Securing the Indian Frontier in Central Asia

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Afghan frontier policy
Afghan Turkestan
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amu
Amu Darya
Anglo-Russian Central Asia conflict analysis
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British India diplomacy
Caravans
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Category=NHW
Central Asia
Central Asian Khanates
Darya
Derby
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Garrison
General Cherniaev
General Skobelev
Great Game rivalry
Held
imperial border demarcation
Inclined
Kara KUL
khyber
Khyber Pass
nineteenth-century geopolitics
pass
petersburg
russian
Russian Advance
Secretary Of State
sher
Simla
St Petersburg
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Tsar Alexander III
Tsarist expansionism
Turkmen Tribes
Unstable
Violate
WOODS LAKE
Yakub Beg

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415496810
  • Weight: 540g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Apr 2010
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The three decades between 1865 and 1895 marked a particularly contentious period in the relationship between Britain and Russia in Central Asia, which more than once brought them to the verge of war. Moderates tried to settle the problem by the negotiation of ‘neutral zones’, or firm boundaries, but the issue was complicated by misreading of intentions, much internal confusion and dispute, and considerable ignorance of the geographical and geopolitical factors involved.

This careful and detailed analysis examines the strategic thinking and diplomatic discourse which underlay the whole period, and in particular of the succession of efforts to establish a frontier, which eventually brought the period to a close without a major confrontation being provoked. Based on relevant records in the PRO and the British Library, as well as private papers, press comment, parliamentary debates and other contemporary accounts, Sir Martin Ewans provides a ‘history of thought' of this crucial period in Central Asia. He provides an insight into the manner in which issues of war and peace were handled in the 19th Century and a fascinating case study of a great power relationship prior to the First World War. An important contribution to the study of Asian history, Tsarist Russia, imperial history and the history of British India, this book will also be of interest in India and Pakistan as a study of the events that led to the definition and consolidation of their northern frontiers.

Sir Martin Ewans is a former diplomat, who in the course of his career was closely concerned with Central Asian and South Asian affairs, including postings in India, Pakistan and Afghanistan. Since retiring, he has written a number of books, including two on Afghanistan.