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Historiography of the British Empire

The historiography of the British Empire refers to the studies, sources, critical methods and interpretations used by scholars to develop a history of the British Empire. Historians and their ideas are the main focus here; specific lands and historical dates and episodes are covered in the article on the British Empire. Scholars have long studied the Empire, looking at the causes for its formation, its relations to the French and other empires, and the kinds of people who became imperialists or anti-imperialists, together with their mindsets. The history of the breakdown of the Empire has attracted scholars of the histories of the United States (which broke away in 1776), the British Raj (dissolved in 1947), and the African colonies (independent in the 1960s). John Darwin (2013) identifies four imperial goals: colonising, civilising, converting, and commerce.[1]

Historians have approached imperial history from numerous angles over the last century.[2] In recent decades scholars have expanded the range of topics into new areas in social and cultural history, paying special attention to the impact on the natives and their agency in response.[3][4] The cultural turn in historiography has recently emphasised issues of language, religion, gender, and identity. Recent debates have considered the relationship between the "metropole" (Great Britain itself, especially London), and the colonial peripheries. The "British world" historians stress the material, emotional, and financial links among the colonizers across the imperial diaspora. The "new imperial historians", by contrast, are more concerned with the Empire's impact on the metropole, including everyday experiences and images.[5] Phillip Buckner says that by the 1990s few historians continued to portray the Empire as benevolent. The new thinking was that the impact was not so great,[clarification needed] for historians had discovered the many ways which the locals responded to and adapted to Imperial rule. The implication Buckner says is that Imperial history is "therefore less important than was formerly believed".[6]

The Empire in red in 1886, by Walter Crane

Historical framework edit

Historians agree that the Empire was not planned by anyone. The concept of the British Empire is a construct and was never a legal entity, unlike the Roman or other European empires. There was no imperial constitution, no office of emperor, no uniformity of laws. So when it began, when it ended, and what stages it went through is a matter of opinion, not official orders or laws. The dividing line was Britain's shift in the 1763–93 period from emphasis on western to eastern territories following U.S. independence. The London bureaucracy governing the colonies also changed, policies to white settler colonies changed and slavery was phased out.[7]

The beginning of the formation of a colonial Empire has been much studied. Tudor conquest of Ireland began in the 1530s and Cromwellian conquest of Ireland in the 1650s completed the British colonisation of Ireland. The first major history was The Expansion of England (1883), by Sir John Seeley.[8] It was a bestseller for decades, and was widely admired by the imperialistic faction in British politics, and opposed by the anti-imperialists of the Liberal Party. The book points out how and why Britain gained the colonies, the character of the Empire, and the light in which it should be regarded. It was well written and persuasive. Seeley argued that British rule is in India's best interest. He also warned that India had to be protected and vastly increased the responsibilities and dangers to Britain. The book contains the much-quoted statement that "we seem, as it were, to have conquered half the world in a fit of absence of mind". Expansion of England appeared at an opportune time, and did much to make the British regard the colonies as an expansion of the British state as well as of British nationality, and to confirm to them the value of Britain's empire in the East.[9] In his history of the British Empire, written in 1940, A. P. Newton lamented that Seeley "dealt in the main with the great wars of the eighteenth century and this gave the false impression that the British Empire has been founded largely by war and conquest, an idea that was unfortunately planted firmly in the public mind, not only in Great Britain, but also in foreign countries".[10]

 
Plaque commemorating Sir Humphrey Gilbert's founding of the British Empire in St. John's, Newfoundland in 1583.

Historians often point out that in the First British Empire (before the 1780s) there was no single imperial vision, but rather a multiplicity of private operations led by different groups of English businessmen or religious groups. Although protected by the Royal Navy, they were not funded or planned by the government.[11] After the American war, says Bruce Collins, British leaders "focused not on any military lessons to be learned, but upon the regulation and expansion of imperial trade and the readjustment of Britain's constitutional relationship with its colonies."[12]

In the Second British Empire, by 1815 historians identify four distinct elements in the colonies.[11] The most politically developed colonies were the self-governing colonies in the Caribbean and those that later formed Canada and Australia. India was in a category by itself, and its immense size and distance required control of the routes to it, and in turn permitted British naval dominance from the Persian Gulf to the South China Sea. The third group was a mixed bag of smaller territories, including isolated ports used as way stations to India, and emerging trade entrepots such as Hong Kong and Singapore, along with a few isolated ports in Africa. The fourth kind of empire was the "informal empire," that is financial dominance exercised through investments, as in Latin America, and including the complex situation in Egypt (it was owned theoretically by the Ottoman Empire, but ruled by Britain).[13] Darwin argues the British Empire was distinguished by the adaptability of its builders: "The hallmark of British imperialism was its extraordinary versatility in method, outlook and object." The British tried to avoid military action in favour of reliance on networks of local elites and businessmen who voluntarily collaborated and in turn gained authority (and military protection) from British recognition.[14]

Historians[who?] argue that Britain built an informal economic empire through control of trade and finance in Latin America after the independence of Spanish and Portuguese colonies about 1820.[15] By the 1840s, Britain had adopted a highly successful policy of free trade that gave it dominance in the trade of much of the world.[16] After losing its first Empire to the Americans, Britain then turned its attention towards Asia, Africa, and the Pacific. Following the defeat of Napoleonic France in 1815, Britain enjoyed a century of almost unchallenged dominance and expanded its imperial holdings around the globe. Increasing degrees of internal autonomy were granted to its white settler colonies in the 20th century.[17]

A resurgence came in the late 19th century, with the Scramble for Africa and major additions in Asia and the Middle East. Leadership in British imperialism was expressed by Joseph Chamberlain and Lord Rosebery, and implemented in Africa by Cecil Rhodes. Other influential spokesmen included Lord Cromer, Lord Curzon, General Kitchner, Lord Milner, and the writer Rudyard Kipling. They all were influenced by Seeley's Expansion of England.[18] The British Empire was the largest Empire that the world has ever seen both in terms of landmass and population. Its power, both military and economic, remained unmatched in 1900. In 1876 Disraeli overcame vehement Liberal opposition and obtained for Queen Victoria the title of "Empress of India" (she was not "Empress of the British Empire.")[19]

British historians focused on the diplomatic, military and administrative aspects of the Empire before the 1960s. They saw a benevolent enterprise. Younger generations branched off into a variety of social, economic and cultural themes, and took a much more critical stance. Representative of the old tradition was the Cambridge History of India, a large-scale project published in five volumes between 1922 and 1937 by Cambridge University Press. Some volumes were also part of the simultaneous multivolume The Cambridge History of the British Empire. Production of both works was delayed by the First World War and the ill health of contributors; the India volume II had to be abandoned. Reviewers complained the research methods were too old-fashioned; one critic said it was "history as it was understood by our grandfathers".[20]

Idea of Empire edit

David Armitage provided an influential[21] study of the emergence of a British imperial ideology from the time of Henry VIII to that of Robert Walpole in the 1720s and 1730s.[22] Using a close reading of English, Scottish and Irish authors from Sir Thomas Smith (1513–77) to David Hume (1711–1776), Armitage argues that the imperial ideology was both a critical agent in the formation of a British state from three kingdoms and an essential bond between the state and the transatlantic colonies. Armitage thus links the concerns of the "New British History" with that of the Atlantic history. Before 1700, Armitage finds that contested English and Scottish versions of state and empire delayed the emergence of a unitary imperial ideology. However political economists Nicholas Barbon and Charles Davenant in the late 17th century emphasized the significance of commerce, especially mercantilism or commerce that was closed to outsiders, to the success of the state. They argued that "trade depended on liberty, and that liberty could therefore be the foundation of empire".[23] To overcome competing versions of "empires of the seas" within Britain, Parliament undertook the regulation of the Irish economy, the Acts of Union 1707 and the formation of a unitary and organic "British" empire of the sea. Walpole's opponents in the 1730s in the "country party" and in the American colonies developed an alternative vision of empire that would be "Protestant, commercial, maritime and free".[24] Walpole did not ensure the promised "liberty" to the colonies because he was intent on subordinating all colonial economic activity to the mercantilist advantages of the metropolis. Anti-imperial critiques emerged from Francis Hutcheson and David Hume, presaging the republicanism that swept the American colonies in the 1770s and led to the creation of a rival power.

Economic policy: Mercantilism edit

Historians led by Eli Heckscher have identified Mercantilism as the central economic policy for the empire before the shift to free trade in the 1840s.[25][26] Mercantilism is an economic theory practice, commonly used in Britain, France and other major European nations from the 16th to the 18th century that promoted governmental regulation of a nation's economy for the purpose of augmenting state power at the expense of rival national powers. It was the economic counterpart of political absolutism.[27][28] It involves a national economic policy aimed at accumulating monetary reserves through a positive balance of trade, especially of finished goods. Mercantilism dominated Western European economic policy and discourse from the 16th to late-18th centuries. Mercantilism was a cause of frequent European wars and also motivated colonial expansion.

High tariffs, especially on manufactured goods, are an almost universal feature of mercantilist policy. Other policies have included:[29]

  • Building overseas colonies;
  • Forbidding colonies to trade with other nations;
  • Monopolizing markets with staple ports;
  • Banning the export of gold and silver, even for payments;
  • Forbidding trade to be carried in foreign ships;
  • Export subsidies;
  • Promoting manufacturing with research or direct subsidies;
  • Limiting wages;
  • Maximizing the use of domestic resources;
  • Restricting domestic consumption with non-tariff barriers to trade.

The term "mercantile system" was used by its foremost critic Adam Smith.[30]

Mercantilism in its simplest form was bullionism which focused on accumulating gold and silver through clever trades (leaver the trading partner with less of his gold and silver). Mercantilist writers emphasized the circulation of money and rejected hoarding. Their emphasis on monetary metals accords with current ideas regarding the money supply, such as the stimulative effect of a growing money supply. In England, mercantilism reached its peak during the Long Parliament government (1640–1660). Mercantilist policies were also embraced throughout much of the Tudor and Stuart periods, with Robert Walpole being another major proponent. In Britain, government control over the domestic economy was far less extensive than on the Continent, limited by common law and the steadily increasing power of Parliament.[31] Government-controlled monopolies were common, especially before the English Civil War, but were often controversial.[32]

 
The Anglo-Dutch Wars were fought between the English and the Dutch for control over the seas and trade routes.

With respect to its colonies, British mercantilism meant that the government and the merchants became partners with the goal of increasing political power and private wealth, to the exclusion of other empires. The government protected its merchants – and kept others out – by trade barriers, regulations, and subsidies to domestic industries in order to maximize exports from and minimize imports to the realm. The government used the Royal Navy to protect the colonies and to fight smuggling – which became a favourite American technique in the 18th century to circumvent the restrictions on trading with the French, Spanish or Dutch.[33] The goal of mercantilism was to run trade surpluses, so that gold and silver would pour into London. The government took its share through duties and taxes, with the remainder going to merchants in Britain. The colonies were captive markets for British industry, and the goal was to enrich the mother country (not the colonists).[34]

 
Mercantilism helped create trade patterns such as the triangular trade in the North Atlantic, in which raw materials were imported to the metropolis and then processed and redistributed to other colonies.

British mercantilist writers were themselves divided on whether domestic controls were necessary. British mercantilism thus mainly took the form of efforts to control trade. Much of the enforcement against smuggling was handled by the Royal Navy, argued Neil Stout.[35] A wide array of regulations was put in place to encourage exports and discourage imports. Tariffs were placed on imports and bounties given for exports, and the export of some raw materials was banned completely. The Navigation Acts expelled foreign merchants from England's domestic trade. The nation aggressively sought colonies and once under British control, regulations were imposed that allowed the colony to only produce raw materials and to only trade with Britain. This led to smuggling by major merchants and political friction with the businessmen of these colonies. Mercantilist policies (such as forbidding trade with other empires and controls over smuggling) were a major irritant leading to the American Revolution.[36]

Mercantilism taught that trade was a zero-sum game with one country's gain equivalent to a loss sustained by the trading partner. Whatever the theoretical weaknesses exposed by economists after Adam Smith, it was under mercantilist policies before the 1840s that Britain became the world's dominant trader, and the global hegemon.[37] Mercantilism in Britain ended when Parliament repealed the Navigation Acts and Corn Laws by 1846.[38]

Scholars agree that Britain gradually dropped mercantilism after 1815. Free trade, with no tariffs and few restrictions, was the prevailing doctrine from the 1840s to the 1930s.[39]

Defending empire and "pseudo-empire" edit

John Darwin has explored the way historians have explained the large role of the Royal Navy and the much smaller role of the British Army in the history of the empire. For the 20th century, he explores what he calls a "pseudo-empire," oil producers in the Middle East. The strategic goal of protecting the Suez Canal was a high priority from the 1880s to 1956 and, by then, had expanded to the oil regions. Darwin argues that defence strategy posed issues of how to reconcile the needs of domestic politics with the preservation of a global Empire.[40] Darwin argues that a main function of the British defence system, especially the Royal Navy, was defence of the overseas empire (in addition of course to defence of the homeland).[41] The army, usually in co-operation with local forces, suppressed internal revolts, losing only the American War of Independence (1775–83).[42] Armitage considers the following to be the British creed:

Protestantism, oceanic commerce and mastery of the seas provided bastions to protect the freedom of inhabitants of the British Empire. That freedom found its institutional expression in Parliament, the law, property, and rights, all of which were exported throughout the British Atlantic world. Such freedom also allowed the British, uniquely, to combine the classically incompatible ideals of liberty and empire.[43]

Lizzie Collingham (2017) stresses the role of expanding the food supply in the building, financing and defending the trade aspect of empire-building.[44]

Thirteen American Colonies and Revolution edit

The first British Empire centered on the 13 American Colonies, which attracted large numbers of settlers from across Britain. In the 1900s - 1930s period the "Imperial School," including Herbert L. Osgood, George Louis Beer,[45] Charles M. Andrews and Lawrence Gipson[46] took a favourable view of the benefits of empire, emphasizing its successful economic integration.[47]

Regarding Columbia University historian Herbert L. Osgood (1855–1918), biographer Gwenda Morgan concludes:

Osgood brought a new sophistication to the study of colonial relations posing the question from an institutional perspective, of how the Atlantic was bridged. He was the first American historian to recognize the complexity of imperial structures, the experimental character of the empire, and the contradictions between theory and practice that gave rise, on both sides of the Atlantic, to inconsistencies and misunderstandings ... It was American factors rather than imperial influences that in his view shaped the development of the colonies. Osgood's work still has value for professional historians interested in the nature of the colonies' place in the early British Empire, and their internal political development.[48]

Much of the historiography concerns the reasons the Americans revolted in the 1770s and successfully broke away.[49] The "Patriots", an insulting term used by the British that was proudly adopted by the Americans, stressed the constitutional rights of Englishmen, especially "No taxation without representation." Historians since the 1960s have emphasized that the Patriot constitutional argument was made possible by the emergence of a sense of American nationalism that united all 13 colonies. In turn, that nationalism was Rooted in a Republican value system that demanded consent of the governed and opposed aristocratic control.[50] In Britain itself, republicanism was a fringe view since it challenged the aristocratic control of the British political system. There were (almost) no aristocrats or nobles in the 13 colonies, and instead, the colonial political system was based on the winners of free elections, which were open to the majority of white men. In the analysis of the coming of the Revolution, historians in recent decades have mostly used one of three approaches.[51]

The Atlantic history view places the American story in a broader context, including revolutions in France and Haiti. It tends to reintegrate the historiographies of the American Revolution and the British Empire.[52][53][54]

The "new social history" approach looks at community social structure to find cleavages that were magnified into colonial cleavages.

The ideological approach that centres on republicanism in the United States.[55] Republicanism dictated there would be no royalty, aristocracy or national church but allowed for continuation of the British common law, which American lawyers and jurists understood and approved and used in their everyday practice. Historians have examined how the rising American legal profession adapted British common law to incorporate republicanism by selective revision of legal customs and by introducing more choice for courts.[56][57]

First British Empire and Second British Empire edit

The concept of a first and second British Empire was developed by historians in the early 20th century,[58][59] Timothy H. Parsons argued in 2014, "there were several British empires that ended at different times and for different reasons".[60] He focused on the Second.

Ashley Jackson argued in 2013 that historians have even extended to a third and fourth empire:

The first British Empire was largely destroyed by the loss of the American colonies, followed by a 'swing to the east' and the foundation of a second British Empire based on commercial and territorial expansion in South Asia. The third British Empire was the construction of a 'white' dominion power bloc in the international system based on Britain's relations with its settler offshoots Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and South Africa ... The fourth British Empire, meanwhile, is used to denote Britain's rejuvenated imperial focus on Africa and South-East Asia following the Second World War and the independence in 1947–48 of Britain's South Asian dependencies, when the Empire became a vital crutch in Britain's economic recovery.[61]

The first Empire was founded in the 17th century, and based on the migration of large numbers of settlers to the American colonies, as well as the development of the sugar plantation colonies in the West Indies. It ended with the British loss of the American War for Independence. The second Empire had already started to emerge. It was originally designed as a chain of trading ports and naval bases. However, it expanded inland into the control of large numbers of natives when the East India Company proved highly successful in taking control of most of India. India became the keystone of the Second Empire, along with colonies later developed across Africa. A few new settler colonies were also built up in Australia and New Zealand, and to a lesser extent in South Africa. Marshall in 1999 shows the consensus of scholars is clear, for since 1900 the concepts of the First British Empire have "held their ground in historians' usage without serious challenge."[62] In 1988 Peter Marshall says that late-18th-century transformations:

constituted a fundamental reordering of the Empire which make it appropriate to talk about a first British Empire giving way to a second one ... Historians have long identified certain developments in the late eighteenth century that undermined the fundamentals of the old Empire and were to bring about a new one. These were the American Revolution and the industrial revolution.[63]

Historians, however, debate whether 1783 was a sharp line of demarcation between First and Second, or whether there was an overlap (as argued by Vincent T. Harlow[64]) or whether there was a "black hole between 1783 and the later birth of the Second Empire. Historian Denis Judd says the "black hole" is a fallacy and that there was continuity. Judd writes: It is commonplace to suppose that the successful revolt of the American colonies marked the end of the 'First British Empire'. But this is only a half-truth. In 1783 there was still a substantial Empire left."[65][66] Marshall notes that the exact dating of the two empires varies, with 1783 a typical demarcation point.[67] Thus the story of the American revolt provides a key: The Fall of the First British Empire: Origins of the Wars of American Independence (1982) by American professors Robert W. Tucker and David Hendrickson, stresses the victorious initiative of the Americans. By contrast Cambridge professor Brendan Simms explores Three Victories and a Defeat: The Rise and Fall of the First British Empire, 1714–1783 (2007) and explains Britain's defeat in terms of alienating the major powers on the Continent.

Theories of imperialism edit

Theories about imperialism typically focus on the Second British Empire,[68] with side glances elsewhere. The term "Imperialism" was originally introduced into English in its present sense in the 1870s by Liberal leader William Gladstone to ridicule the imperial policies of Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli, which he denounced as aggressive and ostentatious and inspired by domestic motives.[69] The term was shortly appropriated by supporters of "imperialism" such as Joseph Chamberlain. For some, imperialism designated a policy of idealism and philanthropy; others alleged that it was characterized by political self-interest, and a growing number associated it with capitalist greed.[70]

John A. Hobson, a leading English Liberal, developed a highly influential economic exploitation model in Imperialism: A Study (1902) that expanded on his belief that free enterprise capitalism had a negative impact on the majority of the population. In Imperialism he argued that the financing of overseas empires drained money that was needed at home. It was invested abroad because lower wages paid the workers overseas made for higher profits and higher rates of return, compared to domestic wages. So although domestic wages remained higher, they did not grow nearly as fast as they might have otherwise. Exporting capital, he concluded, put a lid on the growth of domestic wages in the domestic standard of living. . By the 1970s, historians such as David K. Fieldhouse[71] and Oren Hale could argue that the, "Hobsonian foundation has been almost completely demolished."[72] The British experience failed to support it. However, European Socialists picked up Hobson's ideas and made it into their own theory of imperialism, most notably in Lenin's Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism (1916). Lenin portrayed Imperialism as the closure of the world market and the end of capitalist free-competition that arose from the need for capitalist economies to constantly expand investment, material resources and manpower in such a way that necessitated colonial expansion. Later Marxist theoreticians echo this conception of imperialism as a structural feature of capitalism, which explained the World War as the battle between imperialists for control of external markets. Lenin's treatise became a standard textbook that flourished until the collapse of communism in 1989–91.[73]

As the application of the term "imperialism" has expanded, its meaning has shifted along five axes: the moral, the economic, the systemic, the cultural, and the temporal. Those changes reflect a growing unease, even squeamishness, with the fact of power, specifically, Western power.[74][75]

The relationships among capitalism, imperialism, exploitation, social reform and economic development has long been debated among historians and political theorists. Much of the debate was pioneered by such theorists as John A. Hobson (1858–1940), Joseph Schumpeter (1883–1950), Thorstein Veblen (1857–1929), and Norman Angell (1872–1967). While these non-Marxist writers were at their most prolific before World War I, they remained active in the interwar years. Their combined work informed the study of imperialism's impact on Europe, as well as contributed to reflections on the rise of the military-political complex in the United States from the 1950s. Hobson argued that domestic social reforms could cure the international disease of imperialism by removing its economic foundation. Hobson theorized that state intervention through taxation could boost broader consumption, create wealth, and encourage a peaceful multilateral world order. Conversely, should the state not intervene, rentiers (people who earn income from property or securities) would generate socially negative wealth that fostered imperialism and protectionism.[76][77]

Hobson for years was widely influential in liberal circles, especially the British Liberal Party.[78] Lenin's writings became orthodoxy for all Marxist historians.[79] They had many critics. D. K. Fieldhouse, for example, argues that they used superficial arguments. Fieldhouse says that the "obvious driving force of British expansion since 1870" came from explorers, missionaries, engineers, and empire-minded politicians. They had little interest in financial investments. Hobson's answer was to say that faceless financiers manipulated everyone else, so that "The final determination rests with the financial power."[80] Lenin believed that capitalism was in its last stages and had been taken over by monopolists. They were no longer dynamic and sought to maintain profits by even more intensive exploitation of protected markets. Fieldhouse rejects these arguments as unfounded speculation.[75][81]

Imperialism of Free Trade edit

Historians agree that in the 1840s, Britain adopted a free-trade policy, meaning open markets and no tariffs throughout the empire.[82] The debate among historians involves what the implications of free trade actually were. "The Imperialism of Free Trade" is a highly influential 1952 article by John Gallagher and Ronald Robinson.[83][84] They argued that the New Imperialism of the 1880s", especially the Scramble for Africa, was a continuation of a long-term policy in which informal empire, based on the principles of free trade, was favoured over formal imperial control. The article helped launch the Cambridge School of historiography. Gallagher and Robinson used the British experience to construct a framework for understanding European imperialism that swept away the all-or-nothing thinking of previous historians.[85] They found that European leaders rejected the notion that "imperialism" had to be based upon formal, legal control by one government over a colonial region. Much more important was informal influence in independent areas. According to Wm. Roger Louis, "In their view, historians have been mesmerized by formal empire and maps of the world with regions colored red. The bulk of British emigration, trade, and capital went to areas outside the formal British Empire. Key to their thinking is the idea of empire 'informally if possible and formally if necessary.'"[86] Oron Hale says that Gallagher and Robinson looked at the British involvement in Africa where they, "found few capitalists, less capital, and not much pressure from the alleged traditional promoters of colonial expansion. Cabinet decisions to annex or not to annex were made, usually on the basis of political or geopolitical considerations."[87]

Reviewing the debate from the end of the 20th century, historian Martin Lynn argues that Gallagher and Robinson exaggerated the impact. He says that Britain achieved its goal of increasing its economic interests in many areas, "but the broader goal of 'regenerating' societies and thereby creating regions tied as 'tributaries' to British economic interests was not attained." The reasons were:

the aim to reshape the world through free trade and its extension overseas owed more to the misplaced optimism of British policy-makers and their partial views of the world than to an understanding of the realities of the mid-19th century globe ... the volumes of trade and investment...the British were able to generate remained limited ... Local economies and local regimes proved adept at restricting the reach of British trade and investment. Local impediments to foreign inroads, the inhabitants' low purchasing power, the resilience of local manufacturing, and the capabilities of local entrepreneurs meant that these areas effectively resisted British economic penetration.[88]

The idea that free-trade imperial states use informal controls to secure their expanding economic influence has attracted Marxists trying to avoid the problems of earlier Marxist interpretations of capitalism. The approach is most often applied to American policies.[89]

Free trade versus tariffs edit

Historians have begun to explore some of the ramifications of British free-trade policy, especially the effect of American and German high tariff policies. Canada adopted a "national policy" of high tariffs in the late 19th century, in sharp distinction to the mother country. The goal was to protect its infant manufacturing industries from low-cost imports from the United States and Britain.[90][91] The demand increasingly rose in Great Britain to end the free trade policy and impose tariffs to protect its manufacturing from American and German competition.[92] The leading spokesman was Joseph Chamberlain (1836-1914) and he made "tariff reform" (that is, imposing higher tariffs) a central issue in British domestic politics.[93] By the 1930s the British began shifting their policies away from free trade and toward low tariffs inside the British Commonwealth, and higher tariffs for outside products. Economic historians have debated at length the impact of these tariff changes on economic growth. One controversial formulation by Bairoch argues that in the 1870–1914 era: "protectionism = economic growth and expansion of trade; liberalism = stagnation in both".[94] Many studies have supported Bairoch but other economists have challenged his results regarding Canada.[95]

Gentlemanly capitalism edit

Gentlemanly capitalism is a theory of New Imperialism first put forward by P. J. Cain and A. G. Hopkins in the 1980s before being fully developed in their 1993 work, British Imperialism.[96] The theory posits that British imperialism was driven by the business interests of the City of London and landed interests. It encourages a shift of emphasis away from seeing provincial manufacturers and geopolitical strategy as important influences, and towards seeing the expansion of empire as emanating from London and the financial sector.[97][98]

Benevolence, human rights and slavery edit

Kevin Grant shows that numerous historians in the 21st century have explored relationships between the Empire, international government and human rights. They have focused on British conceptions of imperial world order from the late 19th century to the Cold War.[99] The British intellectuals and political leaders felt that they had a duty to protect and promote the human rights of the natives and to help pull them from the slough of traditionalism and cruelties (such as suttee in India and foot binding in China). The notion of "benevolence" was developed in the 1780–1840 era by idealists whose moralistic prescriptions annoyed efficiency-oriented colonial administrators and profit-oriented merchants.[100] Partly it was a matter of fighting corruption in the Empire, as typified by Edmund Burke's long, but failed, attempt to impeach Warren Hastings for his cruelties in India. The most successful development came in the abolition of slavery led by William Wilberforce and the Evangelicals,[101] and the expansion of Christian missionary work.[102] Edward Gibbon Wakefield (1796–1852) spearheaded efforts to create model colonies (such as South Australia, Canada and New Zealand). The 1840 Treaty of Waitangi, initially designed to protect Maori rights, has become the bedrock of Aotearoa–New Zealand biculturalism.[103] In Wakefield's vision, the object of benevolence was to introduce and promote values of industriousness and a productive economy, not to use colonies as a dumping ground for transported criminals.[104]

Promotion and abolition of slavery edit

English historian Jeremy Black argues that:

Slavery and the slave trade are the most difficult and contentious aspect of the imperial legacy, one that captures the full viciousness of power, economic, political, and military, and that leaves a clear and understandable hostility to empire in the Atlantic world, Moreover, within Britain, slavery and the slave trade became and become, ready ways to stigmatize empire, and increasingly so, notably as Britain becomes a multiracial society.[105]

One of the most controversial aspects of the Empire is its role in first promoting and then ending slavery.[106] In the 18th century, British merchant ships were the largest element in the "Middle Passage", which transported millions of slaves to the Western Hemisphere. Most of those who survived the journey wound up in the Caribbean, where the Empire had highly profitable sugar colonies, and the living conditions were bad (the plantation owners lived in Britain). Parliament ended the international transportation of slaves in 1807 and used the Royal Navy to enforce that ban. In 1833, it bought out the plantation owners and banned slavery. Historians before the 1940s argued that moralistic reformers such as William Wilberforce were primarily responsible.[107]

Historical revisionism arrived when West Indian historian Eric Williams, a Marxist, in Capitalism and Slavery (1944), rejected this moral explanation and argued that abolition was now more profitable, as a century of sugar cane raising had exhausted the soil of the islands, and the plantations had become unprofitable. It was more profitable to sell the slaves to the government than to keep up operations. The 1807 prohibition of the international trade, Williams argued, prevented French expansion on other islands. Meanwhile, British investors turned to Asia, where labor was so plentiful that slavery was unnecessary. Williams went on to argue that slavery played a major role in making Britain prosperous. The high profits from the slave trade, he said, helped finance the Industrial Revolution. Britain enjoyed prosperity because of the capital gained from the unpaid work of slaves.[108]

Since the 1970s, numerous historians have challenged Williams from various angles, and Gad Heuman has concluded, "More recent research has rejected this conclusion; it is now clear that the colonies of the British Caribbean profited considerably during the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars."[109][110] In his major attack on the Williams's thesis, Seymour Drescher argues that Britain's abolition of the slave trade in 1807 resulted not from the diminishing value of slavery for Britain but instead from the moral outrage of the British voting public.[111] Critics have also argued that slavery remained profitable in the 1830s because of innovations in agriculture so the profit motive was not central to abolition.[112] Richardson (1998) finds that Williams's claims regarding the Industrial Revolution are exaggerated, as profits from the slave trade amounted to less than 1% of domestic investment in Britain. Richardson further challenges claims (by African scholars) that the slave trade caused widespread depopulation and economic distress in Africa but that it caused the "underdevelopment" of Africa. Admitting the horrible suffering of slaves, he notes that many Africans benefited directly because the first stage of the trade was always firmly in the hands of Africans. European slave ships waited at ports to purchase cargoes of people who were captured in the hinterland by African dealers and tribal leaders. Richardson finds that the "terms of trade" (how much the ship owners paid for the slave cargo) moved heavily in favour of the Africans after about 1750. That is, indigenous elites inside West and Central Africa made large and growing profits from slavery, thus increasing their wealth and power.[113]

Economic historian Stanley Engerman finds that even without subtracting the associated costs of the slave trade (shipping costs, slave mortality, mortality of British people in Africa, defence costs) or reinvestment of profits back into the slave trade, the total profits from the slave trade and of West Indian plantations amounted to less than 5% of the British economy during any year of the Industrial Revolution.[114] Engerman's 5% figure gives as much as possible in terms of benefit of the doubt to the Williams argument, not solely because it does not take into account the associated costs of the slave trade to Britain, but also because it carries the full-employment assumption from economics and holds the gross value of slave trade profits as a direct contribution to Britain's national income.[115] Historian Richard Pares, in an article written before Williams's book, dismisses the influence of wealth generated from the West Indian plantations upon the financing of the Industrial Revolution, stating that whatever substantial flow of investment from West Indian profits into industry there was occurred after emancipation, not before it.[116]

Whiggish history and the civilising mission edit

 
University of Lucknow founded by the British in 1867 in India

Thomas Babington Macaulay (1800–1859) was the foremost historian of his day, arguing for the "Whig interpretation of history" that saw the history of Britain as an upward progression always leading to more liberty and more progress. Macaulay simultaneously was a leading reformer involved in transforming the educational system of India. He would base it on the English language so that India could join the mother country in a steady upward progress. Macaulay took Burke's emphasis on moral rule and implemented it in actual school reforms, giving the British Empire a profound moral mission to civilize the natives.

 
Paul Bogle, a Baptist deacon, was hanged for leading the Morant Bay rebellion in Jamaica, 1865

Yale professor Karuna Mantena has argued that the civilizing mission did not last long, for she says that benevolent reformers were the losers in key debates, such as those following the 1857 rebellion in India, and the scandal of Governor Edward Eyre's brutal repression of the Morant Bay rebellion in Jamaica in 1865. The rhetoric continued but it became an alibi for British misrule and racism. No longer was it believed that the natives could truly make progress, instead they had to be ruled by heavy hand, with democratic opportunities postponed indefinitely. As a result:

The central tenets of liberal imperialism were challenged as various forms of rebellion, resistance and instability in the colonies precipitated a broad-ranging reassessment ... the equation of 'good government' with the reform of native society, which was at the core of the discourse of liberal empire, would be subject to mounting skepticism."[117]

English historian Peter Cain, has challenged Mantena, arguing that the imperialists truly believed that British rule would bring to the subjects the benefits of ‘ordered liberty’. thereby Britain could fulfill its moral duty and achieve its own greatness. Much of the debate took place in Britain itself, and the imperialists worked hard to convince the general population that the civilising mission was well underway. This campaign served to strengthen imperial support at home, and thus, says Cain, to bolster the moral authority of the gentlemanly elites who ran the Empire.[118]

Public health edit

Mark Harrison argues that the history of public health administration in India dates from the assumption of Crown rule in 1859. Medical experts found that epidemic disease had seriously depleted the fighting capacity of British troops in repressing the rebellion in 1857 and insisted that preventive measures were much more effective than waiting for the next epidemic to break out.[119] Across the Empire it became a high priority for Imperial officials to establish a public health system in each colony. They applied the best practices as developed in Britain, using an elaborate administrative structure in each colony. The system depended on trained local elites and officials to carry out the sanitation improvements, quarantines, inoculations, hospitals, and local treatment centers that were needed. For example, local midwives were trained to provide maternal and infant health care. Propaganda campaigns using posters, rallies, and later films were used to educate the general public.[120] A serious challenge came from the intensified use of multiple transportation routes and the emergence of central hubs such as Hong Kong all of which facilitated this spread of epidemics such as the plague in the 1890s, thus sharply increasing the priority of public health programs.[121] Michael Worboys argues that the 20th-century development and control of tropical diseases had three phases: protection of Europeans in the colonies, improvement in health care of employable natives, and finally the systematic attack on the main diseases of the natives. BELRA, a large-scale program against leprosy, had policies of isolation in newly established leper colonies, separation of healthy children from infected parents, and the development in Britain of chaulmoogra oil therapy and its systematic dissemination.[122][123]

Danald McDonald has argued the most advanced program in public health (apart from the dominions) was established in India, with the Indian Medical Service (IMS).[124] The Raj set up the Calcutta School of Tropical Medicine between 1910 and its opening in 1921 as a postgraduate center for tropical medicine on the periphery of the Empire.[125][126]

Religion: The missionaries edit

In the 18th century, and even more so in the 19th century, missionaries based in Britain saw the Empire as a fertile field for proselytizing Christianity. Congregations across Britain received regular reports and contributed money.[127] All the main denominations were involved, including the Church of England, the Presbyterians of Scotland, and the Nonconformists. Much of the enthusiasm emerged from the Evangelical revival.[128][129][130] The two largest and most influential operations were the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts (SPG) founded in 1701,[131] and the more evangelical Church Mission Society, founded in 1799, also by the Church of England.[132]

Before the American Revolution, Anglican and Methodist missionaries were active in the 13 Colonies. The Methodists, led by George Whitefield, were the most successful according to Mark Noll. After the revolution an entirely distinct American Methodist denomination emerged that became the largest Protestant denomination in the new United States.[133] As historians such as Carl Bridenbaugh have argued, a major problem for colonial officials was the demand of the Church of England to set up an American bishop; this was strongly opposed by most of the Americans.[134] Increasingly colonial officials took a neutral position on religious matters, even in those colonies such as Virginia where the Church of England was officially established, but in practice controlled by laymen in the local vestries. After the Americans broke free, British officials decided to enhance the power and wealth of the Church of England in all the settler colonies, especially British North America (Canada).[135]

Missionary societies funded their own operations that were not supervised or directed by the Colonial Office. Tensions emerged between the missionaries and the colonial officials. The latter feared that missionaries might stir up trouble or encourage the natives to challenge colonial authority. In general, colonial officials were much more comfortable with working with the established local leadership, including the native religions, rather than introducing the divisive force of Christianity. This proved especially troublesome in India, where very few local elites were attracted to Christianity. In Africa, especially, the missionaries made many converts. By the 21st century, there were more Anglicans in Nigeria than in England.[136][137]

Christianity had a powerful effect far beyond the small circle of converts—it provided a model of modernity. The introduction of European medicine was especially important, as well as the introduction of European political practices and ideals such as religious liberty, mass education, mass printing, newspapers, voluntary organizations, colonial reforms, and especially liberal democracy.[138] Increasingly the missionaries realized their wider scope and systematically added secular roles to their spiritual mission. They tried to upgrade education, medical care, and sponsored the long-term modernization of the native personality to inculcate European middle-class values. Alongside their churches they established schools and medical clinics, and sometimes demonstrated improved farming techniques.[139] Christian missionaries played a public role, especially in promoting sanitation and public health. Many were trained as physicians, or took special courses in public health and tropical medicine at Livingstone College, London.[140]

Furthermore, Christian missionary activities were studied and copied by local activists and had an influence upon religious politics, on prophetic movements such as those in Xhosa societies, on emerging nationalism in South African and India, the emergence of African independent churches, and sometimes upgrading the status of native women.[141]

Historians have begun to analyze the agency of women in overseas missions. At first, missionary societies officially enrolled only men, but women increasingly insisted on playing a variety of roles. Single women typically worked as educators. Wives assisted their missionary husbands in most of his roles. Advocates stopped short of calling for the end of specified gender roles, but they stressed the interconnectedness of the public and private spheres and spoke out against perceptions of women as weak and house-bound.[142]

Education edit

In the colonies that became dominions, education was left primarily in the hands of local officials. The Imperial government took a strong hand in India, and most of the later colonies. The goal was to speed up modernization and social development through a widespread system of elementary education for all natives, plus high school and eventually university education for selected elites. The students were encouraged to attend university in Britain.[143][144]

Direct control and bureaucracy edit

Much of the older historiography, as represented by The Cambridge History of the British Empire, covers the detailed month-to-month operations of the Imperial bureaucracy. More recent scholarship has examined who the bureaucrats and governors were, as well as the role of the colonial experience on their own lives and families. The cultural approach asks how bureaucrats represented themselves and enticed the natives to accept their rule.[145]

Wives of senior bureaucrats played an increasingly important role in dealing with the local people, and in sponsoring and promoting charities and civic good will. When they returned to Britain they had an influential voice in shaping upper-class opinion toward colonization. Historian Robert Pearce points out that many colonial wives had a negative reputation, but he depicts Violet Bourdillon (1886–1979) as "the perfect Governor's wife." She charmed both British businessmen and the locals in Nigeria, giving the colonial peoples graciousness and respect; she made the British appear to be not so much rulers, as guides and partners in social, economic and political development.[146]

Indirect control edit

Some British colonies were ruled directly by the Colonial Office in London, while others were ruled indirectly through local rulers who are supervised behind the scenes by British advisors, with different economic results as shown by Lakshmi Iyer (2010).

In much of the Empire, large local populations were ruled in close cooperation with the local hierarchy. Historians have developed categories of control, such as "subsidiary alliances", "paramountcy", "protectorates", "indirect rule", "clientelism", or "collaboration". Local elites were co-opted into leadership positions, and often had the role of minimizing opposition from local independence movements.[147]

Fisher has explored the origins and development of the system of indirect rule. The British East India Company starting in the mid-18th century stationed its staff as agents in Indian states which it did not control, especially the Princely States. By the 1840s The system became an efficient way to govern indirectly, by providing local rulers with highly detailed advice that had been approved by central authorities. After 1870, military more and more often took the role; they were recruited and promoted officers on the basis of experience and expertise. The indirect rule system was extended to Many of the colonial holdings in Asia and Africa.[148]

Economic historians have explored the economic consequences of indirect rule, as in India[149] and West Africa.[150]

In 1890, Zanzibar became a protectorate (not a colony) of Britain. Prime minister Salisbury explained his position:

The condition of a protected dependency is more acceptable to the half civilised races, and more suitable for them than direct dominion. It is cheaper, simpler, less wounding to their self-esteem, gives them more career as public officials, and spares of unnecessary contact with white men.[151]

Colonel Sir Robert Groves Sandeman (1835–1892) introduced an innovative system of tribal pacification in Balochistan that was in effect from 1877 to 1947. He gave financial allowances to tribal chiefs who enforced control, and used British military force only when necessary. However the Government of India generally opposed his methods and refused to allow it to operate in India's North West Frontier. Historians have long debated its scope and effectiveness in the peaceful spread of Imperial influence.[152]

Environment edit

Although environmental history was growing rapidly after 1970, it only reached empire studies in the 1990s.[153][154][155] Gregory Barton argues that the concept of environmentalism emerged from forestry studies, and emphasizes the British imperial role in that research. He argues that imperial forestry movement in India around 1900 included government reservations, new methods of fire protection, and attention to revenue-producing forest management. The result eased the fight between romantic preservationists and laissez-faire businessmen, thus giving the compromise from which modern environmentalism emerged.[156]

In recent years numerous scholars cited by James Beattie have examined the environmental impact of the Empire.[157] Beinart and Hughes argue that the discovery and commercial or scientific use of new plants was an important concern in the 18th and 19th centuries. The efficient use of rivers through dams and irrigation projects was an expensive but important method of raising agricultural productivity. Searching for more efficient ways of using natural resources, the British moved flora, fauna and commodities around the world, sometimes resulting in ecological disruption and radical environmental change. Imperialism also stimulated more modern attitudes toward nature and subsidized botany and agricultural research.[158] Scholars have used the British Empire to examine the utility of the new concept of eco-cultural networks as a lens for examining interconnected, wide-ranging social and environmental processes.[159]

Regions edit

Between 1696 and 1782, the Board of Trade, in partnership with the various secretaries of state over that time,[a] held responsibility for colonial affairs, particularly in British America.

From 1783 through 1801, the British Empire, including British North America, was administered by the Home Office and by the Home Secretary, then from 1801 to 1854 by the War Office (which became the War and Colonial Office) and Secretary of State for War and Colonies (as the Secretary of State for War was renamed). From 1824, the British Empire was divided by the War and Colonial Office into four administrative departments, including NORTH AMERICA, the WEST INDIES, MEDITERRANEAN AND AFRICA, and EASTERN COLONIES, of which North America included:[160]

NORTH AMERICA

The Colonial Office and War Office, and the Secretary of State for the Colonies and the Secretary of State for War, were separated in 1854.[161][162] The War Office, from then until the 1867 confederation of the Dominion of Canada, split the military administration of the British colonial and foreign stations into nine districts: North America And North Atlantic; West Indies; Mediterranean; West Coast Of Africa And South Atlantic; South Africa; Egypt And The Sudan; INDIAN OCEAN; Australia; and China. North America And North Atlantic included the following stations (or garrisons):[163]

NORTH AMERICA AND NORTH ATLANTIC

  • New Westminster (British Columbia)
  • Newfoundland
  • Quebec
  • Halifax
  • Kingston, Canada West
  • Bermuda

India was administered separately by the East India Company until transferred by the Government of India Act 1858 to the India Office, which was closed in 1947 on Indian independence. As British protectorates were not British territory, they were also administered separately by the Foreign Office.

Surveys of the whole empire edit

In 1914, the six volume The Oxford Survey Of The British Empire gave comprehensive coverage to geography and society of the entire Empire, including the British Isles.[164]

Since the 1950s, historians have tended to concentrate on specific countries or regions.[165] By the 1930s, an Empire so vast was a challenge for historians to grasp in its entirety. The American Lawrence H. Gipson (1880–1971) won the Pulitzer Prize for his monumental coverage in 15 volumes of "The British Empire Before the American Revolution", published 1936–70.[46] At about the same time in London, Sir Keith Hancock wrote a Survey of Commonwealth Affairs (2 vol 1937–42) that dramatically widened the scope of coverage beyond politics to the newer fields of economic and social history.[166]

In recent decades numerous scholars have tried their hand at one volume surveys including T. O. Lloyd, The British Empire, 1558–1995 (1996); Denis Judd, Empire: The British Imperial Experience From 1765 To The Present (1998); Lawrence James, The Rise and Fall of the British Empire (1998); Niall Ferguson, Empire: The Rise and Demise of the British World Order and the Lessons for Global Power (2002); Brendan Simms, Three victories and a defeat: the rise and fall of the first British Empire (2008); Piers Brendon, The Decline and Fall of the British Empire, 1781–1997 (2008), and Phillip J. Smith, The Rise And Fall Of The British Empire: Mercantilism, Diplomacy and the Colonies (2015).[167] There were also large-scale popular histories, such as those by Winston Churchill, A History of the English-Speaking Peoples (4 vol. 1956–58) and Arthur Bryant, The History of Britain and the British Peoples (3 vols. 1984–90). Obviously from their titles a number of writers have been inspired by the famous The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (6 vols 1776–1781) by Edward Gibbon.[168] Brendon notes that Gibbon's work, "became the essential guide for Britons anxious to plot their own imperial trajectory. They found the key to understanding the British Empire in the ruins of Rome."[169] W. David McIntyre, The commonwealth of nations: Origins and impact, 1869–1971 (University of Minnesota Press, 1977) provides comprehensive coverage giving London's perspective on political and constitutional relations with each possession.

Ireland edit

Ireland, in some ways the first acquisition the British Empire, has generated a very large popular and scholarly literature.[170] Marshall says historians continue to debate whether Ireland should be considered part of the British Empire.[171] Recent work by historians pays special attention to continuing Imperial aspects of Irish history,[172] postcolonial approaches,[173] Atlantic history,[174] and the role of migration in forming the Irish diaspora across the Empire and North America.[175][176][177]

Australia edit

Until the late 20th century, historians of Australia used an Imperial framework, arguing that Australia emerged from a transfer of people, institutions, and culture from Britain. It portrayed the first governors as "Lilliputian sovereigns". The historians have traced the arrival of limited self-government, with regional parliaments and responsible ministers, followed by Federation in 1901 and eventually full national autonomy. This was a Whiggish story of successful growth into a modern nation. That interpretation has been largely abandoned by recent scholars.[178] In his survey of the historiography of Australia, Stuart Macintyre shows how historians have emphasized the negative and tragic features between the boasts.[178] Macintyre points out that in current historical writing:

The process of settlement is now regarded as a violent invasion of a rich and subtle indigenous culture, the colonists' material practices as destructive of a fragile environment, their aesthetic response to it blinkered and prejudiced, the cultivation of some British forms timid and unresponsive.[179]

The first major history was William Charles Wentworth, Statistical, Historical, and Political Description of the Colony of New South Wales, and Its Dependent Settlements in Van Diemen's Land: With a Particular Enumeration of the Advantages Which These Colonies Offer for Emigration, and Their Superiority in Many Respects Over Those Possessed by the United States of America (1819).[180] Wentworth shows the disastrous effects of the penal regime. Many other historians followed his path, with the six volume History of Australia by Manning Clark (published 1962–87) telling the story of "epic tragedy":

in which the explorers, Governors, improvers, and perturbators vainly endeavored to impose their received schemes of redemption on an alien, intractable setting.[181]

History wars edit

Since the 1980s some even describe a "history war" taking place in Australia involving scholars and politicians.[182] Debate often concerns recorded history verses oral testimony - unproven in Courts of Law - regarding the treatment of Aboriginal populations.[183] They debate how "British" or "multicultural" Australia has been historically, and how it should be today.[184][185] The rhetoric has escalated into national politics, often tied to the question of whether the royalty should be discarded and Australia become a republic.[186] Some schools and universities have reduced the amount of Australian history in their curriculum.[187]

Debates on the founding edit

Historians have used the founding of Australia to mark the beginning of the Second British Empire.[188] It was planned by the government in London and designed as a replacement for the lost American colonies.[189] The American Loyalist James Matra in 1783 wrote "A Proposal for Establishing a Settlement in New South Wales" proposing the establishment of a colony composed of American Loyalists, Chinese and South Sea Islanders (but not convicts).[190] Matra reasoned that the land country was suitable for plantations of sugar, cotton and tobacco; New Zealand timber and hemp or flax could prove valuable commodities; it could form a base for Pacific trade; and it could be a suitable compensation for displaced American Loyalists. At the suggestion of Secretary of State Lord Sydney, Matra amended his proposal to include convicts as settlers, considering that this would benefit both "Economy to the Publick, & Humanity to the Individual". The government adopted the basics of Matra's plan in 1784, and funded the settlement of convicts.[191]

Michael Roe argues that the founding of Australia supports the theory of Vincent T. Harlow in The Founding of the Second British Empire, 17G3-1793, Vol. 2. New Continents and Changing Values (1964) that a goal of the second British empire was to open up new commerce in the Far East and Pacific. However, London emphasized Australia's purpose as a penal colony, and the East India Company was hostile to potential commercial rivals. Nevertheless, says Roe, the founders of Australia showed a keen interest in whaling, sealing, sheep raising, mining and other opportunities for trade. In the long run, he says, commerce was the main stimulus for colonization.[192]

Canada edit

Canadian historian Carl Berger argues that an influential section of English Canadians embraced an ideology of imperialism as a way to enhance Canada's own power position in the international system, as well as for more traditional reasons of Anglophillia. Berger identified Canadian imperialism as a distinct ideology, rival to anti-imperial Canadian nationalism or pro-American continentalism, the other nationalisms in Canada.[193]

For the French Canadians, the chief debate among historians involves the conquest and the incorporation into the British Empire in 1763.[194] One school says it was a disaster that retarded for a century and more the normal development of a middle class society, leaving Quebec locked into a traditionalism controlled by priests and landlords.[195] The other more optimistic school says it was generally advantageous in political and economic terms. For example, it enabled Quebec to avoid the French Revolution that tore France apart in the 1790s. Another example is that it integrated the economy into the larger and faster growing British economy, as opposed to the sluggish French economy. The optimistic school attributes the backwardness of the Quebec economy to deeply ingrained conservatism and aversion to entrepreneurship.[196][197]

India edit

In recent decades there have been four main schools of historiography in how historians study India: Cambridge, Nationalist, Marxist, and subaltern. The once common "Orientalist" approach, with its image of a sensuous, inscrutable, and wholly spiritual India, has died out in serious scholarship.[198]

The "Cambridge School", led by Anil Seal,[199] Gordon Johnson,[200] Richard Gordon, and David A. Washbrook,[201] downplays ideology.[202] However, this school of historiography is criticised for western bias or Eurocentrism.[203]

The Nationalist school has focused on Congress, Gandhi, Nehru and high level politics. It highlighted the Mutiny of 1857 as a war of liberation, and Gandhi's 'Quit India' begun in 1942, as defining historical events. This school of historiography has received criticism for Elitism.[204]

The Marxists have focused on studies of economic development, landownership, and class conflict in precolonial India and of deindustrialisation during the colonial period. The Marxists portrayed Gandhi's movement as a device of the bourgeois elite to harness popular, potentially revolutionary forces for its own ends. Again, the Marxists are accused of being "too much" ideologically influenced.[205]

The "subaltern school", was begun in the 1980s by Ranajit Guha and Gyan Prakash.[206] It focuses attention away from the elites and politicians to "history from below", looking at the peasants using folklore, poetry, riddles, proverbs, songs, oral history and methods inspired by anthropology. It focuses on the colonial era before 1947 and typically emphasises caste and downplays class, to the annoyance of the Marxist school.[207]

More recently, Hindu nationalists have created a version of history to support their demands for "Hindutva" ("Hinduness") in Indian society. This school of thought is still in the process of development.[208] In March 2012, Diana L. Eck in her India: A Sacred Geography (2013) argues that the idea of India dates to a much earlier time than the British or the Mughals and it was not just a cluster of regional identities and it wasn't ethnic or racial.[209][210][211][212]

Debate continues about the economic impact of British imperialism on India. The issue was actually raised by conservative British politician Edmund Burke who in the 1780s vehemently attacked the East India Company, claiming that Warren Hastings and other top officials had ruined the Indian economy and society. Indian historian Rajat Kanta Ray (1998) continues this line of attack, saying the new economy brought by the British in the 18th century was a form of "plunder" and a catastrophe for the traditional economy of Mughal India. Ray accuses the British of depleting the food and money stocks and imposing high taxes that helped cause the terrible famine of 1770, which killed a third of the people of Bengal.[213]

Rejecting the Indian nationalist account of the British as alien aggressors, seizing power by brute force and impoverishing all of India, British historian P. J. Marshall argues that the British were not in full control but instead were players in what was primarily an Indian play and in which their rise to power depended upon excellent cooperation with Indian elites. Marshall admits that much of his interpretation is still rejected by many historians.[214] Marshall argues that recent scholarship has reinterpreted the view that the prosperity of the formerly benign Mughal rule gave way to poverty and anarchy. Marshall argues the British takeover did not make any sharp break with the past. The British largely delegated control to regional Mughal rulers and sustained a generally prosperous economy for the rest of the 18th century. Marshall notes the British went into partnership with Indian bankers and raised revenue through local tax administrators and kept the old Mughal rates of taxation. Professor Ray agrees that the East India Company inherited an onerous taxation system that took one-third of the produce of Indian cultivators.[215]

In the 20th century historians generally agreed that imperial authority in the Raj had been secure in the 1800-1940 era. Various challenges have emerged. Mark Condos and Jon Wilson argue that the Raj was chronically insecure.[216][217] They argue that the irrational anxiety of officials led to a chaotic administration with minimal social purchase or ideological coherence. The Raj was not a confident state capable of acting as it chose, but rather a psychologically embattled one incapable of acting except in the abstract, the small scale, or short term.[218]

Tropical Africa edit

The first historical studies appeared in the 1890s, and followed one of four approaches. The territorial narrative was typically written by a veteran soldier or civil servant who gave heavy emphasis to what he had seen. The "apologia" were essays designed to justify British policies. Thirdly, popularizers tried to reach a large audience, and finally compendia appeared designed to combine academic and official credentials. Professional scholarship appeared around 1900, and began with the study of business operations, typically using government documents and unpublished archives. The economic approach was widely practiced in the 1930s, primarily to provide descriptions of the changes underway in the previous half-century. Reginald Coupland, an Oxford professor, studied the Exploitation of East Africa, 1856–1890: The Slave Trade and the Scramble (1939). The American historian William L. Langer wrote The Diplomacy of Imperialism: 1890–1902 (1935), a book is still widely cited. The Second World War diverted most scholars to wartime projects and accounted for a pause in scholarship during the 1940s.[219]

By the 1950s, many African students were studying in British universities, and they produced a demand for new scholarship, and started themselves to supply it as well. Oxford University became the main center for African studies, with activity as well at Cambridge, and the London School of Economics. The perspective from British government policy-makers or from international business operations, slowly gave way to a new interest in the activities of the natives, especially in a nationalistic movements and the growing demand for independence. The major breakthrough came from Ronald Robinson and John Gallagher, especially with their studies of the impact of free trade on Africa.[219][220]

South Africa edit

The historiography of South Africa has been one of the most contentious areas of the British Empire, involving a three-way division of sharply differing interpretations among the British, the Boers, and the black African historians.[221][222] The first British historians emphasized the benefits of British civilization.[223] Afrikaner historiography began in the 1870s with early laudatory accounts of the trekkers and undisguised anger at the British. After many years of conflict and warfare, the British took control of South Africa and historians began conciliatory effort to bring the two sides together in a shared history. An influential large-scale effort was made by George McCall Theal (1837-1919), who wrote many books as school teacher and as the official historian, such as History and Ethnography of Africa South of the Zambesi (11 vol, 1897–1919). In the 1920s, historians using missionary sources started presenting the Coloured and African viewpoints, as in W. M. Macmillan, Bantu, Boer and Briton: The Making of the South African Native Problem (London, 1929). Modern research standards were introduced by Eric A. Walker (1886–1976), who moved from a professorship at the University of Cape Town to become the Vere Harmsworth Professor of Imperial and Naval History at the University of Cambridge, where he trained a generation of graduate students.[224] Afrikaner historiography increasingly defended apartheid.[225]

Liberation historiography edit

The dominant approach in recent decades is to emphasize the roots of the liberation movement.[226] Baines argues that the "Soweto uprising" of 1976 inspired a new generation of social historians to start looking for evidence that would allow the writing of history "from below"; often they adopted a Marxist perspective.[227]

By the 1990s, historians were exploring comparative race relations in South Africa and the United States from the late 19th century to the late 20th century.[228] James Campbell argues that black American Methodist missionaries to South Africa adopted the same standards of promoting civilization as did the British.[229][230]

Nationalism and opposition to the Empire edit

Opposition to imperialism and demands for self-rule emerged across the empire; in all but one case the British authorities suppressed revolts. However, in the 1770s, under the leadership of Benjamin Franklin, George Washington and Thomas Jefferson, it came to an armed revolt in the 13 American colonies, the American Revolutionary War. With military and financial help from France and others, the 13 became the first British colonies to secure their independence in the name of American nationalism.[231][232]

There is a large literature on the Indian Rebellion of 1857, which saw a very large scale revolt in India, involving the mutiny of many native troops. It was suppressed by the British Army after much bloodshed.[233]

The Indians organised under Mahatma Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru and finally achieved independence in 1947. They wanted one India but the Muslims were organized by Muhammad Ali Jinnah and created their own nation, Pakistan, in a process that still is heatedly debated by scholars.[234] Independence came in the midst of religious communal violence, chiefly between Hindus and Muslims in border areas. Millions died and millions more were displaced as the conflicting memories and grievances still shape subcontinent tensions, as Jisha Menon argues.[235][236]

Historians of the empire have recently paid close attention to 20th-century native voices in many colonies who demanded independence.[237] The African colonies became independent mostly in a peaceful fashion. Kenya saw severe violence on both sides.[238] Typically the leaders of independence had studied in England in the 1920s and 1930s. For example, the radical nationalist Kwame Nkrumah in 1957 led Ghana to become Britain's second African colony to gain independence (Sudan being the first being granted its independence a year earlier in 1956) and others quickly followed.[239]

Ideas of anti-imperialism edit

At an intellectual level, anti-imperialism appealed strongly to Marxists and liberals across the world. Both groups were strongly influenced by British writer John A. Hobson in his Imperialism: A Study (1902). Historians Peter Duignan and Lewis H. Gann argue that Hobson had an enormous influence in the early 20th century that caused widespread distrust of imperialism:

Hobson's ideas were not entirely original; however his hatred of moneyed men and monopolies, his loathing of secret compacts and public bluster, fused all existing indictments of imperialism into one coherent system....His ideas influenced German nationalist opponents of the British Empire as well as French Anglophobes and Marxists; they colored the thoughts of American liberals and isolationist critics of colonialism. In days to come they were to contribute to American distrust of Western Europe and of the British Empire. Hobson helped make the British averse to the exercise of colonial rule; he provided indigenous nationalists in Asia and Africa with the ammunition to resist rule from Europe.[240]

World War II edit

British historians of the Second World War have not emphasized the critical role played by the Empire in terms of money, manpower and imports of food and raw materials.[241][242] The powerful combination meant that Britain did not stand alone against Germany, it stood at the head of a great but fading empire. As Ashley Jackson has argued," The story of the British Empire's war, therefore, is one of Imperial success in contributing toward Allied victory on the one hand, and egregious Imperial failure on the other, as Britain struggled to protect people and defeat them, and failed to win the loyalty of colonial subjects."[243] The contribution in terms of soldiers numbered 2.5 million men from India, over 1 million from Canada, just under 1 million from Australia, 410,000 from South Africa, and 215,000 from New Zealand. In addition, the colonies mobilized over 500,000 uniformed personnel who serve primarily inside Africa.[244] In terms of financing, the British war budget included £2.7 billion borrowed from the Empire's Sterling Area, And eventually paid back. Canada made C$3 billion in gifts and loans on easy terms.[245] In terms of actual engagement with the enemy, there was a great deal in South Asia and Southeast Asia, as recalled by Ashley Jackson:

Terror, mass migration, shortages, inflation, blackouts, air raids, massacres, famine, forced labour, urbanization, environmental damage, occupation [by the enemy], resistance, Collaboration – all of these dramatic and often horrific phenomena shaped the war experience of Britain's imperial subjects.[246][247]

Decline and decolonization edit

Historians continue to debate when the Empire reached its peak. At one end, the insecurities of the 1880s and 1890s are mentioned, especially the industrial rise of the United States and Germany. The Second Boer War in South Africa, 1899-1902 angered an influential element of Liberal thought in England, and deprived imperialism of much moral support. Most historians agree that by 1918, at the end of the First World War, permanent long-term decline was inevitable. The dominions largely had freed themselves and began their own foreign and military policies. Worldwide investments had been cashed in to pay for the war, and the British economy was in the doldrums after 1918. A new spirit of nationalism appeared in many of the colonies, most dramatically in India. Most historians agree that following the Second World War, Britain lost its superpower status, and it was financially near bankruptcy. With the Suez fiasco of 1956, the profound weaknesses were apparent to all and rapid decolonization was inevitable.[248]

The chronology and main features of decolonization of the British Empire have been studied at length. By far the greatest attention has been given to the situation in India in 1947, with far less attention to other colonies in Asia and Africa. Of course most of the scholarly attention focuses on newly independent nations no longer ruled by Britain.[249] From the Imperial perspective, historians are divided on two issues: with respect to India, could London have handled decolonization better in 1947, or was what happened largely fixed in the previous century? Historians also disagree regarding a degree of involvement in the domestic British society and economy. Did Britons much care about decolonization, and did it make much difference to them? Bailkin points out that one view is that the domestic dimension was of minor importance, and most Britons paid little attention.[250] She says that political historians often reach this conclusion.[251] John Darwin has studied the political debates.[252]

On the other hand, most social historians argue the contrary. They say the values and beliefs inside Britain about the overseas empire helped shape policy; the decolonization process proved psychologically wrenching to many people living in Britain, particularly migrants, and those with family experience with overseas civil service, business, or missionary activity. Bailkin says that decolonization was often taken personally, and had a major policy impact in terms of the policies of the British welfare state. She shows how some West Indian migrants were repatriated; idealists volunteered to help the new nations; a wave of overseas students came to British universities; and polygamous relationships were invalidated. Meanwhile, she says, the new welfare state was in part shaped by British colonial practices, especially regarding mental health and child care.[253] Social historian Bill Schwarz says that as decolonization moved forward in the 1950s there was an upsurge in racial whiteness and racial segregation – the colour bar – became more pronounced.[254]

Thomas Colley finds that informed Britons in the 21st century are in agreement that Britain has very often been at war over the centuries. They also agree that the nation has steadily lost its military prowess due to declines in its economy and disappearance of its empire.[255]

The new imperial history edit

The focus of attention of historians has shifted over time. Phillip Buckner reports that on a bygone era of graduate education in Britain when the Empire was

studied in a tradition that had been established in the late 19th century. By the 1960s the Empire was no longer seen as an unmitigated blessing for its subjects overseas and the emphasis of the newer studies was an attempt to reassess British policy-making from a more critical perspective. Nonetheless, mainstream imperial history still focused on policy-making at the imperial centre with considerable emphasis on relations between Britain and its colonies of settlement overseas and the emergence of modern Commonwealth.[256]

Ronald Hyam argues that the historiography of the British Empire reached a state of severe crisis:

The early 1980s marked the end of an era ... as imperial and Commonwealth history itself everywhere became fragmented, unfashionable, and increasingly embattled. The old conceptual unities as they had been worked out in the previous half-century now collapsed, particularly under the pressure of the inexorable advance of area studies."[257]

Hyam goes on to state that by the 21st century new themes had emerged including "post—colonial theory, globalisation, sex and gender issues, the cultural imperative, and the linguistic turn."[258]

The native leadership edit

The studies of policy-making in London and the settlement colonies like Canada and Australia are now rare. Newer concerns deal with the natives,[4] and give much more attention to native leaders such as Gandhi.[259] They address topics such as migration,[260] gender,[261] race,[262] sexuality,[263] environmentalism,[264] visualization,[265] and sports.[266] Thus there are entire chapters on economics, religion, colonial knowledge, agency, culture, and identity in the historiographical overview edited by Sarah E. Stockwell, The British Empire: Themes and Perspectives (2008).[267] The new approaches to imperial history are often grouped together under the heading of the "new imperial history".[268] These approaches have been distinguished by two features. Firstly, they have suggested that the British empire was a cultural project as well as a set of political and economic relationships. As a result, these historians have stressed the ways in which empire building shaped the cultures of both colonized peoples and Britons themselves.

Race and gender edit

In particular they have shown the ways in which British imperialism rested upon ideas about cultural difference and in turn how British colonialism reshaped understandings of race and gender in both the colonies and at home in Britain. Mrinalini Sinha's Colonial Masculinity (1995) showed how supposed British manliness and ideas about the effeminacy of some Indians influenced colonial policy and Indian nationalist thought.[269] Antoinette Burton has been a key figure and her Burdens of History (1995) showed how white British feminists in the Victorian period appropriated imperialist rhetoric to claim a role for themselves in 'saving' native women and thereby strengthened their own claims to equality in Britain.[270] Historians like Sinha, Burton, and Catherine Hall have used this approach to argue that British culture at 'home' was profoundly shaped by the empire during the 19th century.[271]

Linkages binding the Empire together edit

The second feature that defines the new imperial history is its examination of the links and flows that connected different parts of the empire together. At first scholars looked at the empire's impact on domestic Britain, particularly in terms of everyday experiences. More recently, attention has been paid to the material, emotional, and financial links among the different regions.[272] Both Burton and Sinha stress the ways in which the politics of gender and race linked Britain and India. Sinha suggested that these linkages were part of an "imperial social formation", an uneven but integrative set of arguments, ideas and institutions that connected Britain to its colonies.[273] More recent work by scholars such as Alan Lester and Tony Ballantyne have stressed the importance of the networks that made up the empire. Lester's Imperial Networks (2001) reconstructed some of the debates and policies that linked Britain and South Africa during the 19th century.[274] Ballantyne's Orientalism and Race developed an influential new model for writing about colonialism in highlighting the "webs of empire" that he suggested made up the empire. These webs were made up of the flows of ideas, books, arguments, money, and people that not only moved between London and Britain's colonies, but also moved directly from colony to colony, from places like India to New Zealand.[275] Many historians now focus on these "networks" and "webs" and Alison Games has used this as a model for studying the pattern of early English imperialism as well.[276]

The Oxford History of the British Empire edit

The major multi-volume multi-author coverage of the history of the British Empire is the Oxford History of the British Empire (1998–2001), five-volume set, plus a companion series.[277] Douglas Peers says the series demonstrates that, "As a field of historical inquiry, imperial history is clearly experiencing a renaissance."[278]

Max Beloff, reviewing the first two volumes in History Today, praised them for their readability and was pleased that his worry that they would be too anti-imperialist had not been realised.[279] Saul Dubow in H-Net noted the uneven quality of the chapters in volume III and also the difficulty of such an endeavour give the state of historiography of the British Empire and the impossibility of maintaining a triumphalist tone in the modern era. Dubow also felt that some of the authors had tended "to 'play safe', awed perhaps by the monumental nature of the enterprise".[280]

Madhavi Kale of Bryn Mawr College, writing in Social History, also felt that the history took a traditional approach to the historiography of the empire and placed the English, and to a lesser extent the Scottish, Irish and Welsh at the centre of the account, rather than the subject peoples of the empire. Kale summed up her review of volumes III-V of the history by saying it represented "a disturbingly revisionist project that seeks to neutralize ... the massive political and military brutality and repression" of the empire.[281]

Postmodern and postcolonial approaches edit

A major unexpected development came after 1980 with a flood of fresh and innovative books and articles from scholars trained in non-British perspectives. Many had studied Africa, South Asia, the Caribbean, and the dominions. The new perspective strengthened the field rather than destroying it. Further imaginative approaches, which occasioned sharp debates, came from literary scholars especially Edward Said and Homi K. Bhabha, as well as anthropologists, feminists,[282] and other newcomers. Longtime experts suddenly confronted the strange new scholarship with theoretical perspectives such as post-structuralism and post-modernism. The colonial empire was becoming "postcolonial."[283][284] Instead of painting the globe red any more, the Empire's history became part of a new global history.[285] New maps were drawn emphasizing the oceans more than the land masses, yielding new perspectives such as Atlantic history.[286][287]

The old consensus among historians held that in India British imperial authority was quite secure from 1858 to World War II. Recently, however, this interpretation has been challenged. For example Mark Condos and Jon Wilson argue that imperial authority in the Raj was chronically insecure. Indeed the anxiety of generations of officials produced a chaotic administration with minimal coherence. Instead of a confident state capable of acting as it chose, these historians find a psychologically embattled one incapable of acting except in the abstract, small scale, or short term. Meanwhile Durba Ghosh offers an alternative approach.[288]

Impact on Britain and British memory edit

Turning away from most political, economic, and diplomatic themes historians recently have looked at the intellectual and cultural impact of the Empire on Britain itself. Ideologically, Britons promoted the Empire with appeals to the ideals of political and legal liberty. Historians have always commented on the paradox of the dichotomy of freedom and coercion inside the Empire, of modernity and tradition. Sir John Seeley, for example, pondered in 1883:

How can the same nation pursue two lines of policy so radically different without bewilderment, be despotic in Asia and democratic in Australia, be in the East at once the greatest Mussulman Power in the World ... and at the same time in the West be the foremost champion of free thought and spiritual religion.[289][290]

Historian Douglas Peers emphasizes that an idealized knowledge of the Empire permeated popular and elite thought in Britain during the 19th century:

No history of nineteenth-century Britain can be complete without acknowledging the impact that the empire had in fashioning political culture, informing strategic and diplomatic priorities, shaping social institutions and cultural practices, and determining, at least in part, the rate and direction of economic development. Moreover, British identity was bound up with the empire.[291]

Politicians at the time and historians ever since have explored whether the Empire was too expensive for the British budget. Joseph Chamberlain thought so but he had little success at the Imperial Conference of 1902 asking overseas partners to increase their contribution. Canada and Australia spoke of funding a warship—the Canadian Senate voted it down in 1913.[292] Meanwhile, the Royal Navy adjusted its war plans to focus on Germany, economizing on defending against lesser threats in peripheral areas such as the Pacific and Indian Oceans.[293] Public opinion supported military spending out of pride, but the left in Britain leaned toward pacifism and deplored the waste of money.[294]

In the Porter–MacKenzie debate the historiographical issue was the impact of the Imperial experience on British society and thinking.[295] Porter argued in 2004 that most Britons were largely indifferent to empire. Imperialism was handled by elites. In the highly heterogeneous British society, "imperialism did not have to have impact greatly on British society and culture."[296] John M. MacKenzie countered that there is a great deal of scattered evidence to show an important impact. His position was supported by Catherine Hall, Antoinette Burton and Jeffrey Richards.[297][298]

In a survey of the British population by YouGov in 2014, respondents "think the British Empire is more something to be proud of (59%) rather than ashamed of (19%).... A third of British people (34%) also say they would like it if Britain still had an empire. Under half (45%) say they would not like the Empire to exist today."[299][300]

See also edit

Notes edit

References edit

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  2. ^ Ghosh, Durba (2012). "Another Set of Imperial Turns?". American Historical Review. 117 (3): 772–793. doi:10.1086/ahr.117.3.772.
  3. ^ The newer themes are emphasized in Sarah E. Stockwell, ed., The British Empire: Themes and Perspectives (2008)
  4. ^ a b Shefali Rajamannar (2012). Reading the Animal in the Literature of the British Raj. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 11. ISBN 978-1-137-01107-7.
  5. ^ Laidlaw, Zoë (2012). "Breaking Britannia'S Bounds? Law, Settlers, and Space in Britain's Imperial Historiography". Historical Journal. 55 (3): 807–830. doi:10.1017/s0018246x12000313. S2CID 145190504.
  6. ^ Phillip Buckner, "Presidential Address: Whatever Happened to the British Empire?" Journal of the Canadian Historical Association/Revue de la Société historique du Canada (1993) 4#1 pp. 3–32, quote on p. 6
  7. ^ Vincent T. Harlow. The Founding of the Second British Empire, 1763–1793: Vol 2: New Continents and Changing Values (1964)
  8. ^ see online version
  9. ^ Deborah Wormell (1980). Sir John Seeley and the Uses of History. Cambridge University Press. p. 154. ISBN 978-0-521-22720-9.
  10. ^ A. P. Newton, A Hundred Years of the British Empire (1940), pp. 240–241.
  11. ^ a b Darwin, Unfinished Empire: The Global Expansion of Britain pp. 386–400.
  12. ^ Bruce Collins (2014). War and Empire: The Expansion of Britain, 1790–1830. Routledge. p. 6. ISBN 978-1-317-87077-7.
  13. ^ Darwin, Unfinished Empire: The Global Expansion of Britain p. 391.
  14. ^ Darwin, Unfinished Empire: The Global Expansion of Britain, p. 388.
  15. ^ Piers Brendon, The Decline and Fall of the British Empire, 1781–1997 (2008) p. 61
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  23. ^ Armitage (2000) p. 143
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  27. ^ editors, Encyclopædia Britannica (2014)
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  41. ^ Darwin, Unfinished Empre ch 5, 10
  42. ^ Darwin, Unfinished Empre ch 8
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  58. ^ See F.J.C.Hearnshaw (1918). Democracy at the Crossways: A Study in Politics and History, with Special Reference to Great Britain. Macmillan. p. 458.
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  67. ^ Marshall. p 52
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  242. ^ For comprehensive coverage and up-to-date bibliography see "The British Empire at War Research Group"
  243. ^ Ashley Jackson, "The British Empire, 1939-1945 " in Richard J. B. Bosworth and Joseph A. Maiolo, eds, The Cambridge History of the Second World War: Volume II Politics and Ideology (2015), pp. 558-580, quote on p. 559.
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  247. ^ See also Ashley Jackson, The British Empire and the Second World War (2007).
  248. ^ Jane Samson (2001). The British Empire. Oxford UP. p. 197. ISBN 978-0-19-289293-5.
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  251. ^ As does cultural historian Bernard Porter, The Absent-Minded Imperialists: Empire, Society and Culture in Britain (2004).
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  254. ^ Bill Schwarz, The White Man's World (2010).
  255. ^ Thomas Colley, Always at War: British Public Narratives of War (U of Michigan Press, 2019) online review
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  260. ^ Marjory Harper and Stephen Constantine, Migration and empire (2010).
  261. ^ Philippa Levine, ed. Gender and empire (2007).
  262. ^ Radhika Mohanram, Imperial white: Race, diaspora, and the British empire (U of Minnesota Press, 2007).
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  270. ^ Antoinette Burton, Burdens of History: British Feminists, Indian Women, and Imperial Culture, 1865–1915 (1995).
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  273. ^ Mrinalini Sinha, Colonial Masculinity, p. 2.
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  276. ^ Alison Games, The Web of Empire: English Cosmopolitans in an Age of Expansion, 1560–1660 (2008).
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  278. ^ Douglas M. Peers, "Is Humpty Dumpty back together again?: The revival of imperial history and the Oxford History of the British Empire". Journal of World History (2002), 13#2, pp. 451–467. online.
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  292. ^ Martin Thornton (2013). Churchill, Borden and Anglo-Canadian Naval Relations, 1911–14. Palgrave Macmillan UK. pp. 82–85. ISBN 978-1-137-30087-4.
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  294. ^ Matthew Johnson, Militarism and the British Left, 1902–1914 (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013).
  295. ^ Jim Tomlinson (2014). Dundee and the Empire: 'Juteopolis' 1850-1939. Edinburgh UP. p. 1. ISBN 978-0-7486-8615-5.
  296. ^ Bernard Porter (2006). The Absent-minded Imperialists: Empire, Society, and Culture in Britain. Oxford UP. p. 24. ISBN 978-0-19-929959-1.
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External links edit

  • "Making History", Coverage of leading British historians and institutions from the Institute of Historical Research

Further reading edit

Basic bibliography edit

  • Bayly, C. A. ed. Atlas of the British Empire (1989). survey by scholars; heavily illustrated
  • Brendon, Piers. "A Moral Audit of the British Empire", History Today (October 2007), Vol. 57, Issue 10, pp. 44–47, online at EBSCO
  • Brendon, Piers. The Decline and Fall of the British Empire, 1781-1997 (2008), wide-ranging survey
  • Bryant, Arthur. The History of Britain and the British Peoples, 3 vols (1984–90), popular.
  • Dalziel, Nigel. The Penguin Historical Atlas of the British Empire (2006), 144 pp.
  • Darwin, John. The Empire Project: The Rise and Fall of the British World-System, 1830–1970 (2009) excerpt and text search
  • Darwin, John. Unfinished Empire: The Global Expansion of Britain (2013)
  • Ferguson, Niall. Empire: The Rise and Demise of the British World Order and the Lessons for Global Power (2002); Also published as Empire: How Britain Made the Modern World (2002).
  • Howe, Stephen ed., The New Imperial Histories Reader (2009) online review
  • Jackson, Ashley. The British Empire: A Very Short Introduction (2013) excerpt.
  • James, Lawrence. The Rise and Fall of the British Empire (1998). A one-volume history of the Empire, from the American colonies to the Handover of Hong Kong; also online
  • Knaplund, Paul. The British empire, 1815–1939 (1941), very wide-ranging; online
  • Marshall, P. J. (ed.), The Cambridge Illustrated History of the British Empire (1996). online
  • Olson, James S., and Robert S. Shadle; Historical Dictionary of the British Empire (1996)
  • Panton, Kenneth J., ed. Historical Dictionary of the British Empire (2015) 766 pp.
  • Simms, Brendan. Three Victories and a Defeat: The Rise and Fall of the First British Empire (2008), 800 pp. excerpt and text search

Overviews edit

  • Belich, James. Replenishing the Earth: The Settler Revolution and the Rise of the Angloworld, 1780-1930 (Oxford University Press, 2009), 448 pp.; focus on British settlement colonies of Canada, Australia and New Zealand, emphasizing the heavy British investments involved
  • Black, Jeremy. The British Seaborne Empire (2004)
  • Cain, P. J., and A. G. Hopkins. British Imperialism, 1688-2000 (2nd edn 2001) 739 pp.; detailed economic history that presents the new "gentlemanly capitalists" thesis;
  • Colley, Linda. Captives: Britain, Empire, and the World, 1600–1850 (2004), 464 pp.
  • Hyam, Ronald. Britain's Imperial Century, 1815-1914: A Study of Empire and Expansion (1993).
  • Judd, Denis. Empire: The British Imperial Experience, From 1765 to the Present (1996).
  • Levine, Philippa. The British Empire: sunrise to sunset (3rd ed. Routledge, 2020) excerpt
  • Lloyd, T. O. The British Empire, 1558-1995 Oxford University Press, 1996
  • Muir, Ramsay. A short history of the British commonwealth (2 vol 1920-22; 8th ed. 1954). online
  • Parsons, Timothy H. The British imperial century, 1815–1914: A world history perspective (Rowman & Littlefield, 2019).
  • Royal Institute of International Affairs. The Colonial Problem (1937); broad-based review of current status of European colonies, especially British Empire. online.
  • Robinson, Howard . The Development of the British Empire (1922), 465 pp. edition.
  • Rose, J. Holland, A. P. Newton and E. A. Benians (general editor), The Cambridge History of the British Empire, 9 vols (1929–61); vol 1: "The Old Empire from the Beginnings to 1783" 934pp online edition Volume I
    • Volume II: The Growth of the New Empire 1783-1870 (1968) online
  • Smith, Simon C. British Imperialism 1750-1970 (1998). brief
  • Stockwell, Sarah, ed. The British Empire: Themes and Perspectives (2008), 355 pp.

Oxford History edit

  • Louis, William. Roger (general editor), The Oxford History of the British Empire, 5 vols (1998–99).
    • Vol. 1 "The Origins of Empire" ed. Nicholas Canny online
    • Vol. 2 "The Eighteenth Century" ed. P. J. Marshall online
    • Vol. 3 The Nineteenth Century ed. Andrew Porter (1998). 780 pp. online edition
    • Vol. 4 The Twentieth Century ed. Judith M. Brown (1998). 773 pp. online edition
    • Vol. 5 "Historiography", ed. Robin W. Winks (1999) online

Oxford History Companion series edit

  • Beinart, William, and Lotte Hughes, eds. Environment and Empire (2007)
  • Bickers, Robert, ed. Settlers and Expatriates: Britons over the Seas (2014)
  • Buckner, Phillip, ed. Canada and the British Empire (2010)
  • Etherington, Norman. Missions and Empire (2008) on Protestant missions
  • Harper, Marjory, and Stephen Constantine, eds. Migration and Empire (2010)
  • Kenny, Kevin, ed. Ireland and the British Empire(2006) excerpt and text search
  • Peers, Douglas M. and Nandini Gooptu, eds. India and the British Empire (2012)
  • Schreuder, Deryck and Stuart Ward, eds. Australia's Empire (2010) doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199563739.001.0001
  • Thompson, Andrew, ed. Britain's Experience of Empire in the Twentieth Century (2012)

Atlases, geography, environment edit

  • Bartholomew, John. Atlas of the British empire throughout the world (1868 edition) online 1868 edition; (1877 edition) online 1877 edition, the maps are poorly reproduced
  • Beattie, James (2012). "Recent Themes in the Environmental History of the British Empire". History Compass. 10 (2): 129–139. doi:10.1111/j.1478-0542.2011.00824.x.
  • Dalziel, Nigel. The Penguin Historical Atlas of the British Empire (2006), 144 pp
  • Faunthorpe, John Pincher. Geography of the British colonies and foreign possessions (1874) online edition
  • Lucas, Charles Prestwood. A Historical Geography of the British Colonies: part 2: West Indies (1890) online edition
  • Lucas, Charles Prestwood. A Historical Geography of the British Colonies: part 4: South and East Africa (1900) online edition
  • MacKenzie, John M. The British Empire through buildings: Structure, function and meaning (Manchester UP, 2020) excerpt.
  • Porter, A. N. Atlas of British Overseas Expansion (1994)
  • The Year-book of the Imperial Institute of the United Kingdom, the colonies and India: a statistical record of the resources and trade of the colonial and Indian possessions of the British Empire (2nd. ed. 1893) 880pp; online edition

Political, economic and intellectual studies edit

  • Andrews, Kenneth R. Trade, Plunder and Settlement: Maritime Enterprise and the Genesis of the British Empire, 1480–1630 (1984).
  • Armitage, David. The Ideological Origins of the British Empire (2000).
  • Armitage, David (1999). "Greater Britain: A Useful Category of Historical Analysis?". American Historical Review. 104 (2): 427–45. doi:10.2307/2650373. JSTOR 2650373.
  • Armitage, David, ed. Theories of Empire, 1450–1800 (1998).
  • Armitage, David, and M. J. Braddick, eds. The British Atlantic World, 1500–1800, (2002)
  • Barker, Sir Ernest, The Ideas and Ideals of the British Empire (1941).
  • Baumgart, W. Imperialism: The Idea and Reality of British and French Colonial Expansion, 1880-1914 (1982)
  • Bayly, C. A. Imperial Meridian: The British Empire and the World, 1780-1831 (1989).
    • Stern, Philip J. "Early Eighteenth-Century British India: Antimeridian or antemeridiem?." Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History 21.2 (2020) pp 1–26, focus on Bayly.
  • Bell, Duncan The Idea of Greater Britain: Empire and the Future of World Order, 1860-1900 (2007)
  • Bell, Duncan (ed.) Victorian Visions of Global Order: Empire and International Relations in Nineteenth Century Political Thought (2007)
  • Bennett, George (ed.), The Concept of Empire: Burke to Attlee, 1774–1947 (1953).
  • Blaut, J. M. The Colonizers' Model of the World 1993
  • Bowen, H. V. Business of Empire: The East India Company and Imperial Britain, 1756-1833 (2006), 304pp
  • Cain; Hopkins, A. G. (1986). "Gentlemanly Capitalism and British Expansion Overseas I. The Old Colonial System, 1688-1850". Economic History Review. 39 (4): 501–525. doi:10.2307/2596481. JSTOR 2596481.
  • Cain; Hopkins, A. G. (1987). "Gentlemanly Capitalism and British Expansion Overseas II: New Imperialism, 1850-1945". The Economic History Review. 40 (1): 1–26. doi:10.2307/2596293. JSTOR 2596293.
  • Cain; Hopkins, A. G. (1980). "The Political Economy of British Expansion Overseas, 1750-1914". The Economic History Review. 33 (4): 463–490. doi:10.1111/j.1468-0289.1980.tb01171.x. JSTOR 2594798.
  • Collingham, Lizzie. The Taste of Empire: How Britain's Quest for Food Shaped the Modern World (2017).
  • Crooks, Peter, and Timothy H. Parsons, eds. Empires and bureaucracy in world history: from late antiquity to the twentieth century (Cambridge UP, 2016) chapters 1, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17.
  • Darby, Philip. The Three Faces of Imperialism: British and American Approaches to Asia and Africa, 1870-1970 (1987)
  • Doyle, Michael W. Empires (1986).
  • Dumett, Raymond E. Gentlemanly Capitalism and British Imperialism: The New Debate on Empire. (1999). 234 pp.
  • Gallagher, John, and Ronald Robinson. "The Imperialism of Free Trade" The Economic History Review, Vol. 6, No. 1 (1953), pp. 1–15 in JSTOR, highly influential interpretation in its day
  • Gilbert, Helen, and Chris Tiffin, eds. Burden or Benefit?: Imperial Benevolence and Its Legacies (2008)
  • Harlow, V. T. The Founding of the Second British Empire, 1763–1793, 2 vols. (1952–64).
  • Heinlein, Frank. British Government Policy and Decolonisation, 1945-1963: Scrutinising the Official Mind (2002).
  • Herbertson, A. J. The Oxford Survey of the British Empire, (1914)
  • Ingram, Edward. The British Empire as a World Power: Ten Studies (2001)
  • Jackson, Ashley. British Empire and the Second World War (2006)
  • Johnson, Robert. British Imperialism (2003). historiography
  • Keith, Arthur Berriedale (1921). War government of the British dominions. Clarendon Press., First World War
  • Kennedy, Paul, The Rise and Fall of British Naval Mastery (1976).
  • Koehn, Nancy F. The Power of Commerce: Economy and Governance in the First British Empire (1994)
  • Knorr, Klaus E., British Colonial Theories 1570–1850 (1944).
  • Louis, William Roger. Imperialism at Bay: The United States and the Decolonization of the British Empire, 1941-1945 (1978)
  • McIntyre, W. David. The commonwealth of nations: Origins and impact, 1869–1971 (U of Minnesota Press, 1977); Comprehensive coverage giving London's perspective on political and constitutional relations with each possession.link
  • Marshall, Peter James (2005). The Making and Unmaking of Empires: Britain, India, and America C.1750-1783. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-927895-4.
  • Mehta, Uday Singh, Liberalism and Empire: A Study in Nineteenth-Century British Liberal Thought (1999).
  • Pares, Richard. “The Economic Factors in the History of the Empire.” Economic History Review 7#2 (1937), pp. 119–144. online
  • Porter, Bernard. The Lion's Share: A History of British Imperialism 1850-2011 (4th ed. 2012), Wide-ranging general history; strong on anti-imperialism. online
  • Thornton, A.P. The Imperial Idea and its Enemies (2nd ed. 1985)
  • Tinker, Hugh. A New System of Slavery: The Export of Indian Labour Overseas, 1830-1920 (1974).
  • Webster, Anthony. Gentlemen Capitalists: British Imperialism in South East Asia, 1770-1890 (1998)

Diplomacy and military policy edit

  • Bannister, Jerry, and Liam Riordan, eds. The Loyal Atlantic: Remaking the British Atlantic in the Revolutionary Era (U of Toronto Press, 2012).
  • Bartlett, C. J. British Foreign Policy in the Twentieth Century (1989)
  • Bemis, Samuel Flagg (1935). The Diplomacy of the American Revolution. American Historical Association., a standard history
  • Black, Jeremy. America or Europe? British Foreign Policy, 1739-63 (1998)
  • Black, Jeremy, ed. Knights Errant and True Englishmen: British Foreign Policy, 1660-1800 (2003) essays by scholars
  • Black, Jeremy. George III: America's last king (Yale UP, 2006).
  • Chandler, David, and Ian Beckett, eds. The Oxford History of the British Army (2003). excerpt
  • Colley, Thomas. Always at War: British Public Narratives of War (U of Michigan Press, 2019) online review
  • Cotterell, Arthur. Western Power in Asia: Its Slow Rise and Swift Fall, 1415 - 1999 (2009) popular history; excerpt
  • Dilks, David. Retreat from Power: 1906-39 v. 1: Studies in Britain's Foreign Policy of the Twentieth Century (1981); Retreat from Power: After 1939 v. 2 (1981)
  • Haswell, Jock, and John Lewis-Stempel. A Brief History of the British Army (2017).
  • Jackson, Ashley. The British Empire and the Second World War (2007) 624pp; Comprehensive coverage.
  • Jackson, Ashley. "New Research on the British Empire and the Second World War: Part II." Global War Studies 7.2 (2010): 157-184; historiography
  • Jones, J. R. Britain and the World, 1649-1815 (1980)
  • Langer, William L. The Diplomacy of Imperialism, 1890-1902 (2nd ed. 1950)
  • Mulligan, William, and Brendan Simms, eds. The Primacy of Foreign Policy in British History, 1660-2000 (Palgrave Macmillan; 2011) 345 pages
  • Nester, William R. Titan: The Art of British Power in the Age of Revolution and Napoleon (2016) excerpt
  • O'Shaughnessy, Andrew Jackson. The Men Who Lost America: British Leadership, the American Revolution, and the Fate of the Empire (2014).
  • Strang, Lord William. Britain in World Affairs: A survey of the Fluctuations in British Power and Influence from Henry VIII to Elizabeth II (1961). Online Popular history by a diplomat.
  • Vickers, Rhiannon. The Evolution of Labour's Foreign Policy, 1900-51 (2003) focus on decolonization
  • Webster, Charles. The Foreign Policy of Palmerston (1951)
  • Wiener, Joel H. ed. Great Britain: Foreign Policy and the Span of Empire, 1689-1971: A Documentary History (1972) 876pp [ primary sources
  • Wyman-McCarthy, Matthew (2018). "British abolitionism and global empire in the late 18th century: A historiographic overview". History Compass. 16 (10): e12480. doi:10.1111/hic3.12480. S2CID 149779622.

Slavery and race edit

  • Auerbach, Sascha. Race, Law, and "The Chinese Puzzle" in Imperial Britain (2009).
  • Ballantyne, Tony. Orientalism and Race: Aryanism in the British Empire (2002)
  • Drescher, Seymour. Abolition: A History of Slavery and Antislavery (2009) excerpt and text search
  • Dumas, Paula E. Proslavery Britain: Fighting for slavery in an era of abolition (Springer, 2016).
  • Eltis, David, and Stanley L. Engerman. "The importance of slavery and the slave trade to industrializing Britain." Journal of Economic History 60.1 (2000): 123-144. online
  • Green, William A. British slave emancipation, the sugar colonies and the great experiment, 1830-1865 (Oxford, 1981)
  • Guasco, Michael (2014). Slaves and Englishmen: Human Bondage in the Early Modern Atlantic. University of Pennsylvania Press.
  • Grant, Kevin. A Civilised Savagery: Britain and the New Slaveries in Africa, 1884-1926 (2005).
  • Killingray, David, and Martin Plaut. "Race and Imperialism in the British Empire: A Lateral View." South African Historical Journal (2020): 1-28. doi:10.1080/02582473.2020.1724191
  • Lake, Marilyn and Reynolds, David. Drawing the Global Colour Line: White Men's Countries and the International Challenge of Racial Equality (2008).
  • Look Lai, Walton. Indentured Labor, Caribbean Sugar: Chinese and Indian Migrants to the British West Indies, 1838-1918 1993.
  • Morgan, Philip D. and Sean Hawkins, eds. Black Experience and the Empire(2006), Oxford History Companion series
  • Quinault, Roland. "Gladstone and slavery." The Historical Journal 52.2 (2009): 363-383. doi:10.1017/S0018246X0900750X
  • Robinson, Ronald, John Gallagher, Alice Denny. Africa and the Victorians: The Climax of Imperialism in the Dark Continent (1961)
  • Taylor, Michael. "The British West India interest and its allies, 1823–1833." English Historical Review 133.565 (2018): 1478-1511. doi:10.1093/ehr/cey336, focus on slavery
  • Walker, Eric A., ed. The Cambridge history of the British Empire Volume VIII: South Africa, Rhodesia and the High Commission Territories (1963) online

Social and cultural studies; gender edit

  • August, Thomas G. The Selling of the Empire: British and French Imperialist Propaganda, 1890-1940 (1985)
  • Bailyn, Bernard, and Philip D. Morgan (eds.), Strangers within the Realm: Cultural Margins of the First British Empire (1991)
  • Brantlinger, Patrick. Rule of Darkness: British Literature and Imperialism, 1830-1914 (1988).
  • Broich, John. "Engineering the Empire: British Water Supply Systems and Colonial Societies, 1850-1900." Journal of British Studies 2007 46(2): 346-365. ISSN 0021-9371 Fulltext: at Ebsco
  • Burton, Antoinette, Burdens of History: British Feminists, Indian Women, and Imperial Culture, 1865-1915 (U of North Carolina Press, 1994).
  • Chaudhuri, Nupur. "Imperialism and Gender." in Encyclopedia of European Social History, edited by Peter N. Stearns, (vol. 1, 2001), pp. 515-521. online
  • Clayton, Martin. and Bennett Zon. Music and Orientalism in the British Empire, 1780s-1940s (2007) excerpt and text search
  • Constantine, Stephen (2003). "British Emigration to the Empire-commonwealth since 1880: from Overseas Settlement to Diaspora?". Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History. 31 (2): 16–35. doi:10.1080/03086530310001705586. S2CID 162001571.
  • Finn, Margot (2006). "Colonial gifts: Family politics and the exchange of goods in British India, c. 1780-1820" (PDF). Modern Asian Studies. 40 (1): 203–231. doi:10.1017/s0026749x06001739. S2CID 154303105.
  • Hall, Catherine, and Sonya O. Rose. At Home with the Empire: Metropolitan Culture and the Imperial World (2007)
  • Hall, Catherine. Civilising Subjects: Colony and Metropole in the English Imagination, 1830–1867 (2002)
  • Hodgkins, Christopher. Reforming Empire: Protestant Colonialism and Conscience in British Literature (U of Missouri Press, 2002)
  • Hyam, Ronald. Empire and Sexuality: The British Experience (1990).
  • Karatani, Rieko. Defining British Citizenship: Empire, Commonwealth, and Modern Britain (2003)
  • Kuczynski, Robert R. Demographic survey of the British Colonial Empire (1 vol 1948) vol 1 West Africa online; also vol 2 East Africa online
  • Lassner, Phyllis. Colonial Strangers: Women Writing the End of the British Empire (2004)
  • Lazarus, Neil, ed. The Cambridge Companion to Postcolonial Literary Studies (2004)
  • Levine, Philippa, ed. Gender and Empire. Oxford History of the British Empire (2004).
  • McDevitt, Patrick F. May the Best Man Win: Sport, Masculinity, and Nationalism in Great Britain and the Empire, 1880-1935 (2004).
  • Midgley, Clare. Feminism and Empire: women activists in imperial Britain, 1790–1865 (Routledge, 2007)
  • Morgan, Philip D. and Hawkins, Sean, ed. Black Experience and the Empire (2004).
  • Morris, Jan. The Spectacle of Empire: Style, Effect and Pax Britannica (1982).
  • Naithani, Sadhana. The Story-Time of the British Empire: Colonial and Postcolonial Folkloristics (2010)
  • Newton, Arthur Percival. The Universities And Educational Systems Of The British Empire (1924) online
  • Porter, Andrew. Religion Versus Empire?: British Protestant Missionaries and Overseas Expansion, 1700-1914 (2004)
  • Potter, Simon J. News and the British World: The Emergence of an Imperial Press System. Clarendon, 2003
  • Price, Richard. "One Big Thing: Britain, its Empire, and Their Imperial Culture." Journal of British Studies 2006 45(3): 602-627. ISSN 0021-9371 Fulltext: Ebsco
  • Price, Richard. Making Empire: Colonial Encounters and the Creation of Imperial Rule in Nineteenth-Century Africa 2008.
  • Richards, Eric. Britannia's children: emigration from England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland since 1600 (A&C Black, 2004) online.
  • Rubinstein, W. D. Capitalism, Culture, and Decline in Britain, 1750-1990 (1993),
  • Rüger, Jan. "Nation, Empire and Navy: Identity Politics in the United Kingdom 1887-1914" Past & Present 2004 (185): 159-187. ISSN 0031-2746 online
  • Sauerberg, Lars Ole. Intercultural Voices in Contemporary British Literature: The Implosion of Empire (2001)
  • Sinha, Mrinalini, "Colonial Masculinity: The 'Manly Englishman' and the 'Effeminate Bengali' in the Late Nineteenth Century" (1995)
  • Smith, Michelle J., Clare Bradford, et al. From Colonial to Modern: Transnational Girlhood in Canadian, Australian, and New Zealand Literature, 1840-1940 (2018) excerpt
  • Spurr, David. The Rhetoric of Empire: Colonial Discourse in Journalism, Travel Writing and Imperial Administration (1993).
  • Trollope, Joanna. Britannia's Daughters: Women of the British Empire (1983).
  • Whitehead, Clive. "The historiography of British imperial education policy, Part I: India." History of Education 34#3 (2005): 315-329.
    • Whitehead, Clive. "The historiography of British Imperial education policy, Part II: Africa and the rest of the colonial empire." History of Education 34#4 (2005): 441-454.
  • Wilson, Kathleen. The Island Race: Englishness, Empire, and Gender in the Eighteenth Century (2003).
  • Wilson, Kathleen, ed. A New Imperial History: Culture Identity, and Modernity in Britain and the Empire, 1660–1840 (2004)
  • Wilson, Kathleen (2011). "Rethinking the Colonial State: Family, Gender, and Governmentality in Eighteenth-Century British Frontiers". American Historical Review. 116 (5): 1294–1322. doi:10.1086/ahr.116.5.1294.
  • Xypolia, Ilia. British Imperialism and Turkish Nationalism in Cyprus, 1923-1939:Divide, Define and Rule. Routledge, 2017

Regional studies edit

  • Bailyn, Bernard. Strangers Within the Realm: Cultural Margins of the First British Empire (1991) excerpt and text search
  • Bruckner, Phillip. Canada and the British Empire (The Oxford History of the British Empire) (2010) excerpt and text search doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199563746.001.0001 online
  • Elliott, J.H., Empires of the Atlantic World: Britain and Spain in America 1492-1830 (2006), a major interpretation excerpt and text search
  • Kenny, Kevin, ed. Ireland and the British Empire (2004).
  • Landsman, Ned. Crossroads of Empire: The Middle Colonies in British North America (2010) excerpt and text search
  • Lees, Lynn Hollen. Planting Empire, Cultivating Subjects: British Malaya, 1786-1941 (2017).
  • Lester, Alan. Imperial Networks: Creating Identities in Nineteenth-Century South Africa and Britain (2001).
  • Louis, William Roger. The British Empire in the Middle East, 1945-1951: Arab Nationalism, the United States, and Postwar Imperialism (1984)
  • Marshall, Peter, and Glyn Williams, eds. The British Atlantic Empire before the American Revolution (1980)
  • Taylor, Alan. The Civil War of 1812: American Citizens, British Subjects, Irish Rebels, and Indian Allies (2010), on War of 1812
  • Veevers, David. The Origins of the British Empire in Asia, 1600–1750 (2020) excerpt.

Historiography and memory edit

  • Adams, James Truslow (1927). "On the Term 'British Empire'". American Historical Review. 22 (3): 485–459. doi:10.2307/1837801. JSTOR 1837801.
  • Armitage, David (1999). "Greater Britain: A Useful Category of Analysis?". American Historical Review. 104 (2): 427–445. doi:10.2307/2650373. JSTOR 2650373.
  • Bailkin, Jordanna (2015). "Where Did the Empire Go? Archives and Decolonization in Britain". American Historical Review. 120 (3): 884–899. doi:10.1093/ahr/120.3.884.
  • Ballantyne, Tony (2010). "The Changing Shape of the Modern British Empire and its Historiography". Historical Journal. 53 (2): 429–452. doi:10.1017/s0018246x10000117. S2CID 162458960.
  • Barone, Charles A. Marxist Thought on Imperialism: Survey and Critique (1985)
  • Bowen, Huw V (1998). "British Conceptions of Global Empire, 1756–83". The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History. 26 (3): 1–27. doi:10.1080/03086539808583038.
  • Black, Jeremy. Imperial Legacies: The British Empire Around the World (Encounter Books, 2019) excerpt.
  • Buckner, Phillip. "Presidential Address: Whatever happened to the British Empire?" Journal of the Canadian Historical Association (1993) 4#1 pp. 3–32. online
  • Burnard, Trevor (2007). "Empire Matters? The Historiography of Imperialism in Early America, 1492–1830". History of European Ideas. 33 (1): 87–107. doi:10.1016/j.histeuroideas.2006.08.011. S2CID 143511493.
  • Burton, Antoinette and Isabel Hofmeyr, eds. Ten Books That Shaped the British Empire: Creating an Imperial Commons (2014) excerpt
  • Cannadine, David, "'Big Tent' Historiography: Transatlantic Obstacles and Opportunities in Writing the History of Empire", Common Knowledge (2005) 11#3 pp. 375–392 at Project MUSE
  • Cannadine, David. Ornamentalism: How the British Saw Their Empire (2002)
  • Cannadine, David. "The Empire Strikes Back", Past & Present No. 147 (May, 1995), pp. 180–194 [1]
  • Cannadine, David. Victorious Century: The United Kingdom, 1800-1906 (2018)
  • Colley, Linda. "What Is Imperial History Now?" in David Cannadine, ed. What Is History Now? (2002), 132–147.
  • Drayton, Richard. "Where does the world historian write from? Objectivity, moral conscience and the past and present of imperialism". Journal of Contemporary History 2011; 46#3 pp. 671–685. online
  • Dumett, Raymond E. ed. Gentlemanly Capitalism and British Imperialism: The New Debate on Empire (1999) online
  • Elton, G. R. Modern Historians on British History 1485–1945: A Critical Bibliography 1945–1969 (1969), annotated guide to 1000 history books on every major topic, plus book reviews and major scholarly articles. online
  • Fieldhouse, David (1984). "Can Humpty-Dumpty be put together again? Imperial history in the 1980s". Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History. 12 (2): 9–23. doi:10.1080/03086538408582657.
  • Fieldhouse, David K. "'Imperialism': An Historiographical Revision". Economic History Review 14#2 (1961): 187–209. [2]
  • Ghosh, Durba. "Another set of imperial turns?". American Historical Review 2012; 117#3 pp: 772–793. online
  • Griffin, Patrick. "In Retrospect: Lawrence Henry Gipson's The British Empire before the American Revolution" Reviews in American History, 31#2 (2003), pp. 171–183 in JSTOR
  • Hyam, Ronald (2001). "The study of imperial and commonwealth history at Cambridge, 1881–1981: Founding fathers and pioneer research students". Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History. 29 (3): 75–103. doi:10.1080/03086530108583128. S2CID 161602517.
  • Hyam, Ronald. Understanding the British Empire (2010), 576pp; essays by Hyam.
  • Johnson David, and Prem Poddar, eds. A Historical Companion to Postcolonial Thought in English (Columbia UP, 2005).
  • Kennedy, Dane. The Imperial History Wars: Debating the British Empire (2018) excerpt
  • Kennedy, Dane (2015). "The Imperial History Wars". Journal of British Studies. 54 (1): 5–22. doi:10.1017/jbr.2014.166. S2CID 154163198.
  • Lester, Alan, Kate Boehme, and Peter Mitchell, eds. Ruling the World: Freedom, Civilisation and Liberalism in the Nineteenth-Century British Empire (Cambridge UP, 2021).
  • Lieven, Dominic. Empire: The Russian empire and its rivals (Yale UP, 2002), comparisons with Russian, Habsburg & Ottoman empires. excerpt
  • MacKenzie, John M (2015). "The British Empire: Ramshackle or Rampaging? A Historiographical Reflection". Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History. 43 (1): 99–124. doi:10.1080/03086534.2015.997120. S2CID 161901237.
  • Morris, Richard B. "The Spacious Empire of Lawrence Henry Gipson," William and Mary Quarterly, (1967) 24#2 pp. 170–189 at JSTOR; covers the "Imperial School" of Americanscholars, 1900–1940s
  • Nelson, Paul David. "British Conduct of the American Revolutionary War: A Review of Interpretations." Journal of American History 65.3 (1978): 623-653. online
  • Peers, Douglas M (2002). "Is Humpty Dumpty back together again?: The revival of imperial history and the Oxford History of the British Empire". Journal of World History. 13 (2): 451–467. doi:10.1353/jwh.2002.0049. S2CID 144790936.
  • Pocock, J. G. A. (1982). "The Limits and Divisions of British History: In Search of the Unknown Subject". American Historical Review. 87 (2): 311–336. doi:10.2307/1870122. JSTOR 1870122.
  • Prakash, Gyan (1990). "Writing Post-Orientalist Histories of the Third World: Perspectives from Indian Historiography". Comparative Studies in Society and History. 32 (2): 383–408. doi:10.1017/s0010417500016534. JSTOR 178920. S2CID 144435305.
  • Philips, Cyril H. ed. Historians of India, Pakistan and Ceylon (1961), reviews the older scholarship
  • Rasor, Eugene L. Winston S. Churchill, 1874-1965: A Comprehensive Historiography and Annotated Bibliography (2000) 712pp; online
  • Shaw, A. G. L. (1969). "British Attitudes to the Colonies, Ca. 1820-1850". Journal of British Studies. 9 (1): 71–95. doi:10.1086/385581. JSTOR 175168. S2CID 145273743.
  • Stern, Philip J (2009). "History and Historiography of the English East India Company: Past, Present, and Future". History Compass. 7 (4): 1146–1180. doi:10.1111/j.1478-0542.2009.00617.x.
  • Syriatou, Athena (2013). "National, Imperial, Colonial and the Political: British Imperial Histories and their Descendants" (PDF). Historein. 12: 38–67. doi:10.12681/historein.181.
  • Thompson, Andrew (2001). "Is Humpty Dumpty Together Again? Imperial History and the Oxford History of the British Empire". Twentieth Century British History. 12 (4): 511–527. doi:10.1093/tcbh/12.4.511.
  • Webster, Anthony. The Debate on the Rise of British Imperialism (Issues in Historiography) (2006)
  • Wilson, Kathleen, ed. A New Imperial History: Culture, Identity and Modernity in Britain and the Empire, 1660–1840 (2004). excerpt and text search
  • Winks, Robin, ed. Historiography (1999) vol. 5 in William Roger Louis, eds. The Oxford History of the British Empire
  • Winks, Robin W. The Historiography of the British Empire-Commonwealth: Trends, Interpretations and Resources (1966); this book is by a different set of authors from the previous 1999 entry
  • Winks, Robin W. "Problem Child of British History: The British Empire-Commonwealth", in Richard Schlatter, ed., Recent Views on British History: Essays on Historical Writing since 1966 (Rutgers UP, 1984), pp. 451–492
  • Winks, Robin W., ed. British Imperialism: Gold, God, Glory (1963) excerpts from 15 historians from early 20th century, plus commentary and bibliography.

Bibliography edit

  • Gabriel Glickman, "Britain and Empire, 1685-1730" Oxford Bibliographies, annotated books

Primary sources edit

  • Board of Education. Educational Systems of the Chief Crown Colonies and Possessions of the British Empire (1905). 340pp online edition
  • Boehmer, Elleke ed. Empire Writing: An Anthology of Colonial Literature, 1870–1918 (1998)
  • Brooks, Chris. and Peter Faulkner (eds.), The White Man's Burdens: An Anthology of British Poetry of the Empire (Exeter UP, 1996).
  • Hall, Catherine. ed. Cultures of Empire: A Reader: Colonizers in Britain and the Empire in the 19th and 20th Centuries (2000)
  • Herbertson, A. J. and O. J. R. Howarth. eds. The Oxford Survey Of The British Empire (6 vol 1914) online vol 2 on Asia and India 555pp; on Africa; vole 1 America; vp; 6 General topics
  • Madden, Frederick, ed. The End of Empire: Dependencies since 1948: Select Documents on the Constitutional History of the British Empire and Commonwealth: The West Indies, British Honduras, Hong Kong, Fiji, Cyprus, Gibraltar, and the Falklands (2000) 596pp
  • Madden, Frederick, and John Darwin, ed. The Dependent Empire: 1900–1948: Colonies, Protectorates, and Mandates (1963) 908pp
  • Mansergh, Nicholas, ed. Documents and Speeches on Commonwealth Affairs, 1952–1962 (1963) 804pp
  • Wiener, Joel H. ed. Great Britain: Foreign Policy and the Span of Empire, 1689-1971: A Documentary History (4 vol 1972) 3400pp; Mostly statements by British leaders

External links edit

  • British Empire Gateway
  • Primary sources and older secondary sources
  • "The British Empire at War Research Group", Comprehensive coverage of the Empire during Second World War.
  • "The British Empire"

historiography, british, empire, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, neutrality, this, article, disputed, relevant, discussion, found, talk, page, please, r. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met November 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may relate to a different subject or has undue weight on an aspect of the subject Please help relocate relevant information and remove irrelevant ones November 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message The historiography of the British Empire refers to the studies sources critical methods and interpretations used by scholars to develop a history of the British Empire Historians and their ideas are the main focus here specific lands and historical dates and episodes are covered in the article on the British Empire Scholars have long studied the Empire looking at the causes for its formation its relations to the French and other empires and the kinds of people who became imperialists or anti imperialists together with their mindsets The history of the breakdown of the Empire has attracted scholars of the histories of the United States which broke away in 1776 the British Raj dissolved in 1947 and the African colonies independent in the 1960s John Darwin 2013 identifies four imperial goals colonising civilising converting and commerce 1 Historians have approached imperial history from numerous angles over the last century 2 In recent decades scholars have expanded the range of topics into new areas in social and cultural history paying special attention to the impact on the natives and their agency in response 3 4 The cultural turn in historiography has recently emphasised issues of language religion gender and identity Recent debates have considered the relationship between the metropole Great Britain itself especially London and the colonial peripheries The British world historians stress the material emotional and financial links among the colonizers across the imperial diaspora The new imperial historians by contrast are more concerned with the Empire s impact on the metropole including everyday experiences and images 5 Phillip Buckner says that by the 1990s few historians continued to portray the Empire as benevolent The new thinking was that the impact was not so great clarification needed for historians had discovered the many ways which the locals responded to and adapted to Imperial rule The implication Buckner says is that Imperial history is therefore less important than was formerly believed 6 The Empire in red in 1886 by Walter CraneContents 1 Historical framework 2 Idea of Empire 2 1 Economic policy Mercantilism 2 2 Defending empire and pseudo empire 2 3 Thirteen American Colonies and Revolution 3 First British Empire and Second British Empire 4 Theories of imperialism 4 1 Imperialism of Free Trade 4 2 Free trade versus tariffs 4 3 Gentlemanly capitalism 5 Benevolence human rights and slavery 5 1 Promotion and abolition of slavery 5 2 Whiggish history and the civilising mission 5 3 Public health 5 4 Religion The missionaries 5 5 Education 5 6 Direct control and bureaucracy 5 7 Indirect control 5 8 Environment 6 Regions 6 1 Surveys of the whole empire 6 2 Ireland 6 3 Australia 6 3 1 History wars 6 3 2 Debates on the founding 6 4 Canada 6 5 India 6 6 Tropical Africa 6 7 South Africa 6 7 1 Liberation historiography 7 Nationalism and opposition to the Empire 8 Ideas of anti imperialism 9 World War II 10 Decline and decolonization 11 The new imperial history 11 1 The native leadership 11 2 Race and gender 11 3 Linkages binding the Empire together 11 4 The Oxford History of the British Empire 11 5 Postmodern and postcolonial approaches 12 Impact on Britain and British memory 13 See also 14 Notes 15 References 16 External links 17 Further reading 17 1 Basic bibliography 17 2 Overviews 17 3 Oxford History 17 3 1 Oxford History Companion series 17 4 Atlases geography environment 17 5 Political economic and intellectual studies 17 6 Diplomacy and military policy 17 7 Slavery and race 17 8 Social and cultural studies gender 17 9 Regional studies 17 10 Historiography and memory 17 11 Bibliography 17 12 Primary sources 18 External linksHistorical framework editHistorians agree that the Empire was not planned by anyone The concept of the British Empire is a construct and was never a legal entity unlike the Roman or other European empires There was no imperial constitution no office of emperor no uniformity of laws So when it began when it ended and what stages it went through is a matter of opinion not official orders or laws The dividing line was Britain s shift in the 1763 93 period from emphasis on western to eastern territories following U S independence The London bureaucracy governing the colonies also changed policies to white settler colonies changed and slavery was phased out 7 The beginning of the formation of a colonial Empire has been much studied Tudor conquest of Ireland began in the 1530s and Cromwellian conquest of Ireland in the 1650s completed the British colonisation of Ireland The first major history was The Expansion of England 1883 by Sir John Seeley 8 It was a bestseller for decades and was widely admired by the imperialistic faction in British politics and opposed by the anti imperialists of the Liberal Party The book points out how and why Britain gained the colonies the character of the Empire and the light in which it should be regarded It was well written and persuasive Seeley argued that British rule is in India s best interest He also warned that India had to be protected and vastly increased the responsibilities and dangers to Britain The book contains the much quoted statement that we seem as it were to have conquered half the world in a fit of absence of mind Expansion of England appeared at an opportune time and did much to make the British regard the colonies as an expansion of the British state as well as of British nationality and to confirm to them the value of Britain s empire in the East 9 In his history of the British Empire written in 1940 A P Newton lamented that Seeley dealt in the main with the great wars of the eighteenth century and this gave the false impression that the British Empire has been founded largely by war and conquest an idea that was unfortunately planted firmly in the public mind not only in Great Britain but also in foreign countries 10 nbsp Plaque commemorating Sir Humphrey Gilbert s founding of the British Empire in St John s Newfoundland in 1583 Historians often point out that in the First British Empire before the 1780s there was no single imperial vision but rather a multiplicity of private operations led by different groups of English businessmen or religious groups Although protected by the Royal Navy they were not funded or planned by the government 11 After the American war says Bruce Collins British leaders focused not on any military lessons to be learned but upon the regulation and expansion of imperial trade and the readjustment of Britain s constitutional relationship with its colonies 12 In the Second British Empire by 1815 historians identify four distinct elements in the colonies 11 The most politically developed colonies were the self governing colonies in the Caribbean and those that later formed Canada and Australia India was in a category by itself and its immense size and distance required control of the routes to it and in turn permitted British naval dominance from the Persian Gulf to the South China Sea The third group was a mixed bag of smaller territories including isolated ports used as way stations to India and emerging trade entrepots such as Hong Kong and Singapore along with a few isolated ports in Africa The fourth kind of empire was the informal empire that is financial dominance exercised through investments as in Latin America and including the complex situation in Egypt it was owned theoretically by the Ottoman Empire but ruled by Britain 13 Darwin argues the British Empire was distinguished by the adaptability of its builders The hallmark of British imperialism was its extraordinary versatility in method outlook and object The British tried to avoid military action in favour of reliance on networks of local elites and businessmen who voluntarily collaborated and in turn gained authority and military protection from British recognition 14 Historians who argue that Britain built an informal economic empire through control of trade and finance in Latin America after the independence of Spanish and Portuguese colonies about 1820 15 By the 1840s Britain had adopted a highly successful policy of free trade that gave it dominance in the trade of much of the world 16 After losing its first Empire to the Americans Britain then turned its attention towards Asia Africa and the Pacific Following the defeat of Napoleonic France in 1815 Britain enjoyed a century of almost unchallenged dominance and expanded its imperial holdings around the globe Increasing degrees of internal autonomy were granted to its white settler colonies in the 20th century 17 A resurgence came in the late 19th century with the Scramble for Africa and major additions in Asia and the Middle East Leadership in British imperialism was expressed by Joseph Chamberlain and Lord Rosebery and implemented in Africa by Cecil Rhodes Other influential spokesmen included Lord Cromer Lord Curzon General Kitchner Lord Milner and the writer Rudyard Kipling They all were influenced by Seeley s Expansion of England 18 The British Empire was the largest Empire that the world has ever seen both in terms of landmass and population Its power both military and economic remained unmatched in 1900 In 1876 Disraeli overcame vehement Liberal opposition and obtained for Queen Victoria the title of Empress of India she was not Empress of the British Empire 19 British historians focused on the diplomatic military and administrative aspects of the Empire before the 1960s They saw a benevolent enterprise Younger generations branched off into a variety of social economic and cultural themes and took a much more critical stance Representative of the old tradition was the Cambridge History of India a large scale project published in five volumes between 1922 and 1937 by Cambridge University Press Some volumes were also part of the simultaneous multivolume The Cambridge History of the British Empire Production of both works was delayed by the First World War and the ill health of contributors the India volume II had to be abandoned Reviewers complained the research methods were too old fashioned one critic said it was history as it was understood by our grandfathers 20 Idea of Empire editDavid Armitage provided an influential 21 study of the emergence of a British imperial ideology from the time of Henry VIII to that of Robert Walpole in the 1720s and 1730s 22 Using a close reading of English Scottish and Irish authors from Sir Thomas Smith 1513 77 to David Hume 1711 1776 Armitage argues that the imperial ideology was both a critical agent in the formation of a British state from three kingdoms and an essential bond between the state and the transatlantic colonies Armitage thus links the concerns of the New British History with that of the Atlantic history Before 1700 Armitage finds that contested English and Scottish versions of state and empire delayed the emergence of a unitary imperial ideology However political economists Nicholas Barbon and Charles Davenant in the late 17th century emphasized the significance of commerce especially mercantilism or commerce that was closed to outsiders to the success of the state They argued that trade depended on liberty and that liberty could therefore be the foundation of empire 23 To overcome competing versions of empires of the seas within Britain Parliament undertook the regulation of the Irish economy the Acts of Union 1707 and the formation of a unitary and organic British empire of the sea Walpole s opponents in the 1730s in the country party and in the American colonies developed an alternative vision of empire that would be Protestant commercial maritime and free 24 Walpole did not ensure the promised liberty to the colonies because he was intent on subordinating all colonial economic activity to the mercantilist advantages of the metropolis Anti imperial critiques emerged from Francis Hutcheson and David Hume presaging the republicanism that swept the American colonies in the 1770s and led to the creation of a rival power Economic policy Mercantilism edit Main article Mercantilism Historians led by Eli Heckscher have identified Mercantilism as the central economic policy for the empire before the shift to free trade in the 1840s 25 26 Mercantilism is an economic theory practice commonly used in Britain France and other major European nations from the 16th to the 18th century that promoted governmental regulation of a nation s economy for the purpose of augmenting state power at the expense of rival national powers It was the economic counterpart of political absolutism 27 28 It involves a national economic policy aimed at accumulating monetary reserves through a positive balance of trade especially of finished goods Mercantilism dominated Western European economic policy and discourse from the 16th to late 18th centuries Mercantilism was a cause of frequent European wars and also motivated colonial expansion High tariffs especially on manufactured goods are an almost universal feature of mercantilist policy Other policies have included 29 Building overseas colonies Forbidding colonies to trade with other nations Monopolizing markets with staple ports Banning the export of gold and silver even for payments Forbidding trade to be carried in foreign ships Export subsidies Promoting manufacturing with research or direct subsidies Limiting wages Maximizing the use of domestic resources Restricting domestic consumption with non tariff barriers to trade The term mercantile system was used by its foremost critic Adam Smith 30 Mercantilism in its simplest form was bullionism which focused on accumulating gold and silver through clever trades leaver the trading partner with less of his gold and silver Mercantilist writers emphasized the circulation of money and rejected hoarding Their emphasis on monetary metals accords with current ideas regarding the money supply such as the stimulative effect of a growing money supply In England mercantilism reached its peak during the Long Parliament government 1640 1660 Mercantilist policies were also embraced throughout much of the Tudor and Stuart periods with Robert Walpole being another major proponent In Britain government control over the domestic economy was far less extensive than on the Continent limited by common law and the steadily increasing power of Parliament 31 Government controlled monopolies were common especially before the English Civil War but were often controversial 32 nbsp The Anglo Dutch Wars were fought between the English and the Dutch for control over the seas and trade routes With respect to its colonies British mercantilism meant that the government and the merchants became partners with the goal of increasing political power and private wealth to the exclusion of other empires The government protected its merchants and kept others out by trade barriers regulations and subsidies to domestic industries in order to maximize exports from and minimize imports to the realm The government used the Royal Navy to protect the colonies and to fight smuggling which became a favourite American technique in the 18th century to circumvent the restrictions on trading with the French Spanish or Dutch 33 The goal of mercantilism was to run trade surpluses so that gold and silver would pour into London The government took its share through duties and taxes with the remainder going to merchants in Britain The colonies were captive markets for British industry and the goal was to enrich the mother country not the colonists 34 nbsp Mercantilism helped create trade patterns such as the triangular trade in the North Atlantic in which raw materials were imported to the metropolis and then processed and redistributed to other colonies British mercantilist writers were themselves divided on whether domestic controls were necessary British mercantilism thus mainly took the form of efforts to control trade Much of the enforcement against smuggling was handled by the Royal Navy argued Neil Stout 35 A wide array of regulations was put in place to encourage exports and discourage imports Tariffs were placed on imports and bounties given for exports and the export of some raw materials was banned completely The Navigation Acts expelled foreign merchants from England s domestic trade The nation aggressively sought colonies and once under British control regulations were imposed that allowed the colony to only produce raw materials and to only trade with Britain This led to smuggling by major merchants and political friction with the businessmen of these colonies Mercantilist policies such as forbidding trade with other empires and controls over smuggling were a major irritant leading to the American Revolution 36 Mercantilism taught that trade was a zero sum game with one country s gain equivalent to a loss sustained by the trading partner Whatever the theoretical weaknesses exposed by economists after Adam Smith it was under mercantilist policies before the 1840s that Britain became the world s dominant trader and the global hegemon 37 Mercantilism in Britain ended when Parliament repealed the Navigation Acts and Corn Laws by 1846 38 Scholars agree that Britain gradually dropped mercantilism after 1815 Free trade with no tariffs and few restrictions was the prevailing doctrine from the 1840s to the 1930s 39 Defending empire and pseudo empire edit John Darwin has explored the way historians have explained the large role of the Royal Navy and the much smaller role of the British Army in the history of the empire For the 20th century he explores what he calls a pseudo empire oil producers in the Middle East The strategic goal of protecting the Suez Canal was a high priority from the 1880s to 1956 and by then had expanded to the oil regions Darwin argues that defence strategy posed issues of how to reconcile the needs of domestic politics with the preservation of a global Empire 40 Darwin argues that a main function of the British defence system especially the Royal Navy was defence of the overseas empire in addition of course to defence of the homeland 41 The army usually in co operation with local forces suppressed internal revolts losing only the American War of Independence 1775 83 42 Armitage considers the following to be the British creed Protestantism oceanic commerce and mastery of the seas provided bastions to protect the freedom of inhabitants of the British Empire That freedom found its institutional expression in Parliament the law property and rights all of which were exported throughout the British Atlantic world Such freedom also allowed the British uniquely to combine the classically incompatible ideals of liberty and empire 43 Lizzie Collingham 2017 stresses the role of expanding the food supply in the building financing and defending the trade aspect of empire building 44 Thirteen American Colonies and Revolution edit Main articles Thirteen Colonies and American Revolution The first British Empire centered on the 13 American Colonies which attracted large numbers of settlers from across Britain In the 1900s 1930s period the Imperial School including Herbert L Osgood George Louis Beer 45 Charles M Andrews and Lawrence Gipson 46 took a favourable view of the benefits of empire emphasizing its successful economic integration 47 Regarding Columbia University historian Herbert L Osgood 1855 1918 biographer Gwenda Morgan concludes Osgood brought a new sophistication to the study of colonial relations posing the question from an institutional perspective of how the Atlantic was bridged He was the first American historian to recognize the complexity of imperial structures the experimental character of the empire and the contradictions between theory and practice that gave rise on both sides of the Atlantic to inconsistencies and misunderstandings It was American factors rather than imperial influences that in his view shaped the development of the colonies Osgood s work still has value for professional historians interested in the nature of the colonies place in the early British Empire and their internal political development 48 Much of the historiography concerns the reasons the Americans revolted in the 1770s and successfully broke away 49 The Patriots an insulting term used by the British that was proudly adopted by the Americans stressed the constitutional rights of Englishmen especially No taxation without representation Historians since the 1960s have emphasized that the Patriot constitutional argument was made possible by the emergence of a sense of American nationalism that united all 13 colonies In turn that nationalism was Rooted in a Republican value system that demanded consent of the governed and opposed aristocratic control 50 In Britain itself republicanism was a fringe view since it challenged the aristocratic control of the British political system There were almost no aristocrats or nobles in the 13 colonies and instead the colonial political system was based on the winners of free elections which were open to the majority of white men In the analysis of the coming of the Revolution historians in recent decades have mostly used one of three approaches 51 The Atlantic history view places the American story in a broader context including revolutions in France and Haiti It tends to reintegrate the historiographies of the American Revolution and the British Empire 52 53 54 The new social history approach looks at community social structure to find cleavages that were magnified into colonial cleavages The ideological approach that centres on republicanism in the United States 55 Republicanism dictated there would be no royalty aristocracy or national church but allowed for continuation of the British common law which American lawyers and jurists understood and approved and used in their everyday practice Historians have examined how the rising American legal profession adapted British common law to incorporate republicanism by selective revision of legal customs and by introducing more choice for courts 56 57 First British Empire and Second British Empire editThe concept of a first and second British Empire was developed by historians in the early 20th century 58 59 Timothy H Parsons argued in 2014 there were several British empires that ended at different times and for different reasons 60 He focused on the Second Ashley Jackson argued in 2013 that historians have even extended to a third and fourth empire The first British Empire was largely destroyed by the loss of the American colonies followed by a swing to the east and the foundation of a second British Empire based on commercial and territorial expansion in South Asia The third British Empire was the construction of a white dominion power bloc in the international system based on Britain s relations with its settler offshoots Australia Canada New Zealand and South Africa The fourth British Empire meanwhile is used to denote Britain s rejuvenated imperial focus on Africa and South East Asia following the Second World War and the independence in 1947 48 of Britain s South Asian dependencies when the Empire became a vital crutch in Britain s economic recovery 61 The first Empire was founded in the 17th century and based on the migration of large numbers of settlers to the American colonies as well as the development of the sugar plantation colonies in the West Indies It ended with the British loss of the American War for Independence The second Empire had already started to emerge It was originally designed as a chain of trading ports and naval bases However it expanded inland into the control of large numbers of natives when the East India Company proved highly successful in taking control of most of India India became the keystone of the Second Empire along with colonies later developed across Africa A few new settler colonies were also built up in Australia and New Zealand and to a lesser extent in South Africa Marshall in 1999 shows the consensus of scholars is clear for since 1900 the concepts of the First British Empire have held their ground in historians usage without serious challenge 62 In 1988 Peter Marshall says that late 18th century transformations constituted a fundamental reordering of the Empire which make it appropriate to talk about a first British Empire giving way to a second one Historians have long identified certain developments in the late eighteenth century that undermined the fundamentals of the old Empire and were to bring about a new one These were the American Revolution and the industrial revolution 63 Historians however debate whether 1783 was a sharp line of demarcation between First and Second or whether there was an overlap as argued by Vincent T Harlow 64 or whether there was a black hole between 1783 and the later birth of the Second Empire Historian Denis Judd says the black hole is a fallacy and that there was continuity Judd writes It is commonplace to suppose that the successful revolt of the American colonies marked the end of the First British Empire But this is only a half truth In 1783 there was still a substantial Empire left 65 66 Marshall notes that the exact dating of the two empires varies with 1783 a typical demarcation point 67 Thus the story of the American revolt provides a key The Fall of the First British Empire Origins of the Wars of American Independence 1982 by American professors Robert W Tucker and David Hendrickson stresses the victorious initiative of the Americans By contrast Cambridge professor Brendan Simms explores Three Victories and a Defeat The Rise and Fall of the First British Empire 1714 1783 2007 and explains Britain s defeat in terms of alienating the major powers on the Continent Theories of imperialism editMain article Imperialism Theories about imperialism typically focus on the Second British Empire 68 with side glances elsewhere The term Imperialism was originally introduced into English in its present sense in the 1870s by Liberal leader William Gladstone to ridicule the imperial policies of Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli which he denounced as aggressive and ostentatious and inspired by domestic motives 69 The term was shortly appropriated by supporters of imperialism such as Joseph Chamberlain For some imperialism designated a policy of idealism and philanthropy others alleged that it was characterized by political self interest and a growing number associated it with capitalist greed 70 John A Hobson a leading English Liberal developed a highly influential economic exploitation model in Imperialism A Study 1902 that expanded on his belief that free enterprise capitalism had a negative impact on the majority of the population In Imperialism he argued that the financing of overseas empires drained money that was needed at home It was invested abroad because lower wages paid the workers overseas made for higher profits and higher rates of return compared to domestic wages So although domestic wages remained higher they did not grow nearly as fast as they might have otherwise Exporting capital he concluded put a lid on the growth of domestic wages in the domestic standard of living By the 1970s historians such as David K Fieldhouse 71 and Oren Hale could argue that the Hobsonian foundation has been almost completely demolished 72 The British experience failed to support it However European Socialists picked up Hobson s ideas and made it into their own theory of imperialism most notably in Lenin s Imperialism the Highest Stage of Capitalism 1916 Lenin portrayed Imperialism as the closure of the world market and the end of capitalist free competition that arose from the need for capitalist economies to constantly expand investment material resources and manpower in such a way that necessitated colonial expansion Later Marxist theoreticians echo this conception of imperialism as a structural feature of capitalism which explained the World War as the battle between imperialists for control of external markets Lenin s treatise became a standard textbook that flourished until the collapse of communism in 1989 91 73 As the application of the term imperialism has expanded its meaning has shifted along five axes the moral the economic the systemic the cultural and the temporal Those changes reflect a growing unease even squeamishness with the fact of power specifically Western power 74 75 The relationships among capitalism imperialism exploitation social reform and economic development has long been debated among historians and political theorists Much of the debate was pioneered by such theorists as John A Hobson 1858 1940 Joseph Schumpeter 1883 1950 Thorstein Veblen 1857 1929 and Norman Angell 1872 1967 While these non Marxist writers were at their most prolific before World War I they remained active in the interwar years Their combined work informed the study of imperialism s impact on Europe as well as contributed to reflections on the rise of the military political complex in the United States from the 1950s Hobson argued that domestic social reforms could cure the international disease of imperialism by removing its economic foundation Hobson theorized that state intervention through taxation could boost broader consumption create wealth and encourage a peaceful multilateral world order Conversely should the state not intervene rentiers people who earn income from property or securities would generate socially negative wealth that fostered imperialism and protectionism 76 77 Hobson for years was widely influential in liberal circles especially the British Liberal Party 78 Lenin s writings became orthodoxy for all Marxist historians 79 They had many critics D K Fieldhouse for example argues that they used superficial arguments Fieldhouse says that the obvious driving force of British expansion since 1870 came from explorers missionaries engineers and empire minded politicians They had little interest in financial investments Hobson s answer was to say that faceless financiers manipulated everyone else so that The final determination rests with the financial power 80 Lenin believed that capitalism was in its last stages and had been taken over by monopolists They were no longer dynamic and sought to maintain profits by even more intensive exploitation of protected markets Fieldhouse rejects these arguments as unfounded speculation 75 81 Imperialism of Free Trade edit Main article The Imperialism of Free Trade Historians agree that in the 1840s Britain adopted a free trade policy meaning open markets and no tariffs throughout the empire 82 The debate among historians involves what the implications of free trade actually were The Imperialism of Free Trade is a highly influential 1952 article by John Gallagher and Ronald Robinson 83 84 They argued that the New Imperialism of the 1880s especially the Scramble for Africa was a continuation of a long term policy in which informal empire based on the principles of free trade was favoured over formal imperial control The article helped launch the Cambridge School of historiography Gallagher and Robinson used the British experience to construct a framework for understanding European imperialism that swept away the all or nothing thinking of previous historians 85 They found that European leaders rejected the notion that imperialism had to be based upon formal legal control by one government over a colonial region Much more important was informal influence in independent areas According to Wm Roger Louis In their view historians have been mesmerized by formal empire and maps of the world with regions colored red The bulk of British emigration trade and capital went to areas outside the formal British Empire Key to their thinking is the idea of empire informally if possible and formally if necessary 86 Oron Hale says that Gallagher and Robinson looked at the British involvement in Africa where they found few capitalists less capital and not much pressure from the alleged traditional promoters of colonial expansion Cabinet decisions to annex or not to annex were made usually on the basis of political or geopolitical considerations 87 Reviewing the debate from the end of the 20th century historian Martin Lynn argues that Gallagher and Robinson exaggerated the impact He says that Britain achieved its goal of increasing its economic interests in many areas but the broader goal of regenerating societies and thereby creating regions tied as tributaries to British economic interests was not attained The reasons were the aim to reshape the world through free trade and its extension overseas owed more to the misplaced optimism of British policy makers and their partial views of the world than to an understanding of the realities of the mid 19th century globe the volumes of trade and investment the British were able to generate remained limited Local economies and local regimes proved adept at restricting the reach of British trade and investment Local impediments to foreign inroads the inhabitants low purchasing power the resilience of local manufacturing and the capabilities of local entrepreneurs meant that these areas effectively resisted British economic penetration 88 The idea that free trade imperial states use informal controls to secure their expanding economic influence has attracted Marxists trying to avoid the problems of earlier Marxist interpretations of capitalism The approach is most often applied to American policies 89 Free trade versus tariffs edit Historians have begun to explore some of the ramifications of British free trade policy especially the effect of American and German high tariff policies Canada adopted a national policy of high tariffs in the late 19th century in sharp distinction to the mother country The goal was to protect its infant manufacturing industries from low cost imports from the United States and Britain 90 91 The demand increasingly rose in Great Britain to end the free trade policy and impose tariffs to protect its manufacturing from American and German competition 92 The leading spokesman was Joseph Chamberlain 1836 1914 and he made tariff reform that is imposing higher tariffs a central issue in British domestic politics 93 By the 1930s the British began shifting their policies away from free trade and toward low tariffs inside the British Commonwealth and higher tariffs for outside products Economic historians have debated at length the impact of these tariff changes on economic growth One controversial formulation by Bairoch argues that in the 1870 1914 era protectionism economic growth and expansion of trade liberalism stagnation in both 94 Many studies have supported Bairoch but other economists have challenged his results regarding Canada 95 Gentlemanly capitalism edit Gentlemanly capitalism is a theory of New Imperialism first put forward by P J Cain and A G Hopkins in the 1980s before being fully developed in their 1993 work British Imperialism 96 The theory posits that British imperialism was driven by the business interests of the City of London and landed interests It encourages a shift of emphasis away from seeing provincial manufacturers and geopolitical strategy as important influences and towards seeing the expansion of empire as emanating from London and the financial sector 97 98 Benevolence human rights and slavery editThis section may be unbalanced towards certain viewpoints Please improve the article by adding information on neglected viewpoints or discuss the issue on the talk page October 2023 Kevin Grant shows that numerous historians in the 21st century have explored relationships between the Empire international government and human rights They have focused on British conceptions of imperial world order from the late 19th century to the Cold War 99 The British intellectuals and political leaders felt that they had a duty to protect and promote the human rights of the natives and to help pull them from the slough of traditionalism and cruelties such as suttee in India and foot binding in China The notion of benevolence was developed in the 1780 1840 era by idealists whose moralistic prescriptions annoyed efficiency oriented colonial administrators and profit oriented merchants 100 Partly it was a matter of fighting corruption in the Empire as typified by Edmund Burke s long but failed attempt to impeach Warren Hastings for his cruelties in India The most successful development came in the abolition of slavery led by William Wilberforce and the Evangelicals 101 and the expansion of Christian missionary work 102 Edward Gibbon Wakefield 1796 1852 spearheaded efforts to create model colonies such as South Australia Canada and New Zealand The 1840 Treaty of Waitangi initially designed to protect Maori rights has become the bedrock of Aotearoa New Zealand biculturalism 103 In Wakefield s vision the object of benevolence was to introduce and promote values of industriousness and a productive economy not to use colonies as a dumping ground for transported criminals 104 Promotion and abolition of slavery edit English historian Jeremy Black argues that Slavery and the slave trade are the most difficult and contentious aspect of the imperial legacy one that captures the full viciousness of power economic political and military and that leaves a clear and understandable hostility to empire in the Atlantic world Moreover within Britain slavery and the slave trade became and become ready ways to stigmatize empire and increasingly so notably as Britain becomes a multiracial society 105 One of the most controversial aspects of the Empire is its role in first promoting and then ending slavery 106 In the 18th century British merchant ships were the largest element in the Middle Passage which transported millions of slaves to the Western Hemisphere Most of those who survived the journey wound up in the Caribbean where the Empire had highly profitable sugar colonies and the living conditions were bad the plantation owners lived in Britain Parliament ended the international transportation of slaves in 1807 and used the Royal Navy to enforce that ban In 1833 it bought out the plantation owners and banned slavery Historians before the 1940s argued that moralistic reformers such as William Wilberforce were primarily responsible 107 Historical revisionism arrived when West Indian historian Eric Williams a Marxist in Capitalism and Slavery 1944 rejected this moral explanation and argued that abolition was now more profitable as a century of sugar cane raising had exhausted the soil of the islands and the plantations had become unprofitable It was more profitable to sell the slaves to the government than to keep up operations The 1807 prohibition of the international trade Williams argued prevented French expansion on other islands Meanwhile British investors turned to Asia where labor was so plentiful that slavery was unnecessary Williams went on to argue that slavery played a major role in making Britain prosperous The high profits from the slave trade he said helped finance the Industrial Revolution Britain enjoyed prosperity because of the capital gained from the unpaid work of slaves 108 Since the 1970s numerous historians have challenged Williams from various angles and Gad Heuman has concluded More recent research has rejected this conclusion it is now clear that the colonies of the British Caribbean profited considerably during the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars 109 110 In his major attack on the Williams s thesis Seymour Drescher argues that Britain s abolition of the slave trade in 1807 resulted not from the diminishing value of slavery for Britain but instead from the moral outrage of the British voting public 111 Critics have also argued that slavery remained profitable in the 1830s because of innovations in agriculture so the profit motive was not central to abolition 112 Richardson 1998 finds that Williams s claims regarding the Industrial Revolution are exaggerated as profits from the slave trade amounted to less than 1 of domestic investment in Britain Richardson further challenges claims by African scholars that the slave trade caused widespread depopulation and economic distress in Africa but that it caused the underdevelopment of Africa Admitting the horrible suffering of slaves he notes that many Africans benefited directly because the first stage of the trade was always firmly in the hands of Africans European slave ships waited at ports to purchase cargoes of people who were captured in the hinterland by African dealers and tribal leaders Richardson finds that the terms of trade how much the ship owners paid for the slave cargo moved heavily in favour of the Africans after about 1750 That is indigenous elites inside West and Central Africa made large and growing profits from slavery thus increasing their wealth and power 113 Economic historian Stanley Engerman finds that even without subtracting the associated costs of the slave trade shipping costs slave mortality mortality of British people in Africa defence costs or reinvestment of profits back into the slave trade the total profits from the slave trade and of West Indian plantations amounted to less than 5 of the British economy during any year of the Industrial Revolution 114 Engerman s 5 figure gives as much as possible in terms of benefit of the doubt to the Williams argument not solely because it does not take into account the associated costs of the slave trade to Britain but also because it carries the full employment assumption from economics and holds the gross value of slave trade profits as a direct contribution to Britain s national income 115 Historian Richard Pares in an article written before Williams s book dismisses the influence of wealth generated from the West Indian plantations upon the financing of the Industrial Revolution stating that whatever substantial flow of investment from West Indian profits into industry there was occurred after emancipation not before it 116 Whiggish history and the civilising mission edit nbsp University of Lucknow founded by the British in 1867 in India Thomas Babington Macaulay 1800 1859 was the foremost historian of his day arguing for the Whig interpretation of history that saw the history of Britain as an upward progression always leading to more liberty and more progress Macaulay simultaneously was a leading reformer involved in transforming the educational system of India He would base it on the English language so that India could join the mother country in a steady upward progress Macaulay took Burke s emphasis on moral rule and implemented it in actual school reforms giving the British Empire a profound moral mission to civilize the natives nbsp Paul Bogle a Baptist deacon was hanged for leading the Morant Bay rebellion in Jamaica 1865Yale professor Karuna Mantena has argued that the civilizing mission did not last long for she says that benevolent reformers were the losers in key debates such as those following the 1857 rebellion in India and the scandal of Governor Edward Eyre s brutal repression of the Morant Bay rebellion in Jamaica in 1865 The rhetoric continued but it became an alibi for British misrule and racism No longer was it believed that the natives could truly make progress instead they had to be ruled by heavy hand with democratic opportunities postponed indefinitely As a result The central tenets of liberal imperialism were challenged as various forms of rebellion resistance and instability in the colonies precipitated a broad ranging reassessment the equation of good government with the reform of native society which was at the core of the discourse of liberal empire would be subject to mounting skepticism 117 English historian Peter Cain has challenged Mantena arguing that the imperialists truly believed that British rule would bring to the subjects the benefits of ordered liberty thereby Britain could fulfill its moral duty and achieve its own greatness Much of the debate took place in Britain itself and the imperialists worked hard to convince the general population that the civilising mission was well underway This campaign served to strengthen imperial support at home and thus says Cain to bolster the moral authority of the gentlemanly elites who ran the Empire 118 Public health edit Mark Harrison argues that the history of public health administration in India dates from the assumption of Crown rule in 1859 Medical experts found that epidemic disease had seriously depleted the fighting capacity of British troops in repressing the rebellion in 1857 and insisted that preventive measures were much more effective than waiting for the next epidemic to break out 119 Across the Empire it became a high priority for Imperial officials to establish a public health system in each colony They applied the best practices as developed in Britain using an elaborate administrative structure in each colony The system depended on trained local elites and officials to carry out the sanitation improvements quarantines inoculations hospitals and local treatment centers that were needed For example local midwives were trained to provide maternal and infant health care Propaganda campaigns using posters rallies and later films were used to educate the general public 120 A serious challenge came from the intensified use of multiple transportation routes and the emergence of central hubs such as Hong Kong all of which facilitated this spread of epidemics such as the plague in the 1890s thus sharply increasing the priority of public health programs 121 Michael Worboys argues that the 20th century development and control of tropical diseases had three phases protection of Europeans in the colonies improvement in health care of employable natives and finally the systematic attack on the main diseases of the natives BELRA a large scale program against leprosy had policies of isolation in newly established leper colonies separation of healthy children from infected parents and the development in Britain of chaulmoogra oil therapy and its systematic dissemination 122 123 Danald McDonald has argued the most advanced program in public health apart from the dominions was established in India with the Indian Medical Service IMS 124 The Raj set up the Calcutta School of Tropical Medicine between 1910 and its opening in 1921 as a postgraduate center for tropical medicine on the periphery of the Empire 125 126 Religion The missionaries edit In the 18th century and even more so in the 19th century missionaries based in Britain saw the Empire as a fertile field for proselytizing Christianity Congregations across Britain received regular reports and contributed money 127 All the main denominations were involved including the Church of England the Presbyterians of Scotland and the Nonconformists Much of the enthusiasm emerged from the Evangelical revival 128 129 130 The two largest and most influential operations were the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts SPG founded in 1701 131 and the more evangelical Church Mission Society founded in 1799 also by the Church of England 132 Before the American Revolution Anglican and Methodist missionaries were active in the 13 Colonies The Methodists led by George Whitefield were the most successful according to Mark Noll After the revolution an entirely distinct American Methodist denomination emerged that became the largest Protestant denomination in the new United States 133 As historians such as Carl Bridenbaugh have argued a major problem for colonial officials was the demand of the Church of England to set up an American bishop this was strongly opposed by most of the Americans 134 Increasingly colonial officials took a neutral position on religious matters even in those colonies such as Virginia where the Church of England was officially established but in practice controlled by laymen in the local vestries After the Americans broke free British officials decided to enhance the power and wealth of the Church of England in all the settler colonies especially British North America Canada 135 Missionary societies funded their own operations that were not supervised or directed by the Colonial Office Tensions emerged between the missionaries and the colonial officials The latter feared that missionaries might stir up trouble or encourage the natives to challenge colonial authority In general colonial officials were much more comfortable with working with the established local leadership including the native religions rather than introducing the divisive force of Christianity This proved especially troublesome in India where very few local elites were attracted to Christianity In Africa especially the missionaries made many converts By the 21st century there were more Anglicans in Nigeria than in England 136 137 Christianity had a powerful effect far beyond the small circle of converts it provided a model of modernity The introduction of European medicine was especially important as well as the introduction of European political practices and ideals such as religious liberty mass education mass printing newspapers voluntary organizations colonial reforms and especially liberal democracy 138 Increasingly the missionaries realized their wider scope and systematically added secular roles to their spiritual mission They tried to upgrade education medical care and sponsored the long term modernization of the native personality to inculcate European middle class values Alongside their churches they established schools and medical clinics and sometimes demonstrated improved farming techniques 139 Christian missionaries played a public role especially in promoting sanitation and public health Many were trained as physicians or took special courses in public health and tropical medicine at Livingstone College London 140 Furthermore Christian missionary activities were studied and copied by local activists and had an influence upon religious politics on prophetic movements such as those in Xhosa societies on emerging nationalism in South African and India the emergence of African independent churches and sometimes upgrading the status of native women 141 Historians have begun to analyze the agency of women in overseas missions At first missionary societies officially enrolled only men but women increasingly insisted on playing a variety of roles Single women typically worked as educators Wives assisted their missionary husbands in most of his roles Advocates stopped short of calling for the end of specified gender roles but they stressed the interconnectedness of the public and private spheres and spoke out against perceptions of women as weak and house bound 142 Education edit In the colonies that became dominions education was left primarily in the hands of local officials The Imperial government took a strong hand in India and most of the later colonies The goal was to speed up modernization and social development through a widespread system of elementary education for all natives plus high school and eventually university education for selected elites The students were encouraged to attend university in Britain 143 144 Direct control and bureaucracy edit Much of the older historiography as represented by The Cambridge History of the British Empire covers the detailed month to month operations of the Imperial bureaucracy More recent scholarship has examined who the bureaucrats and governors were as well as the role of the colonial experience on their own lives and families The cultural approach asks how bureaucrats represented themselves and enticed the natives to accept their rule 145 Wives of senior bureaucrats played an increasingly important role in dealing with the local people and in sponsoring and promoting charities and civic good will When they returned to Britain they had an influential voice in shaping upper class opinion toward colonization Historian Robert Pearce points out that many colonial wives had a negative reputation but he depicts Violet Bourdillon 1886 1979 as the perfect Governor s wife She charmed both British businessmen and the locals in Nigeria giving the colonial peoples graciousness and respect she made the British appear to be not so much rulers as guides and partners in social economic and political development 146 Indirect control edit Main article indirect rule Some British colonies were ruled directly by the Colonial Office in London while others were ruled indirectly through local rulers who are supervised behind the scenes by British advisors with different economic results as shown by Lakshmi Iyer 2010 In much of the Empire large local populations were ruled in close cooperation with the local hierarchy Historians have developed categories of control such as subsidiary alliances paramountcy protectorates indirect rule clientelism or collaboration Local elites were co opted into leadership positions and often had the role of minimizing opposition from local independence movements 147 Fisher has explored the origins and development of the system of indirect rule The British East India Company starting in the mid 18th century stationed its staff as agents in Indian states which it did not control especially the Princely States By the 1840s The system became an efficient way to govern indirectly by providing local rulers with highly detailed advice that had been approved by central authorities After 1870 military more and more often took the role they were recruited and promoted officers on the basis of experience and expertise The indirect rule system was extended to Many of the colonial holdings in Asia and Africa 148 Economic historians have explored the economic consequences of indirect rule as in India 149 and West Africa 150 In 1890 Zanzibar became a protectorate not a colony of Britain Prime minister Salisbury explained his position The condition of a protected dependency is more acceptable to the half civilised races and more suitable for them than direct dominion It is cheaper simpler less wounding to their self esteem gives them more career as public officials and spares of unnecessary contact with white men 151 Colonel Sir Robert Groves Sandeman 1835 1892 introduced an innovative system of tribal pacification in Balochistan that was in effect from 1877 to 1947 He gave financial allowances to tribal chiefs who enforced control and used British military force only when necessary However the Government of India generally opposed his methods and refused to allow it to operate in India s North West Frontier Historians have long debated its scope and effectiveness in the peaceful spread of Imperial influence 152 Environment edit Although environmental history was growing rapidly after 1970 it only reached empire studies in the 1990s 153 154 155 Gregory Barton argues that the concept of environmentalism emerged from forestry studies and emphasizes the British imperial role in that research He argues that imperial forestry movement in India around 1900 included government reservations new methods of fire protection and attention to revenue producing forest management The result eased the fight between romantic preservationists and laissez faire businessmen thus giving the compromise from which modern environmentalism emerged 156 In recent years numerous scholars cited by James Beattie have examined the environmental impact of the Empire 157 Beinart and Hughes argue that the discovery and commercial or scientific use of new plants was an important concern in the 18th and 19th centuries The efficient use of rivers through dams and irrigation projects was an expensive but important method of raising agricultural productivity Searching for more efficient ways of using natural resources the British moved flora fauna and commodities around the world sometimes resulting in ecological disruption and radical environmental change Imperialism also stimulated more modern attitudes toward nature and subsidized botany and agricultural research 158 Scholars have used the British Empire to examine the utility of the new concept of eco cultural networks as a lens for examining interconnected wide ranging social and environmental processes 159 Regions editBetween 1696 and 1782 the Board of Trade in partnership with the various secretaries of state over that time a held responsibility for colonial affairs particularly in British America From 1783 through 1801 the British Empire including British North America was administered by the Home Office and by the Home Secretary then from 1801 to 1854 by the War Office which became the War and Colonial Office and Secretary of State for War and Colonies as the Secretary of State for War was renamed From 1824 the British Empire was divided by the War and Colonial Office into four administrative departments including NORTH AMERICA the WEST INDIES MEDITERRANEAN AND AFRICA and EASTERN COLONIES of which North America included 160 NORTH AMERICA Upper Canada Lower Canada New Brunswick Nova Scotia Prince Edward Island Bermuda NewfoundlandThe Colonial Office and War Office and the Secretary of State for the Colonies and the Secretary of State for War were separated in 1854 161 162 The War Office from then until the 1867 confederation of the Dominion of Canada split the military administration of the British colonial and foreign stations into nine districts North America And North Atlantic West Indies Mediterranean West Coast Of Africa And South Atlantic South Africa Egypt And The Sudan INDIAN OCEAN Australia and China North America And North Atlantic included the following stations or garrisons 163 NORTH AMERICA AND NORTH ATLANTIC New Westminster British Columbia Newfoundland Quebec Halifax Kingston Canada West BermudaIndia was administered separately by the East India Company until transferred by the Government of India Act 1858 to the India Office which was closed in 1947 on Indian independence As British protectorates were not British territory they were also administered separately by the Foreign Office Surveys of the whole empire edit In 1914 the six volume The Oxford Survey Of The British Empire gave comprehensive coverage to geography and society of the entire Empire including the British Isles 164 Since the 1950s historians have tended to concentrate on specific countries or regions 165 By the 1930s an Empire so vast was a challenge for historians to grasp in its entirety The American Lawrence H Gipson 1880 1971 won the Pulitzer Prize for his monumental coverage in 15 volumes of The British Empire Before the American Revolution published 1936 70 46 At about the same time in London Sir Keith Hancock wrote a Survey of Commonwealth Affairs 2 vol 1937 42 that dramatically widened the scope of coverage beyond politics to the newer fields of economic and social history 166 In recent decades numerous scholars have tried their hand at one volume surveys including T O Lloyd The British Empire 1558 1995 1996 Denis Judd Empire The British Imperial Experience From 1765 To The Present 1998 Lawrence James The Rise and Fall of the British Empire 1998 Niall Ferguson Empire The Rise and Demise of the British World Order and the Lessons for Global Power 2002 Brendan Simms Three victories and a defeat the rise and fall of the first British Empire 2008 Piers Brendon The Decline and Fall of the British Empire 1781 1997 2008 and Phillip J Smith The Rise And Fall Of The British Empire Mercantilism Diplomacy and the Colonies 2015 167 There were also large scale popular histories such as those by Winston Churchill A History of the English Speaking Peoples 4 vol 1956 58 and Arthur Bryant The History of Britain and the British Peoples 3 vols 1984 90 Obviously from their titles a number of writers have been inspired by the famous The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire 6 vols 1776 1781 by Edward Gibbon 168 Brendon notes that Gibbon s work became the essential guide for Britons anxious to plot their own imperial trajectory They found the key to understanding the British Empire in the ruins of Rome 169 W David McIntyre The commonwealth of nations Origins and impact 1869 1971 University of Minnesota Press 1977 provides comprehensive coverage giving London s perspective on political and constitutional relations with each possession Ireland edit Ireland in some ways the first acquisition the British Empire has generated a very large popular and scholarly literature 170 Marshall says historians continue to debate whether Ireland should be considered part of the British Empire 171 Recent work by historians pays special attention to continuing Imperial aspects of Irish history 172 postcolonial approaches 173 Atlantic history 174 and the role of migration in forming the Irish diaspora across the Empire and North America 175 176 177 Australia edit Main article History of Australia Until the late 20th century historians of Australia used an Imperial framework arguing that Australia emerged from a transfer of people institutions and culture from Britain It portrayed the first governors as Lilliputian sovereigns The historians have traced the arrival of limited self government with regional parliaments and responsible ministers followed by Federation in 1901 and eventually full national autonomy This was a Whiggish story of successful growth into a modern nation That interpretation has been largely abandoned by recent scholars 178 In his survey of the historiography of Australia Stuart Macintyre shows how historians have emphasized the negative and tragic features between the boasts 178 Macintyre points out that in current historical writing The process of settlement is now regarded as a violent invasion of a rich and subtle indigenous culture the colonists material practices as destructive of a fragile environment their aesthetic response to it blinkered and prejudiced the cultivation of some British forms timid and unresponsive 179 The first major history was William Charles Wentworth Statistical Historical and Political Description of the Colony of New South Wales and Its Dependent Settlements in Van Diemen s Land With a Particular Enumeration of the Advantages Which These Colonies Offer for Emigration and Their Superiority in Many Respects Over Those Possessed by the United States of America 1819 180 Wentworth shows the disastrous effects of the penal regime Many other historians followed his path with the six volume History of Australia by Manning Clark published 1962 87 telling the story of epic tragedy in which the explorers Governors improvers and perturbators vainly endeavored to impose their received schemes of redemption on an alien intractable setting 181 History wars edit Main article History wars Since the 1980s some even describe a history war taking place in Australia involving scholars and politicians 182 Debate often concerns recorded history verses oral testimony unproven in Courts of Law regarding the treatment of Aboriginal populations 183 They debate how British or multicultural Australia has been historically and how it should be today 184 185 The rhetoric has escalated into national politics often tied to the question of whether the royalty should be discarded and Australia become a republic 186 Some schools and universities have reduced the amount of Australian history in their curriculum 187 Debates on the founding edit Historians have used the founding of Australia to mark the beginning of the Second British Empire 188 It was planned by the government in London and designed as a replacement for the lost American colonies 189 The American Loyalist James Matra in 1783 wrote A Proposal for Establishing a Settlement in New South Wales proposing the establishment of a colony composed of American Loyalists Chinese and South Sea Islanders but not convicts 190 Matra reasoned that the land country was suitable for plantations of sugar cotton and tobacco New Zealand timber and hemp or flax could prove valuable commodities it could form a base for Pacific trade and it could be a suitable compensation for displaced American Loyalists At the suggestion of Secretary of State Lord Sydney Matra amended his proposal to include convicts as settlers considering that this would benefit both Economy to the Publick amp Humanity to the Individual The government adopted the basics of Matra s plan in 1784 and funded the settlement of convicts 191 Michael Roe argues that the founding of Australia supports the theory of Vincent T Harlow in The Founding of the Second British Empire 17G3 1793 Vol 2 New Continents and Changing Values 1964 that a goal of the second British empire was to open up new commerce in the Far East and Pacific However London emphasized Australia s purpose as a penal colony and the East India Company was hostile to potential commercial rivals Nevertheless says Roe the founders of Australia showed a keen interest in whaling sealing sheep raising mining and other opportunities for trade In the long run he says commerce was the main stimulus for colonization 192 Canada edit Main article History of Canada Canadian historian Carl Berger argues that an influential section of English Canadians embraced an ideology of imperialism as a way to enhance Canada s own power position in the international system as well as for more traditional reasons of Anglophillia Berger identified Canadian imperialism as a distinct ideology rival to anti imperial Canadian nationalism or pro American continentalism the other nationalisms in Canada 193 For the French Canadians the chief debate among historians involves the conquest and the incorporation into the British Empire in 1763 194 One school says it was a disaster that retarded for a century and more the normal development of a middle class society leaving Quebec locked into a traditionalism controlled by priests and landlords 195 The other more optimistic school says it was generally advantageous in political and economic terms For example it enabled Quebec to avoid the French Revolution that tore France apart in the 1790s Another example is that it integrated the economy into the larger and faster growing British economy as opposed to the sluggish French economy The optimistic school attributes the backwardness of the Quebec economy to deeply ingrained conservatism and aversion to entrepreneurship 196 197 India edit Main articles British Raj Historiography of India and Economic history of India In recent decades there have been four main schools of historiography in how historians study India Cambridge Nationalist Marxist and subaltern The once common Orientalist approach with its image of a sensuous inscrutable and wholly spiritual India has died out in serious scholarship 198 The Cambridge School led by Anil Seal 199 Gordon Johnson 200 Richard Gordon and David A Washbrook 201 downplays ideology 202 However this school of historiography is criticised for western bias or Eurocentrism 203 The Nationalist school has focused on Congress Gandhi Nehru and high level politics It highlighted the Mutiny of 1857 as a war of liberation and Gandhi s Quit India begun in 1942 as defining historical events This school of historiography has received criticism for Elitism 204 The Marxists have focused on studies of economic development landownership and class conflict in precolonial India and of deindustrialisation during the colonial period The Marxists portrayed Gandhi s movement as a device of the bourgeois elite to harness popular potentially revolutionary forces for its own ends Again the Marxists are accused of being too much ideologically influenced 205 The subaltern school was begun in the 1980s by Ranajit Guha and Gyan Prakash 206 It focuses attention away from the elites and politicians to history from below looking at the peasants using folklore poetry riddles proverbs songs oral history and methods inspired by anthropology It focuses on the colonial era before 1947 and typically emphasises caste and downplays class to the annoyance of the Marxist school 207 More recently Hindu nationalists have created a version of history to support their demands for Hindutva Hinduness in Indian society This school of thought is still in the process of development 208 In March 2012 Diana L Eck in her India A Sacred Geography 2013 argues that the idea of India dates to a much earlier time than the British or the Mughals and it was not just a cluster of regional identities and it wasn t ethnic or racial 209 210 211 212 Debate continues about the economic impact of British imperialism on India The issue was actually raised by conservative British politician Edmund Burke who in the 1780s vehemently attacked the East India Company claiming that Warren Hastings and other top officials had ruined the Indian economy and society Indian historian Rajat Kanta Ray 1998 continues this line of attack saying the new economy brought by the British in the 18th century was a form of plunder and a catastrophe for the traditional economy of Mughal India Ray accuses the British of depleting the food and money stocks and imposing high taxes that helped cause the terrible famine of 1770 which killed a third of the people of Bengal 213 Rejecting the Indian nationalist account of the British as alien aggressors seizing power by brute force and impoverishing all of India British historian P J Marshall argues that the British were not in full control but instead were players in what was primarily an Indian play and in which their rise to power depended upon excellent cooperation with Indian elites Marshall admits that much of his interpretation is still rejected by many historians 214 Marshall argues that recent scholarship has reinterpreted the view that the prosperity of the formerly benign Mughal rule gave way to poverty and anarchy Marshall argues the British takeover did not make any sharp break with the past The British largely delegated control to regional Mughal rulers and sustained a generally prosperous economy for the rest of the 18th century Marshall notes the British went into partnership with Indian bankers and raised revenue through local tax administrators and kept the old Mughal rates of taxation Professor Ray agrees that the East India Company inherited an onerous taxation system that took one third of the produce of Indian cultivators 215 In the 20th century historians generally agreed that imperial authority in the Raj had been secure in the 1800 1940 era Various challenges have emerged Mark Condos and Jon Wilson argue that the Raj was chronically insecure 216 217 They argue that the irrational anxiety of officials led to a chaotic administration with minimal social purchase or ideological coherence The Raj was not a confident state capable of acting as it chose but rather a psychologically embattled one incapable of acting except in the abstract the small scale or short term 218 Tropical Africa edit The first historical studies appeared in the 1890s and followed one of four approaches The territorial narrative was typically written by a veteran soldier or civil servant who gave heavy emphasis to what he had seen The apologia were essays designed to justify British policies Thirdly popularizers tried to reach a large audience and finally compendia appeared designed to combine academic and official credentials Professional scholarship appeared around 1900 and began with the study of business operations typically using government documents and unpublished archives The economic approach was widely practiced in the 1930s primarily to provide descriptions of the changes underway in the previous half century Reginald Coupland an Oxford professor studied the Exploitation of East Africa 1856 1890 The Slave Trade and the Scramble 1939 The American historian William L Langer wrote The Diplomacy of Imperialism 1890 1902 1935 a book is still widely cited The Second World War diverted most scholars to wartime projects and accounted for a pause in scholarship during the 1940s 219 By the 1950s many African students were studying in British universities and they produced a demand for new scholarship and started themselves to supply it as well Oxford University became the main center for African studies with activity as well at Cambridge and the London School of Economics The perspective from British government policy makers or from international business operations slowly gave way to a new interest in the activities of the natives especially in a nationalistic movements and the growing demand for independence The major breakthrough came from Ronald Robinson and John Gallagher especially with their studies of the impact of free trade on Africa 219 220 South Africa edit The historiography of South Africa has been one of the most contentious areas of the British Empire involving a three way division of sharply differing interpretations among the British the Boers and the black African historians 221 222 The first British historians emphasized the benefits of British civilization 223 Afrikaner historiography began in the 1870s with early laudatory accounts of the trekkers and undisguised anger at the British After many years of conflict and warfare the British took control of South Africa and historians began conciliatory effort to bring the two sides together in a shared history An influential large scale effort was made by George McCall Theal 1837 1919 who wrote many books as school teacher and as the official historian such as History and Ethnography of Africa South of the Zambesi 11 vol 1897 1919 In the 1920s historians using missionary sources started presenting the Coloured and African viewpoints as in W M Macmillan Bantu Boer and Briton The Making of the South African Native Problem London 1929 Modern research standards were introduced by Eric A Walker 1886 1976 who moved from a professorship at the University of Cape Town to become the Vere Harmsworth Professor of Imperial and Naval History at the University of Cambridge where he trained a generation of graduate students 224 Afrikaner historiography increasingly defended apartheid 225 Liberation historiography edit The dominant approach in recent decades is to emphasize the roots of the liberation movement 226 Baines argues that the Soweto uprising of 1976 inspired a new generation of social historians to start looking for evidence that would allow the writing of history from below often they adopted a Marxist perspective 227 By the 1990s historians were exploring comparative race relations in South Africa and the United States from the late 19th century to the late 20th century 228 James Campbell argues that black American Methodist missionaries to South Africa adopted the same standards of promoting civilization as did the British 229 230 Nationalism and opposition to the Empire editOpposition to imperialism and demands for self rule emerged across the empire in all but one case the British authorities suppressed revolts However in the 1770s under the leadership of Benjamin Franklin George Washington and Thomas Jefferson it came to an armed revolt in the 13 American colonies the American Revolutionary War With military and financial help from France and others the 13 became the first British colonies to secure their independence in the name of American nationalism 231 232 There is a large literature on the Indian Rebellion of 1857 which saw a very large scale revolt in India involving the mutiny of many native troops It was suppressed by the British Army after much bloodshed 233 The Indians organised under Mahatma Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru and finally achieved independence in 1947 They wanted one India but the Muslims were organized by Muhammad Ali Jinnah and created their own nation Pakistan in a process that still is heatedly debated by scholars 234 Independence came in the midst of religious communal violence chiefly between Hindus and Muslims in border areas Millions died and millions more were displaced as the conflicting memories and grievances still shape subcontinent tensions as Jisha Menon argues 235 236 Historians of the empire have recently paid close attention to 20th century native voices in many colonies who demanded independence 237 The African colonies became independent mostly in a peaceful fashion Kenya saw severe violence on both sides 238 Typically the leaders of independence had studied in England in the 1920s and 1930s For example the radical nationalist Kwame Nkrumah in 1957 led Ghana to become Britain s second African colony to gain independence Sudan being the first being granted its independence a year earlier in 1956 and others quickly followed 239 Ideas of anti imperialism editMain article Anti imperialism At an intellectual level anti imperialism appealed strongly to Marxists and liberals across the world Both groups were strongly influenced by British writer John A Hobson in his Imperialism A Study 1902 Historians Peter Duignan and Lewis H Gann argue that Hobson had an enormous influence in the early 20th century that caused widespread distrust of imperialism Hobson s ideas were not entirely original however his hatred of moneyed men and monopolies his loathing of secret compacts and public bluster fused all existing indictments of imperialism into one coherent system His ideas influenced German nationalist opponents of the British Empire as well as French Anglophobes and Marxists they colored the thoughts of American liberals and isolationist critics of colonialism In days to come they were to contribute to American distrust of Western Europe and of the British Empire Hobson helped make the British averse to the exercise of colonial rule he provided indigenous nationalists in Asia and Africa with the ammunition to resist rule from Europe 240 World War II editFurther information British Empire in World War II and Homefront during World War II British historians of the Second World War have not emphasized the critical role played by the Empire in terms of money manpower and imports of food and raw materials 241 242 The powerful combination meant that Britain did not stand alone against Germany it stood at the head of a great but fading empire As Ashley Jackson has argued The story of the British Empire s war therefore is one of Imperial success in contributing toward Allied victory on the one hand and egregious Imperial failure on the other as Britain struggled to protect people and defeat them and failed to win the loyalty of colonial subjects 243 The contribution in terms of soldiers numbered 2 5 million men from India over 1 million from Canada just under 1 million from Australia 410 000 from South Africa and 215 000 from New Zealand In addition the colonies mobilized over 500 000 uniformed personnel who serve primarily inside Africa 244 In terms of financing the British war budget included 2 7 billion borrowed from the Empire s Sterling Area And eventually paid back Canada made C 3 billion in gifts and loans on easy terms 245 In terms of actual engagement with the enemy there was a great deal in South Asia and Southeast Asia as recalled by Ashley Jackson Terror mass migration shortages inflation blackouts air raids massacres famine forced labour urbanization environmental damage occupation by the enemy resistance Collaboration all of these dramatic and often horrific phenomena shaped the war experience of Britain s imperial subjects 246 247 Decline and decolonization editMain article Decolonization Historians continue to debate when the Empire reached its peak At one end the insecurities of the 1880s and 1890s are mentioned especially the industrial rise of the United States and Germany The Second Boer War in South Africa 1899 1902 angered an influential element of Liberal thought in England and deprived imperialism of much moral support Most historians agree that by 1918 at the end of the First World War permanent long term decline was inevitable The dominions largely had freed themselves and began their own foreign and military policies Worldwide investments had been cashed in to pay for the war and the British economy was in the doldrums after 1918 A new spirit of nationalism appeared in many of the colonies most dramatically in India Most historians agree that following the Second World War Britain lost its superpower status and it was financially near bankruptcy With the Suez fiasco of 1956 the profound weaknesses were apparent to all and rapid decolonization was inevitable 248 The chronology and main features of decolonization of the British Empire have been studied at length By far the greatest attention has been given to the situation in India in 1947 with far less attention to other colonies in Asia and Africa Of course most of the scholarly attention focuses on newly independent nations no longer ruled by Britain 249 From the Imperial perspective historians are divided on two issues with respect to India could London have handled decolonization better in 1947 or was what happened largely fixed in the previous century Historians also disagree regarding a degree of involvement in the domestic British society and economy Did Britons much care about decolonization and did it make much difference to them Bailkin points out that one view is that the domestic dimension was of minor importance and most Britons paid little attention 250 She says that political historians often reach this conclusion 251 John Darwin has studied the political debates 252 On the other hand most social historians argue the contrary They say the values and beliefs inside Britain about the overseas empire helped shape policy the decolonization process proved psychologically wrenching to many people living in Britain particularly migrants and those with family experience with overseas civil service business or missionary activity Bailkin says that decolonization was often taken personally and had a major policy impact in terms of the policies of the British welfare state She shows how some West Indian migrants were repatriated idealists volunteered to help the new nations a wave of overseas students came to British universities and polygamous relationships were invalidated Meanwhile she says the new welfare state was in part shaped by British colonial practices especially regarding mental health and child care 253 Social historian Bill Schwarz says that as decolonization moved forward in the 1950s there was an upsurge in racial whiteness and racial segregation the colour bar became more pronounced 254 Thomas Colley finds that informed Britons in the 21st century are in agreement that Britain has very often been at war over the centuries They also agree that the nation has steadily lost its military prowess due to declines in its economy and disappearance of its empire 255 The new imperial history editThe focus of attention of historians has shifted over time Phillip Buckner reports that on a bygone era of graduate education in Britain when the Empire was studied in a tradition that had been established in the late 19th century By the 1960s the Empire was no longer seen as an unmitigated blessing for its subjects overseas and the emphasis of the newer studies was an attempt to reassess British policy making from a more critical perspective Nonetheless mainstream imperial history still focused on policy making at the imperial centre with considerable emphasis on relations between Britain and its colonies of settlement overseas and the emergence of modern Commonwealth 256 Ronald Hyam argues that the historiography of the British Empire reached a state of severe crisis The early 1980s marked the end of an era as imperial and Commonwealth history itself everywhere became fragmented unfashionable and increasingly embattled The old conceptual unities as they had been worked out in the previous half century now collapsed particularly under the pressure of the inexorable advance of area studies 257 Hyam goes on to state that by the 21st century new themes had emerged including post colonial theory globalisation sex and gender issues the cultural imperative and the linguistic turn 258 The native leadership edit The studies of policy making in London and the settlement colonies like Canada and Australia are now rare Newer concerns deal with the natives 4 and give much more attention to native leaders such as Gandhi 259 They address topics such as migration 260 gender 261 race 262 sexuality 263 environmentalism 264 visualization 265 and sports 266 Thus there are entire chapters on economics religion colonial knowledge agency culture and identity in the historiographical overview edited by Sarah E Stockwell The British Empire Themes and Perspectives 2008 267 The new approaches to imperial history are often grouped together under the heading of the new imperial history 268 These approaches have been distinguished by two features Firstly they have suggested that the British empire was a cultural project as well as a set of political and economic relationships As a result these historians have stressed the ways in which empire building shaped the cultures of both colonized peoples and Britons themselves Race and gender edit In particular they have shown the ways in which British imperialism rested upon ideas about cultural difference and in turn how British colonialism reshaped understandings of race and gender in both the colonies and at home in Britain Mrinalini Sinha s Colonial Masculinity 1995 showed how supposed British manliness and ideas about the effeminacy of some Indians influenced colonial policy and Indian nationalist thought 269 Antoinette Burton has been a key figure and her Burdens of History 1995 showed how white British feminists in the Victorian period appropriated imperialist rhetoric to claim a role for themselves in saving native women and thereby strengthened their own claims to equality in Britain 270 Historians like Sinha Burton and Catherine Hall have used this approach to argue that British culture at home was profoundly shaped by the empire during the 19th century 271 Linkages binding the Empire together edit The second feature that defines the new imperial history is its examination of the links and flows that connected different parts of the empire together At first scholars looked at the empire s impact on domestic Britain particularly in terms of everyday experiences More recently attention has been paid to the material emotional and financial links among the different regions 272 Both Burton and Sinha stress the ways in which the politics of gender and race linked Britain and India Sinha suggested that these linkages were part of an imperial social formation an uneven but integrative set of arguments ideas and institutions that connected Britain to its colonies 273 More recent work by scholars such as Alan Lester and Tony Ballantyne have stressed the importance of the networks that made up the empire Lester s Imperial Networks 2001 reconstructed some of the debates and policies that linked Britain and South Africa during the 19th century 274 Ballantyne s Orientalism and Race developed an influential new model for writing about colonialism in highlighting the webs of empire that he suggested made up the empire These webs were made up of the flows of ideas books arguments money and people that not only moved between London and Britain s colonies but also moved directly from colony to colony from places like India to New Zealand 275 Many historians now focus on these networks and webs and Alison Games has used this as a model for studying the pattern of early English imperialism as well 276 The Oxford History of the British Empire edit Main article The Oxford History of the British Empire The major multi volume multi author coverage of the history of the British Empire is the Oxford History of the British Empire 1998 2001 five volume set plus a companion series 277 Douglas Peers says the series demonstrates that As a field of historical inquiry imperial history is clearly experiencing a renaissance 278 Max Beloff reviewing the first two volumes in History Today praised them for their readability and was pleased that his worry that they would be too anti imperialist had not been realised 279 Saul Dubow in H Net noted the uneven quality of the chapters in volume III and also the difficulty of such an endeavour give the state of historiography of the British Empire and the impossibility of maintaining a triumphalist tone in the modern era Dubow also felt that some of the authors had tended to play safe awed perhaps by the monumental nature of the enterprise 280 Madhavi Kale of Bryn Mawr College writing in Social History also felt that the history took a traditional approach to the historiography of the empire and placed the English and to a lesser extent the Scottish Irish and Welsh at the centre of the account rather than the subject peoples of the empire Kale summed up her review of volumes III V of the history by saying it represented a disturbingly revisionist project that seeks to neutralize the massive political and military brutality and repression of the empire 281 Postmodern and postcolonial approaches edit A major unexpected development came after 1980 with a flood of fresh and innovative books and articles from scholars trained in non British perspectives Many had studied Africa South Asia the Caribbean and the dominions The new perspective strengthened the field rather than destroying it Further imaginative approaches which occasioned sharp debates came from literary scholars especially Edward Said and Homi K Bhabha as well as anthropologists feminists 282 and other newcomers Longtime experts suddenly confronted the strange new scholarship with theoretical perspectives such as post structuralism and post modernism The colonial empire was becoming postcolonial 283 284 Instead of painting the globe red any more the Empire s history became part of a new global history 285 New maps were drawn emphasizing the oceans more than the land masses yielding new perspectives such as Atlantic history 286 287 The old consensus among historians held that in India British imperial authority was quite secure from 1858 to World War II Recently however this interpretation has been challenged For example Mark Condos and Jon Wilson argue that imperial authority in the Raj was chronically insecure Indeed the anxiety of generations of officials produced a chaotic administration with minimal coherence Instead of a confident state capable of acting as it chose these historians find a psychologically embattled one incapable of acting except in the abstract small scale or short term Meanwhile Durba Ghosh offers an alternative approach 288 Impact on Britain and British memory editFurther information Porter MacKenzie debate Turning away from most political economic and diplomatic themes historians recently have looked at the intellectual and cultural impact of the Empire on Britain itself Ideologically Britons promoted the Empire with appeals to the ideals of political and legal liberty Historians have always commented on the paradox of the dichotomy of freedom and coercion inside the Empire of modernity and tradition Sir John Seeley for example pondered in 1883 How can the same nation pursue two lines of policy so radically different without bewilderment be despotic in Asia and democratic in Australia be in the East at once the greatest Mussulman Power in the World and at the same time in the West be the foremost champion of free thought and spiritual religion 289 290 Historian Douglas Peers emphasizes that an idealized knowledge of the Empire permeated popular and elite thought in Britain during the 19th century No history of nineteenth century Britain can be complete without acknowledging the impact that the empire had in fashioning political culture informing strategic and diplomatic priorities shaping social institutions and cultural practices and determining at least in part the rate and direction of economic development Moreover British identity was bound up with the empire 291 Politicians at the time and historians ever since have explored whether the Empire was too expensive for the British budget Joseph Chamberlain thought so but he had little success at the Imperial Conference of 1902 asking overseas partners to increase their contribution Canada and Australia spoke of funding a warship the Canadian Senate voted it down in 1913 292 Meanwhile the Royal Navy adjusted its war plans to focus on Germany economizing on defending against lesser threats in peripheral areas such as the Pacific and Indian Oceans 293 Public opinion supported military spending out of pride but the left in Britain leaned toward pacifism and deplored the waste of money 294 In the Porter MacKenzie debate the historiographical issue was the impact of the Imperial experience on British society and thinking 295 Porter argued in 2004 that most Britons were largely indifferent to empire Imperialism was handled by elites In the highly heterogeneous British society imperialism did not have to have impact greatly on British society and culture 296 John M MacKenzie countered that there is a great deal of scattered evidence to show an important impact His position was supported by Catherine Hall Antoinette Burton and Jeffrey Richards 297 298 In a survey of the British population by YouGov in 2014 respondents think the British Empire is more something to be proud of 59 rather than ashamed of 19 A third of British people 34 also say they would like it if Britain still had an empire Under half 45 say they would not like the Empire to exist today 299 300 See also editBritish Empire Economic Conference 1932 Cambridge School of historiography led by John Gallagher and Ronald Robinson Commonwealth Heads of Government MeetingHistoriography of the United Kingdom Historiography of the causes of World War I Imperial Conference Covers the meetings of prime ministers in 1887 1894 1897 1902 1907 1911 1921 1923 1926 1930 1932 in 1937 1887 Colonial Conference Imperial War Cabinet International relations of the Great Powers 1814 1919 New Imperialism re 1880 1910 Pageant of Empire Porter MacKenzie debate what role did colonialism play in shaping British culture The Cambridge History of the British Empire The Oxford History of the British Empire Timeline of imperialism Western imperialism in AsiaNotes edit Secretary of State England to 1660 Secretary of State for the Southern Department 1660 1768 Secretary of State for the Colonies 1768 1782 References edit John Darwin Unfinished Empire The Global Expansion of Britain 2013 Ghosh Durba 2012 Another Set of Imperial Turns American Historical Review 117 3 772 793 doi 10 1086 ahr 117 3 772 The newer themes are emphasized in Sarah E Stockwell ed The British Empire Themes and Perspectives 2008 a b Shefali Rajamannar 2012 Reading the Animal in the Literature of the British Raj Palgrave Macmillan p 11 ISBN 978 1 137 01107 7 Laidlaw Zoe 2012 Breaking Britannia S Bounds Law Settlers and Space in Britain s Imperial Historiography Historical Journal 55 3 807 830 doi 10 1017 s0018246x12000313 S2CID 145190504 Phillip Buckner Presidential Address Whatever Happened to the British Empire Journal of the Canadian Historical Association Revue de la Societe historique du Canada 1993 4 1 pp 3 32 quote on p 6 Vincent T Harlow The Founding of the Second British Empire 1763 1793 Vol 2 New Continents and Changing Values 1964 see online version Deborah Wormell 1980 Sir John Seeley and the Uses of History Cambridge University Press p 154 ISBN 978 0 521 22720 9 A P Newton A Hundred Years of the British Empire 1940 pp 240 241 a b Darwin Unfinished Empire The Global Expansion of Britain pp 386 400 Bruce Collins 2014 War and Empire The Expansion of Britain 1790 1830 Routledge p 6 ISBN 978 1 317 87077 7 Darwin Unfinished Empire The Global Expansion of Britain p 391 Darwin Unfinished Empire The Global Expansion of Britain p 388 Piers Brendon The Decline and Fall of the British Empire 1781 1997 2008 p 61 Lawrence James The Rise and Fall of the British Empire 1997 pp 169 183 James The Rise and Fall of the British Empire 1997 pp 307 318 William L Langer The Diplomacy of Imperialism 1890 1902 2nd ed 1950 pp 67 100 Helen Rappaport 2003 Queen Victoria A Biographical Companion Bloomsbury Academic p 135 ISBN 978 1 85109 355 7 H H Dodwell Review of Cambridge history of India vol 4 in The English Historical Review 1938 53 210 pp 299 301 at JSTOR Barbara Bush 2014 Imperialism and Postcolonialism Routledge p 218 ISBN 978 1 317 87011 1 David Armitage The ideological origins of the British Empire 2000 Armitage 2000 p 143 Armitage 2000 p 173 Cuthbert Coleman Donald 1957 Eli Heckscher and the idea of mercantilism Scandinavian Economic History Review 5 1 3 25 doi 10 1080 03585522 1957 10411389 Sickinger Raymond L 2000 Regulation or Ruination Parliament s Consistent Pattern of Mercantilist Regulation of the English Textile Trade 1660 1800 Parliamentary History 19 2 211 232 doi 10 1111 j 1750 0206 2000 tb00595 x editors Encyclopaedia Britannica 2014 The standard history is Eli F Heckscher Mercantilism 1935 Heckscher Mercantilism 1935 ch 1 LaHaye Mercantilism in The Concise Encyclopedia of Economics E Damsgaard Hansen European Economic History From Mercantilism to Maastricht and Beyond Copenhagen Business School Press 2001 p 65 Christopher Hill The Century of Revolution 1603 1714 2nd ed 1980 p 32 Patricia Rogers Rebels Property Smuggling and Imperial Dis loyalty in the Anglo American Atlantic Journal of Early American History 2 1 2012 32 67 William R Nester The Great Frontier War Britain France and the Imperial Struggle for North America 1607 1755 2000 p 54 Neil R Stout The Royal Navy in America 1760 1775 A Study of Enforcement of British Colonial Policy in the Era of the American Revolution 1973 Max Savelle Seeds of Liberty The Genesis of the American Mind 1948 pp 204ff Jeffry A Frieden et al eds 2002 International Political Economy Perspectives on Global Power and Wealth Routledge p 128ff ISBN 978 1 134 59595 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a last has generic name help Marrison Andrew 2002 Free Trade and Its Reception 1815 1960 Freedom and Trade Routledge pp 170 72 ISBN 978 1 134 73182 4 Anthony Howe Free trade and liberal England 1846 1946 1997 William Roger Louis et al edss 1999 The Oxford History of the British Empire Historiography Oxford University Press pp 348 ISBN 978 0 19 820566 1 Darwin Unfinished Empre ch 5 10 Darwin Unfinished Empre ch 8 David Armitage 2000 The Ideological Origins of the British Empire Cambridge University Press p 8 ISBN 978 0 521 78978 3 Lizzie Collingham The Taste of Empire How Britain s Quest for Food Shaped the Modern World 2017 George Louis Beer 1913 The Old Colonial System 1660 1754 Macmillan a b William G Shade Lawrence Henry Gipson s Empire The Critics Pennsylvania History 1969 49 69 online Archived 2019 03 28 at the Wayback Machine Robert L Middlekauff The American Continental Colonies in the Empire in Robin Winks ed The Historiography of the British Empire Commonwealth Trends Interpretations and Resources 1966 pp 23 45 Gwenda Morgan Osgood Herbert Levi in Kelly Boyd ed 1999 Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writing vol 2 Taylor amp Francis p 889 ISBN 978 1 884964 33 6 Paul David Nelson British Conduct of the American Revolutionary War A Review of Interpretations Journal of American History 65 3 1978 623 653 online Tyrrell Ian 1999 Making Nations Making States American Historians in the Context of Empire Journal of American History 86 3 1015 1044 doi 10 2307 2568604 JSTOR 2568604 Winks Historiography 5 95 Cogliano Francis D 2010 Revisiting the American Revolution History Compass 8 8 951 963 doi 10 1111 j 1478 0542 2010 00705 x Eliga H Gould Peter S Onuf eds Empire and Nation The American Revolution in the Atlantic World 2005 Gould Eliga H 1999 A virtual nation Greater Britain and the imperial legacy of the American Revolution American Historical Review 104 2 476 489 doi 10 2307 2650376 JSTOR 2650376 David Kennedy Lizabeth Cohen 2015 American Pageant Cengage Learning p 156 ISBN 978 1 305 53742 2 Ellen Holmes Pearson Revising Custom Embracing Choice Early American Legal Scholars and the Republicanization of the Common Law in Gould and Onuf eds Empire and Nation The American Revolution in the Atlantic World 2005 pp 93 113 Anton Hermann Chroust Rise of the Legal Profession in America 1965 vol 2 See F J C Hearnshaw 1918 Democracy at the Crossways A Study in Politics and History with Special Reference to Great Britain Macmillan p 458 It occasionally appears in the popular literature such as the 1998 BBC Radio series Charles Lee This Sceptred Isle The First British Empire 1702 1760 v 6 1998 Timothy H Parsons 2014 The Second British Empire In the Crucible of the Twentieth Century Rowman amp Littlefield p 5 ISBN 978 1 4422 3529 8 Ashley Jackson 2013 The British Empire A Very Short Introduction Oxford UP p 72 ISBN 978 0 19 960541 5 P J Marshall The First British Empire in Robin Winks ed 1999 The Oxford History of the British Empire Volume V Historiography Oxford UP pp 5 43 ISBN 978 0 19 154241 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author has generic name help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link P J Marshall 1998 The Oxford History of the British Empire The eighteenth century Oxford University Press p 576 ISBN 978 0 19 820563 0 Harlow The Founding of the Second British Empire 1763 1793 2 vol 1952 Denis Judd 1968 Balfour and the British Empire a study in Imperial evolution 1874 1932 Macmillan p 268 ISBN 9787250008505 Denis Judd Empire The British Imperial Experience from 1765 to the Present 2002 p 19 Marshall p 52 Xypolia Ilia 2016 Divide et Impera Vertical and Horizontal Dimensions of British Imperialism PDF Critique 44 3 221 231 doi 10 1080 03017605 2016 1199629 hdl 2164 9956 S2CID 148118309 Freda Harcourt Gladstone monarchism and the new imperialism 1868 74 Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 14 1 1985 20 51 Wolfgang J Mommsen 1980 Theories of Imperialism University of Chicago Press pp 3 5 ISBN 978 0 226 53396 4 David K Fieldhouse Imperialism An Historiographical Revision Economic History Review14 2 1961 187 209 Oron J Hale The Great Illusion 1900 1914 1971 pp 5 6 Hale The Great Illusion 1900 1914 1971 pp 5 6 Proudman Mark F September 2008 Words for Scholars The Semantics of Imperialism Journal of the Historical Society 8 3 395 433 doi 10 1111 j 1540 5923 2008 00252 x a b Fieldhouse David K 1961 Imperialism An Historiographical Revision Economic History Review 14 2 187 209 doi 10 2307 2593218 JSTOR 2593218 P J Cain Capitalism Aristocracy and Empire Some Classical Theories of Imperialism Revisited Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History March 2007 Vol 35 Issue 1 pp 25 47 Peatling G K 2004 Globalism Hegemonism and British Power J A Hobson and Alfred Zimmern Reconsidered History 89 295 381 398 doi 10 1111 j 1468 229x 2004 00305 x David Long Towards a new liberal internationalism the international theory of J A Hobson 1996 Tony Brewer Marxist theories of imperialism a critical survey 2002 J A Hobson 1902 Imperialism A Study Cosimo p 59 ISBN 978 1 59605 948 1 Howe Stephen 1998 David Fieldhouse and Imperialism some historiographical revisions Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 26 2 213 232 doi 10 1080 03086539808583033 Lynn Martin 1999 British Policy Trade and Informal Empire in the Mid 19th Century in Andrew Porter ed The Oxford History of the British Empire Volume III The Nineteenth Century 3 101 121 John Gallagher and Ronald Robinson The Imperialism of Free Trade Economic History Review 6 1 1953 pp 1 15 Winks Oxford History 5 40 42 R E Robinson and John Gallagher Africa and the Victorians The official mind of imperialism 1966 Wm Roger Louis Imperialism 1976 p 4 Oron J Hale The Great Illusion 1900 1914 1971 p 6 Martin Lynn British Policy Trade and Informal Empire in the Mid 19th Century 1999 3 118 119 Grocott Chris Grady Jo 2014 Naked abroad The continuing imperialism of free trade Capital amp Class 38 3 541 562 doi 10 1177 0309816814550388 hdl 2381 31522 S2CID 143536938 J H Dales The Protective Tariff in Canada s Development 1966 For an econometric study see Richard Harris Ian Keay and Frank Lewis Protecting infant industries Canadian manufacturing and the national policy 1870 1913 Explorations in Economic History 2015 56 15 31 online Palen Marc William 2010 Protection Federation and Union The Global Impact of the McKinley Tariff upon the British Empire 1890 94 Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 38 3 395 418 doi 10 1080 03086534 2010 503395 S2CID 159638185 Alan Sykes Tariff Reform in British Politics 1903 1913 1979 Paul Bairoch European Trade Policy 1815 1914 in Peter Mathias and Sidney Pollard eds The Cambridge Economic History Volume VIII The Industrial Economies The development of Economic and Social Policies 1989 p 69 Douglas A Irwin Interpreting The Tariff Growth Correlation Of The Late 19th Century American Economic Review 2002 v92 2 May 165 169 Cain P J Hopkins A G November 1986 Gentlemanly Capitalism and British Expansion Overseas I The Old Colonial System 1688 1850 The Economic History Review 39 4 501 525 doi 10 2307 2596481 JSTOR 2596481 Cain P J Hopkins A G February 1987 Gentlemanly Capitalism and British Expansion Overseas II New Imperialism 1850 1945 The Economic History Review 40 1 1 26 doi 10 2307 2596293 JSTOR 2596293 Cain P J Hopkins A G 1993 British Imperialism Innovation and Expansion 1688 1914 Lynn Martin April 1996 Review of British Imperialism Innovation and Expansion 1688 1914 and British Imperialism Crisis and Deconstruction 1914 1990 by P J Cain A G Hopkins PDF The English Historical Review 111 441 501 503 doi 10 1093 ehr CXI 441 501 JSTOR 2596293 Retrieved 22 October 2021 Akita Shigeru ed 2002 Gentlemanly Capitalism Imperialism and Global History Palgrave Macmillan doi 10 1057 9781403919403 ISBN 978 1 4039 1940 3 Retrieved 22 October 2021 Grant Kevin 2013 The British Empire International Government and Human Rights History Compass 11 8 573 583 doi 10 1111 hic3 12069 Helen Gilbert and Chris Tiffin eds Burden or Benefit Imperial Benevolence and Its Legacies 2008 ch 2 Richard S Reddie Abolition The Struggle to Abolish Slavery in the British Colonies 2007 Norman Etherington Missions and Empire 2008 Bell Avril 2006 Bifurcation or entanglement Settler identity and biculturalism in Aotearoa New Zealand Continuum Journal of Media amp Cultural Studies 20 2 253 268 doi 10 1080 10304310600641786 S2CID 144829231 Helen Gilbert and Chris Tiffin eds Burden or Benefit Imperial Benevolence and Its Legacies 2008 Jeremy Black Imperial legacies the British Empire around the world 2020 p 128 Matthew Wyman McCarthy British abolitionism and global empire in the late 18th century A historiographic overview History Compass 16 10 2018 e12480 doi 10 1111 hic3 12480 Frank Joseph Klingberg The Anti slavery Movement in England A study in English Humanitarianism Yale University Press 1926 Barbara Solow and Stanley L Engerman eds British capitalism and Caribbean slavery The legacy of Eric Williams Cambridge University Press 2004 Heuman Gad 1999 The British West Indies in Andrew Porter ed The Oxford History of the British Empire Vol 3 The 19th Century 3 470 Seymour Drescher Eric Williams British Capitalism and British Slavery History and Theory 1987 180 196 online Archived 2017 03 29 at the Wayback Machine Seymour Drescher Econocide British Slavery in the Era of Abolition 1977 J R Ward The British West Indies in the Age of Abolition in P J Marshall ed The Oxford History of the British Empire Volume II The Eighteenth Century 1998 pp 415 439 David Richardson The British Empire and the Atlantic Slave Trade 1660 1807 in P J Marshall ed The Oxford History of the British Empire Volume II The Eighteenth Century 1998 pp 440 464 Stanley L Engerman The Slave Trade and British Capital Formation in the Eighteenth Century A Comment on the Williams Thesis Business History Review 46 04 1972 430 443 in jstor Stanley L Engerman 1972 The Slave Trade and British Capital Formation in the Eighteenth Century Business History Review 46 4 430 443 doi 10 2307 3113341 JSTOR 3113341 S2CID 154620412 Pares Richard 1937 The Economic Factors in the History of the Empire Economic History Review 7 2 119 144 doi 10 2307 2590147 JSTOR 2590147 Karuna Mantena The Crisis of Liberal Imperialism Histoire Politique Politique culture societe 2010 11 p 3 Peter J Cain Character Ordered Liberty and the Mission to Civilise British Moral Justification of Empire 1870 1914 Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 2012 40 4 pp 557 578 Mark Harrison Public Health in British India Anglo Indian Preventive Medicine 1859 1914 1994 Ryan Johnson and Amna Khalid eds Public Health in the British Empire Intermediaries Subordinates and the Practice of Public Health 1850 1960 Routledge 2011 Peckham Robert 2013 Infective Economies Empire Panic and the Business of Disease Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 41 2 211 237 doi 10 1080 03086534 2013 789272 S2CID 144467448 Michael Worboys The colonial world as mission and mandate Leprosy and empire 1900 1940 Osiris 2000 207 218 in JSTOR John Farley Bilharzia a history of imperial tropical medicine Cambridge University Press 2003 Donald McDonald Surgeons Twoe and a Barber London Heinemann 1950 Review Surgeons Twoe and a Barber Postgraduate Medical Journal 27 309 365 July 1951 doi 10 1136 pgmj 27 309 365 PMC 2530269 Power Helen 1996 The Calcutta School of Tropical Medicine Institutionalizing Medical Research in the Periphery Medical History 40 2 197 214 doi 10 1017 s0025727300061007 PMC 1037095 PMID 8936061 Douglas M Haynes Imperial Medicine Patrick Manson amp the Conquest of Tropical Diseases 2001 For the historiography see Elizabeth Elbourne Religion in Stockwell ed The British Empire 2008 pp 131 156 For an empire wide view see Norman Etherington ed Missions and Empire Oxford History of the British Empire Companion Series 2005 Andrew Porter Religion Missionary Enthusiasm and Empire in Andrew Porter ed The Oxford History of the British Empire Vol 3 1999 pp 222 46 Susan Thorne 1999 Congregational Missions and the Making of an Imperial Culture in Nineteenth Century England Stanford University Press ch 1 ISBN 978 0 8047 6544 2 Andrew Porter Religion versus Empire British Protestant Missionaries and Overseas Expansion 1700 1914 2004 Henry Paget Thompson Into all lands the history of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts 1701 1950 1951 Kevin Ward and Brian Stanley eds The Church Mission Society and World Christianity 1799 1999 Eerdmans 2000 Mark A Noll The Rise of Evangelicalism The Age of Edwards Whitefield and the Wesleys 2010 Carl Bridenbaugh Mitre and Sceptre Transatlantic Faiths Ideas Personalities and Politics 1689 1775 1967 Andrew Porter Religion Missionary Enthusiasm and Empire in The Oxford History of the British Empire Vol 3 pp 223 224 Norman Etherington ed Missions and Empire Oxford History of the British Empire Companion Series 2008 Porter Religion Missionary Enthusiasm and Empire 1999 vol 3 ch 11 Robert D Woodberry The missionary roots of liberal democracy Archived 2017 08 09 at the Wayback Machine American Political Science Review 106 2 2012 244 274 Michael D Palmer and Stanley M Burgess eds 2012 The Wiley Blackwell Companion to Religion and Social Justice John Wiley amp Sons p 473 ISBN 978 1 4443 5537 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author has generic name help Johnson Ryan 2010 Colonial Mission and Imperial Tropical Medicine Livingstone College London 1893 1914 Social History of Medicine 23 3 549 566 doi 10 1093 shm hkq044 Elbourne Religion in Stockwell 2008 pp 131 156 Clare Midgley Can Women Be Missionaries Envisioning female agency in the early nineteenth century British Empire Journal of British Studies 45 2 2006 335 358 online Clive Whitehead The historiography of British imperial education policy Part I India History of Education 34 3 2005 315 329 Clive Whitehead The historiography of British Imperial education policy Part II Africa and the rest of the colonial empire History of Education 34 4 2005 441 454 Mark Francis Governors amp Settlers Images of Authority in the British Colonies 1820 1860 1992 Robert D Pearce Violet Bourdillon Colonial Governor s Wife African Affairs 1983 267 277 at JSTOR Colin Walter Newbury Patrons Clients and Empire The Subordination of Indigenous Hierarchies in Asia and Africa Journal of World History 2000 11 2 227 263 online Michael H Fisher Indirect rule in the British Empire The foundations of the residency system in India 1764 1858 Modern Asian Studies 18 3 1984 393 428 Lakshmi Iyer Direct versus indirect colonial rule in India Long term consequences The Review of Economics and Statistics 2010 92 4 pp 693 713 online Archived 2014 09 03 at the Wayback Machine Adiele Eberechukwu Afigbo The Warrant Chiefs indirect rule in southeastern Nigeria 1891 1929 London Longman 1972 Andrew Roberts Salisbury Victorian Titan 1999 p 529 Christian Tripodi Good for one but not the other The Sandeman System of Pacification as Applied to Baluchistan and the North West Frontier 1877 1947 Journal of Military History 73 3 2009 767 802 online Robin Winks ed 1999 The Oxford History of the British Empire Volume V Historiography OUP Oxford pp 664 665 ISBN 978 0 19 164769 7 Madhav Gadgil and Ramachandra Guha This fissured land an ecological history of India 1993 John M MacKenzie The empire of nature Hunting conservation and British Imperialism 1997 Gregory Barton Empire forestry and the origins of environmentalism Journal of Historical Geography 27 4 2001 529 552 James Beattie Recent Themes in the Environmental History of the British Empire History Compass Feb 2012 10 2 pp 129 139 William Beinart and Lotte Hughes Environment and empire 2007 James Beattie Edward Melillo and Emily O Gorman Rethinking the British Empire through eco cultural networks materialist cultural environmental history relational connections and agency Environment and History 20 4 2014 561 575 Young Douglas MacMurray 1961 The Colonial Office in The Early Nineteenth Century London Published for the Royal Commonwealth Society by Longmans p 55 Maton 1995 article Maton 1998 article METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS AT THE FOREIGN AND COLONIAL STATIONS OF THE ROYAL ENGINEERS AND THE ARMY MEDICAL DEPARTMENT 1852 1886 London Published by the authority of the Meteorological Council PRINTED FOR HER MAJESTY S STATIONERY OFFICE BY EYRE AND SPOTTISWOODE East Harding Street Fleet Street London E C 1890 Herbertson A J and O J R Howarth eds The Oxford Survey Of The British Empire 6 vol 1914 online vol 1 on British Isles online vol 2 on Asia online vol 3 on Africa online vol 4 on America online vol 5 on Australasia online vol 6 on general topics Curtin The British Empire and Commonwealth in Recent Historiography Philip D Curtin The British Empire and Commonwealth in Recent Historiography American Historical Review 1959 72 91 at JSTOR Bernard Porter 2014 The Lion s Share A History of British Imperialism 1850 2011 Routledge pp 361 62 ISBN 978 1 317 86039 6 Winks Historiography pp 3 5 614 Paul Kennedy has much to say about Britain in The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers 1987 Piers Brendon The Decline and Fall of the British Empire 1781 1997 2008 p xv Kevin Kenny ed Ireland and the British Empire 2004 P J Marshall The Cambridge illustrated history of the British Empire 2001 p 9 Stephen Howe Ireland and empire colonial legacies in Irish history and culture 2002 Ellekje Boehmer Empire the national and postcolonial 1890 1920 Resistance in Interaction 2002 Nicholas P Canny Kingdom and Colony Ireland in the Atlantic World 1560 1800 1988 Andrew Bielenberg ed The Irish Diaspora 2014 Barry Crosbie Networks of Empire Linkage and Reciprocity in Nineteenth Century Irish and Indian History History Compass 7 3 2009 993 1007 Cleary Joe 2007 Amongst Empires A Short History of Ireland and Empire Studies in International Context PDF Eire Ireland 42 1 11 57 doi 10 1353 eir 2007 0014 S2CID 159949742 a b Macintyre Stuart 1999 Australia and the Empire in Robin Winks ed The Oxford History of the British Empire Historiography 5 163 181 Macintyre online p 164 online Macintyre p 165 175 Stuart Macintyre and Anna Clark The History Wars 2003 Robert Manne ed Whitewash On Keith Windschuttle s Fabrication of Aboriginal History 2003 Meaney Neville 2001 Britishness and Australian identity The problem of nationalism in Australian history and historiography Australian Historical Studies 32 116 76 90 doi 10 1080 10314610108596148 S2CID 143930425 Deborah Gare Britishness in recent Australian historiography Historical Journal 43 4 2000 1145 1155 Andrew G Bonnell and Martin Crotty An Australian Historikerstreit Review Article Australian Journal of Politics amp History 2004 50 3 pp 425 433 compares the debate to a similar one in Germany about the guilt for the Holocaust Jo Case Who Killed Australian History In History 6 March 2012 online Archived 2015 12 07 at the Wayback Machine Macintyre Stuart Australia and the Empire in Winks ed Historiography 5 163 181 Deryck Schreuder and Stuart Ward eds Australia s Empire Oxford History of the British Empire Companion Series 2010 ch 1 Harold B Carter Banks Cook and the Eighteenth Century Natural History Tradition in Tony Delamotte and Carl Bridge eds Interpreting Australia British Perceptions of Australia since 1788 London Sir Robert Menzies Centre for Australian Studies 1988 pp 4 23 Alan Atkinson The first plans for governing New South Wales 1786 87 Australian Historical Studies vol 24 no 94 April 1990 pp 22 40 p 31 Roe Michael 1958 Australia s Place in The Swing to the East 1788 1810 Historical Studies Australia and New Zealand 8 30 202 213 doi 10 1080 10314615808595113 Carl Berger Sense of Power Studies in the Ideas of Canadian Imperialism 1867 1914 1971 Standen S Dale 1985 The Debate on the Social and Economic Consequences of the Conquest a Summary Proceedings of the Meeting of the French Colonial Historical Society 10 179 193 JSTOR 42952161 Dale Miquelon ed Society and conquest the debate on the bourgeoisie and social change in French Canada 1700 1850 1977 Cameron Nish ed The French Canadians 1759 1766 Conquered Half Conquered Liberated 1966 has readings on both sides Serge Gagnon Quebec and its Historians 1840 to 1920 Harvest House 1982 Prakash Gyan April 1990 Writing Post Orientalist Histories of the Third World Perspectives from Indian Historiography Comparative Studies in Society and History 32 2 383 408 doi 10 1017 s0010417500016534 JSTOR 178920 S2CID 144435305 Anil Seal The Emergence of Indian Nationalism Competition and Collaboration in the Later Nineteenth Century 1971 Gordon Johnson Provincial Politics and Indian Nationalism Bombay and the Indian National Congress 1880 1915 2005 Rosalind O Hanlon and David Washbrook eds Religious Cultures in Early Modern India New Perspectives 2011 Aravind Ganachari Studies in Indian Historiography The Cambridge School Indica March 2010 47 1 pp 70 93 Hostettler N 2013 Eurocentrism a marxian critical realist critique Taylor amp Francis p 33 ISBN 978 1 135 18131 4 Retrieved 6 January 2017 Ranjit Guha On Some Aspects of Historiography of Colonial India Bagchi Amiya Kumar January 1993 Writing Indian History in the Marxist Mode in a Post Soviet World Indian Historical Review 20 1 2 229 244 Prakash Gyan December 1994 Subaltern studies as postcolonial criticism American Historical Review 99 5 1475 1500 doi 10 2307 2168385 JSTOR 2168385 Roosa John 2006 When the Subaltern Took the Postcolonial Turn Journal of the Canadian Historical Association 17 2 130 147 doi 10 7202 016593ar Menon Latha August 2004 Coming to Terms with the Past India History Today Vol 54 no 8 pp 28 30 Harvard scholar says the idea of India dates to a much earlier time than the British or the Mughals 20 January 2016 In The Footsteps of Pilgrims India s spiritual landscape The heavens and the earth The Economist 24 March 2012 Dalrymple William 27 July 2012 India A Sacred Geography by Diana L Eck review The Guardian Rajat Kanta Ray Indian Society and the Establishment of British Supremacy 1765 1818 in The Oxford History of the British Empire vol 2 The Eighteenth Century ed P J Marshall 1998 pp 508 529 P J Marshall The British in Asia Trade to Dominion 1700 1765 in The Oxford History of the British Empire vol 2 The Eighteenth Century ed P J Marshall 1998 pp 487 507 Marshall The British in Asia Trade to Dominion 1700 1765 Mark Condos The Insecurity State Punjab and the Making of Colonial Power in British India Cambridge University Press 2017 Jon Wilson India conquered Britain s Raj and the chaos of empire Simon and Schuster 2016 Joshua Ehrlich Anxiety Chaos and the Raj Historical Journal 63 3 2020 777 787 doi 10 1017 S0018246X1900058X a b Roberts A D 1999 The British Empire in Tropical Africa A Review of the Literature to the 1960s in Winks Historiography 5 463 485 Ronald Robinson John Gallagher and Alice Denny Africa and the Victorians The Climax of Imperialism in the Dark Continent 1961 William H Worger Southern and Central Africa in Winks Historiography pp 512 540 Christopher Saunders The Making of the South African Past Major Historians on Race and Class 1988 Alexander Wilmot John Centlivres Chase 1869 History of the Colony of the Cape of Good Hope Longmans Green Reader and Dyer Leonard M Thompson South Africa in Winks ed The Historiography of the British Empire Commonwealth Trends Interpretations and Resources 1966 pp 212 236 Thompson Leonard M 1962 Afrikaner Nationalist Historiography and the Policy of Apartheid Journal of African History 3 1 125 141 doi 10 1017 s0021853700002772 S2CID 161944286 Chris Saunders The ANC in the Historiography of the National Liberation Struggle in South Africa in Kwandiwe Kondlo et al eds Treading the waters of history Perspectives on the ANC 2014 p 11 Baines Gary 2007 The Master Narrative of South Africa s Liberation Struggle Remembering and Forgetting June 16 1976 International Journal of African Historical Studies 40 2 283 302 JSTOR 40033914 George M Fredrickson Black Liberation A Comparative History of Black Ideologies in the United States and South Africa 1995 James T Campbell Songs of Zion The African Methodist Episcopal Church in the United States and South Africa 1995 Cooper Frederick 1996 Race ideology and the perils of comparative history American Historical Review 101 4 1122 1138 doi 10 2307 2169637 JSTOR 2169637 Timothy H Breen Ideology and nationalism on the eve of the American Revolution Revisions once more in need of revising Journal of American History 1997 13 39 in JSTOR Robert W Tucker and David Hendrickson The Fall of the First British Empire Origins of the Wars of American Independence 2002 For the latest research see Crispin Bates ed Mutiny at the Margins New Perspectives on the Indian Uprising of 1857 Volume I Anticipations and Experiences in the Locality 2013 David Gilmartin Partition Pakistan and South Asian history in search of a narrative Journal of Asian Studies 57 4 1998 1068 1095 Jisha Menon The performance of nationalism India Pakistan and the memory of partition 2013 Yasmin Khan The Great Partition The Making of India and Pakistan 2008 Darwin John 1984 British decolonization since 1945 A pattern or a puzzle Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 12 2 187 209 doi 10 1080 03086538408582666 Klose Fabian 2013 Human Rights in the Shadow of Colonial Violence The Wars of Independence in Kenya and Algeria doi 10 9783 9780812207828 ISBN 9780812207828 Thomas M Leonard 2005 Encyclopedia of the Developing World Psychology Press pp 29 30 ISBN 978 1 57958 388 0 Peter Duignan Lewis H Gann 2013 Burden of Empire An Appraisal of Western Colonialism in Africa South of the Sahara Hoover Press p 59 ISBN 978 0 8179 1693 0 for survey see Ashley Jackson The British Empire and the Second World War online For comprehensive coverage and up to date bibliography see The British Empire at War Research Group Ashley Jackson The British Empire 1939 1945 in Richard J B Bosworth and Joseph A Maiolo eds The Cambridge History of the Second World War Volume II Politics and Ideology 2015 pp 558 580 quote on p 559 Jackson p 563 Michael Geyer and Adam Tooz eds e 2015 The Cambridge History of the Second World War Volume 3 Total War Economy Society and Culture Cambridge University Press pp 80 81 ISBN 978 1 316 29880 0 Ashley Jackson The British Empire in Richard Bosworth and Joseph Maiolo ed 2015 The Cambridge History of the Second World War Volume 2 Politics and Ideology Cambridge University Press p 559 ISBN 978 1 316 29856 5 See also Ashley Jackson The British Empire and the Second World War 2007 Jane Samson 2001 The British Empire Oxford UP p 197 ISBN 978 0 19 289293 5 for comparative perspective on different empires Dietmar Rothermund The Routledge Companion to Decolonization 2000 Bailkin Jordanna 2015 Where Did the Empire Go Archives and Decolonization in Britain American Historical Review 120 3 884 899 esp pp 889 890 doi 10 1093 ahr 120 3 884 As does cultural historian Bernard Porter The Absent Minded Imperialists Empire Society and Culture in Britain 2004 Darwin John 1984 British Decolonisation since 1945 A Pattern or a Puzzle Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 12 2 186 208 doi 10 1080 03086538408582666 Jordanna Bailkin The Afterlife of Empire 2012 Bill Schwarz The White Man s World 2010 Thomas Colley Always at War British Public Narratives of War U of Michigan Press 2019 online review Buckner Presidential Address Whatever Happened to the British Empire p 5 Ronald Hyam 2010 Understanding the British Empire Cambridge University Press p 473 ISBN 978 0 521 11522 3 Hyam 2010 Understanding the British Empire Cambridge University Press p 496 ISBN 978 0 521 11522 3 Bligh Michelle C Robinson Jill L 2010 Was Gandhi charismatic Exploring the rhetorical leadership of Mahatma Gandhi The Leadership Quarterly 21 5 844 855 doi 10 1016 j leaqua 2010 07 011 Marjory Harper and Stephen Constantine Migration and empire 2010 Philippa Levine ed Gender and empire 2007 Radhika Mohanram Imperial white Race diaspora and the British empire U of Minnesota Press 2007 Ronald Hyam Empire and sexuality the British experience 1990 Peder Anker Imperial ecology environmental order in the British Empire 1895 1945 2009 James R Ryan Picturing empire Photography and the visualization of the British Empire 1997 Brian Stoddart Sport cultural imperialism and colonial response in the British Empire Comparative Studies in Society and History 30 4 1988 649 673 Sarah E Stockwell ed The British Empire Themes and Perspectives 2008 Stephen Howe ed New Imperial Histories Reader Routledge 2010 Mrinalini Sinha Colonial Masculinity The Manly Englishman and the Effeminate Bengali in the Late Nineteenth Century 1995 Antoinette Burton Burdens of History British Feminists Indian Women and Imperial Culture 1865 1915 1995 Catherine Hall and Sonya Rose eds At Home with the Empire Metropolitan Culture and the Imperial World 2006 Zoe Laidlaw Breaking Britannia s Bounds Law Settlers and Space in Britain s Imperial Historiography Historical Journal 55 3 2012 807 830 Mrinalini Sinha Colonial Masculinity p 2 Alan Lester Imperial Networks Creating Identities in Nineteenth Century South Africa and Britain 2001 Tony Ballantyne Orientalism and Race Aryanism in the British Empire 2002 Alison Games The Web of Empire English Cosmopolitans in an Age of Expansion 1560 1660 2008 See Oxford History of the British Empire Companion series Douglas M Peers Is Humpty Dumpty back together again The revival of imperial history and the Oxford History of the British Empire Journal of World History 2002 13 2 pp 451 467 online The Oxford History of the British Empire Volume I Max Beloff History Today Retrieved 7 June 2015 subscription required Saul Dubow Review of Porter Andrew ed The Oxford History of the British Empire Vol III The Nineteenth Century H Albion H Net Reviews April 2002 Retrieved 7 June 2015 Reviews Madhavi Kale Social History 27 2 2002 pp 250 253 Tim Allender Household bibis pious learning and racial cure changing feminine identities in colonial India 1780 1925 Paedagogica Historica 53 1 2 2017 155 169 Dane Kennedy The Imperial History Wars Journal of British Studies 54 1 2015 5 22 especially pp 8 9 Dane Kennedy Postcolonialism and History in The Oxford Handbook of Postcolonial Studies ed Graham Huggins 2013 pp 467 88 Rachel K Bright and Andrew R Dilley After the British World Historical Journal 60 2 2017 547 568 D Armitage and M J Braddick eds The British Atlantic World 2002 E A Alpers The Indian Ocean in World History 2014 D Armitage and A Bashford eds Pacific Histories Ocean Land People 2014 Joshua Ehrlich Anxiety Chaos and the Raj Historical Journal 63 3 2020 777 787 Deborah Wormell 1980 Sir John Seeley and the Uses of History Cambridge UP p 97 ISBN 978 0 521 22720 9 Sir John Robert Seeley 1905 The Expansion of England Little Brown p 205 Douglas M Peers Britain and Empire in Chris Williams ed A Companion to Nineteenth Century Britain 2004 53 78 quoting p 55 Martin Thornton 2013 Churchill Borden and Anglo Canadian Naval Relations 1911 14 Palgrave Macmillan UK pp 82 85 ISBN 978 1 137 30087 4 Payson O Brien Phillips 2001 The Titan refreshed imperial overstretch and the British Navy before the First World War Past amp Present 172 1 146 169 doi 10 1093 past 172 1 146 JSTOR 3600779 Matthew Johnson Militarism and the British Left 1902 1914 Palgrave Macmillan 2013 Jim Tomlinson 2014 Dundee and the Empire Juteopolis 1850 1939 Edinburgh UP p 1 ISBN 978 0 7486 8615 5 Bernard Porter 2006 The Absent minded Imperialists Empire Society and Culture in Britain Oxford UP p 24 ISBN 978 0 19 929959 1 Porter Bernard 2008 Further thoughts on imperial absent mindedness Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 36 1 101 117 doi 10 1080 03086530801889400 S2CID 159839435 MacKenzie John M 2008 Comfort and Conviction A Response to Bernard Porter Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 36 4 659 668 doi 10 1080 03086530802561040 S2CID 143894750 The British Empire is something to be proud of YouGov 26 July 2014 Colonial nostalgia is back in fashion blinding us to the horrors of empire The Guardian 24 August 2016 External links edit Making History Coverage of leading British historians and institutions from the Institute of Historical ResearchFurther reading editBasic bibliography edit Bayly C A ed Atlas of the British Empire 1989 survey by scholars heavily illustrated Brendon Piers A Moral Audit of the British Empire History Today October 2007 Vol 57 Issue 10 pp 44 47 online at EBSCO Brendon Piers The Decline and Fall of the British Empire 1781 1997 2008 wide ranging survey Bryant Arthur The History of Britain and the British Peoples 3 vols 1984 90 popular Dalziel Nigel The Penguin Historical Atlas of the British Empire 2006 144 pp Darwin John The Empire Project The Rise and Fall of the British World System 1830 1970 2009 excerpt and text search Darwin John Unfinished Empire The Global Expansion of Britain 2013 Ferguson Niall Empire The Rise and Demise of the British World Order and the Lessons for Global Power 2002 Also published as Empire How Britain Made the Modern World 2002 Howe Stephen ed The New Imperial Histories Reader 2009 online review Jackson Ashley The British Empire A Very Short Introduction 2013 excerpt James Lawrence The Rise and Fall of the British Empire 1998 A one volume history of the Empire from the American colonies to the Handover of Hong Kong also online Knaplund Paul The British empire 1815 1939 1941 very wide ranging online Marshall P J ed The Cambridge Illustrated History of the British Empire 1996 online Olson James S and Robert S Shadle Historical Dictionary of the British Empire 1996 Panton Kenneth J ed Historical Dictionary of the British Empire 2015 766 pp Simms Brendan Three Victories and a Defeat The Rise and Fall of the First British Empire 2008 800 pp excerpt and text searchOverviews edit Belich James Replenishing the Earth The Settler Revolution and the Rise of the Angloworld 1780 1930 Oxford University Press 2009 448 pp focus on British settlement colonies of Canada Australia and New Zealand emphasizing the heavy British investments involved Black Jeremy The British Seaborne Empire 2004 Cain P J and A G Hopkins British Imperialism 1688 2000 2nd edn 2001 739 pp detailed economic history that presents the new gentlemanly capitalists thesis Colley Linda Captives Britain Empire and the World 1600 1850 2004 464 pp Hyam Ronald Britain s Imperial Century 1815 1914 A Study of Empire and Expansion 1993 Judd Denis Empire The British Imperial Experience From 1765 to the Present 1996 Levine Philippa The British Empire sunrise to sunset 3rd ed Routledge 2020 excerpt Lloyd T O The British Empire 1558 1995 Oxford University Press 1996 Muir Ramsay A short history of the British commonwealth 2 vol 1920 22 8th ed 1954 online Parsons Timothy H The British imperial century 1815 1914 A world history perspective Rowman amp Littlefield 2019 Royal Institute of International Affairs The Colonial Problem 1937 broad based review of current status of European colonies especially British Empire online Robinson Howard The Development of the British Empire 1922 465 pp edition Rose J Holland A P Newton and E A Benians general editor The Cambridge History of the British Empire 9 vols 1929 61 vol 1 The Old Empire from the Beginnings to 1783 934pp online edition Volume I Volume II The Growth of the New Empire 1783 1870 1968 online Smith Simon C British Imperialism 1750 1970 1998 brief Stockwell Sarah ed The British Empire Themes and Perspectives 2008 355 pp Oxford History edit Louis William Roger general editor The Oxford History of the British Empire 5 vols 1998 99 Vol 1 The Origins of Empire ed Nicholas Canny online Vol 2 The Eighteenth Century ed P J Marshall online Vol 3 The Nineteenth Century ed Andrew Porter 1998 780 pp online edition Vol 4 The Twentieth Century ed Judith M Brown 1998 773 pp online edition Vol 5 Historiography ed Robin W Winks 1999 onlineOxford History Companion series edit Beinart William and Lotte Hughes eds Environment and Empire 2007 Bickers Robert ed Settlers and Expatriates Britons over the Seas 2014 Buckner Phillip ed Canada and the British Empire 2010 Etherington Norman Missions and Empire 2008 on Protestant missions Harper Marjory and Stephen Constantine eds Migration and Empire 2010 Kenny Kevin ed Ireland and the British Empire 2006 excerpt and text search Peers Douglas M and Nandini Gooptu eds India and the British Empire 2012 Schreuder Deryck and Stuart Ward eds Australia s Empire 2010 doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780199563739 001 0001 Thompson Andrew ed Britain s Experience of Empire in the Twentieth Century 2012 Atlases geography environment edit Bartholomew John Atlas of the British empire throughout the world 1868 edition online 1868 edition 1877 edition online 1877 edition the maps are poorly reproduced Beattie James 2012 Recent Themes in the Environmental History of the British Empire History Compass 10 2 129 139 doi 10 1111 j 1478 0542 2011 00824 x Dalziel Nigel The Penguin Historical Atlas of the British Empire 2006 144 pp Faunthorpe John Pincher Geography of the British colonies and foreign possessions 1874 online edition Lucas Charles Prestwood A Historical Geography of the British Colonies part 2 West Indies 1890 online edition Lucas Charles Prestwood A Historical Geography of the British Colonies part 4 South and East Africa 1900 online edition MacKenzie John M The British Empire through buildings Structure function and meaning Manchester UP 2020 excerpt Porter A N Atlas of British Overseas Expansion 1994 The Year book of the Imperial Institute of the United Kingdom the colonies and India a statistical record of the resources and trade of the colonial and Indian possessions of the British Empire 2nd ed 1893 880pp online editionPolitical economic and intellectual studies edit Andrews Kenneth R Trade Plunder and Settlement Maritime Enterprise and the Genesis of the British Empire 1480 1630 1984 Armitage David The Ideological Origins of the British Empire 2000 Armitage David 1999 Greater Britain A Useful Category of Historical Analysis American Historical Review 104 2 427 45 doi 10 2307 2650373 JSTOR 2650373 Armitage David ed Theories of Empire 1450 1800 1998 Armitage David and M J Braddick eds The British Atlantic World 1500 1800 2002 Barker Sir Ernest The Ideas and Ideals of the British Empire 1941 Baumgart W Imperialism The Idea and Reality of British and French Colonial Expansion 1880 1914 1982 Bayly C A Imperial Meridian The British Empire and the World 1780 1831 1989 Stern Philip J Early Eighteenth Century British India Antimeridian or antemeridiem Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History 21 2 2020 pp 1 26 focus on Bayly Bell Duncan The Idea of Greater Britain Empire and the Future of World Order 1860 1900 2007 Bell Duncan ed Victorian Visions of Global Order Empire and International Relations in Nineteenth Century Political Thought 2007 Bennett George ed The Concept of Empire Burke to Attlee 1774 1947 1953 Blaut J M The Colonizers Model of the World 1993 Bowen H V Business of Empire The East India Company and Imperial Britain 1756 1833 2006 304pp Cain Hopkins A G 1986 Gentlemanly Capitalism and British Expansion Overseas I The Old Colonial System 1688 1850 Economic History Review 39 4 501 525 doi 10 2307 2596481 JSTOR 2596481 Cain Hopkins A G 1987 Gentlemanly Capitalism and British Expansion Overseas II New Imperialism 1850 1945 The Economic History Review 40 1 1 26 doi 10 2307 2596293 JSTOR 2596293 Cain Hopkins A G 1980 The Political Economy of British Expansion Overseas 1750 1914 The Economic History Review 33 4 463 490 doi 10 1111 j 1468 0289 1980 tb01171 x JSTOR 2594798 Collingham Lizzie The Taste of Empire How Britain s Quest for Food Shaped the Modern World 2017 Crooks Peter and Timothy H Parsons eds Empires and bureaucracy in world history from late antiquity to the twentieth century Cambridge UP 2016 chapters 1 9 11 13 15 17 Darby Philip The Three Faces of Imperialism British and American Approaches to Asia and Africa 1870 1970 1987 Doyle Michael W Empires 1986 Dumett Raymond E Gentlemanly Capitalism and British Imperialism The New Debate on Empire 1999 234 pp Gallagher John and Ronald Robinson The Imperialism of Free Trade The Economic History Review Vol 6 No 1 1953 pp 1 15 in JSTOR online free at Mt Holyoke highly influential interpretation in its day Gilbert Helen and Chris Tiffin eds Burden or Benefit Imperial Benevolence and Its Legacies 2008 Harlow V T The Founding of the Second British Empire 1763 1793 2 vols 1952 64 Heinlein Frank British Government Policy and Decolonisation 1945 1963 Scrutinising the Official Mind 2002 Herbertson A J The Oxford Survey of the British Empire 1914 Ingram Edward The British Empire as a World Power Ten Studies 2001 Jackson Ashley British Empire and the Second World War 2006 Johnson Robert British Imperialism 2003 historiography Keith Arthur Berriedale 1921 War government of the British dominions Clarendon Press First World War Kennedy Paul The Rise and Fall of British Naval Mastery 1976 Koehn Nancy F The Power of Commerce Economy and Governance in the First British Empire 1994 Knorr Klaus E British Colonial Theories 1570 1850 1944 Louis William Roger Imperialism at Bay The United States and the Decolonization of the British Empire 1941 1945 1978 McIntyre W David The commonwealth of nations Origins and impact 1869 1971 U of Minnesota Press 1977 Comprehensive coverage giving London s perspective on political and constitutional relations with each possession link Marshall Peter James 2005 The Making and Unmaking of Empires Britain India and America C 1750 1783 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 927895 4 Mehta Uday Singh Liberalism and Empire A Study in Nineteenth Century British Liberal Thought 1999 Pares Richard The Economic Factors in the History of the Empire Economic History Review 7 2 1937 pp 119 144 online Porter Bernard The Lion s Share A History of British Imperialism 1850 2011 4th ed 2012 Wide ranging general history strong on anti imperialism online Thornton A P The Imperial Idea and its Enemies 2nd ed 1985 Tinker Hugh A New System of Slavery The Export of Indian Labour Overseas 1830 1920 1974 Webster Anthony Gentlemen Capitalists British Imperialism in South East Asia 1770 1890 1998 Diplomacy and military policy edit Further information History of the foreign relations of the United Kingdom and History of the British Army Bannister Jerry and Liam Riordan eds The Loyal Atlantic Remaking the British Atlantic in the Revolutionary Era U of Toronto Press 2012 Bartlett C J British Foreign Policy in the Twentieth Century 1989 Bemis Samuel Flagg 1935 The Diplomacy of the American Revolution American Historical Association a standard history Black Jeremy America or Europe British Foreign Policy 1739 63 1998 Black Jeremy ed Knights Errant and True Englishmen British Foreign Policy 1660 1800 2003 essays by scholars Black Jeremy George III America s last king Yale UP 2006 Chandler David and Ian Beckett eds The Oxford History of the British Army 2003 excerpt Colley Thomas Always at War British Public Narratives of War U of Michigan Press 2019 online review Cotterell Arthur Western Power in Asia Its Slow Rise and Swift Fall 1415 1999 2009 popular history excerpt Dilks David Retreat from Power 1906 39 v 1 Studies in Britain s Foreign Policy of the Twentieth Century 1981 Retreat from Power After 1939 v 2 1981 Haswell Jock and John Lewis Stempel A Brief History of the British Army 2017 Jackson Ashley The British Empire and the Second World War 2007 624pp Comprehensive coverage Jackson Ashley New Research on the British Empire and the Second World War Part II Global War Studies 7 2 2010 157 184 historiography Jones J R Britain and the World 1649 1815 1980 Langer William L The Diplomacy of Imperialism 1890 1902 2nd ed 1950 Mulligan William and Brendan Simms eds The Primacy of Foreign Policy in British History 1660 2000 Palgrave Macmillan 2011 345 pages Nester William R Titan The Art of British Power in the Age of Revolution and Napoleon 2016 excerpt O Shaughnessy Andrew Jackson The Men Who Lost America British Leadership the American Revolution and the Fate of the Empire 2014 Strang Lord William Britain in World Affairs A survey of the Fluctuations in British Power and Influence from Henry VIII to Elizabeth II 1961 Online Popular history by a diplomat Vickers Rhiannon The Evolution of Labour s Foreign Policy 1900 51 2003 focus on decolonization Webster Charles The Foreign Policy of Palmerston 1951 Wiener Joel H ed Great Britain Foreign Policy and the Span of Empire 1689 1971 A Documentary History 1972 876pp primary sources Wyman McCarthy Matthew 2018 British abolitionism and global empire in the late 18th century A historiographic overview History Compass 16 10 e12480 doi 10 1111 hic3 12480 S2CID 149779622 Slavery and race edit Auerbach Sascha Race Law and The Chinese Puzzle in Imperial Britain 2009 Ballantyne Tony Orientalism and Race Aryanism in the British Empire 2002 Drescher Seymour Abolition A History of Slavery and Antislavery 2009 excerpt and text search Dumas Paula E Proslavery Britain Fighting for slavery in an era of abolition Springer 2016 Eltis David and Stanley L Engerman The importance of slavery and the slave trade to industrializing Britain Journal of Economic History 60 1 2000 123 144 online Green William A British slave emancipation the sugar colonies and the great experiment 1830 1865 Oxford 1981 Guasco Michael 2014 Slaves and Englishmen Human Bondage in the Early Modern Atlantic University of Pennsylvania Press Grant Kevin A Civilised Savagery Britain and the New Slaveries in Africa 1884 1926 2005 Killingray David and Martin Plaut Race and Imperialism in the British Empire A Lateral View South African Historical Journal 2020 1 28 doi 10 1080 02582473 2020 1724191 Lake Marilyn and Reynolds David Drawing the Global Colour Line White Men s Countries and the International Challenge of Racial Equality 2008 Look Lai Walton Indentured Labor Caribbean Sugar Chinese and Indian Migrants to the British West Indies 1838 1918 1993 Morgan Philip D and Sean Hawkins eds Black Experience and the Empire 2006 Oxford History Companion series Quinault Roland Gladstone and slavery The Historical Journal 52 2 2009 363 383 doi 10 1017 S0018246X0900750X Robinson Ronald John Gallagher Alice Denny Africa and the Victorians The Climax of Imperialism in the Dark Continent 1961 Taylor Michael The British West India interest and its allies 1823 1833 English Historical Review 133 565 2018 1478 1511 doi 10 1093 ehr cey336 focus on slavery Walker Eric A ed The Cambridge history of the British Empire Volume VIII South Africa Rhodesia and the High Commission Territories 1963 onlineSocial and cultural studies gender edit August Thomas G The Selling of the Empire British and French Imperialist Propaganda 1890 1940 1985 Bailyn Bernard and Philip D Morgan eds Strangers within the Realm Cultural Margins of the First British Empire 1991 Brantlinger Patrick Rule of Darkness British Literature and Imperialism 1830 1914 1988 Broich John Engineering the Empire British Water Supply Systems and Colonial Societies 1850 1900 Journal of British Studies 2007 46 2 346 365 ISSN 0021 9371 Fulltext at Ebsco Burton Antoinette Burdens of History British Feminists Indian Women and Imperial Culture 1865 1915 U of North Carolina Press 1994 Chaudhuri Nupur Imperialism and Gender in Encyclopedia of European Social History edited by Peter N Stearns vol 1 2001 pp 515 521 online Clayton Martin and Bennett Zon Music and Orientalism in the British Empire 1780s 1940s 2007 excerpt and text search Constantine Stephen 2003 British Emigration to the Empire commonwealth since 1880 from Overseas Settlement to Diaspora Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 31 2 16 35 doi 10 1080 03086530310001705586 S2CID 162001571 Finn Margot 2006 Colonial gifts Family politics and the exchange of goods in British India c 1780 1820 PDF Modern Asian Studies 40 1 203 231 doi 10 1017 s0026749x06001739 S2CID 154303105 Hall Catherine and Sonya O Rose At Home with the Empire Metropolitan Culture and the Imperial World 2007 Hall Catherine Civilising Subjects Colony and Metropole in the English Imagination 1830 1867 2002 Hodgkins Christopher Reforming Empire Protestant Colonialism and Conscience in British Literature U of Missouri Press 2002 Hyam Ronald Empire and Sexuality The British Experience 1990 Karatani Rieko Defining British Citizenship Empire Commonwealth and Modern Britain 2003 Kuczynski Robert R Demographic survey of the British Colonial Empire 1 vol 1948 vol 1 West Africa online also vol 2 East Africa online Lassner Phyllis Colonial Strangers Women Writing the End of the British Empire 2004 Lazarus Neil ed The Cambridge Companion to Postcolonial Literary Studies 2004 Levine Philippa ed Gender and Empire Oxford History of the British Empire 2004 McDevitt Patrick F May the Best Man Win Sport Masculinity and Nationalism in Great Britain and the Empire 1880 1935 2004 Midgley Clare Feminism and Empire women activists in imperial Britain 1790 1865 Routledge 2007 Morgan Philip D and Hawkins Sean ed Black Experience and the Empire 2004 Morris Jan The Spectacle of Empire Style Effect and Pax Britannica 1982 Naithani Sadhana The Story Time of the British Empire Colonial and Postcolonial Folkloristics 2010 Newton Arthur Percival The Universities And Educational Systems Of The British Empire 1924 online Porter Andrew Religion Versus Empire British Protestant Missionaries and Overseas Expansion 1700 1914 2004 Potter Simon J News and the British World The Emergence of an Imperial Press System Clarendon 2003 Price Richard One Big Thing Britain its Empire and Their Imperial Culture Journal of British Studies 2006 45 3 602 627 ISSN 0021 9371 Fulltext Ebsco Price Richard Making Empire Colonial Encounters and the Creation of Imperial Rule in Nineteenth Century Africa 2008 Richards Eric Britannia s children emigration from England Scotland Wales and Ireland since 1600 A amp C Black 2004 online Rubinstein W D Capitalism Culture and Decline in Britain 1750 1990 1993 Ruger Jan Nation Empire and Navy Identity Politics in the United Kingdom 1887 1914 Past amp Present 2004 185 159 187 ISSN 0031 2746 online Sauerberg Lars Ole Intercultural Voices in Contemporary British Literature The Implosion of Empire 2001 Sinha Mrinalini Colonial Masculinity The Manly Englishman and the Effeminate Bengali in the Late Nineteenth Century 1995 Smith Michelle J Clare Bradford et al From Colonial to Modern Transnational Girlhood in Canadian Australian and New Zealand Literature 1840 1940 2018 excerpt Spurr David The Rhetoric of Empire Colonial Discourse in Journalism Travel Writing and Imperial Administration 1993 Trollope Joanna Britannia s Daughters Women of the British Empire 1983 Whitehead Clive The historiography of British imperial education policy Part I India History of Education 34 3 2005 315 329 Whitehead Clive The historiography of British Imperial education policy Part II Africa and the rest of the colonial empire History of Education 34 4 2005 441 454 Wilson Kathleen The Island Race Englishness Empire and Gender in the Eighteenth Century 2003 Wilson Kathleen ed A New Imperial History Culture Identity and Modernity in Britain and the Empire 1660 1840 2004 Wilson Kathleen 2011 Rethinking the Colonial State Family Gender and Governmentality in Eighteenth Century British Frontiers American Historical Review 116 5 1294 1322 doi 10 1086 ahr 116 5 1294 Xypolia Ilia British Imperialism and Turkish Nationalism in Cyprus 1923 1939 Divide Define and Rule Routledge 2017Regional studies edit Bailyn Bernard Strangers Within the Realm Cultural Margins of the First British Empire 1991 excerpt and text search Bruckner Phillip Canada and the British Empire The Oxford History of the British Empire 2010 excerpt and text search doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780199563746 001 0001 online Elliott J H Empires of the Atlantic World Britain and Spain in America 1492 1830 2006 a major interpretation excerpt and text search Kenny Kevin ed Ireland and the British Empire 2004 Landsman Ned Crossroads of Empire The Middle Colonies in British North America 2010 excerpt and text search Lees Lynn Hollen Planting Empire Cultivating Subjects British Malaya 1786 1941 2017 Lester Alan Imperial Networks Creating Identities in Nineteenth Century South Africa and Britain 2001 Louis William Roger The British Empire in the Middle East 1945 1951 Arab Nationalism the United States and Postwar Imperialism 1984 Marshall Peter and Glyn Williams eds The British Atlantic Empire before the American Revolution 1980 Taylor Alan The Civil War of 1812 American Citizens British Subjects Irish Rebels and Indian Allies 2010 on War of 1812 Veevers David The Origins of the British Empire in Asia 1600 1750 2020 excerpt Historiography and memory edit Adams James Truslow 1927 On the Term British Empire American Historical Review 22 3 485 459 doi 10 2307 1837801 JSTOR 1837801 Armitage David 1999 Greater Britain A Useful Category of Analysis American Historical Review 104 2 427 445 doi 10 2307 2650373 JSTOR 2650373 Bailkin Jordanna 2015 Where Did the Empire Go Archives and Decolonization in Britain American Historical Review 120 3 884 899 doi 10 1093 ahr 120 3 884 Ballantyne Tony 2010 The Changing Shape of the Modern British Empire and its Historiography Historical Journal 53 2 429 452 doi 10 1017 s0018246x10000117 S2CID 162458960 Barone Charles A Marxist Thought on Imperialism Survey and Critique 1985 Bowen Huw V 1998 British Conceptions of Global Empire 1756 83 The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 26 3 1 27 doi 10 1080 03086539808583038 Black Jeremy Imperial Legacies The British Empire Around the World Encounter Books 2019 excerpt Buckner Phillip Presidential Address Whatever happened to the British Empire Journal of the Canadian Historical Association 1993 4 1 pp 3 32 online Burnard Trevor 2007 Empire Matters The Historiography of Imperialism in Early America 1492 1830 History of European Ideas 33 1 87 107 doi 10 1016 j histeuroideas 2006 08 011 S2CID 143511493 Burton Antoinette and Isabel Hofmeyr eds Ten Books That Shaped the British Empire Creating an Imperial Commons 2014 excerpt Cannadine David Big Tent Historiography Transatlantic Obstacles and Opportunities in Writing the History of Empire Common Knowledge 2005 11 3 pp 375 392 at Project MUSE Cannadine David Ornamentalism How the British Saw Their Empire 2002 Cannadine David The Empire Strikes Back Past amp Present No 147 May 1995 pp 180 194 1 Cannadine David Victorious Century The United Kingdom 1800 1906 2018 Colley Linda What Is Imperial History Now in David Cannadine ed What Is History Now 2002 132 147 Drayton Richard Where does the world historian write from Objectivity moral conscience and the past and present of imperialism Journal of Contemporary History 2011 46 3 pp 671 685 online Dumett Raymond E ed Gentlemanly Capitalism and British Imperialism The New Debate on Empire 1999 online Elton G R Modern Historians on British History 1485 1945 A Critical Bibliography 1945 1969 1969 annotated guide to 1000 history books on every major topic plus book reviews and major scholarly articles online Fieldhouse David 1984 Can Humpty Dumpty be put together again Imperial history in the 1980s Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 12 2 9 23 doi 10 1080 03086538408582657 Fieldhouse David K Imperialism An Historiographical Revision Economic History Review 14 2 1961 187 209 2 Ghosh Durba Another set of imperial turns American Historical Review 2012 117 3 pp 772 793 online Griffin Patrick In Retrospect Lawrence Henry Gipson s The British Empire before the American Revolution Reviews in American History 31 2 2003 pp 171 183 in JSTOR Hyam Ronald 2001 The study of imperial and commonwealth history at Cambridge 1881 1981 Founding fathers and pioneer research students Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 29 3 75 103 doi 10 1080 03086530108583128 S2CID 161602517 Hyam Ronald Understanding the British Empire 2010 576pp essays by Hyam Johnson David and Prem Poddar eds A Historical Companion to Postcolonial Thought in English Columbia UP 2005 Kennedy Dane The Imperial History Wars Debating the British Empire 2018 excerpt Kennedy Dane 2015 The Imperial History Wars Journal of British Studies 54 1 5 22 doi 10 1017 jbr 2014 166 S2CID 154163198 Lester Alan Kate Boehme and Peter Mitchell eds Ruling the World Freedom Civilisation and Liberalism in the Nineteenth Century British Empire Cambridge UP 2021 Lieven Dominic Empire The Russian empire and its rivals Yale UP 2002 comparisons with Russian Habsburg amp Ottoman empires excerpt MacKenzie John M 2015 The British Empire Ramshackle or Rampaging A Historiographical Reflection Journal of 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Possessions of the British Empire 1905 340pp online edition Boehmer Elleke ed Empire Writing An Anthology of Colonial Literature 1870 1918 1998 Brooks Chris and Peter Faulkner eds The White Man s Burdens An Anthology of British Poetry of the Empire Exeter UP 1996 Hall Catherine ed Cultures of Empire A Reader Colonizers in Britain and the Empire in the 19th and 20th Centuries 2000 Herbertson A J and O J R Howarth eds The Oxford Survey Of The British Empire 6 vol 1914 online vol 2 on Asia and India 555pp on Africa vole 1 America vp 6 General topics Madden Frederick ed The End of Empire Dependencies since 1948 Select Documents on the Constitutional History of the British Empire and Commonwealth The West Indies British Honduras Hong Kong Fiji Cyprus Gibraltar and the Falklands 2000 596pp Madden Frederick and John Darwin ed The Dependent Empire 1900 1948 Colonies Protectorates and Mandates 1963 908pp Mansergh Nicholas ed Documents and Speeches on Commonwealth Affairs 1952 1962 1963 804pp Wiener Joel H ed Great Britain Foreign Policy and the Span of Empire 1689 1971 A Documentary History 4 vol 1972 3400pp Mostly statements by British leadersExternal links editBritish Empire Gateway Primary sources and older secondary sources The British Empire at War Research Group Comprehensive coverage of the Empire during Second World War The British Empire Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Historiography of the British Empire amp oldid 1194032848, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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