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Delineating British Burma, c. 18261949 |
Kontakt/Bestellung
Contact/Order: info@digento.de |
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Hrsg. v. A.J. Farrington |
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Online |
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Verlag :: Publisher Brill Academic Publishers |
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Preis :: Price Preise auf Anfrage / Prices on request |
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Das Angebot richtet sich nicht an Verbraucher i. S. d. § 13 BGB und Letztverbraucher i. S. d. PAngV. |
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ISBN/ISSN 2950-5038 Bestellnummer bei digento :: digento order number 10883306 |
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Verlagsinformation :: Publisher's information This online collection of official and confidential print reflects the long process of information gathering, codification, and dissemination that both accompanied and followed on from the three stages of the British annexation of Burma. It combines the kind of Intelligence Branch investigations that were routinely produced for the states bordering on British India, with a uniquely complete set of gazetteers/topographical works and reports covering the districts and states of British Burma and its boundaries.
The collection begins with contemporary accounts and official histories of the three wars of 18241826, 18521854, and 18851886. At the conclusion of the first war in 1826, Assam, Arakan, and Tenasserim were annexed to the East India Company’s territories. Assam never became part of British Burma, while Arakan was transferred to the government of Bengal and Tenasserim was placed under the direct control of the Governor-General at Calcutta.
On January 1st, 1886, the province of British Burma was more than doubled in size by the final annexation of the kingdom of Burma, although sporadic fighting continued until 1889. As the new territories were divided into four commissionerships and Pegu had meanwhile been split into two, British Burma now comprised eight commissioner’s divisions, headed by the Chief Commissioner with a growing administrative secretariat at Rangoon. The Chief Commissioner was replaced in 1897 by a Lieutenant-Governor, who was assisted by a Legislative Council, enabling Burma-specific legislation to be enacted for the first time under British rule. From January 2nd, 1923, responsibility for a wide range of functions (but excluding, for example, defense and external relations) was devolved to the Government of Burma.
The first general gazetteer, of 1879, covered Lower Burma only. The second, of 1883, covered Lower Burma and independent Burma, and was followed in 19001901 by a massive (3,000-page) compilation, which also included the Shan states. There are also handbooks and a gazetteer issued for war-time use by the government in exile at Simla.
The Burma Gazetteer provides a highly detailed, multi-volume account of early twentieth-century British Burma, compiled by the district officers. The Gazetteer is divided into Part A which comprises monographs on, for example, the history, geography, administration, and economic life of each district and Part B, which contains tables of statistics. There are A volumes for 26 districts only, produced between 1910 and 1935. The B volumes of statistics appear in three editions, which were published after the census returns of 1901, 1911, and 1921. These are: 1906-1907: 36 volumes (the China Hills and Shan and Karenni states are not included); 19121913: 42 volumes, numbered 142; 19241925: 42 volumes, numbered 143 (Rangoon, vol. 5 in 1912, omitted). Included in this section are a number of other works relating to particular districts or states that do not form part of the Burma Gazetteer series. Provenance and historical background The various "Secret," "Confidential," or "For Official Use Only" works are located in two internal reference libraries, which accumulated within the Military Department (L/MIL/17) and the Political & Secret Department (L/P&S/20) at the India Office in London. Items were received both from Military Intelligence in India and from the Government of Burma. Custody rules for volumes held "in the field" dictated that when a new edition of a particular work appeared, all previous editions had to be destroyed. As a result, these works in their various issues survive in very few locations. The collection in the India Office Records at the British Library is unique in its breadth and accessibility. The non-classified works (V/27), mainly the volumes of the Burma Gazetteer, are part of the large collection of official publications managed by the Registry & Records Department at the India Office. All the India Office departments were subsumed within the Commonwealth Relations Office (subsequently the Foreign & Commonwealth Office) after India, Pakistan, and Burma became independent in 19471948. In 1982, the Foreign & Commonwealth Office transferred the administration of the India Office Library & Records to the British Library, where it now forms one part of the Library’s Asia, Pacific, and Africa Collections (specifically, the former Oriental & India Office Collections; OIOC). |
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