The British South Africa Company and the Jameson Raid
- 1 November 1970
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in The Journal of British Studies
- Vol. 10 (1) , 145-161
- https://doi.org/10.1086/385604
Abstract
When a powerful state seeks to impose its will on a weaker one, it expects to be subject to condemnation, which must be weighed against its assessment of national interest. Failure does not eliminate the condemnation; indeed it may intensify it. In most books and articles on the Jameson Raid and its antecedents, the fact that it was a fiasco foredoomed to disaster seems to add to the gravity of the indictment against those who planned it. In recent years scholars have devoted considerable attention to the question of the complicity of Joseph Chamberlain. Most of them have concluded that he was aware of an impending rising but that he was not acquainted with the details, principally because he did not choose to know. Most investigators have also averred that the High Commissioner in South Africa, Sir Hercules Robinson, knew far more about the preparations for a coup than he was willing to admit.The overthrow of the Transvaal Government, of course, had been the subject of discussions among Imperial officials long before the Raid. Robinson's predecessor, Sir Henry Loch, had plans as early as 1893 to intervene in the Transvaal in the event of an insurrection and the Secretary of State for Colonies, Lord Ripon, knew of these plans and did not prohibit such action, even though he did not encourage it, and at the time of Robinson's appointment in 1895 he discussed with Ripon intervention to support a Johannesburg rising. Edmund Garrett, who talked to Ripon at this time, stated that if the raid had occurred while Ripon was in office, he could have telegraphed, “Ripon is in it up to his neck.”Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- W. T. Stead's History of the Mystery and the Jameson RaidThe Journal of British Studies, 1964
- Joseph Chamberlain and the Jameson Raid: a Bibliographical SurveyThe Journal of British Studies, 1964
- The Jameson RaidThe American Historical Review, 1953