Ratcliff, Jessica (Author)
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.
...More
Book
Lachlan Fleetwood;
(2022)
Science on the Roof of the World: Empire and the Remaking of the Himalaya
(/isis/citation/CBB036062764/)
Article
Anna Winterbottom;
(2019)
An Experimental Community: The East India Company in London, 1600–1800
(/isis/citation/CBB821547552/)
Article
R.C. Kapoor;
Wayne Orchiston;
(2023)
Colonial astronomy as an element of Empire in British India
(/isis/citation/CBB770458313/)
Book
Rajani Sudan;
(2016)
The Alchemy of Empire: Abject Materials and the Technologies of Colonialism
(/isis/citation/CBB316221240/)
Book
Moritz von Brescius;
(2019)
German Science in the Age of Empire: Enterprise, Opportunity and the Schlagintweit Brothers
(/isis/citation/CBB566967216/)
Article
Miguel Ohnesorge;
(2021)
Theodolites at 20,000 feet: Justifying precision measurement during the trigonometrical survey of Kashmir, 1855–1865
(/isis/citation/CBB530518468/)
Article
Kieran Fitzpatrick;
(2021)
The Imperial Makings of Medical Work: Peter Johnstone Freyer and the Practice of Genitourinary Medicine in Britain and the Raj, c. 1875–1921
(/isis/citation/CBB417898798/)
Book
White, Daniel E.;
(2013)
From Little London to Little Bengal: Religion, Print, and Modernity in Early British India, 1793--1835
(/isis/citation/CBB001552145/)
Book
Kristin Hussey;
(2021)
Imperial Bodies in London: Empire, Mobility, and the Making of British Medicine, 1880–1914
(/isis/citation/CBB460048744/)
Article
Helen Cowie;
(2022)
A Tale of Two Anteaters: Madrid 1776 and London 1853
(/isis/citation/CBB322544541/)
Book
John Simons;
(2019)
Obaysch: A Hippopotamus in Victorian London
(/isis/citation/CBB336073522/)
Article
Hilary Buxton;
(2018)
Health by Design: Teaching Cleanliness and Assembling Hygiene at the Nineteenth-Century Sanitation Museum
(/isis/citation/CBB804490571/)
Article
Craske, Matthew;
(2011)
“Unwholesome” and “Pornographic”: A Reassessment of the Place of Rackstrow's Museum in the Story of Eighteenth-Century Anatomical Collection and Exhibition
(/isis/citation/CBB001200259/)
Article
Murphy, Kathleen S.;
(2013)
Collecting Slave Traders: James Petiver, Natural History, and the British Slave Trade
(/isis/citation/CBB001320636/)
Chapter
Nicola Harrison;
Efstratia Verveniotou;
(2019)
The Conservation of Insect Wax Models at the Natural History Museum, London
(/isis/citation/CBB801272928/)
Article
Sandweiss, Eric;
(2014)
“History and Reality Have Become the Same Thing”: City Museums and City Plans in London, 1912--2012
(/isis/citation/CBB001421590/)
Article
Jennifer Clark;
(2015)
London Transport Museum's wartime centennial tribute
(/isis/citation/CBB102430059/)
Chapter
Lightman, Bernard;
(2011)
Refashioning the Spaces of London Science: Elite Epistemes in the Nineteenth Century
(/isis/citation/CBB001231554/)
Chapter
Roberta Ballestriero;
(2020)
La ceroplastica dermatologica del Gordon Museum of Pathology: lezioni per la medicina moderna
(/isis/citation/CBB661219995/)
Book
Levin, Miriam R.;
(2010)
Urban Modernity: Cultural Innovation in the Second Industrial Revolution
(/isis/citation/CBB001031314/)
Be the first to comment!