[First paragraph] Between 1789 and 1939 the British transported at least 108,000 Indian, Burmese, Malay and Chinese convicts to penal settlements around the Bay of Bengal and Indian Ocean, and to prisons in the south and west of mainland India. The large majority of these convicts were men; and most had been convicted of serious crimes, including murder, gang robbery, rebellion and violent offences against property. In each location, convicts constituted a highly mobile workforce that was vital to British imperial ambitions. The British exploited their labour in land clearance, infrastructural development, mining, agriculture and cultivation. They also used them to establish villages and to settle land. Asian convicts responded to their tra...
The history of migration in India is among the most diverse and complex in the world. South-East Asi...
In this chapter, I explore speech and writing in British colonial prisons, to focus on how officials...
This article centers on the lives of two indigenous women of the Andaman Islands, both of whom were ...
[First paragraph] Between 1789 and 1939 the British transported at least 108,000 Indian, Burmese, Ma...
During the first half of the nineteenth century violent disorder broke out on a number of ships of t...
This article explores the British Empire’s configuration of imprisonment and transportation in the A...
This article explores the transportation of Indian convicts to the port cities of the Bay of Bengal ...
Banishment and exile were common punishments in early modern Europe. Though not subject to confineme...
Singapore’s past as a penal settlement has been largely based upon the usage of Indian convict labou...
A little known but important aspect of the early British administration of Mauritius was the establi...
Historically, India played a crucial role in the establishment and maintenance of the British Empire...
From the seventeenth to twentieth centuries, approximately 380,000 transportation convicts journeyed...
British colonial expansion policy had brought the Andaman and Nicobar Islands under its control. As...
[First paragraph] In 1415, the Portuguese Empire used convicts as part of an expeditionary force sen...
For over 150 years from the early eighteenth century, convict transportation was a primary method of...
The history of migration in India is among the most diverse and complex in the world. South-East Asi...
In this chapter, I explore speech and writing in British colonial prisons, to focus on how officials...
This article centers on the lives of two indigenous women of the Andaman Islands, both of whom were ...
[First paragraph] Between 1789 and 1939 the British transported at least 108,000 Indian, Burmese, Ma...
During the first half of the nineteenth century violent disorder broke out on a number of ships of t...
This article explores the British Empire’s configuration of imprisonment and transportation in the A...
This article explores the transportation of Indian convicts to the port cities of the Bay of Bengal ...
Banishment and exile were common punishments in early modern Europe. Though not subject to confineme...
Singapore’s past as a penal settlement has been largely based upon the usage of Indian convict labou...
A little known but important aspect of the early British administration of Mauritius was the establi...
Historically, India played a crucial role in the establishment and maintenance of the British Empire...
From the seventeenth to twentieth centuries, approximately 380,000 transportation convicts journeyed...
British colonial expansion policy had brought the Andaman and Nicobar Islands under its control. As...
[First paragraph] In 1415, the Portuguese Empire used convicts as part of an expeditionary force sen...
For over 150 years from the early eighteenth century, convict transportation was a primary method of...
The history of migration in India is among the most diverse and complex in the world. South-East Asi...
In this chapter, I explore speech and writing in British colonial prisons, to focus on how officials...
This article centers on the lives of two indigenous women of the Andaman Islands, both of whom were ...