The Resilience of Maratha States Against British Forces

Number of words: 484 The hinterlands of Bombay were then controlled by a set of powerful Maratha principalities. These states, the most important of which had their capitals in Gwalior, Baroda, Indore and Nagpur, were founded after the region was wrested away from the Mughal Empire in the seventeenth century by the Maratha leader Shivaji … Read more

The Ingenious Subterfuge of the East India Company

Number of words: 389 Of course, China too had acted early to ban the importation of opium, and the laws passed in 1729 were re-enacted twice more, once in the late eighteenth century and then again in the early nineteenth century. Because of these bans, the East India Company could not formally or explicitly acknowledge … Read more

The Interplay of Coca and Opium in Drug History

Number of words: 374 The plant whose profile most closely resembles that of the opium poppy is the coca bush (Erythroxylum coca), the leaves of which can also be processed into the addictive drug cocaine. But for most of its long history coca was a grassroots psychoactive, used by indigenous populations in South America, where … Read more

The Intricate Relationship Between Britain and China

Number of words: 779 Largely because of tea, China was consistently among four countries from which Britain bought its imports. The value of the goods that Britain received from China vastly exceeded what it got from most of its colonies: In 1857, for example, the computed real value of imports into the United Kingdom from … Read more

The Legacy of Tea in British Society

Number of words: 541 The seed from which this story begins is that of the tea bush T (Camellia sinensis), which produces most of the world’s tea. The oldest tea leaves go back 2,150 years and were found in the tomb of China’s Jia Ding Emperor. Beginning as an elite practice, tea drinking advanced quickly … Read more

The Legacy of Hakka Migrants in Indian History

Number of words: 250 The roots of India’s Chinese communities go back to the late eighteenth century, when the first Hakka migrants settled near Calcutta. Over time the community thrived; it ran several schools, temples and newspapers, and many of its members became successful professionals and entrepreneurs. Many Chinese Indians never visited China and had … Read more