4062 Friday, April 27, 1832
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The Treaty of Nanking: Form and the Foreign Office, 1842–43
The Treaty of Nanking: Form and the Foreign Office, 1842–43 R. DEREK WOOD [Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, May 1996, Vol. 24 (2), pp. 181-196] First witness (1841): Captain Charles Elliot, as Superintendant of the British Trade mission to China, had an important meeting with the Chinese Imperial Commissioner Ch’i–shan on 27 January1841: I placed in his hands a Chinese version of the Treaty. He examined it with deep attention and evident distress, observing that great as the difficulties were in point of substance, he did not believe they would be as insuperable as those of form.1,2 Second witness (1842): an anonymous contributor to a German newspaper describes how he had an opportunity in the quiet of Christmas day 1842 of seeing ‘one of the most important documents of modern times’ at the Foreign Office in London: On my asking for the room where was working Mr. Collins [sic. Collen] ... I was directed towards the Attic. I had many stairs to climb, meeting nobody, nor could I hear any human sound. In this way I passed by a printing machine workshop; for this world–office is itself a small world containing everything it needs to be effective. Above this, in a small room with closed shutters, I found Mr. Collins, who with the help of an assistant was busy by means of lights copying the Treaty. The document itself is of Strawpaper, 4 foot long and about 10 inches wide; the letters are daintily painted figures and it has three elongated woodblock impressions in red ink as seals of authority. -
1 Global Routes and Imperial Spaces: Burnfoot, Eskdale and the Creation
Global Routes and Imperial Spaces: Burnfoot, Eskdale and the Creation of East India Company Servants, c. 1790-1850 Ellen Filor, University of Warwick [email protected] Few ken to whom this muckle monument stands, Some general or admiral I’ve nae doot, On the hill-top whaur weather lang syne Has blotted its inscribed palaver oot.1 Hugh MacDirmuid’s 1929 description of the nineteenth-century monument to Sir John Malcolm that stands on a hill above Langholm demonstrates ably the physical effacing of Scotland’s imperial past over the past century. But another, less explored point adumbrated in his verse is the effect on the landscape that imperial service could have in making and remaking the physicality of the Scottish Borders themselves. Scottish landscape has often been defined in terms of a romantic and antiquarian past and this necessarily static reading of the landscape ignores the imperial aspect of this geography. The landscape of Scotland is a reference point that repeatedly resurfaces both in the letters and poetry of those in India and those at home. But to shift the focus to the frontiers of India in Scotland is to seek to disrupt this static, parochial reading of the landscape. Using the ‘collage’ of letters, diaries, poetry and sketch books in the Malcolm of Burnfoot archive held at the National Library of Scotland this paper will map the geographies of the Malcolm clan. By drawing heavily on James Clifford’s insight that the meanings of place are not rooted in place but rather formed through the routes through them, the impact of the global on these relatively provincial areas will be illuminated. -
Observations on a Scrapbook Attributed to John Thomson at George Eastman House
Observations on a Scrapbook Attributed to John Thomson at George Eastman House by Bing Wang Bachelor of History, Nankai University, Tianjin, China, 2009 A thesis presented to Ryerson University & George Eastman House International Museum of Photography and Film in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in the Program of Film and Photography Preservation & Collections Management Toronto, Ontario, Canada & Rochester, New York, USA, 2014 © Bing Wang 2014 Author's Declaration I hereby declare that I am the sole author of this thesis or dissertation. I authorize Ryerson University to lend this thesis to other institutions or individuals for the purpose of scholarly research. I further authorize Ryerson University and George Eastman House International Museum of Photography and Film to reproduce this thesis or dissertation by photocopying or by other means, in total or in part, at the request of other institutions or individuals for the purpose of scholarly research. i Observations on a Scrapbook Attributed to John Thomson at George Eastman House By Bing Wang Abstract This thesis comprises a description and analysis of a personal scrapbook with 123 albumen prints compiled in the nineteenth century. Originally attributed to photographer John Thomson (1837–1921), it is held by George Eastman House, International Museum of Photography and Film. The goal of this thesis is to critically examine the original catalogue records and provide more appropriate and searchable catalogue information in the Eastman House’s collection management system. Histories of photography in Asian countries featured in the scrapbook, and an account of Thomson's career contextualize the scrapbook. -
THE LONDON GAZETTE, 5 MAY, 1914. 8Th (The Argyllshire) Battalion, Princess General W
3664 THE LONDON GAZETTE, 5 MAY, 1914. 8th (The Argyllshire) Battalion, Princess General W. H. Ralston, C.B., deceased. Louise's (Argyll and Sutherland High- Dated 18th April, 1914. landers), Captain and Honorary Major Patrick Hunter Gillies. 2nd Battalion, The -Monmouthshire Regiment, Captain and Honorary Major Evan Jenkins Morris. War Office, 5th. (City of London) Battalion, The London 5th May, 1914. Regiment (London Rifle Brigade), Quarter- master and Honorary Major John Guppy REGULAR FORCES. (retired list). COMMANDS AND STAFF. 14th (County of London) Battalion, The Lon- Colonel. Robert Wanless-O'Gowan, from don Regiment (London 'Scottish), Lieu- the half-pay list,- to be an Assistant Quarter- tenant-Colonel George Alexander Malcolm. master General, vice Colonel C. T. Dawkins, C.M.G. Dated 27th April, 1914. 16th (County of London) Battalion, The Lon- Major Walter V. J. C. Elwes, retired pay, don Regiment (Queen's Westminster Rifles), to be a Deputy Assistant Director of Re- Major Jacob Waley Cohen. mounts. Dated 28th April, 1914. Captain and Honorary Major Edward Captain Ivo L. B. Vesey, The Queen's Arthur Dodd. (Royal West Surrey Regiment), a General Quartermaster, and Honorary Major Staff Officer at the War Office, is advanced Arthur Stirling P.ridmore. from the 3rd to the 2nd "Grade, vice Brevet Lieutenant - Colonel E. D. Lord Loch, M.V.O., D.S.O., Grenadier Guards. Dated 17th (County of London) Battalion, The Lon- 12th April, 1914. don Regiment (Poplar and Stepney Rifles), The appointment of Captain William R. Major Harry Joseph Millikin (retired list). Pinwill, The King's (Liverpool Regiment), as a General Staff Officer, 2nd Grade, notified 28th (County of London) Battalion, The Lon- in the London Gazette of the 21st April, don Regiment (Artists Rifles), Captain 1914, is cancelled.