यूआईटीलैंडर Meaning in English
यूआईटीलैंडर शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : uITLANDER
, uitlander
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
उज्बेगउजडार्डिस्ट
उजड्डियर
उजड्डनेस
ऊजीने
यूक्रेन का
यूक्रेनी
यूक्रेनी भाषा
यूक्रेनी निवासी
यूक्रेनियों
यूकेटेक
उकुलेल्स
उकुलस
उलानबातार
व्रणयुक्त
यूआईटीलैंडर इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
The League had been established in the aftermath of the Jameson Raid and had quickly become the principal and most strident voice of uitlander agitation in the Transvaal.
However, the ground had been insufficiently prepared; the uitlander risings failed to materialise and the invading troops were quickly subdued and arrested.
Smuts was convinced that Kotze's actions were strongly motivated by a desire to appeal to British elements: the uitlanders, the High Commissioner and the Colonial office; each of which had been vociferous in their criticism of the chaotic nature of Transvaal administration.
Smuts hoped that with good faith on all sides, negotiations could lead to such political reforms as proved necessary, satisfying uitlander opinion, the British government, and Smuts's own desire for the Transvaal to embrace the new industry in its midst.
Leyds was legally sound (especially as he had found little problem with legislation by resolution in his previous judgements), there was considerable protest at his dismissal, most vociferously from the uitlander's representatives.
Kruger welcomed their arrival, not only were they of the same blood, but the Netherlands had no political ambition in South Africa – unlike Britain and her uitlanders.
Rhodes's big idea was the Jameson Raid - an armed invasion of the Transvaal, combined with simultaneous orchestrated uprisings amongst the uitlanders.
The League was not concerned with merely campaigning for civil rights for uitlanders; its aim was to encourage British intervention on the Transvaal – intervention leading to eventual annexation.
These migrants, or uitlanders as they were known, had the potential to change the Transvaal forever; by 1895 the Transvaal government estimated there to be 30000 Afrikaner voters (or burghers, as they were known), to 60000 uitlanders.
Despite this, the fact remained that at the same time as gold revenues served as the Transvaal's main source of income, the uitlander mineworkers were denied any effective say in government.
Initially, from the time of the first gold discoveries to 1890, uitlanders could obtain the right to vote after five years residence.
On 19 December 1898 there was a vulgar brawl in Johannesburg between two drunken uitlanders; a relatively commonplace event in the rough streets of the Rand, but one which was to have significant ramifications.
Smuts's view was that the state and nature of public administration gave rise to various issues of dispute between the uitlanders, the British government, and the Transvaal.