- Kruger telegram
The Kruger telegram was a message sent by
Germany 'sKaiser Wilhelm II toStephanus Johannes Paulus Kruger , president of theTransvaal on3 January 1896 . The Kaiser congratulated the president on repelling theJameson Raid , a sortie by 600 irregulars fromCape Colony into the Transvaal under the command ofLeander Starr Jameson . The raid was intended to trigger an uprising by the primarily British expatriate workers but was a fiasco with around 30 raiders killed and the rest surrendering.The telegram read:
It was applauded by the German press, but caused huge indignation in Great Britain and led to a further deterioration in relations between the two countries. The
telegram was taken to mean that the Kaiser endorsed the Transvaal's independence in what was seen by the British as their ownsphere of influence , and the reference to "friendly powers" interpreted by them as meaning that assistance would have been available from Germany if asked for — and might in future.The Times newspaper proclaimed that "England will concede nothing to menaces and will not lie down under insult." The windows of German shops were broken, and German sailors were attacked in London. The German diplomatic response was essentially conciliatory, with the Kaiser responding to a letter from Queen Victoria (his grandmother) with "Never was the Telegram intended as a step against England or your Government...".The Kruger Telegram is often seen as marking the point at which Anglo-German antagonism became firmly established [http://www.history.ac.uk/ihr/Focus/Empire/reviews/mombauer.html] . This antagonism and the naval arms race which it promoted were important factors behind the outbreak of the
First World War .Notes
Bibliography
* Massie, Robert K - "Dreadnought: Britain, Germany, and the Coming of the Great War." New York: Random House, (1991)
* van der Poel, J - "The Jameson Raid", Oxford University Press, (1951)
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