INDEX


[1]. Prince Henckel von Donnesmarck.

[2]. Von Tirpitz’s account is quite direct. “At his [von Kiderlen-Wächter’s] suggestion the Chancellor dispatched the gunboat Panther to the Moroccan port Agadir on July 1, 1911, and left the British Government, when it asked the reason, completely in the dark and without a reply for many weeks. The result was that on July 21 Lloyd George delivered a speech which had been drawn up in the British Cabinet, in which he warned Germany that she would find British power on the side of France in the event of a challenge.”

[3]. The work had been begun by Lieutenant-Colonel Adrian Grant-Duff, afterwards killed on the Aisne.

[4]. The italics are mine.

[5]. The close blockade of the German ports was prescribed in the war orders of 1909, during Lord Fisher’s term of office. Sir Arthur Wilson did not reveal any modification, which he had made in consequence of new conditions to anyone.

[6]. Sir Charles Ottley: at that time Secretary to the Committee of Imperial Defence.

[7]. The memorandum abridged can be read in Appendix A.