march, 2017
Event Details
Aditya Das, Editor, PhD, MBA Ritu Birla, University of Toronto Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Columbia The book launched at this event outlines the diplomatic and external policies of Gilbert Elliot, the first
Event Details
Aditya Das, Editor, PhD, MBA Ritu Birla, University of Toronto Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Columbia
The book launched at this event outlines the diplomatic and external policies of Gilbert Elliot, the first Earl of Minto, who held the office of Governor-General of Bengal from July 1807 to October 1813. Minto’s period of office coincided with the last years of the Napoleonic Wars in Europe, which had their inevitable repercussions in the colonial sphere, and influenced the shaping of Minto’s foreign policy. Napoleon’s treaty with Russia at Tilsit (July 1807), the treaty of Finkenstein (May 1807) with Persia, and the predominance of French influence in Turkey and Persia, created a short-lived alarm for the security of British interests in India. The main aims of Minto’s foreign policy were the defence of the Company’s trade and territories in India, and the expulsion of the French from the neighbouring states of Asia and from bases of operation in the Indian Ocean.
Time
(Thursday) 6:00 pm
Location
1180 Amsterdam Avenue, Room 411 Fayerweather
Organizer
The South Asia Institute, the Department of History, and Global Cultural Studies