Foreword. Preface: Envisaging ‘contingencies’: British projections of Der Tag. 1. Defining ‘Diplomatic Revolution’: a case study, 1898-1908. 2. Britain and Germany: Directions of Travel: the Earl of Selborne, the Cabinet, and the Threat from Germany, 1900-1904. 3. Britain and Germany: ‘Most Obedient and Devoted Servants’: some correspondence of certain British Naval Persons with Kaiser Wilhelm II, 1908-1914. 4. Britain and the Ottoman Empire: Reality-Check, 1906-7: the British Government recognises the limitations of its power of offence against the Ottoman Empire. 5. Britain and Russia: ‘Repose on our Indian Frontier’: Sir Edward Grey and the Russian Empire. 6. Britain and France: the Portrayal of France by the Opponents of the Channel Tunnel, 1880-1930. 7. Austria-Hungary and Germany: Hamlet without the Prince: Terrorism at the Outbreak of the Great War. 8. Notes of the Non-Interventionists, 1911-1914. 9. Britain and the ‘re-education’ of Germany, 1917-1920. 10. The Study of International History in Britain in the aftermath of the Great War. Reviews.