Page 312 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)
P. 312

286               NOTES TO PAGES 205-13

                    205      GLB letter mentioning Howell, Margoliouth, etc.,Dec. 5th,
                             1918, CEB.
                    206      Armistice declaration, see Official History.
                    206      Cox, Wilson and GLB, views on post-war government. See
                             Cox, Notes to BL, p. 409 ct seq., and Graves, Life of Sir
                             Percy Cox; Marlowe, Life of Sir Arnold Wilson; Wilson
                             Papers, British Museum, MSS (5 245 5-59); Wilson, Loyalties;
                             and, for view from within Whitehall, Young, The Indepen­
                             dent Arab.
                    206      Wilson’s appointment, discussions in Baghdad etc., see
                             Marlowe, op. cit. and Young, op. cit. Also BL, CEB.
                    207      GLB’s memo and report, Self-Determination in Mesopotamia.
                             File 4722/18, L/P&S/10/755-64.
                    208      Peace Conference, letter to FB (dated Sunday, March
                             16th), ‘Lord Robert [Cecil] is, I think, the salient figure of
                             the Conference andT. E. Lawrence the most picturesque ...’
                             See also Wilson, op. cit. and BM MSS (52455-59), Young,
                             op. cit., BL, CEB, UBL, TEL Letters, p. 282 ct seq.
                    209      Wilson on self-government, BM MSS (52455-59).
                    209      Gertrude in Paris, BL, CEB, UBL.
                    210      Wilson in Paris, op. cit. and BM MSS (52455-59).
                    210      Wilson about Gertrude, BM MSS (52455-59).
                    211      Meinertzhagen and Aaronsohn, see Aaronsohn, Yoman
                             1916-18 and Meinertzhagen, Middle East Diary. Also U.S.
                             Department of Agriculture Bulletin 180,1910. For details of
                             other ‘agents’ of same family see Engle, The Nili Spies.
                    211      Letter to Frankfurter. Its provenance seems connected with
                             an almost incoherent essay by Sykes (FO 882) filed by the
                             FO before Sykes left for Paris in January 1919. Sykes had
                             carefully cut his signature from the original document.
                    212      International Commission. The King-Crane Commission,
                             set up at the request of President Wilson. British representa­
                             tives were McMahon and Hogarth.
                    212      Wilson/Cox discussions, BM MSS (5 245 5-5 9) and Marlowe,
                             op. cit.
                    212      Gertrude’s return, BL, CEB.
                    212      Dismissal of Meinertzhagen, see his Middle East Diary, also
                             Wavell, Allenby: Soldier and Statesman.
                    212      Syrian question. Secret agreement between Clemenceau
                             and Faisal. See TEL, Letters, p. 671.
                   212       Storrs in Jerusalem, see his Orientations.
                   213       Arab politicians in Syria, BL, CEB.
                   213       Fattuh, CEB.
                             Wilson to Stephenson, BM MSS (52455-59).
                   213
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