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  2. List of high commissioners of the United Kingdom to Nigeria

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_High_Commissioners...

    Though there are a few technical differences, they are in practice one and the same office. The following persons have served as British High Commissioner to the Federal Republic of Nigeria since the country gained its independence from the United Kingdom on 1 October 1960: 1960–1963: Antony Head, 1st Viscount Head [1]

  3. List of diplomatic missions of the United Kingdom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_diplomatic...

    In 2015, the UK Consulate-General in Denver was reclassified as a UK Government Office. [6] In 2018 the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office has announced that new High Commissions will open in Antigua and Barbuda , Bahamas , Grenada , Lesotho , Saint Vincent and the Grenadines , Samoa , Swaziland , Tonga and Vanuatu and a British ...

  4. List of diplomatic missions in Nigeria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_diplomatic...

    Consulate 1988 [29] United Kingdom: Liaison Office 2014 Lagos Australia: Embassy branch office 2009 Austria: Consulate 2013 Belgium: Embassy branch office 2004 Chile: Embassy 1983 [30] Egypt: Consulate-General 2015 [31] Ethiopia: Consulate-General 2021 [32] Japan: Embassy branch office 2007 [33] [34] Poland: Consulate General 2008 [35] Sweden

  5. Lagos Colony - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lagos_Colony

    Oba Dosunmu of Lagos (spelled "Docemo" in British documents) resisted the cession for 11 days while facing the threat of violence on Lagos and its people, but capitulated and signed the Lagos Treaty of Cession. [1] Lagos was declared a colony on 5 March 1862. [2] By 1872, Lagos was a cosmopolitan trading centre with a population over 60,000. [3]

  6. Ghana–United Kingdom relations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghana–United_Kingdom...

    In 1853 the British opened a consulate in Lagos, annexing the area as a British protectorate in 1861 after heightened tensions and British involvement in local disputes between neighbouring Gold Coast leaders. [5] In 1863–1864, the second Anglo-Ashanti war (or Incident, more accurately as no fighting took place) was fought.

  7. List of ambassadors of the United Kingdom to Ivory Coast

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Ambassadors_of_the...

    The British embassy in Abidjan was closed in 2005 because of the worsening security situation [1] and the mission to Ivory Coast was temporarily operated out of the embassy in neighbouring Ghana. The embassy in Abidjan was reopened in May 2012. [2]

  8. Dosunmu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dosunmu

    Dosunmu's accession to the throne broke with tradition in that he was appointed Oba by British Consul to Lagos Benjamin Campbell following Britain's intervention in Lagos affairs following the Reduction of Lagos in December 1851. Campbell had learned about Oba Akitoye's death on 2 September 1853 from CMS agent C.C. Gollmer but withheld this ...

  9. Treaty Between Great Britain and Lagos, 1 January 1852

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_Between_Great...

    The Treaty Between Great Britain and Lagos, 1 January 1852 was an agreement between Great Britain (represented by Commodore Henry William Bruce, Commander of the British Navy's West Africa Station and John Beecroft, British Consul in the Bights of Benin and Biafra) and Oba Akitoye, the newly installed Oba of Lagos. [1]