This article is the third part of what is intended as a single coherent whole, a study of Parliament and British foreign policy between the Glorious Revolution and the outbreak of war with Revolutionary France. The first part, ‘A Parliamentary Foreign Policy,’ appeared in this journal in vol. 11, no. 1 (June 1991), the second, ‘Parliament and Foreign Policy 1739–1763,’ in vol. 12, no. 2 (December 1992). This article seeks both to examine the 1763–93 period, concentrating on the position during the peace‐time ministry of the Younger Pitt, and to bring together in a conclusion the common issues and general observations that can be made about the long‐term relationship between Parliament and foreign policy over the period as a whole.
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