Description

Book Synopsis
Tracing the beginnings of the British colonial enterprise in South Asia and the Middle East, this title brings together key texts from the era of the privately owned British East India Company through the crises that led to the Company's takeover by the Crown in 1858. It ends with the momentous opening of the Suez Canal in 1869.

Trade Review
Archives of Empire offers a valuable and original intervention in contemporary studies of imperialism, providing a rich array of source material pertaining to the imperial project and the wide-ranging grounds for its critique.”—Anne McClintock, author of Imperial Leather: Race, Gender, and Sexuality in the Colonial Contest
"Archives of Empire is a substantial and valuable project containing a generous sampling of key primary texts for understanding both the crucial events in and the debates around British imperialism in the nineteenth century.”—David Lloyd, coeditor of The Politics of Culture in the Shadow of Capital

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments xix
General Introduction: Readings in Imperialism and Orientalism xxi
Volume Introduction: From the Company to the Canal 1
I. COMPANY TO CANAL, 1757-1869

INTRODUCTION: Adventure Capitalism: Mercantilism, Militarism, and the British East India Company 13
Chronology of Events 16
List of the Governors and Governors-General of India 17
List of the Newabs of Bengal 18
India under Cornwallis (1792) [map] 19
India under Wellesley (1799) [map] 19
India under Hastings (1832) [map] 20
India under Dalhousie (1856) [map] 20
G.A. (George Alfred) Henty, Excerpt from With Clive in India (n.d.) 21
“Agreement between the Nabob Nudjum-ul-Dowlah and the Company, 12 August 1765” 25
Anonymous, An Inquiry into the Rights of the East India Company of Making War and Peace (1772) 27
East India Company Act, 1773 31
James Mill, “The Constitution of the East India Company” (1817) 39
James Mill, Letter to Durmont (1819) 47
John Stuart Mill. Excerpt from Autobiography (1873) 48
Government of India Act, 1833 49
Lord Thomas Babington Macaulay, “Lord Clive” (1840) 59
Samuel Lucas, “The Spoliation of Oude” (1857) 72
Sir Arthur Wellesley, “Memorandum on Marquess Wellesley’s Government of India” (1806) 81
II. ORIENTAL DEPOTISM
INTRODUCTON: Oriental Despotisms and Political Economies 89
Baron de Montesquieu, “Distinctive Properties of a Despotic Government” (1746) 92
Baron de Montesquieu, Excerpts from Persian Letters (1721) 92
Adam Smith, “America and the East Indies” (1776) 95
Robert Orme, “Of the Government and People of Indostan” (1782) 107
John Stuart Mill, Excerpt from The Principles of Political Economy (1848) 111
John Stuart Mill, Excerpt from “Considerations on Representative Government” (1861) 113
Karl Marx, “On Imperialism in India” (1853) 117
III. THE IMPEACHMENT OF WARREN HASTINGS
INTRODUCTION: Warren Hastings: Naughty Nabob or National Hero? 131
Warren Hastings, “Warren Hastings to the Court of General Directors, 11 November 1773” 135
Warren Hastings, Excerpt from Memoirs Relative to the State of India (1786) 137
Edmund Burke, “Edmund Burke on the Impeachment of Warren Hastings, 15-19 February 1788” 143
Westminister Hall during the trial of Warren Hastings (1788) [illustration] 146
Fanny Burney, Diary Selections (1788) 155
Edmund Burke, “From the Third Day of Edmund Burke’s Speech Opening the Impeachment, 18 February 1788” 160
Warren Hastings, “From the Address of Warren Hastings in His Defence, 2 June 1791” 163
Lord Thomas Babington Macaulay, “Warren Hastings” (1841) 166
IV. THE CASE OF TIPU SULTAN
INTRODUCTION: Tipu Sultan: Oriental Despot or National Hero? 171
G.A. Henty, Excerpts from The Tiger of Mysore (189?) 173
“Tippoo Sahib at the Lines of Travancore” (1789) [illustration] 174
Major Diram, “Treaties of Peace, and Review of the Consequences of War” (1793) 175
Selected Letters between Tipu and Company Governors-General, 1798-1799 180
Wilkie Collins, “Prologue: The Storming of Seringapatam, 1799” (1869) 195
V. ORIENTALISM
INTRODUCTION: Orientalism: The East as a Career 203
Mary Shelley, Excerpts from Frankenstein (1813/1831) 206
Benjamin Disraeli, Excerpt from Sibyl, or the Two Nations (1845) 208
Definitions from the Hobson-Jobson Dictionary 209
G.W.F. Hegel, “India” (1822) 219
William Jones, “A Discourse on the Institution of a Society for Inquiring into the History, Civil and Natural, the Antiquities, Arts, Sciences, and Literatures of Asia” (1784) 223
Lord Thomas Babington Macaulay, “Minute on Indian Education” (1835) 227
Max Muller, “The Aryan Section” (1876) 239
VI. LAWS AND ORDERS
INTRODUCTION: Ordering “Chaos”: Administering the Law 249
Robert Orme, “Of the Laws and Justice of Indostan” (1782) 251
Sir William Jones, Preface to “Institutes of Hindu Law: Or, the Ordinances of Menu” (1794) 261
Lord Thomas Babington Macaulay, “Introductory Report upon the Indian Penal Code” (1837) 268
VII. THUGGEE/THAGI
INTRODUCTION: Decriminalizing the Landscape: Thugs and Poisoners 285
A thug “family tree” (1836) [illustration] 288
Thug depredations (1836) [map] 288
Thugs giving a demonstration of their method of strangulation (1855) [photo] 289
Captain William H. Sleeman, Excerpts from The Thugs or Phansigars of India: History of the Rise and Progress (1839) 297
Fanny Parks Parlby, “A Kutcherry or Kachahri” (1850) 307
Philip Meadows Taylor, “Thugs” (1877) 314
Philip Meadows Taylor, Excerpts from Confessions of a Thug (1837) 315
Captain William H. Sleeman, “Thug Approvers” (1833-1835?) 322
VIII. SUTTEE/SATI
INTRODUCTION: Sati/Suttee: Observances, Abolition, Observations 337
Colonel Henry Yule and A.C. Burnell, “Suttee” [definition] (1903) 340
Lord William Bentinck, “Bentinck’s Minute on Sati, 8 November 1892” 350
Sati Regulation XVII, A.D. 1829 of the Bengal Code, 4 December 1829 361
“The Duties of a Faithful Widow,” from Digest of Hindi Law (n.d.) 364
Raja Ram Mohan Roy, “Petitions and Addresses on the Practice of Suttee (1818-1831)” 369
G.W.F. Hegel, On Sati (1822) 374
Charles Dickens, Death by Fire of Miss Havisham (1861) 375
Jules Verne, “Fogg Rescues a Sati” (1873) 377
Maspero Jingle [advertisement for Maspero Egyptian cigarettes] 379
Ernest Renan, On Suttee (1893) 380
Flora Annie Steel, “The Reformer’s Wife” (1933) 381
IX. THE INDIAN UPRISING/SEPOY MUTINY 1857-1858
INTRODUCTION: The “Asiatic Mystery”: The Sepoy Mutiny, Rebellion, or Revolt 391
Chronology of Events 396
Rulers and Rebels: Some Major Figures 397
Excerpts from The Who’s Who of Indian Martyrs (1969-1973) 400
“Portrait of Nana Sahib” [illustration] 402
“Sepoys, 1757” (1890) [illustration] 406
“Attack of the Mutineers on the Redan Battery at Lucknow, July 30, 1857” (n.d.) [illustration] 406
“The Asiatic Mystery. As Prepared by Sepoy D’Israeli” (1857) [illustration] 407
“Proclamation to the People of Oude on Its Annexati

Archives of Empire

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    A Hardback by Barbara Harlow, Mia Carter

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      Publisher: Duke University Press
      Publication Date: 31/12/2003
      ISBN13: 9780822331766, 978-0822331766
      ISBN10: 0822331764

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Tracing the beginnings of the British colonial enterprise in South Asia and the Middle East, this title brings together key texts from the era of the privately owned British East India Company through the crises that led to the Company's takeover by the Crown in 1858. It ends with the momentous opening of the Suez Canal in 1869.

      Trade Review
      Archives of Empire offers a valuable and original intervention in contemporary studies of imperialism, providing a rich array of source material pertaining to the imperial project and the wide-ranging grounds for its critique.”—Anne McClintock, author of Imperial Leather: Race, Gender, and Sexuality in the Colonial Contest
      "Archives of Empire is a substantial and valuable project containing a generous sampling of key primary texts for understanding both the crucial events in and the debates around British imperialism in the nineteenth century.”—David Lloyd, coeditor of The Politics of Culture in the Shadow of Capital

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments xix
      General Introduction: Readings in Imperialism and Orientalism xxi
      Volume Introduction: From the Company to the Canal 1
      I. COMPANY TO CANAL, 1757-1869

      INTRODUCTION: Adventure Capitalism: Mercantilism, Militarism, and the British East India Company 13
      Chronology of Events 16
      List of the Governors and Governors-General of India 17
      List of the Newabs of Bengal 18
      India under Cornwallis (1792) [map] 19
      India under Wellesley (1799) [map] 19
      India under Hastings (1832) [map] 20
      India under Dalhousie (1856) [map] 20
      G.A. (George Alfred) Henty, Excerpt from With Clive in India (n.d.) 21
      “Agreement between the Nabob Nudjum-ul-Dowlah and the Company, 12 August 1765” 25
      Anonymous, An Inquiry into the Rights of the East India Company of Making War and Peace (1772) 27
      East India Company Act, 1773 31
      James Mill, “The Constitution of the East India Company” (1817) 39
      James Mill, Letter to Durmont (1819) 47
      John Stuart Mill. Excerpt from Autobiography (1873) 48
      Government of India Act, 1833 49
      Lord Thomas Babington Macaulay, “Lord Clive” (1840) 59
      Samuel Lucas, “The Spoliation of Oude” (1857) 72
      Sir Arthur Wellesley, “Memorandum on Marquess Wellesley’s Government of India” (1806) 81
      II. ORIENTAL DEPOTISM
      INTRODUCTON: Oriental Despotisms and Political Economies 89
      Baron de Montesquieu, “Distinctive Properties of a Despotic Government” (1746) 92
      Baron de Montesquieu, Excerpts from Persian Letters (1721) 92
      Adam Smith, “America and the East Indies” (1776) 95
      Robert Orme, “Of the Government and People of Indostan” (1782) 107
      John Stuart Mill, Excerpt from The Principles of Political Economy (1848) 111
      John Stuart Mill, Excerpt from “Considerations on Representative Government” (1861) 113
      Karl Marx, “On Imperialism in India” (1853) 117
      III. THE IMPEACHMENT OF WARREN HASTINGS
      INTRODUCTION: Warren Hastings: Naughty Nabob or National Hero? 131
      Warren Hastings, “Warren Hastings to the Court of General Directors, 11 November 1773” 135
      Warren Hastings, Excerpt from Memoirs Relative to the State of India (1786) 137
      Edmund Burke, “Edmund Burke on the Impeachment of Warren Hastings, 15-19 February 1788” 143
      Westminister Hall during the trial of Warren Hastings (1788) [illustration] 146
      Fanny Burney, Diary Selections (1788) 155
      Edmund Burke, “From the Third Day of Edmund Burke’s Speech Opening the Impeachment, 18 February 1788” 160
      Warren Hastings, “From the Address of Warren Hastings in His Defence, 2 June 1791” 163
      Lord Thomas Babington Macaulay, “Warren Hastings” (1841) 166
      IV. THE CASE OF TIPU SULTAN
      INTRODUCTION: Tipu Sultan: Oriental Despot or National Hero? 171
      G.A. Henty, Excerpts from The Tiger of Mysore (189?) 173
      “Tippoo Sahib at the Lines of Travancore” (1789) [illustration] 174
      Major Diram, “Treaties of Peace, and Review of the Consequences of War” (1793) 175
      Selected Letters between Tipu and Company Governors-General, 1798-1799 180
      Wilkie Collins, “Prologue: The Storming of Seringapatam, 1799” (1869) 195
      V. ORIENTALISM
      INTRODUCTION: Orientalism: The East as a Career 203
      Mary Shelley, Excerpts from Frankenstein (1813/1831) 206
      Benjamin Disraeli, Excerpt from Sibyl, or the Two Nations (1845) 208
      Definitions from the Hobson-Jobson Dictionary 209
      G.W.F. Hegel, “India” (1822) 219
      William Jones, “A Discourse on the Institution of a Society for Inquiring into the History, Civil and Natural, the Antiquities, Arts, Sciences, and Literatures of Asia” (1784) 223
      Lord Thomas Babington Macaulay, “Minute on Indian Education” (1835) 227
      Max Muller, “The Aryan Section” (1876) 239
      VI. LAWS AND ORDERS
      INTRODUCTION: Ordering “Chaos”: Administering the Law 249
      Robert Orme, “Of the Laws and Justice of Indostan” (1782) 251
      Sir William Jones, Preface to “Institutes of Hindu Law: Or, the Ordinances of Menu” (1794) 261
      Lord Thomas Babington Macaulay, “Introductory Report upon the Indian Penal Code” (1837) 268
      VII. THUGGEE/THAGI
      INTRODUCTION: Decriminalizing the Landscape: Thugs and Poisoners 285
      A thug “family tree” (1836) [illustration] 288
      Thug depredations (1836) [map] 288
      Thugs giving a demonstration of their method of strangulation (1855) [photo] 289
      Captain William H. Sleeman, Excerpts from The Thugs or Phansigars of India: History of the Rise and Progress (1839) 297
      Fanny Parks Parlby, “A Kutcherry or Kachahri” (1850) 307
      Philip Meadows Taylor, “Thugs” (1877) 314
      Philip Meadows Taylor, Excerpts from Confessions of a Thug (1837) 315
      Captain William H. Sleeman, “Thug Approvers” (1833-1835?) 322
      VIII. SUTTEE/SATI
      INTRODUCTION: Sati/Suttee: Observances, Abolition, Observations 337
      Colonel Henry Yule and A.C. Burnell, “Suttee” [definition] (1903) 340
      Lord William Bentinck, “Bentinck’s Minute on Sati, 8 November 1892” 350
      Sati Regulation XVII, A.D. 1829 of the Bengal Code, 4 December 1829 361
      “The Duties of a Faithful Widow,” from Digest of Hindi Law (n.d.) 364
      Raja Ram Mohan Roy, “Petitions and Addresses on the Practice of Suttee (1818-1831)” 369
      G.W.F. Hegel, On Sati (1822) 374
      Charles Dickens, Death by Fire of Miss Havisham (1861) 375
      Jules Verne, “Fogg Rescues a Sati” (1873) 377
      Maspero Jingle [advertisement for Maspero Egyptian cigarettes] 379
      Ernest Renan, On Suttee (1893) 380
      Flora Annie Steel, “The Reformer’s Wife” (1933) 381
      IX. THE INDIAN UPRISING/SEPOY MUTINY 1857-1858
      INTRODUCTION: The “Asiatic Mystery”: The Sepoy Mutiny, Rebellion, or Revolt 391
      Chronology of Events 396
      Rulers and Rebels: Some Major Figures 397
      Excerpts from The Who’s Who of Indian Martyrs (1969-1973) 400
      “Portrait of Nana Sahib” [illustration] 402
      “Sepoys, 1757” (1890) [illustration] 406
      “Attack of the Mutineers on the Redan Battery at Lucknow, July 30, 1857” (n.d.) [illustration] 406
      “The Asiatic Mystery. As Prepared by Sepoy D’Israeli” (1857) [illustration] 407
      “Proclamation to the People of Oude on Its Annexati

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