by Thomas Shaw ( 1694 – 1751 ), who was consular chaplain at Algiers.
Hicks's legal team claimed in the High Court on 14 June 2006 that the process of Mr Hicks's registration as a British citizen had been delayed and obstructed by the United States, which had not allowed British consular access to Hicks in order to conduct the oath of allegiance to the Queen and the United Kingdom.
Next to the fort the British built their consular residence in 1891.
Foremost among the varieties cultivated was the Jaffa orange, and mention of it being exported to Europe first appears in British consular reports in the 1850s.
Aston passed the examination for entry to the Consular Service in 1884, and served in the British consular service in Tokyo, Kobe and Nagasaki.
He returned to consular duties in Tokyo as Secretary of British Legation in 1885.
With the help of a British journalist and consular officials, Susskind arrived in the United Kingdom as a refugee.
The passport note No. 5 at the passport note page of BNO passport have the following sentence: " If you need consular assistance when you are outside the European Union in a country where there is no British Embassy or Consulate, you can get help from the Embassy or Consulate of other Member State of the European Union ".

British and dispatch
Obviously the commander-in-chief had confidence that Morgan would furnish him good intelligence too, for on the 23rd of May, he told Morgan that the British were prepared to move, perhaps in the night, and asked Morgan to have two of his best horses ready to dispatch to General Smallwood with the intelligence obtained.
Following the Capture of Emden he ordered the dispatch of the first British troops to the European continent under the Duke of Marlborough, who joined Brunswick's army.
The continuing British activity in the Ohio territories prompted Longueuil to dispatch another expedition to the area under the command of Charles Michel de Langlade, an officer in the Troupes de la Marine.
In his September 1792 dispatch log report for the British Admiralty, Captain Vancouver reveals that his decision here was rather meant to honour a request by the Spanish Peruvian seafarer Juan Francisco de la Bodega y Quadra that Vancouver:
From his base at New York, Amherst oversaw the dispatch of troops to take part in British expeditions in the West Indies that led to the British capturing Dominica in 1761 and Martinique and Cuba in 1762.
Both of these actions were against British Major General William Phillips, who mentions the property in a dispatch: “ We assaulted the enemy ’ s work across the river and attempted to gain the high ground adjacent to Thomas Shore ’ s house, but were repulsed with heavy losses .” The British casualties were approx.
The Irish Government have, therefore, requested the British Government to apply immediately to the United Nations for the urgent dispatch of a Peace-Keeping Force to the Six Counties of Northern Ireland and have instructed the Permanent Representative to the United Nations to inform the Secretary General of this request.
; 1649: Ebenezer and Joanna Cartwright dispatch a petition to the British Government calling for the ban on Jews settling in England to be lifted and for assistance to be provided to enable them to be repatriated to Palestine.
Admiral Sukeyuki Ito had his flag aboard the cruiser with two dispatch vessels as escort ; the converted-liner Saikyo Maru, British Captain John Wilson commanding ; and the gunboat.
Little objected and in a dispatch in 1857, the British cancelled the deal which would have been unfavourable to Newfoundland.
When the Japanese surrender was announced over the wireless in mid-August, plans were hurriedly prepared in Ceylon for the dispatch of a British Military Administration.
At the beginning of First World War, Portal joined the British Army and served as a dispatch rider in the motorcycle section of the Royal Engineers on the Western Front.
On 23 April 1940, members of Danish military intelligence established contacts with their British counterparts through the British diplomatic mission in Stockholm, and the first intelligence dispatch was sent by messenger to the Stockholm mission in the autumn of 1940.
They were attacked by a mob that quickly killed them all as they were trying to escape into the prison, then mutilated the bodies, " with circumstances of barbarity too shocking to describe " according to the British diplomatic dispatch.
Ministers spoke from a dispatch box in a chamber modelled on the British House of Commons chamber.
The dispatch was carried by two Volunteers, P. J. Stephenson and Seán McLaughlin, who had to avoid both sniper fire and British troops across the city.
Denouncing the planned dispatch of British, French and Italian military advisers, she lamented the decision of French authorities to compromise further France in " a new Afghanistan ".
Wellington unfairly placed most of the blame for the losses on Blake, while a dispatch read in the Spanish cortes implied that the British had played only a minor role in the battle.
Bland's observations at Brandywine supplied General Washington with the correct location of Lord Cornwallis ' and Howe's main armies ; Bland wrote two separate dispatches and Col James Ross of the 8th Pennsylvania wrote another dispatch reporting on the British.
The RAF Malta Command would then dispatch the ASV-Wellingtons to sweep the seas and direct the British naval forces to the targeted convoy.
At the outbreak of World War II he was mobilised and joined the 6th Battalion, The Green Howards and went to France as part of the British Expeditionary Force in 1940 where he was employed as the Commanding Officer's dispatch rider.

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