Article contents
British Immigration into India in the Nineteenth Century
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 April 2010
Extract
In a by now classic definition, European expansion in the nineteenth century has been characterised as the integration of large tracts of the earth's surface into a world-economy dominated by Britain,. Distinctions are conventionally drawn between two processes of integration: on the one hand, the creation of new economies by European settlement in ‘empty’ lands of temperate climate, from which a thinly scattered indigenous population had been displaced, and, on the other, the subordination and partial development of existing economic systems in densely populated tropical areas. Migration from Europe clearly had a role in both processes. It was crucial to the first: economic integration of ‘new’ lands could hardly take place without it, or at least historically it has not done so. The role of European migration in the second process would appear to be more limited. Whites were only likely to be involved in productive processes of agriculture or manufacturing at the highest managerial levels or as technical experts, and much of the military and administrative underpinning deemed necessary for economic domination could be provided by Asian or African clerks and soldiers.
- Type
- Articles
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Research Institute for History, Leiden University 1990
References
Notes
1 Parliamentary Papers (hereafter PP) 1875 LIV, 407Google Scholar.
2 PP 1830 XXVIII; PP 1831–2 IX, 316Google Scholar.
3 PP 1852 X, 351.
4 Trustram, M., Women of the Regiment (Cambridge 1984)Google Scholar.
5 PP 1863 XIX, i, 101.
6 Ghose, S.C., Social Condition of the British Community in Bengal 1787–1800 (Leiden 1970) 71Google Scholar.
7 The Cadet's Guide to India by a Lieutenant of the Bengal Establishment (London 1820) 46Google Scholar.
8 PP 1863 XIX, i, 28,101.
9 Arnold, D., ‘White Colonisation and Labour in Nineteenth-Century India’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 11 (1983)Google Scholar.
10 A Handbook of Useful Information for … Bengal, the Punjab (Maidstone 1853) 22Google Scholar.
11 PP 1863 XIX (2 vols.).
12 Heathcote, T.A., The Indian Army (Newton Abbot 1974) 161Google Scholar.
13 PP 1863 XIX, i, 23.
14 PP 1831–2 XIII, 9.
15 Arnold, D., ‘European Orphans and Vagrants in India in the Nineteenth Century’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 7 (1979)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
16 Gilchrist, J.B., The General East India Guide and Vade Mecum (London 1825) 212Google Scholar.
17 ‘J.P.’, The Care of Infants in India (6th ed.; London 1907) 88Google Scholar.
18 Cited in Spiers, E.M., The Army and Society 1815–1914 (London 1980) 44Google Scholar.
19 PP 1892 XIX, 10.
20 PP 1859 V, 404.
21 , Heathcote, Indian Army, 119Google Scholar.
22 Spangenberg, B., British Bureaucracy in India (New Delhi 1976)Google Scholar; Dewey, C.J., ‘The Education of a Ruling Caste: the Indian Civil Service in the Era of Competitive Examination’, English Historical Review 88 (1973)Google Scholar.
23 Razzell, P.E., ‘Social Origins of Officers in the Indian and the British Home Armies 1750–1862’, British Journal of Sociology 14 (1963) 249Google Scholar; , Heathcote, Indian Army, 135Google Scholar.
24 Bourne, J.H., Patronage and Society in Nineteenth-Century England (London 1986) 102–103Google Scholar.
25 For the civil service, see , Dewey, 'Education of a Ruling Caste’, 284–285Google Scholar.
26 , Bourne, Patronage, 105Google Scholar; , Spangenberg, Bureaucracy, 19Google Scholar.
27 Potter, D.C., India's Political Administrators 1919–83 (Oxford 1986) 58Google Scholar.
28 , Boume, Patronage, 181Google Scholar.
29 , Arnold, ‘European Orphans’, 151Google Scholar.
30 King, A.D., Colonial Urban Development (London 1976)Google Scholar.
31 Cited in Wilkinson, T., Two Monsoons (2nd ed.; London 1987) 99Google Scholar.
32 The Cadet's Guide to India, 47–50.
33 Rosselli, J., ‘Lord William Bentinck and his Age’, Bengal Past and Present 94 (1975) 68,71–72Google Scholar.
34 Varma, L.B., Anglo-Indians (Delhi 1979)122–123Google Scholar.
35 PP 1831–2 XIII, 397.
36 Ballhatchet, K.A., Race, Sex, and Class under the Raj (London 1980)Google Scholar
37 Allen, C. ed., Plain Tales from the Raj (London 1977) 184ffGoogle Scholar.
38 PP 1863 XIX, i, 288.
39 PP 1859 V, 364.
40 Bagchi, A.K., Private Investment in India 1900–39 (Cambridge 1972) 159CrossRefGoogle Scholar; see also Rungta, R.S., Rise of Business Corporations in India (Cambridge 1970) 265Google Scholar
- 2
- Cited by