1st Edition

Colonial Empires Compared Britain and the Netherlands, 1750–1850

By Bob Moore, Henk van Nierop Copyright 2003

    During the seventeenth century, the Dutch and English emerged as the world's leading trading nations, building their prosperity largely upon their maritime successes. During this period both nations strongly contested for maritime supremacy and colonial dominance, yet by the nineteenth century, it was Britain who had undoubtedly come out on top of this struggle, with a navy that dominated the seas and an empire of unparalleled size. This volume examines the colonial development of these two nations at a crucial period in which the foundations for the modern nineteenth and twentieth century imperial state were laid. The volume consists of ten essays (five by British and five by Dutch scholars) based on papers originally delivered to the Fourteenth Anglo-Dutch Historical Conference, 2000. The essays are arranged into five themes which take a strongly comparative approach to explore the development of the British and Dutch colonial empires in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. These themes examine the nature of Anglo-Dutch relations, the culture of imperialism and perceptions of the overseas world, the role of sea power in imperial expansion, the economics of colonial expansion and the extension of the metropolitan state to the colonies. Taken together, these essays form an important collection which will greatly add to the understanding of the British and Dutch colonial empires, and their relative successes and failures.

    Contents: Introduction, Stephen Conway; The Anglo-Dutch Relationship 1750-1850: Sir Joseph Yorke and the waning of the Anglo-Dutch Alliance, 1747-1788, H. M. Scott; Between the devil and the deep blue sea: the logic of neutrality, Niek van Sas; Perceptions of Empire: Perceptions of the Overseas World: National identity and empire: Britain and the American colonies, 1763-1787, Glynis Ridley; Dutch debates on overseas man and his world, 1770-1820, Angelie Sens; The Role of the Navy in Anglo-Dutch Imperial Relations: Seapower and empire: cause and effect?, N.A.M. Rodger; Facing a new world: the Dutch navy goes overseas (c.1750-c.1850), Jaap R. Bruijn; Financing Imperial Trade: From supranational to national: changing patterns of investment in the British East India Company, 1750-1820, H. V. Bowen; Miracle cure for an economy in crisis? Colonial exploitation as a source of growth in the Netherlands 1815-1870, Edwin Horlings; The Imperial State: the Extension of the Metropolitan State to the Colonies: The British State overseas, 1750-1850, P. J. Marshall; Continuity and change in the Dutch position in Asia between 1750 and 1850, Jur van Goor; Index.

    Biography

    Bob Moore, Henk van Nierop