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British
Imperial Art. Because Britons wanted souvenir images of the India they knew, they began to patronize Indian artists. And between 1770-1825, 30 portrait and 28 miniaturist British painters came to India to work (source: National Gallery of Modern Art, Delhi, India). The "Company School" of miniature painting, so called because the pictures were originally produced for employees of the East India Company. Though they drew upon a long tradition of miniature painting in India, the painters adapted their style for European consumption. The subtleties of the earlier traditions were sacrificed to produce fairly simple illustrations of a limited range of Indian life which the British encountered. |
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European colonial empires developed into five different spatial models: continental empire (see below), sea empire, boreal riverine empire, settler empire, and nationalistic empire. |
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| Characteristics of Continental Empires |
| Legalistic, rigidly structured Iberian societies were transplanted
to the "New World." Countries that established this form of colonialism: primarily Spain and Portugal. Spatial Patterns: colonies were continuous over large amounts of land areas Native societies were the most transformed of all forms of European colonialism: economically, culturally, and racially. |
| Economically: Europeans seized land and mineral resources from Indians; established plantation agriculture. |
Culturally: native languages and religions, such as
those of the Mayans, were destroyed, replaced, or at least transformed by
European languages, law, and Roman Catholicism.Racially: European men (married or single) administrators, soldiers, and priests had legal or illegitimate sexual relations with Indian women; resulting in a large racially mixed population called Mestizo. The result: a single, hierarchical, multi-racial, land-based societies. |
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Sources: The colonial models discussed here are primarily based on Donald Meinig, "A Macrogeography of Western Imperialism," Settlement and Encounter, eds. Fay Gale and G. H. Lawton. Another relevant source is J. M. Blaut, Fourteen ninety-two," Political Geography, Volume 11, No. 4, July 1992, pp. 355-385. Additional optional reading: |
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Created by Ingolf Vogeler on 1 February 1996; last revised on 04/12/11.