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Western Imperialism In Asia. History 381: Asian Experience. Colonial Southeast Asia. The Spread of Colonial Rule. Africa and Asia a source of raw materials and markets for European manufactured goods Motives for expansion: Economic National Grandeur Moral purposes
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Western Imperialism In Asia History 381: Asian Experience
The Spread of Colonial Rule • Africa and Asia a source of raw materials and markets for European manufactured goods • Motives for expansion: • Economic • National Grandeur • Moral purposes • No longer happy to deal with independent states; maintaining access important • Competition for control over territories • “Opportunity in the Orient”: Colonial Takeover in Southeast Asia • Malay Peninsula • Singapore • Burma • Vietnam • Philippines
The Colonial System • Resistance from societies with long traditions of national cohesion • Direct and indirect rule • Philosophy of colonialism • Darwinism • Survival of the fittest • Agent of civilization • Bring the benefits of the West • Assimilation/association
Colonialism in Action • India Under the British Raj • Some territories taken over directly by the East India Company and later the British crown • Others ruled by local maharajas and rajas • Order and stability • Attention to education • Building railroads, the telegraph, and postal service • British textiles put out of work those in the Indian textile industry • Failed to bring benefits of modern science and technology • Psychological effects
Colonial Regimes in Southeast Asia • Primary aim was economic • Indirect rule • Burma • Malaya • Indochina • Slow to create democratic institutions • Slow to adopt educational reforms • Reluctant to take up “white man’s burden” • Slow economic development • Some manufacturing in urban areas • Problems with growth of cash crops • Problems of population growth • “Modernizing elite”
The Emergence of Anti-Colonialism • Nationalism • Imperialism brought a consciousness of modern nationhood • Introduction of western ideas of citizenship and representative government • New elite • Traditional Resistance: A Precursor to Nationalism • Led by existing ruling class • Resistance in India • Peasant revolts • Religious resentment
The Rise of British Power in India • The Mughal Collapse • Aurangzeb and his weak successors; fragmentation and disunity in the Mughal Empire; Maratha raiders and their failure to succeed the Mughals; internal discord; external Persian incursions; regional divisions • Westerners in India • Early European contacts with India; Western trade interests and Indian political interests; Portuguese then Dutch and British dominance; the distribution of Dutch and Portuguese interests in India
British in India • The Early English Presence • Early British efforts blocked by Portugal; ventures of the English East India Co.; English naval supremacy over the Portuguese; weak attraction of British commodities in India; powerful attraction of British naval power • Territorial Bases • Well-positioned mercantile bases and fortresses: Madras (in the South), Calcutta (in the East), Bombay (in the West); 1714 embassy and English attainment of the right to local administration
The Mughal and Post-Mughal Contexts • The decline of the Mughal order and the attraction of secure refuge within company jurisdiction • Merchant attraction to English stability and order • Indian cottons • Indian prosperity and limitations under English rule • Commercialization and collaboration
Anglo-French Rivalry and the Conquest of Bengal • Anglo-French competition and the French defeat; superior European military power; the “Black Hole of Calcutta” and the Battle of Plassey; English control of Bengal; Indian collaboration • Robert Clive and the Beginnings of British India • The background of Robert Clive; adventures against the French; victory at Plassey; Bengal administration; suicide • The Establishment of British Rule • British plunder and extortion in Bengal; defeat of the Marathas by the Afghans; the Board of Control for India; defeat of the Indian Bengal regime
From Trading Company to Government • Indirect British administration via the Indian princes • Napoleonic wars and the seizure of French territory • The seizure of Maratha territory; Warren Hastings; Cornwallis; Wellesley; territorial expansion • The central Ganges Valley, Ceylon—tea and rubber in Ceylon • The Reasons for British Hegemony • Indian collaboration • British rule preferred to any Indian alternative • British efforts at honest, humane, and effective government
The Orientalists and the Bengal Renaissance • British and Indian cross-cultural appreciation • Calcutta, Colonial Capital • East India’s hot, humid climate and “The City of Dreadful Night” • Diseases • A major trade center and transportation hub • An industrial center • Conspicuous wealth alongside slums
From Tolerance to Arrogance • Indirect British rule; some Indians thrive, some are ruined under the British system; very limited social or cultural repression; the rise of the Indian middle class; industrialization • The British “need” to “civilize” India; the imposition and promotion of British culture; railroads, postage, and telegraphs; British defeat at the hands of the Afghans; British defeat of the Sikhs in Punjab and Kashmir • The Revolt of 1857 • The British annexation of the independent central Indian states; angry Indian aristocracy and troops; the rebel capture of Delhi; the new view of Britain as an occupying power; British atrocities; no chance for an equal partnership between England and India
The Consolidation of the British Empire in India • When were the beginnings of empire?; British East India Co., interests; territorial acquisitions; Orientalist vs. utilitarians’ philosophies regarding India; utilitarian victory and the move to “civilize” India; British education and legal systems in India • Indian intellectual mastery of British and Indian cultures; the rise of Indian nationalism; Western values and Indian yearnings for them (freedom, sovereignty, liberty, etc.); the unification of India via rail, telegraph, the English language, the press • Assessments of early British administration; the rise of an Indian identity; the exclusive nature of British culture; the backwardness of the princely states; backward rebels and educated Indian elites both demand independence
Colonialism in India • India Under the British Raj • Some territories taken over directly by the East India Company and later the British crown • Others ruled by local maharajas and rajas • Order and stability • Attention to education • Building railroads, the telegraph, and postal service • British textiles put out of work those in the Indian textile industry • Failed to bring benefits of modern science and technology • Psychological effects
Changes in Empire Sepoy Mutiny or the Indian Revolt of 1857 Pre-1857: Indian states under indirect/informal control Influence of British East India Company British Colonizers --the “treason” of the Indians Mutiny confirms “inferiority” of natives for Colonizers 1857: Indian states are directly ruled by Britain 1876: Victoria is made Empress of India
The Emergence of Anti-Colonialism • Nationalism • Imperialism brought a consciousness of modern nationhood • Introduction of western ideas of citizenship and representative government • New elite • Traditional Resistance: A Precursor to Nationalism • Led by existing ruling class • Resistance in India • Peasant revolts • Religious resentment
Maintenance of Empire • India in 1900: • 3500 colonial officials in a population of 300 millions • 75,000 white troops • 200,000 Indian troops Sikh soldiers in the Indian Army
Maintenance and the Rituals of Empire Image of Imperial Administration Queen Victoria: Empress of India in 1876
Colonial Regimes in Southeast Asia • Primary aim was economic • Indirect rule • Burma • Malaya • Indochina • Slow to create democratic institutions • Slow to adopt educational reforms • Reluctant to take up “white man’s burden” • Slow economic development • Some manufacturing in urban areas • Problems with growth of cash crops • Problems of population growth • “Modernizing elite”
Discussion 1. Do you agree with the author that it was unfortunate that “Rajputs, [and] Marathas saw each other as rivals and indeed as enemies” rather than uniting to defeat the British? Why? 2. During the 1700s, why might have an Indian of average means or less supported the British instead of the ruling dynasty? 3. During the 1700s, why might Indian merchants or other wealthy Indians have supported the British? 4. Some nationalists have contended that British imperialism in India and elsewhere in Asia followed a conscious policy to capture lands through a “divide and conquer” policy. How valid is this view of history?
5. The Manchu takeover of China can be compared with Britain’s entrance into India. How did the two roles resemble each other? In what ways did they differ? 6. What led British attitudes to shift “from tolerance to arrogance” regarding their Indian colonies? 7. What are some of the positive contributions of British rule in India? What are some of the negative results? Was British rule good or bad for India?