1 Result in the "Edwardian Era" category
Definition: The years of transition between empire and modernity, when administrative reform, social change, and rising geopolitical tension reshaped Britain. In the context of security and intelligence, this period includes the formation of the Secret Service Bureau in 1909 and the early architecture of domestic and foreign intelligence. Articles situate institutional developments within the wider Edwardian climate of anxiety, reform, and quiet state consolidation.
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Scotland Yard and the CID In the early decades of the nineteenth century, the idea of a police officer working undercover would have seemed deeply unsettling to many Britons. The country had a long tradition of mistrusting secret policing, associating it with the authoritarian regimes of continental Europe. While the newly created Metropolitan Police patrolled London’s streets in uniform, the idea of officers quietly…