Online Encyclopedia

FOREIGN OFFICE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 644 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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FOREIGN OFFICE  , that department of the executive of the
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United
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Kingdom which is concerned with
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foreign affairs . The head of the Foreign Office is termed
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principal secretary of state for foreign affairs and his office
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dates from 1782 . Between that date and the Revolution there had been only two secretaries of state, whose duties were divided by a
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geographical division of the globe into
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northern and
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southern departments . The duties of the secretary of the northern department of
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Europe comprised dealings with the northern powers of Europe, while the secretary of the southern department of Europe communicated with France, Spain,
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Portugal,
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Switzerland, Italy,
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Turkey, and also looked after Irish and colonial business, and carried out the
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work of the Home Office . In 1782 the duties of these two secretaries were revised, the northern department becoming the Foreign Office . The secretary for foreign affairs is the official agent of the
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crown in all communications between
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Great Britain and foreign powers; his intercourse is carried on either through the representatives of foreign states in Great Britain or through representatives of Great Britain abroad . He negotiates all
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treaties or alliances with foreign states, protects
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British subjects residing abroad, and deinands satisfaction for any injuries they may sustain at the hands of foreigners . He is assisted by two under-secretaries of state (one of them a politician, the other a permanent
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civil servant), three assistant under-secretaries (civil servants), a librarian, a head of the treaty department and a staff of clerks . The departments of the Foreign Office are the
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African,
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American, commercial and sanitary, consular, eastern (Europe), far eastern, western (Europe),
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parliamentary,
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financial, librarian and keeper of the papers, treaties and registry . In the case of important despatches and correspondence, these, with the drafts of answers, are sent first to the permanent under-secretary, then to the prime minister, then to the
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sovereign and, lastly, are circulated among the members of the
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cabinet . The
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salary of the secretary for foreign affairs is £5000 per annum,that of the permanent under-secretary £2000, the parliamentary under-secretary and the first assistant under-secretary, £150o, and the other assistant under-secretaries £i2oo . See Anson, Law and Custom of the Constitution,
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part ii .

End of Article: FOREIGN OFFICE
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