Title of article :
IRELAND, COLONIAL SCIENCE, AND THE GEOGRAPHICAL CONSTRUCTION OF BRITISH RULE IN INDIA, C. 1820–1870
Abstract :
This article examines the role that Ireland and Irish people played in the geographical
construction of British colonial rule in India during the nineteenth century. It argues that as an important
sub-imperial centre, Ireland not only supplied the empire with key personnel, but also functioned as an
important reference point for scientific practice, new legislation, and systems of government. Occupying
integral roles within the information systems of the colonial state, Irish people provided much of the intellectual
capital around which British rule in India was constructed. These individuals were part of
nineteenth-century Irish professional personnel networks that viewed the empire as a legitimate sphere for
work and as an arena in which they could prosper. Through involvement and deployment of expertise in areas
such as surveying and geological research in India, Irishmen and Irish institutions were able to act decisively
in the development of colonial knowledge. The relationships mapped in this article centre the Irish within the
imperial web of connections and global exchange of ideas, technologies, and practices during the long
nineteenth century, thereby making a contribution towards uncovering Ireland’s multi-directional involvement
in the British empire and reassessing the challenges that this presents to existing British, Irish, and imperial
historiography.