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====Suez==== [[File:Disraeli.jpg|thumb|Portrait of Disraeli published in 1873]] [[File:Victoria Disraeli cartoon.jpg|thumb|upright|''New Crowns for Old'' depicts Disraeli as Abanazar from the pantomime ''[[Aladdin]]'', offering Victoria an imperial crown in exchange for a royal one. Disraeli cultivated a public image of himself as an Imperialist with grand gestures such as conferring on Queen Victoria the title "Empress of India".|alt=Refer to caption]] The [[Suez Canal]], opened in 1869, cut weeks and thousands of miles off the sea journey between Britain and India; in 1875, approximately 80% of the ships using the canal were British.<ref>Blake (1967), p. 581</ref> In the event of another rebellion in India or a Russian invasion, the time saved at Suez might be crucial. Built by French interests, 56% of the stocks in the canal remained in their hands, while 44% of the stock belonged to [[Isma'il Pasha]], the [[Khedive of Egypt]]. He was notorious for his profligate spending. The canal was losing money, and an attempt by [[Ferdinand de Lesseps]], builder of the canal, to raise the tolls had fallen through when the Khedive had threatened military force to prevent it, and had also attracted Disraeli's attention.<ref name="Blake (1967), pp. 570β571"/> The Khedive governed Egypt under the [[Ottoman Empire]]; as in the Crimea, the issue of the Canal raised the [[Eastern Question]] of what to do about the decaying empire governed from Constantinople.<ref name = "w541">Weintraub, p. 541</ref> With much of the pre-canal trade and communications between Britain and India passing through the Ottoman Empire, Britain had done its best to prop up the Ottomans against the threat that Russia would take Constantinople, cutting those communications, and giving Russian ships unfettered access to the Mediterranean. The French might also threaten those lines.<ref>Roberts, pp. 149β150</ref> Britain had had the opportunity to purchase shares in the canal but had declined to do so.<ref>Aldous, p. 262</ref> Disraeli sent the Liberal MP [[Nathan Rothschild, 1st Baron Rothschild|Nathan Rothschild]] to Paris to enquire about buying de Lesseps's shares.<ref name = "w541" /> On 14 November 1875, the editor of the ''[[Pall Mall Gazette]]'', [[Frederick Greenwood]], learned from London banker Henry Oppenheim that the Khedive was seeking to sell his shares in the [[Suez Canal Company]] to a French firm. Greenwood quickly told Lord Derby, the Foreign Secretary, who notified Disraeli. The Prime Minister moved immediately to secure the shares. On 23 November, the Khedive offered to sell the shares for 100,000,000 [[French franc|francs]].<ref name=baer>[[Werner Baer|Baer, Werner]], [https://www.jstor.org/stable/3111714 "The Promoting and the Financing of the Suez Canal"], ''The Business History Review'', December 1956, p. 379 {{subscription}}</ref> Rather than seek the aid of the [[Bank of England]], Disraeli borrowed funds from Lionel de Rothschild, who took a commission on the deal. The banker's capital was at risk as Parliament could have refused to ratify the transaction.<ref>Aldous, pp. 262β263</ref> The contract for purchase was signed at Cairo on 25 November and the shares deposited at the British consulate the following day.<ref name = baer/><ref>Geoffrey Hicks, "Disraeli, Derby and the Suez Canal, 1875: some myths reassessed." ''History'' 97.326 (2012): 182–203.</ref> Disraeli told the Queen, "it is settled; you have it, madam!"<ref name="a263">Aldous, p. 263</ref> The public saw the venture as a daring statement of British dominance of the seas. [[Sir Ian Malcolm]] described the Suez Canal share purchase as "the greatest romance of Mr. Disraeli's romantic career".<ref name = baer/> In the following decades, the security of the Suez Canal became a major concern of British foreign policy. Under Gladstone, Britain took control of Egypt in 1882. A later Foreign Secretary, [[Lord Curzon]], described the canal in 1909 as "the determining influence of every considerable movement of British power to the east and south of the Mediterranean".<ref name = "a263" />
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