Article ID: CBB463323007

The East India Company, the Company’s Museum, and the Political Economy of Natural History in the Early Nineteenth Century (2016)

unapi

At the turn of the nineteenth century, at its headquarters in the City of London, the Honourable East India Company established a new museum and library. By midcentury this museum would contain one of Europe’s most extensive collections of the natural history, arts, and sciences of Asia. This essay uses the early history of the company’s museum, focusing in particular on its natural history collections, to explore the material relationship between scientific practice and the imperial political economy. Much of the collections had been gathered in the wake of military campaigns, trade missions, or administrative surveys. Once specimens and reports arrived in Leadenhall Street and passed through the museum storage areas, this plunder would become the stuff of science, going on to feed the growth of disciplines, societies, and projects in Britain and beyond. In this way, the East India Company was integral to the information and communication infrastructures within which many sciences then operated. Collections-based disciplines and societies flourished in this period; their growth, it is argued, was coextensive with administrative and political economic change at institutions like the East India Company. The essay first explores the company’s practices and patterns of collecting and then considers the consequences of this accumulation for aspects of scientific practice—particularly the growth of scientific societies—in both London and Calcutta.

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Authors & Contributors
Clark, Jennifer
Cowie, Helen
Craske, Matthew
Fleetwood, Lachlan
Hussey, Kristin D.
Kapoor, R. C.
Journals
British Journal for the History of Science
Centaurus: International Magazine of the History of Mathematics, Science, and Technology
Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage
Journal of Social History
Journal of the History of Collections
Museum History Journal
Publishers
Cambridge University Press
Fordham University Press
Johns Hopkins University Press
L'Erma di Bretschneider
MIT Press
Sydney University Press
Concepts
Imperialism
Museums
Colonialism
Collectors and collecting
Medicine
Science and society
People
Austen, Jane
Petiver, James
Pope, Alexander
Schlagintweit, Brothers
Freyer, Peter Johnstone
Time Periods
19th century
18th century
20th century, early
17th century
20th century
Early modern
Places
London (England)
Great Britain
India
Paris (France)
Berlin (Germany)
Bengal (India)
Institutions
East India Company (English)
Royal Society of London
Royal Geographical Society
London Zoo
Parkes Museum of Hygiene
London Transport Museum
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