Formal and Informal Empire in the Nineteenth Century
Gresham College Lectures
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Gresham College Lectures
Formal and Informal Empire in the Nineteenth Century
Oct 18, 2011
Gresham College
From the end of the Napoleonic Wars to the 1880s, British industrial might and British command of the oceans underpinned the 'imperialism of free trade', in which economic interests of various kinds were paramount. In the industrial era, the major non-European empires, notably the Chinese, Japanese and Mughal states, failed to keep pace with this expansion of European influence, and the lecture discusses the reasons for this failure. New European empires emerged following the collapse of the old, and gradually European states found themselves intentionally or otherwise involved in converting economic and trading interests into imperial administration. Existing centres of European settlement and economic penetration, from Canada and South Africa to India and Algeria, generated a further impetus towards imperial expansion, driven by settlers' interests in trade, labour exploitation or security.

This is a part of the lecture series The Rise and Fall of European Empires from the 16th to the 20th Century.

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