| Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons - 1832 - 600 pages
...then it has happened that those conquests were pressed on the Indian rulers by a species of necessity. All our wars cannot perhaps be, with propriety, considered...our subsidiary alliances have grown, have been wars, 1 think, of necessity, and not of choice. For example, the wars with Tippoo and the Mahrattas. The... | |
| 1840 - 824 pages
...pressed on the Indian rulers as a species of necessity. All'our wars cannot perhaps with propriety be considered wars of necessity ; but most of those by...choice. For example, the wars with Tippoo and the Mahrattas. The conquests actually made by those wars, the dominion acquired and kept, we have frequently... | |
| James Mill - 1840 - 712 pages
...and unadvisable. In his examination before the Committee of the House of Commons in 1832, he says, " all our wars cannot perhaps be with propriety considered...have grown, have been wars I think of necessity, and n"t of choice. " For example, the wars with Tippoo and the Mahrattas." Evidence Political, ip 10. This... | |
| Robert Walsh, Eliakim Littell, John Jay Smith - 1840 - 536 pages
...pressed on the Indian rulers as a species of necessity. All our wars cannot perhaps with propriety be considered wars of necessity ; but most of those by...we possess have been obtained, and out of which our subsidiarv alliances have grown, have been wars, I think, of necessity, and not of choice. For example,... | |
| James Mill - 1848 - 710 pages
...and unadvisable. In his examination before the Committee of the House of Commons in 1832, he says, " all our wars cannot perhaps be with propriety considered...subsidiary alliances have grown, have been wars I i him, of necessity, and not of choice. " For example, the wars with Tippoo and the Mahrattas." Evidence... | |
| James Mill - 1858 - 534 pages
...unadvisable. In his examination before the Committee of the House of Common a in 1 832, he says, " all our wars cannot perhaps be with propriety considered...territories we possess have been obtained, and out of which onr subsidiary alliances have grown, have been wars, I think, of necessity, and not of choice. For... | |
| Khasherao Bhagvantrao Jadhava - 1920 - 242 pages
...happened that those conquests were pressed on the British Indian rulers by a species of necessity. All our wars cannot perhaps be, with propriety, considered wars of necessity* * *. There being a certain anticipation on the part of the conquering Government that the avowed conquest,... | |
| 1840 - 306 pages
...species of necessity. All our wars cannot perhaps with propriety be considered wars of necessity ; hut most of those by which the territories we possess...choice. For example, the wars with Tippoo and the Mahrattas. The conquests actually made by those wars, the dominion acquired and kept, we have frequently... | |
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