Dutch and British Colonial Intervention in Sri Lanka, 1780-1815: Expansion and Reform

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BRILL, 2007 - Social Science - 270 pages
This study examines the colonial intervention in Sri Lanka at the end of the eighteenth century, when British rule replaced Dutch rule on the island. It focuses on the local reforms in the Dutch administration and policymaking on the island prior to the take-over and the various ways in which the British colonial government dealt with the Dutch legacy. Native agency in the colonial state formation process, the influence of the revolutions that swayed Europe at the time and changes in Dutch and British colonial exploitation are addressed respectively in an effort to characterize the transition of colonial regimes in Asia during this revolutionary era.
 

Contents

Introduction
1
TEMPTATION ISLAND
11
THE FIRST COLONIAL TRANSITION LOCAL GROWTH OF COLONIAL INTERESTS
31
THE SECOND COLONIAL TRANSITION IMPERIAL DESIGN AND LOCAL PRACTICE
127
Notes
219
Appendix
253
Bibliography
255
Index
265
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About the author (2007)

Alicia Schrikker (1976) obtained her MA in History at Leiden University in 2001 and received her doctorate in History at the same university in 2006. Her main interests include the history of the Asian-European interaction and colonial state formation. She is currently employed at Leiden University as coordinator of the ENCOMPASS (Encountering a Common Past in Asia) programme.

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