Tag: Colonialism

  • James Forbes’ Mango and the Art of British Indian Empire

    James Forbes’ Mango and the Art of British Indian Empire

    Apurba Chatterjee In  1765, James Forbes, a mere Scottish lad of less than sixteen years of age, set sail to India following his appointment as a Writer for the English East India Company (EIC) in Bombay. Forbes was to stay in India for eighteen years, and he gradually rose to prominence as the Collector of…

  • Historians Call for a Review of Home Office Citizenship and Settlement Test

    Historians Call for a Review of Home Office Citizenship and Settlement Test

    21 July 2020 Historians Call for a Review of Home Office Citizenship and Settlement Test We are historians of Britain and the British Empire and writing in protest at the on-going misrepresentation of slavery and Empire in the “Life in the UK Test”, which is a requirement for applicants for citizenship or settlement (“indefinite leave…

  • How to Run an Empire: Early Modern Style

    How to Run an Empire: Early Modern Style

    L.H. Roper Dr C. Annemieke Romein recently offered a very helpful discussion here of how the habitual misunderstanding and misuse of nineteenth-century characterisations of ‘-isms’ and ‘the state’ continue to obscure our understanding of the nature and history of European government prior to 1789.  With Dr Romein’s permission and assistance, this post will extend her…

  • Edgerton & Empire: Nationalism, Imperialism and Decolonisation

    Edgerton & Empire: Nationalism, Imperialism and Decolonisation

    Liam Liburd One of the indirect and unintended side-effects of the tragic murder of George Floyd by an officer of the Minneapolis Police Department in late May has been a renewed effort to confront Britain’s own history of racism, especially that in the form of colonialism. Activists have taken aim at the symbols of this…

  • Worrying about the Field of the History of Emotions in Ireland – A report

    Worrying about the Field of the History of Emotions in Ireland – A report

    Sara Honarmand Ebrahimi Back in November, when the world was still in a relatively ‘normal’ state, I asked Dr Hannah Parker about the possibly of writing a report for the new History website concerning a series of events I was organising under the title, “Worrying about the Field of the History of Emotions in Ireland”.…