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Indian Society And The Making of The British Empire

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Book Review

Subject:

History

Subclass:

Timured/Mughal

Reign:

Alamgir II 1754–1759

Subject Year (Time):

1700

Author:

C.A. Bayly

Volume:

-

Edition:

-

Publisher & Place:

1988

Publisher Date:

1922

Languages:

English

ISBN 10|13:

978-0521386500 | 0521386500

Royal Mughal Ref:

ARC-1000001-250306

Description

When H. H. Dodwell published his fifth volume of the Cambridge History of India in 1929, this book also became the fourth volume of the Cambridge History of the British Empire. The aim of the work was to chronicle the conquest of India by British arms and its transformation by British institutions. This must have seemed a very appropriate theme in the years just preceding the Statute of Westminster of 1931, which laid new foundations for the British Empire and Common-wealth. But since that date there has been a considerable change of perspective. Historians working after I929 have, if anything, emphasized the importance of India to Britain’s world role in the nineteenth century even more strongly. However, the nature and extent of India’s transformation has been vigorously debated from perspectives that would have seemed alien, even offensive to the interwar authors. The importance of India for Britain’s imperial system lay in both the military and economic fields. Seizure of the cash land revenues of India between 1757 and I818 made it possible for Britain to build up one of the largest European-style standing armies in the world, thus critically augmenting British land forces which were small and logistically backward except for a few years during the final struggle with Napoleon. This Indian army was used in large measure to hold down the subcontinent itself, but after 1790 it was increasingly employed to forward British interests in southern and eastern Asia and the Middle East. More symbolically, the Indian army opened up a second front, as it were, against the other great Eurasian land powers, Russia, the Ottomans, France and Austria. This reinforced the significance of the dominance of the Royal Navy at sea. From its Indian base Britain had already begun to construct informal empires of influence and trade in the Middle East, on the China coast and in East Africa during the first two decades of the nineteenth century. The campaign against the French in Egypt in 1801 and the seizure of the Cape of Good Hope in 179; and 1806 anticipated at key points the global strategy of Victorian England.

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