TY - JOUR
T1 - A triple empireunited under one dominion
T2 - Charles Prinsep's schemes for exporting Indian labour to Australia
AU - Allbrook, Malcolm
PY - 2012/9/1
Y1 - 2012/9/1
N2 - Charles Prinsep, a prosperous Calcutta lawyer and sometime advocate general of the East India Company, was active amongst a network of British entrepreneurs in India who were enthusiastic about an Indian Ocean sub-empire, the potential of the Australian colonies to become trading partners with India, and their prospects as destinations for British residents to settle after their Indian service. During the 1820s and 1830s, Prinsep embarked on a series of ventures to purchase land, establish shipping links and export indentured Indian labour to Australia. In Australia, agriculturalists and merchants were also interested in the potential of Indian indenture schemes to respond to projected shortages of labour with the demise of convictism in the Eastern Australian colonies. A number of shipments of indentured Indian labourers arrived in Australia during the 1830s. These schemes were opposed by the Colonial Office and by many in Australia, particularly urban dwellers, who feared that such a degradation of the labour market would discourage European settlement in the Australian colonies, which they wanted reserved for Europeans, that other great diaspora of the nineteenth century.
AB - Charles Prinsep, a prosperous Calcutta lawyer and sometime advocate general of the East India Company, was active amongst a network of British entrepreneurs in India who were enthusiastic about an Indian Ocean sub-empire, the potential of the Australian colonies to become trading partners with India, and their prospects as destinations for British residents to settle after their Indian service. During the 1820s and 1830s, Prinsep embarked on a series of ventures to purchase land, establish shipping links and export indentured Indian labour to Australia. In Australia, agriculturalists and merchants were also interested in the potential of Indian indenture schemes to respond to projected shortages of labour with the demise of convictism in the Eastern Australian colonies. A number of shipments of indentured Indian labourers arrived in Australia during the 1830s. These schemes were opposed by the Colonial Office and by many in Australia, particularly urban dwellers, who feared that such a degradation of the labour market would discourage European settlement in the Australian colonies, which they wanted reserved for Europeans, that other great diaspora of the nineteenth century.
KW - Australian labour needs
KW - Indian Ocean trade
KW - Indian sub-imperial empire
KW - Prinsep
KW - indentured Indian labour
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84866666101&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/00856401.2011.649676
DO - 10.1080/00856401.2011.649676
M3 - Article
SN - 0085-6401
VL - 35
SP - 648
EP - 670
JO - South Asia: Journal of South Asia Studies
JF - South Asia: Journal of South Asia Studies
IS - 3
ER -