The History of British India


The History of British India is a history of Company rule in India by the 19th century British historian and imperial political theorist James Mill.
This History went into many editions and during the 19th century became the standard reference work on its subject among British imperialists.

Genesis

James Mill began his History of British India in 1806, expecting it to take him about seven years, but its completion proved to take instead twelve years, with three substantial volumes at last being published early in 1817. The work was immediately successful among British imperialists and secured for Mill for the first time a degree of prosperity. It led, with the support of David Ricardo and Joseph Hume, to Mill's appointment in 1819 in United Kingdom as assistant examiner of correspondence at the imperial East India Company at an annual salary of £800. By 1836, when he died, this income had become £2,000.
Mill's biographer Bruce Mazlish takes a practical view of Mill's purpose in beginning the History, stating

Summary

The History of British India purports to be a study of India in which James set out to attack the history, character, religion, literatureThe History of British India#cite%20note-3|re, arts, and laws of India, also making claims about the influence of the
Indian climate. He also aimed to locate the attacks on India within a wider theoretical framework.
The book begins with a preface in which Mill tries to make a virtue of having never visited India and of knowing none of its native languages. To him, these are guarantees of his objectivity, and he boldly claims –
However, Mill goes on in this preface to say that his work is a "critical history", encompassing singularly harsh attacks on Hindu customs and a "backward" culture which he claims to be notable only for superstition, ignorance, and the mistreatment of women. His work was influential in the eventual ban of the sati in 1829.
From the historical perspective, Mill tells the story of the English and, later, British acquisition of
wide territories in India, severely criticising those involved in these conquests and in the later administration of the conquered territories, as well as illuminating the harmful effects of commercial monopolies such as that of the imperial East India Company. As a philosopher, Mill applies political theory to the description of the civilisations of India. His interest is in institutions, ideas, and historical processes, while his work is relatively lacking in human interest, in that he does not seek to paint memorable portraits of Robert Clive, Warren Hastings, and the other leading players in the history of British India, nor of its famous battles. Indeed, the History has been called "...a work of Benthamite 'philosophical history' from which the reader is supposed to draw lessons about human nature, reason and religion".
Despite the fact that Mill had never been to India, his work had a profound effect on the British imperial system of governing the country, as did his later official connection with India.
The Orientalist Horace Hayman Wilson edited later editions and extended the history to 1835 with a continuation entitled The History of British India from 1805 to 1835. He also added notes to Mill's work, based on his own knowledge of India and its languages. The History of British India is still in print.
In his introduction to Ungoverned Imaginings: James Mill's The History of British India and Orientalism, Javed Majeed argues against "colonialist discourse" approaches to Mill's History, while in his forthcoming James Mill and the Despotism of Philosophy, David McInerney considers how Mill's History of British India relates to Enlightenment historiography, and especially William Robertson's Historical Disquisition Concerning the Knowledge the Ancients had of India. He argues that Mill first published his theory of government in The History of British India, and that in the work Mill's use of history is not rationalist but entails an empirical conception of how historical records relate to the improvement of government.

Criticism

According to Thomas Trautmann, "James Mill's highly influential History of British India – most particularly the long essay 'Of the Hindus' comprising ten chapters – is the single most important source of British Indophobia and hostility to Orientalism". In the chapter titled General Reflections in "Of the Hindus", Mill wrote "under the glosing exterior of the Hindu, lies a general disposition to deceit and perfidy". According to Mill, "the same insincerity, mendacity, and perfidy; the same indifference to the feelings of others; the same prostitution and venality" were the conspicuous characteristics of both the Hindoos and the Muslims. The Muslims, however, were perfuse, when possessed of wealth, and devoted to pleasure; the Hindoos almost always penurious and ascetic; and "in truth, the Hindoo like the eunuch, excels in the qualities of a slave". Furthermore, similar to the Chinese, the Hindoos were "dissembling, treacherous, mendacious, to an excess which surpasses even the usual measure of uncultivated society". Both the Chinese and the Hindoos were "disposed to excessive exaggeration with regard to everything relating to themselves". Both were "cowardly and unfeeling". Both were "in the highest degree conceited of themselves, and full of affected contempt for others". And, above all, both were "in physical sense, disgustingly unclean in their persons and houses".

Published editions

  • The History of British India, , , .
  • The History of British India
  • The History of British India
  • The History of British India
  • The History of British India
  • The History of British India, reprint in three volumes,
  • James Mill's History of British India

    Online editions

  • ' online at http://books.google.com
  • ' online at http://books.google.com

    Edition of 1858

The 1858 edition of ten volumes is edited by Horace Hayman Wilson. The first six volumes are based on an earlier six volume edition, while volumes seven to nine are based on an earlier three volume edition. The tenth volume is an index volume, split into two indexes, the first index for volumes one to six, the second index for volumes seven to nine.
  • 1527-1707, Commencement, The Hindus....
  • .... Hindus, Mohammedans
  • 1708-1773, The East India Company
  • 1773-1784, Pitt's Act
  • 1784-1805, The Mahrattas....
  • 1784-1805,.... The Mahrattas
  • 1805-1813, Peace with the Mahrattas
  • 1813-1823, Administration of Marquis of Hastings
  • 1823-1835, Administration of Lord Bentinck
  • an index to the James Mills volumes, and an index to the Horace Wilson volumes

    Secondary literature

  • Majeed, Javed, Ungoverned Imaginings: James Mill's the History of British India and Orientalism
  • Yasukawa, Ryuji, 'James Mill's The History of British India Reconsidered', in Journal of the Tokyo College of Economics vol. 203 pp. 65–88
  • McInerney, David, James Mill and the Despotism of Philosophy: Reading 'The History of British India'
  • Harrington, Jack, Sir John Malcolm and the Creation of British India, chs. 2 & 6.