This article addresses the problem of jurisdiction and protection over certain categories of the local population by the British Consulate in the independent Sultanate of Zanzibar. The minorities in question represented various ethno-religious backgrounds and enjoyed different social and economic statuses. They included the British Indian community, whose members belonged to the economic elite of the state and many of whom were British servants: employees of the British Consulate, as well as missions and private companies. The category also included freed slaves and Christian converts. The article examines the motives and conditions that stood behind British legal policies in Zanzibar. It argues that even if the consulate did run its own po...
The British Empire Exhibition at Wembley was a spectacle on a grand scale designed to reinvigorate t...
The year 1786 marked the beginning of the British official administration in Malaya through the effe...
Studies portraying the history of international law and empire in Africa still often take as their s...
The historiography on protection in the nineteenth-century British Empire often assumes that British...
The article covers the issues of defining the status of the British occupational troops in Egypt fro...
Studies portraying the history of international law and empire in Africa still often take as their s...
The late nineteenth century marked the beginning of British policy of intervention in the Malay stat...
Early British colonialism was originally driven by the pragmatic trading needs of the East India Com...
The Indians were considered the main category working in trade in Zanzibar during the reign of Sulta...
The article examines the relationship between colonialism and international law by focusing on late ...
This paper discusses the impact of British colonialism on the legal system of Egypt and its developm...
Between 1820-1892, Britain’s interest in the Persian Gulf gradually expanded through a series of bil...
This article examines the role of British legal scholars and institutions in the development of Afri...
British colonizers relied on chieftaincies as civilizing partners to implement indirect rule in the ...
This paper will present to the reader a history of the evolution of legal practices and the rise of ...
The British Empire Exhibition at Wembley was a spectacle on a grand scale designed to reinvigorate t...
The year 1786 marked the beginning of the British official administration in Malaya through the effe...
Studies portraying the history of international law and empire in Africa still often take as their s...
The historiography on protection in the nineteenth-century British Empire often assumes that British...
The article covers the issues of defining the status of the British occupational troops in Egypt fro...
Studies portraying the history of international law and empire in Africa still often take as their s...
The late nineteenth century marked the beginning of British policy of intervention in the Malay stat...
Early British colonialism was originally driven by the pragmatic trading needs of the East India Com...
The Indians were considered the main category working in trade in Zanzibar during the reign of Sulta...
The article examines the relationship between colonialism and international law by focusing on late ...
This paper discusses the impact of British colonialism on the legal system of Egypt and its developm...
Between 1820-1892, Britain’s interest in the Persian Gulf gradually expanded through a series of bil...
This article examines the role of British legal scholars and institutions in the development of Afri...
British colonizers relied on chieftaincies as civilizing partners to implement indirect rule in the ...
This paper will present to the reader a history of the evolution of legal practices and the rise of ...
The British Empire Exhibition at Wembley was a spectacle on a grand scale designed to reinvigorate t...
The year 1786 marked the beginning of the British official administration in Malaya through the effe...
Studies portraying the history of international law and empire in Africa still often take as their s...