Authors: Timothy H. Parsons
Tags: #Oxford University Press, #9780195304312, #Inc
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Those Who Built Them,
Those Who Endured Them,
and Why They Always Fall
Timothy H. Parsons
1
2010
3
Oxford University Press, Inc., publishes works that further
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Copyright © 2010 by Timothy H. Parsons
Published by Oxford University Press, Inc.
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Parsons, Timothy, 1962–The rule of empires : those who built them,
those who endured them,
and why they always fall / Timothy H. Parsons.
p. cm.
ISBN 978-0-19-530431-2
1. Colonies—History. 2. Colonization—History.
3. Imperialism—History. I. Title.
JV61.P33 2010
325'.3—dc22 2009044192
1 3 5 7 9 8 6 4 2
Printed in the United States of America
on acid-free paper
For Annie, always
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Acknowledgments, ix
Introduction: The Subjects of Empire, 1
1
Roman Britain: The Myth of the Civilizing
Empire, 21
2
Muslim Spain: Blurring Subjecthood in Imperial
Al-Andalus, 65
3
Spanish Peru: Empire by Franchise, 111
4
Company India: Private Empire Building, 169
5
Napoleonic Italy: Empire Aborted, 231
6
British Kenya: The Short Life of the
New Imperialism, 289
7
France under the Nazis: Imperial Endpoint, 351
Conclusion: Imperial Epitaph, 423
Notes, 451
Index, 473
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As a social historian of twentieth-century Africa, I incurred considerable scholarly debts in writing on so many different empires that are
far outside my own area of specialization. Bruce Masters introduced
me to the study of Islamic societies more than two decades ago, and
Ahmet Karamustafa continued this education with his close reading
of the Umayyad Spain chapter. Matthew Restall read the initial proposal for this book as an anonymous reviewer for Oxford University
Press and then was immensely supportive in helping me fi nd my way
in Spain’s American empire. Mark Burkholder and Rick Walter each
reviewed that chapter closely and also made numerous suggestions
and corrections. Similarly, Tom Metcalf generously helped me navigate the complexities of the history of British rule in South Asia, and
Hillel Kieval did the same for the Nazi empire in Europe. I have drawn
inspiration from Dane Kennedy’s and Lori Watt’s views of empire,
and I am particularly grateful to my dear friend Derek Peterson for
his close and critical reading of the introduction. Richard Davis was
an equally important source of wise advice, and I particularly valued
Keith Bennett’s patience and encouragement during the writing process. Although they were not fully aware of it, my graduate students
John Aerni, Muey Saeteurn, and Meghan Ference made an important
intellectual contribution to the book’s central arguments through their
thoughtful and probing questions. Rethinking empire from the perspectives of subject peoples has been a diffi cult and complex process,
and so of course I alone am responsible for any errors of fact or interpretation that have crept into this exercise in academic trespassing.
ix
x ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The logistics of researching and writing a project of this scope
have been equally daunting. The Inter-Library Loan and Circulation
units of Washington University’s Olin Library did a remarkable job
in locating and producing a diverse and unusually obscure array of
historical sources. Most importantly, I never could have organized
this material or written this book without the assistance and unfl agging support of my friends on the faculty and staff of our African
and
African-American Studies Program. My colleagues Mungai
Mutonya, Garrett Duncan, Rafi a Zafar, Priscilla Stone, Cameron
Monroe, and Amina Gautier were always encouraging, and in running the program offi ce Raye Maheney and Adele Tuchler spoiled
me by making sure that I had all the time and resources necessary
to fi nish the book. On this score, Molly Shaikewitz and four successive years of work-study students also deserve mention: Nancy
Kim, Josh Lubatkin, Karen Wang, Danielle Roth, Lily Huang, Brandon Williams, Molissa Thomas, and Michael Musgrave. Sheryl Peltz
and Brendan Akos were similarly helpful in giving me extra time for
research and writing.
A number of people played equally key roles in bringing this book
into print. My agent, Jeff Gerecke, was smart and deft in helping me
refi ne my abstract ideas about empire, and Peter Ginna shared my
conviction that conventional imperial histories are fl awed because
they ignore the central role of imperial subjects. But I never would
have been able to follow through on the grand promises that I made
to Oxford University Press and my editor, Tim Bent, without Ann
Parsons’s help in reading and rereading countless draft chapters. I am
also particularly grateful to Tim for his incisive guidance in shaping
the fi nal manuscript and for addressing my concerns thoughtfully
and patiently. Tim’s assistant, Dayne Poshusta, also merits a word of
thanks on this score.
Finally, I never would have been able to write this book without
the unfl agging encouragement of my friends and family. Showing
infi nite and largely undeserved patience, they never gave into the
temptation of asking, “Aren’t you done yet?”
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The Subjects of Empire
Looking back to his youth, when Britain ruled Kenya and he served
in its East African army, seventy-four-year-old Daniel Wambua
Nguta’s hatred for his former colonial rulers remains undiminished.
“A European is no good. He rolls you like a ball at his will. And you
have to live by his commands.”1 Nguta’s characterization of British
rule is strikingly different from the idealized and romantic notions
of empire.
The conquerors of Kenya would have dismissed men like Nguta as
barbarous tribesmen. The British peer Baron Cranworth claimed that
he and his fellow Kenyan settlers brought progress and modernity to
the “primitive” peoples of the East African highlands.
We give peace where war was. We give justice where injustice ruled.
We give law and order where the only law was the law of strength. We
give Christianity, or a chance of it, where Paganism ruled. Whether
the native looks on it in that light is another matter. I am afraid that
possibly he doesn’t as yet truly appreciate his benefi ts.2
Cranworth made his case in 1912, but the current archbishop of
Canterbury, Rowan Williams, echoed his sentiments almost a century
later when he criticized the United States’ occupation of Iraq by lauding Britain’s rule of India. “It is one thing to take over a territory and
then pour energy and resources into administering it and normalising
it. Rightly or wrongly that’s what the British Empire did in India.”3
Today, few westerners doubt this argument. Confi dent in the superiority of their technology and culture, they believe that the empires
1
2 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
of the last century performed the necessary service of dragging backward counties into the modern world.
The twentieth-century western empires were probably the most
humane imperial enterprises in history. In contrast to brutal and
nakedly exploitive ancient and medieval empires, French and British
administrators tried to make good on promises to improve the lives
of their subjects. But such imperial humanitarianism rested on the
premise that nonwestern peoples were in need of salvation. To Cranworth, Africans were only marginally human. “They lie, they steal,
they poison; they conspire, they are intensely lazy, and they are callously cruel. Still, there they are, and such as they are we must make
the best of them.”4
It is hardly surprising that the rulers and the ruled had differing
perspectives on empire. The myth of the liberal empire survives to
this day because the voices of men like Nguta were either silenced
or never recorded at all. Instead, popular history romanticizes Caesars, emirs, conquistadors, viceroys, nabobs, explorers, soldiers, and
missionaries. Westerners like to think that they are the heirs of an
omnipotent and enlightened imperial Rome.
Imperial nostalgia diminished as the last formal global European
empires broke up after the Second World War, and the Soviet Union
and Red China, imperial powers in their own right, won allies in the
developing world by championing their cause. The Latin American,
African, and Asian nations that dominated the United Nations General Assembly by the 1960s further redefi ned imperial rule as foreign
domination, economic exploitation, and ultimately a violation of fundamental human rights. European liberals consequently repudiated
their own imperial history or conveniently forgot that their nations
had ever even ruled empires. Similarly, most Americans ignore
the fate of Amerindians by viewing themselves as a uniquely antiimperial people. Recalling the Revolutionary War as a struggle against
British despotism, they viewed the United States as an egalitarian
republic protecting the world from communist imperial expansion.
The terrorist attacks of 2001 gave imperial methods, if not actual
empire building, a new lease on life. Puncturing the illusion of domestic security, they gave credence to those who called for a more aggressive stance in defending America’s national interests. The best way
to protect the United States from further attacks was to use military
Introduction 3
force, or hard power, to change regimes and restructure conquered
societies. This imperial assumption was in no way masked by President George W. Bush’s assertion in the run-up to the invasion of Iraq
that “America has no empire to extend or utopia to establish. We wish
for others only what we wish for ourselves—safety from violence,
the rewards of liberty, and the hope for a better life.”5
Fears that collapsed states would become havens for terrorists and
that rogue nations might give them nuclear, chemical, or biological
weapons led political commentators and analysts of all ideological