The music for The Crown of India was written by Edward Elgar in 1912 to accompany an 'Imperial Masque' with a libretto by Henry Hamilton. The impresario Sir Oswald Stoll had commissioned Elgar to compose the Masque music for the lavish celebration of the coronation of King George V as Emperor of India as part of a larger entertainment in the Coliseum Theatre in St. Martin's Lane. The Masque was part of an ample music-hall programme, involving shows as different as mime, pantomime and music. Elgar's 'Imperial Masque' was meant to be an assertion of the British Empire, bringing to the London stage the crucial political happenings behind all the pageantry of the Delhi Durbar for the crowning of George V as Emperor of India in December 1911. Th...
In the aftermath of the Second World War, as postcolonial regimes in Africa and Asia hauled down imp...
The cultural venue of European exhibitions in the late-nineteenth century enabled the promotion of t...
Sir Edward Elgar's song cycle Sea Pictures, op. 37 premiered on 5 October 1899. Written for contralt...
The music for The Crown of India was written by Edward Elgar in 1912 to accompany an ‘Imperial Masqu...
British composer Edward Elgar (1857 – 1934) is most famous for his later works including his “Enigma...
Statue of George V. Photograph of George V and Queen Mary in Coronation robes. Film and photograph...
The staging of civic pageantry dramatically altered the soundscape of a city, replacing everyday sou...
In India in London I explore the numerous ways that Indian identity was being corporeally represente...
Thomas Arne’s The Masque of Alfred (1740) with a libretto by James Thomson and David Mallet was writ...
Following the first world exhibition, the 1851 Crystal Palace Exhibition in London, exhibitions beca...
The lavish murals of Daria Daulat Bagh Palace in Srirangapatna are well-known for the rich depiction...
It is unanimously acknowledged that the entire world has become Shakespeare’s stage as his plays are...
'Executed with remarkable care and artistic feeling': popular imperialism and the music hall balle
This article explores Edward Elgar's attempts to ascribe Christian traits to the pagan king, Caracta...
This thesis examines the political and social worldview of British and Indian royalty during the nin...
In the aftermath of the Second World War, as postcolonial regimes in Africa and Asia hauled down imp...
The cultural venue of European exhibitions in the late-nineteenth century enabled the promotion of t...
Sir Edward Elgar's song cycle Sea Pictures, op. 37 premiered on 5 October 1899. Written for contralt...
The music for The Crown of India was written by Edward Elgar in 1912 to accompany an ‘Imperial Masqu...
British composer Edward Elgar (1857 – 1934) is most famous for his later works including his “Enigma...
Statue of George V. Photograph of George V and Queen Mary in Coronation robes. Film and photograph...
The staging of civic pageantry dramatically altered the soundscape of a city, replacing everyday sou...
In India in London I explore the numerous ways that Indian identity was being corporeally represente...
Thomas Arne’s The Masque of Alfred (1740) with a libretto by James Thomson and David Mallet was writ...
Following the first world exhibition, the 1851 Crystal Palace Exhibition in London, exhibitions beca...
The lavish murals of Daria Daulat Bagh Palace in Srirangapatna are well-known for the rich depiction...
It is unanimously acknowledged that the entire world has become Shakespeare’s stage as his plays are...
'Executed with remarkable care and artistic feeling': popular imperialism and the music hall balle
This article explores Edward Elgar's attempts to ascribe Christian traits to the pagan king, Caracta...
This thesis examines the political and social worldview of British and Indian royalty during the nin...
In the aftermath of the Second World War, as postcolonial regimes in Africa and Asia hauled down imp...
The cultural venue of European exhibitions in the late-nineteenth century enabled the promotion of t...
Sir Edward Elgar's song cycle Sea Pictures, op. 37 premiered on 5 October 1899. Written for contralt...