Untold lives blog

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19 November 2024

Papers of Edward Robert Bulwer-Lytton, 1st Earl of Lytton, Viceroy of India 1876-1880

The National Lottery is celebrating its 30th anniversary.  To mark this occasion we look at one of the collections acquired with the help of National Lottery funding: the papers of Edward Robert Bulwer-Lytton, 1st Earl of Lytton, as Viceroy of India 1876-1880.

A full-length standing portrait of Lord Lytton, wearing Viceregal robes and the order of the Star of India, probably photographed at Government House, Calcutta.Lord Lytton, Viceroy of India. Grand Master of the Star of India, c. 1876. From J. Talboys Wheeler, The History of the Imperial Assemblage at Delhi (London, 1877). British Library shelfmark Photo 1054/(2). Images Online

Lytton was born in 1831, son of the writer Edward Bulwer-Lytton, 1st Baron Lytton.  Following his education at Harrow and the University of Bonn, he entered the diplomatic service in 1849.  He spent the first half of his career in various diplomatic posts around Europe and was serving as British Minister Plenipotentiary at Lisbon when he was appointed Viceroy of India in 1876 by the Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli.  His term of office would be controversial entailing war in Afghanistan, famine in India and an attempt to tighten British control over the native press.  The collection includes letters from a wide range of people in India and England, as well as correspondence between Lytton and the Secretary of State for India, and British officials and politicians on matters relating to Indian government.  There are also letters to and from members of the British Royal family.

Map showing the frontier with Afghanistan 1880 Map showing the frontier with Afghanistan 1880 - Mss Eur E218/126

Perhaps not surprisingly, a dominant subject of the papers in the collection is Afghanistan and the Second Anglo-Afghan war.  The rivalry between Britain and Russia in Central Asia, often referred to as the Great Game, was one of the defining aspects of British foreign policy in the mid-19th century.  Lytton had been given the task of securing an alliance with the Amir of Afghanistan Sher Ali Khan who was thought to be too pro-Russian, but on failing in this he opted to order an invasion instead.  The collection contains correspondence, minutes, reports, and notes on relations with the Amir of Afghanistan, future policy, and the frontiers of India, for example:
• Correspondence respecting relations with Afghanistan since the accession of Sher Ali Khan, Jul 1863 to Nov 1878, reference Mss Eur E218/123.
• Minutes and notes by the Viceroy relating to Afghanistan and the frontiers of India, 1876-1880, reference Mss Eur E218/125.
• Correspondence and other papers concerning the attack on the British Embassy at Kabul and subsequent military operations, Sep 1879 to Mar 1880, reference Mss Eur E218/127.

A published statement on the Indian Famine of 1877 A statement on the Indian Famine of 1877 - Mss Eur E218/136

One of the most controversial aspects of Lytton’s time as Viceroy was his government’s response to the great famine of 1876-1878.  This was caused by drought leading to crop failure, affecting many parts of India, with the death toll estimated at between 6 and 10 million people.  The high mortality rate was in part blamed on the government’s minimal famine relief measures. The collection includes several files on the famine, such as:
• Volume of cuttings from Indian and newspapers concerning the famine, Jul 1877 to Feb 1878, reference Mss Eur E218/134.
• Volume of printed weather reports from each province and of rain telegrams sent to the Private Secretary's Office, Jul 1877 to Jan 1878, reference Mss Eur E218/135.
• The Indian Famine of 1877 being a statement of the measures proposed by the Government of India for the prevention and relief of famines in the future (1878), reference Mss Eur E218/136.

Minute by the Viceroy Lord Lytton  on AfghanistanMinute by the Viceroy Lord Lytton on Afghanistan - Mss Eur E218/125

The collection also touches on other aspects of Indian government, such as Indian finances, new legislation, appointments to the Indian Civil Service, and includes two files on attempts to control Indian newspapers and publications:
• Papers concerning the Native Press and the 1878 Vernacular Press Act, 1858-1881, reference Mss Eur E218/146.
• Correspondence between the Secretary of State for India and the Government of India on the control of publications in Oriental languages, 1878, reference Mss Eur E218/147.

Weather Reports for Hyderabad  July 1877Weather Reports for Hyderabad July 1877 - Mss Eur E218/135

John O’Brien
India Office Records

Further Reading:
Papers of 1st Earl of Lytton as Viceroy of India 1876-1880, collection reference Mss Eur E218. Deposited on permanent loan by Lady Hermione Cobbold in 1955. Purchased from Lord Cobbold in 2004 with assistance from the Heritage Lottery Fund, The Friends of the British Library, The Friends of the National Libraries and The Lord Farringdon Charitable Trust.

A list of the Lytton Papers can be found on The National Archives'  Discovery catalogue: Papers of 1st Earl of Lytton as Viceroy of India 1876-80.

 

14 November 2024

Learning from Early Printed Books for Green Libraries Week 2024

For Green Libraries Week 2024 curators at the British Library selected items that address climate and sustainability.  While the climate crisis is an issue we are facing today, historical holdings can help us understand the threats and effects of natural catastrophes better.  Two 15th-century books from the British Library’s incunabula collection provide insights into how people experienced and interpreted such extreme natural events in the Early Modern era.

The Magdalene Flood of 1480 was a devastating disaster that struck the area around the Aare and the Rhine as well as other rivers in the Swiss Mittelland and Upper Rhine region in July 1480.  According to the Bern Chronicle (Bern, Burgerbibliothek, Mss. H.h.l.16), on the Thursday before St Mary Magdalene Feast Day (29 July 1480) it started raining for three days and three nights.  The weather in the weeks before had been extremely hot so that 'glaciers and snowy mountains had warmed'.  The flood caused extensive destruction of buildings and bridges leaving many without a home or their possessions.

Detail from the 1493 Nuremberg Chronicle showing the Middle Bridge in BaselDetail from the 1493 Nuremberg Chronicle showing the Middle Bridge in Basel.  Liber chronicarum [German] Das Buch der Croniken und Geschichten. Tr: Georg Alt. Nuremberg : Anton Koberger, for Sebald Schreyer and Sebastian Kammermeister, 23 Dec. 1493 (is00309000). London, British Library (IC.7458)

Hieronymus Brilinger (1469-1537) recollects that 'people standing on the bridge [in Basel] could easily wash their hands in the Rhine'.  Looking at the city panorama in the Nuremberg Chronicle (1493), one of the most significant examples of 15th-century printing, puts this quote into perspective: we can spot the bridge in question and imagine the rising water, which eventually flooded large parts of the city centre.  Environmental historians are able to use historical sources like these to reconstruct previous floods and to better prevent similar catastrophic events today.  Literary texts, too, bear witness to the effects of catastrophic events.  In Varia Carmina (1489), a collection of Latin poetry by Sebastian Brant, contains a poem about the 1480 flood: ‘De diluvio aquarum intimatio ad ecclesiam Basiliensem Anno domini. 1480’.  It is an emotive appeal to Neptune, the Roman god of freshwater and the sea, asking him to 'stay in the depths of his kingdom'. 'You force the animals of the sea to visit the mountains – and the whales of Proteus (a sea god) have to graze in beech forests'.  Using references to classical mythology, it is not a realistic account of the flood but instead uses literary features typical for learned humanist literature.

Opening in Sebastian Brant’s poetry collection showing the start of ‘De diluvio aquarum intimatio ad ecclesiam Basiliensem Anno domini. 1480’.Opening in Sebastian Brant’s poetry collection showing the start of ‘De diluvio aquarum intimatio ad ecclesiam Basiliensem Anno domini. 1480’. Brant, Sebastian: Varia carmina. Add: Johann Bergmann. Basel : Johann Bergmann, de Olpe, 1 May [14]98 (ib01099000). London, British Library (IA.37949).

Alyssa Steiner
Curator, Printed Heritage Collections

Further reading:
Christian Pfister and Oliver Wetter: Das Jahrtausendhochwasser von 1480 an Aare und Rhein, in: Berner Zeitschrift für Geschichte 04/11, pp. 41–49.

 

12 November 2024

Attending the V&A Connecting Threads Conference

In October I had the pleasure of attending the Connecting Threads: Fashioning Madras in India and the Caribbean Symposium at the V&A Museum.  This event focused on exploring the cultural and textile history of 18th-century Madras textiles, their production in South India, and their interwoven link with the Caribbean.

Red checked Madras handkerchief made by Sooboo Chetty  c.1855Madras Handkerchief made by Sooboo Chetty, c.1855. V&A, 4968(IS)

The Connecting Threads project is a collaboration among various specialists, aiming to amplify the voices and contributions of Indian weavers and African Caribbean consumers who have adopted Madras as part of their heritage, shifting the narrative away from colonial and Western markets.  The project’s accompanying website, Connecting Threads, supports this initiative.  With born-digital scholarship, the project aims to democratise research, reach a wider audience, and address Open Access data issues by making their resources freely available globally.  They also hope to influence the development of AI knowledge about Madras textiles, promoting a less Eurocentric view of its visual history.

The Programme
The programme featured 14 speakers from various backgrounds and specialisms, including curators, professors, historians, craftspeople, artists, and business owners.  Throughout the day, we viewed microscope-enhanced images of 18th-century and modern Madras handkerchiefs, analysed by the research team and a Chennai master weaver.  There were lectures on their production and how different caste groups, sexes, and religions may have worn them.  For example, Muslim groups were noted in inscriptions from 1538 for their specific weaving techniques (source: Uthra Rajagopal, scholar and curator).  There was some discussion into trade by the English East India Company and other European traders, and the appropriation of designs to be reproduced in Britain.

A Company painting titled ‘A Weaver and his wife’  c.1800A Company painting titled ‘A Weaver and his wife’, c.1800. V&A, AL.8940N

Caribbean experts and scholars gave excellent talks and demonstrations on the trade and cultural use of Madras, particularly by enslaved or low-income groups.  The usage is complex, but the talks generally emphasized Madras’s positive context—its power in Caribbean island identity and, amusingly, the historical use of head wraps as flirtatious signifiers of availability.

Exquisite handmade dolls were displayed to the attendees, a real example of the integrated nature of Madras in Caribbean culture.  These dolls, currently held at the Bristol Museum, were made in the 1780s by Rebecca Ahmuty Snagg, a domestic enslaved woman in Grenada who died a free woman.  They were likely crafted for the children of the family that bought Rebecca, and they feature Madras head coverings, emulating the real-life articles worn by black Caribbean women at the time.

One of three of the Rebecca Ahmuty Snagg dollsOne of three of the Rebecca Ahmuty Snagg dolls, currently held at the Bristol Museum Collections - photograph by author

The conference was an insightful addition in the ongoing initiative to decolonise and diversify our collections.  This line of research is gaining momentum, with frequent discussions at the British Library on how to rethink our catalogues to promote a more diverse and inclusive narrative.

Maddy Clark
India Office Records

Further information about the Connecting Threads project can be found on their resource website and the V&A website.
Connecting Threads
Connecting Threads: Fashioning Madras in India and the Caribbean