Authors: Timothy H. Parsons
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15. Quoted in Jonathan North, “General Hoche and Counterinsurgency,”
Journal of Military History
67 (2003): 530.
16. Owen Connelly,
The French Revolution and Napoleonic Era
, 2nd ed.
(Fort Worth, TX: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1991), 209.
17. Connor,
Age of Napoleon
, 51–52; Ellis,
Napoleonic Empire
, 77–81.
18. These fi gures do not include the “independent” satellite states. Woolf,
Napoleon’s Integration of Europe
, 30.
19. Ellis,
Napoleonic Empire
, 35–36.
20. Woolf,
Napoleon’s Integration of Europe
, 158–59; Ellis,
Napoleonic
Empire
, 60–63.
21. Best,
War and Society in Revolutionary Europe
, 116–17; Isser Woloch,
“Napoleonic Conscription: State Power and Civil Society,”
Past and Present
111
(1986): 120–24.
22. Woolf,
Napoleon’s Integration of Europe
, 171, 220–21; Edward Whitcomb,
“Napoleon’s Prefects,”
American Historical Review
79 (1974): 1099.
23. Charles Esdaile, “Popular Resistance to the Napoleonic Empire,” in
Dwyer,
Napoleon and Europe
, 138; Best,
War and Society in Revolutionary
Europe
, 114; Woolf,
Napoleon’s Integration of Europe
, 172–73.
24. Gunther Rothenberg,
The Art of Warfare in the Age of Napoleon
(Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1978), 159–60.
25. Michael Rowe, “Between Empire and Home Town: Napoleonic Rule on
the Rhine, 1799–1814,”
Historical Journal
42 (1999): 665–66.
26. Quoted in Woolf,
History of Italy
, 30.
27. Nicholas Doumanis,
Italy
(London: Oxford University Press, 2001), 44;
Duggan,
Force of Destiny
, 4–5.
28. Douglas Radcliff-Umstead,
Ugo Foscolo’s Ultime Lettere di Jacobo Ortis,
A Translation
(Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1970), 57.
29. Spencer Di Scala,
Italy from Revolution to Republic: 1700 to the Present
,
3rd ed. (Boulder, CO: Westview, 1995), 27.
30. Quoted in Gregory,
Napoleon’s Italy
, 47–48.
31. Doumanis,
Italy
, 43.
32. Duggan,
Force of Destiny
, 52; Gregory,
Napoleon’s Italy
, 137; Frederick
Schneid,
Soldiers of Napoleon’s Kingdom of Italy: Army, State, and Society,
1800–1815
(Boulder, CO: Westview, 1995), 61.
NOTES TO PAGES 275–306 463
33. Alexander Grab, “State Power, Brigandage and Rural Resistance
in
Napoleonic Italy,”
European History Quarterly
25 (1995): 54; Gregory,
Napoleon’s Italy
, 135–36.
34. Quoted in Charles Esdaile, “Popular Resistance to the Napoleonic
Empire,” in Dwyer,
Napoleon and Europe
, 140.
35. Quoted in Gregory,
Napoleon’s Italy
, 172.
36. Quoted in ibid., 182.
37. Quoted in Duggan,
Force of Destiny
, 67.
38. Broers,
Napoleonic Empire in Italy
, 12.
1. C. W. Hobley,
Kenya: From Chartered Company to Crown Colony
, 2nd
ed. (London: Frank Cass, 1970), 109–17; Richard Meinertzhagen,
Kenya Diary
1902–1906
(New York: Hippocrene, 1984), 214, 224.
2. Meinertzhagen,
Kenya Diary
, 178.
3. Ibid., 223, 233; David Anderson, “Black Mischief: Crime, Protest and
Resistance in Colonial Kenya,”
Historical Journal
36 (1993): 858.
4. John Seabrook, “Ruffl ed Feathers: Uncovering the Biggest Scandal in the
Bird World,”
New Yorker
, May 29, 2006.
5. Great Britain, House of Commons,
Report from the Select Committee
on Africa (Western Coast)
(London, 1865), iii.
6. P. J. Cain and A. G. Hopkins,
British Imperialism: Innovation and Expan-
sion, 1688–1914
(London: Longman, 1993), 112.
7. Anonymous, “France under Louis Napoleon,”
Westminster Review
344
(October 1858): 193; Richard Hingley,
Roman Offi cers and English Gentlemen
(London: Routledge, 2000), 20.
8. Lance Davis and Robert Huttenback,
Mammon and the Pursuit of Empire:
The Political Economy of British Imperialism, 1860–1912
(Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1986), 71–75, 270; Cain and Hopkins,
British Imperialism
, 467.
9. Patrick K. O’Brien, “The Costs and Benefi ts of British Imperialism
1846–1914: Reply,”
Past and Present
125 (1989): 173, 176.
10. Cain and Hopkins,
British Imperialism
, 359.
11. Ronald Hyam, “The British Empire in the Edwardian Era,” in
The
Oxford History of the British Empire: The Twentieth Century
(New York:
Oxford University Press, 1999), 5:48.
12. E. S. Grogan,
From the Cape to Cairo: The First Traverse of Africa from
South to North
(Freeport: Books for Libraries, 1972), 356.
13. John Iliffe,
A Modern History of Tanganyika
(New York: Cambridge
University Press, 1979), 324.
14. John Lonsdale and Bruce Berman,
Unhappy Valley: Confl ict in Kenya
and Africa
(London: James Curry, 1992), 18.
464 NOTES TO PAGES 306–13
15. John Lonsdale, “The European Scramble and Conquest in African
History,” in
The Cambridge History of Africa
, ed. Roland Oliver (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1985), 6:747–48.
16. William Lloyd-Jones,
K.A.R.; Being an Unoffi cial Account of the
Origin and Activities of the Kings African Rifl es
(London: Arrowsmith, 1926),
77.
17. Meinertzhagen,
Kenya Diary
, 218.
18. Ibid., 10–12, 148.
19. Bruce Berman,
Control and Crisis in Colonial Kenya: The Dialec-
tic of Domination
(Nairobi: East African Publishers, 1990), 134; Simon S. S.
Kenyanchui, “European Settler Agriculture,” in
An Economic History of Kenya
,
ed. W. R. Ochieng’ and R. M. Maxon (Nairobi: East African Educational Publishers, 1992), 115.
20. Quoted in W. T. W. Morgan, “The ‘White Highlands’ of Kenya,”
Geo-
graphical Journal
129 (1963): 140.
21. Quoted in W. McGregor Ross,
Kenya from Within: A Short Political
History
(London: George Allen and Unwin, 1927), 41.
22. Harry Thuku,
Harry Thuku: An Autobiography
(Nairobi: Oxford University Press, 1970), 2.
23. A. C. Hollis,
The Nandi: Their Language and Folk-Lore
(Westport, CT:
Negro Universities Press, 1971), 50; Jomo Kenyatta,
Facing Mount Kenya: The
Tribal Life of the Gikuyu
(New York: Vintage, 1965), 42–43.
24. Kenyatta,
Facing Mount Kenya
, 47.
25. Bertram Francis Gordon Cranworth,
A Colony in the Making: Or Sport
and Profi t in British East Africa
(London: Macmillan, 1912), 21.
26. Robert Foran,
The Kenya Police, 1887–1960
(London: Robert Hale, 1962),
21.
27. Grogan,
From the Cape to Cairo
, 378.
28. Cranworth,
Colony in the Making
, 48.
29. F. D. Lugard,
The Dual Mandate in British Tropical Africa
(London:
Frank Cass, 1965); F. D. Lugard, “The Colour Problem,”
Edinburgh Review
233
(April 1921): 281.
30. Quoted in E. A. Brett,
Colonialism and Underdevelopment in East Africa:
The Politics of Economic Change, 1919–1939
(New York: NOK, 1973), 73.
31. Quoted in Anthony Clayton and Donald Savage,
Government and
Labour in Kenya, 1895–1963
(London: Frank Cass, 1974), 105.
32. Quoted in ibid., 172.
33. John Cell, ed.,
By Kenya Possessed: The Correspondence of Norman
Leys and J. H. Oldham, 1918–1926
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1976),
140.
34. Hut Tax Ordinance, 1910, in G. H. Mungheam, ed.,
Kenya: Select
Historical Documents
(Nairobi: East African Publishing House, 1978).
NOTES TO PAGES 315–38 465
35. Thomas Jesse Jones for the African Education Commission,
Education in
East Africa (Phelps-Stokes Report)
(London: Edinburgh House, 1924), 118.
36. Quoted in Wyatt Rawson, ed.,
Education for a Changing Common-
wealth: Report of a British Commonwealth Education Conference, July 1931
(London: New Education Fellowship, 1931), 80.
37. Tanganyika Education Conference,
Conference between Government
and Missions: Report of Proceedings 5–12 October 1925
(Dar es Salaam: Government Printer, 1925), 76.
38. William Malcom Hailey,
An African Survey: A Study of Problems Aris-
ing in Africa South of the Sahara
(London: Oxford University Press, 1938),
335.
39. Labour Circular No. 1, October 23, 1919, Labour Circular No. 2, February 17, 1920, in Mungheam,
Kenya: Select Historical Documents
.
40. Tiyambe Zeleza, “The Colonial Labour System in Kenya,” in Ochieng’
and Maxon,
Economic History of Kenya
, 180.
41. Ibid., 177.
42. Kenya Colony and Protectorate,
Report of the Kenya Land Commission
(Nairobi: Government Printer, 1933).
43. Terence Gavaghan,
Of Lions and Dung Beetles
(Ilfracombe: Arthur H.
Stockwell, 1999), 36.
44. Quoted in Marshall Clough,
Fighting Two Sides: Kenyan Chiefs and
Politicians, 1918–1940
(Niwot, CO: University Press of Colorado, 1990), 16.
45. Hailey,
African Survey
, 387–89.
46. Nuffi eld Foundation and Colonial Offi ce,
African Education: A Study
of Educational Policy and Practice in British Tropical Areas
(Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1953), 80.
47. Cranworth,
Colony in the Making
, 85; Gavaghan,
Of Lions and Dung
Beetles
, 35–36, 66.
48. James R. Sheffi eld,
Education in Kenya: An Historical Study
(New York:
Teachers College Press, 1973), 410.
49. Kenyatta,
Facing Mount Kenya
, 306.
50. Quoted in R. D. Pearce, “The Colonial Offi ce and Planned Decolonisation
in Africa,”
African Affairs
83 (1984): 80.
51. L. J. Butler,
Britain and Empire: Adjusting to a Post-Imperial World
(London: I. B. Tauris, 2002), 81–85; J. S. Hogendorn and K. M. Scott, “The East
African Groundnut Scheme: Lessons of a Large Scale Agricultural Failure,”
African Economic History
10 (1981): 108.
52. Quoted in Anthony Kirk-Greene,
On Crown Service: A History of HM
Colonial and Overseas Civil Services, 1837–1997
(London: I. B. Tauris, 1999), 9.
53. Report by Kenya Governor and Memoranda on What Legislation Is
Discriminatory, February 28, 1949, Great Britain Public Records Offi ce, CO 859
129/1.
466 NOTES TO PAGES 338–61
54. R. Mugo Gatheru,
Child of Two Worlds
(London: Heinemann, 1966),
74.
55. Anthony Clayton,
Counterinsurgency in Kenya: A Study of Military
Operations against the Mau Mau, 1952–1960
(Manhattan, KS: Sunfl ower University Press, 1984), 41.
56. David Anderson,
Histories of the Hanged: The Dirty War in Kenya and
the End of Empire
(New York: W. W. Norton, 2005), 53–59.
57. John Hargreaves,
Decolonization in Africa
, 2nd ed. (London: Longmans,
1996), 171; Butler,
Britain and Empire
, 106–8.
58. Harold Macmillan,
Pointing the Way, 1959–1961
(London: Macmillan,
1972), 475.
59. Michael Blundell,
A Love Affair with the Sun: A Memoir of Seventy
Years in Kenya
(Nairobi: East African Publishers, 1994), 97.
60. Quoted in Clayton and Savage,
Government and Labour in Kenya
, 189.
61. Michael Blundell,
So Rough a Wind
(London: Weidenfeld & Nicholson,
1964), 263.
1. Thomas Kernan,
France on Berlin Time
(Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott,
1941), 76.
2. Simone de Beauvoir,
Letters to Sartre
, trans. and ed. Quintin Hoare
(New York: Arcade, 1991), 322.
3. Kernan,
France on Berlin Time
, 12–13.
4. Quoted in Richard Vinen,
The Unfree French: Life under the Occupation
(New Haven: Yale University Press, 2006), 23.
5. Philippe Burrin,
France under the Germans: Collaboration and Com-
promise
, trans. Janet Lloyd (New York: New Press, 1993), 14.
6. Pierre Laval,
The Unpublished Diary of Pierre Laval
(London: Falcon,
1948), 45.
7. David Pryce-Jones,
Paris in the Third Reich: A History of German
Occupation, 1940–1944
(New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1981), 67.
8. Quoted in Karl Brandt,
Management of Agriculture and Food in the
German-Occupied and Other Areas of Fortress Europe: A Study in Military
Government
(Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1953), 485.
9. Hermann Rauschning,
Hitler Told Me
, quoted in Burrin,
France under