Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-m6dg7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-14T16:58:27.696Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 July 2009

Robert Travers
Affiliation:
Cornell University, New York
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Ideology and Empire in Eighteenth-Century India
The British in Bengal
, pp. 254 - 268
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2007

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

,Anon., The Importance of British Dominion in India Compared to that in America, London, 1770.Google Scholar
,AnonNarrative of the Proceedings of the Provincial Council at Patna in the suit of Behader Beg against Nadara Begum; & of the Supreme Court of Judicature at Calcutta, In the suit of Nadara Begum against Behader Beg & others. And in the Criminal Prosecution instituted against Nadara Begum and her Accomplices for Forgery – Forming together what is generally called in Bengal THE PATNA CAUSE, London, 1780.Google Scholar
Asiatick Researches, vol. I, Calcutta, 1788, repr. London, 1801.
Blackstone, W., Commentaries on the Laws of England, 4 vols., London, 1826.
Bolts, W., Considerations on Indian Affairs Particularly Respecting the Present State of Bengal and its Dependencies, 3 vols., London, 1772–5.Google Scholar
Cobbett, W., The Parliamentary History of England from the Earliest Period to the year 1803, from which last-mentioned Epoch it is continued downwards in the work entititled, ‘Cobbett’s Parliamentary Debates', 36 vols., London, 1806–20.Google Scholar
Colebrooke, J. E., Digest of the Regulations and Laws, enacted by the Governor-General in Council for the Civil Government of the Territories under the Presidency of Bengal, arranged in alphabetical order, Calcutta, 1807.Google Scholar
Dow, A., The History of Hindostan, from the death of Akbar, to the complete settlement of the empire under Aurungzebe, 3 vols., London, 1768–72.Google Scholar
Francis, P., Original Minutes of the Governor-General and Council of Fort William on the settlement and collection of the Revenues of Bengal with a plan of settlement recommended to the Court of Directors, January 1776, London, 1782.Google Scholar
Ghulam Husain Khan Tabatabai, A Translation of Seir Mutaqherin, Or View of Modern Times, Haji Mustafa, Nota Manus (tr., ed.), 3 vols., Calcutta, 1789, repr. Calcutta, 1902–3.Google Scholar
Gladwin, F.(trans.), Ayeen Akbery, or the Institutes of the Emperor Akber, translated from the original Persian by F. Gladwin, 2 vols., London, 1800.Google Scholar
Gleig, G. R., Memoirs of Warren Hastings, 3 vols., London, 1841.Google Scholar
Halhed, N. B., Code of the Gentoo Laws: or Ordinations of the Pundits, London, 1776.Google Scholar
Hastings, W., in Banerjee, A. C. (ed.), Memoirs Relative to the State of India, Calcutta, 1978.Google Scholar
Hodges, W., Travels to India, During the Years 1780, 1781, 1782, and 1783, 2nd edn, London, 1794.Google Scholar
Howell, T. B., A Complete Collection of State Trials and Proceedings for High Treason and Other Crimes and Misdemeanors from the earliest period to the present time, with notes and other illustrations, 33 vols., London, 1809–26.Google Scholar
Malcolm, J., Life of Robert, Lord Clive, 3 vols., London, 1836.Google Scholar
Mill, J. S., Considerations on Representative Government, London, 1856.Google Scholar
Montesquieu, C. de S. (1st English edn, 1750), in Cohler, A. M., Miller, B. C. and Stone, H. S. (eds.), Spirit of the Laws, Cambridge, 1989.Google Scholar
Patullo, H., An Essay upon the Cultivation of the Lands, and Improvements of the Revenues of Bengal, London, 1772.Google Scholar
Pownall, T., The Right, Interest, and Duty of Government, As Concerned in the Affairs of the East Indies, 1st edn, 1773, 2nd edn, London, 1781.Google Scholar
Scrafton, Luke, Reflections on the Government of Indostan. With a Short Sketch of the History of Bengal, from the years 1739 to 1756, and an Account of the English Affairs to 1758, 1st edn, Edinburgh, 1761, 2nd edn, London, 1763.Google Scholar
Smith, A., in Skinner, A. S. (ed.), The Wealth of Nations, Books IV–V, London, 1999.Google Scholar
Steuart, J., An Inquiry into the Principles of Political Oeconomy (1st edn, 1767), Skinner, A. S. (ed.), 2 vols., Edinburgh, 1966.Google Scholar
Steuart, J.The Principles of Money Applied to the Present State of the Coin in Bengal, London, 1772.Google Scholar
Vansittart, H., Narrative of Transactions in Bengal, London, 1766, Bannerjee, A. C. and Ghosh, B. K. (eds.), repr. Calcutta, 1976.Google Scholar
Verelst, H., View of the Rise, Progress and Present State of the English Government in Bengal, London, 1772.Google Scholar
Watts, W., Memoirs of the Revolution in Bengal, London, 1760, repr. Calcutta, 1988.
Bannerjee, A. C. (ed.), Indian Constitutional Documents, Calcutta, 1945–6.Google Scholar
Burke, E., in Bromwich, D. (ed.), On Empire, Liberty and Reform: Speeches and Letters, New Haven, CT, 2000.Google Scholar
Calendar of Persian Correspondence, 11 vols., Calcutta, 1911–69.
Cannon, J. (ed.), The Letters of Junius, Oxford, 1978.Google Scholar
Eliot, H. M. and Dowson, J. (eds.), History of India by its own Historians. The Muhammadan Period, 8 vols., Calcutta, 1867–77.Google Scholar
Fieldhouse, D. K. and Madden, F. (eds.), The Classical Period of the First British Empire, 1689–1783. Select Documents on the Constitutional History of the British Empire and Commonwealth, 2 vols., London, 1985.Google Scholar
Firminger, W. K. (ed.), Bengal District Records. Midnapur, 1768–70, Calcutta, 1915.Google Scholar
Firminger, W. K. (ed.), ‘Historical Introduction to the Bengal Portion of the Fifth Report’, The Fifth Report from the Select Committee of the House of Commons on the Affairs of the East India Company, 28 July, 1812, 3 vols., London, 1917–18.Google Scholar
Firminger, W. K. (ed.), Proceedings of the Controlling Council of Revenue at Murshidabad, 12 vols., Calcutta, 1919–24.Google Scholar
Forrest, G. W., Selections from the Letters, Dispatches and Other State Papers, Preserved in the Foreign Department of the Government of India, 1772–85, 3 vols., Calcutta, 1890.Google Scholar
Forrest, G. W. (ed.), Historical Documents of British India, Warren Hastings, 2 vols., New Delhi, 1985.Google Scholar
Fort William-India House Correspondence, and Other Contemporary Papers Relating Thereto, 21 vols., National Archives of India, Delhi, 1949–85.
Khan, Shayesta (ed.), Bihar and Bengal in the Eighteenth Century: A Critical Edition and Translation of Muzaffarnama, a Contemporary History, Patna, 1992.Google Scholar
Lambert, S., House of Commons Sessional Papers of the Eighteenth Century, 145 vols., Wilmington, DE, 1975.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J. (ed.), in Langford, P. (gen. ed.), Writings and Speeches of Edmund Burke. Vol. V. India: Madras and Bengal, 1774–1785, Oxford, 1981.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J. (ed.), in Langford, P. (gen. ed.), Writings and Speeches of Edmund Burke. Vol. VI. India: the Launching of the Hastings Impeachment, 1786–8, Oxford, 1991.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J. (ed.), in Langford, P. (gen. ed.), Writings and Speeches of Edmund Burke. Vol. VII. India: The Hastings Trial, 1789–94, Oxford, 2000.Google Scholar
Proceedings of the Committee of Circuit at Krishnanagar, Bengal Record Department, Calcutta, 1915.
Reports from Committees of the House of Commons, 1715—1801, 15 vols., London, 1803.
Sarkar, J. (ed. tr.), Bengal Nawabs, 1st edn, 1952, repr. Calcutta, 1985.Google Scholar
Sinha, N. K. (ed.), Selections from District Records. Midnapur Salt Papers. Hijli and Tamluk, 1781–1807, Calcutta, 1984.Google Scholar
Alam, M., The Crisis of Empire in Mughal North India: Awadh and the Punjab, 1707–48, Delhi, 1986.Google Scholar
Alam, M.The Languages of Political Islam: India, 1200–1800, Chicago, 2004.Google Scholar
Alam, M. and Alavi, S., A European Experience of the Mughal Orient, New Delhi, 2001.Google Scholar
Alam, M. and Subrahmanyam, S. (eds.), The Mughal State, 1526–1750, Delhi, 1998.Google Scholar
Alavi, S., ‘The Company Army and Rural Society: The Invalid thana, 1780–1830’, Modern Asian Studies, 27 (1993), pp. 147–78.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alavi, S.The Sepoys and the Company. Tradition and Transition in Northern India, 1770–1830, Delhi, 1995.Google Scholar
Alavi, S. (ed.), The Eighteenth Century in India, Delhi, 2002.Google Scholar
Armitage, D., The Ideological Origins of the British Empire, Cambridge, 2000.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Armitage, D. and Michael, B. (eds.), The British Atlantic World, 1500–1800, Houndsmill, UK, 2002.Google Scholar
Ascoli, F. D., The Early Revenue History of Bengal and the Fifth Report, Oxford, 1917.Google Scholar
Aspinall, A., Cornwallis in Bengal; the Administrative and Judicial Reforms of Lord Cornwallis in Bengal, Together with Accounts of the Commercial Expansion of the East India Company, 1786–1793, and the Foundation of Penang, 1st edn, 1937, repr. Delhi, 1987.Google Scholar
Athar Ali, M., ‘Recent Theories of Eighteenth Century India’, Indian Historical Review, 13 (1986–7), pp. 102–10.Google Scholar
Athar Ali, M.The Mughal Nobility under Aurangzeb, 2nd edn, New Delhi, 1997.Google Scholar
Bailyn, B., The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution, Cambridge, MA, 1967.Google Scholar
Ballhatchet, K., Race, Sex, and Class under the Raj: Imperial Attitudes and Policies and their Critics, 1793–1905, London, 1980.Google Scholar
Barber, W. J., British Economic Thought and India, 1600–1858: A Study in the History of Development Economics, Oxford, 1975.Google Scholar
Barnett, R., North India Between Empires: Awadh, the Mughals, and the British, 1720–1801, Berkeley, CA, 1980.Google Scholar
Barrow, I. J. and Haynes, D. E., ‘The Colonial Transition: South Asia, 1780–1840’, Modern Asian Studies, 38 (2004), pp. 469–78.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bayly, C. A., Rulers, Townsmen, and Bazaars: North Indian Society in the Age of British Expansion, 1770–1870, Cambridge, 1983.Google Scholar
Bayly, C. A.Indian Society and the Making of the British Empire. New Cambridge History of India, 2.1, Cambridge, 1988.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bayly, C. A.Imperial Meridian: the British Empire and the World, 1780–1830, London, 1989.Google Scholar
Bayly, C. A. (ed.), The Raj: India and the British, 1600–1990, London, 1990.Google Scholar
Bayly, C. A.Empire and Information: Intelligence Gathering and Social Communication in India, 1780–1870, Cambridge, 1997.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bayly, C. A.Origins of Nationality in South Asia: Patriotism and Ethical Government in the Making of Modern India, New Delhi, 1998.Google Scholar
Bayly, C. A.‘The First Age of Global Expansion’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 28 (1998), pp. 29–47.Google Scholar
Bayly, C. A.The Birth of the Modern World, 1780–1914, Oxford, 2004.Google Scholar
Bearce, G. D., British Attitudes to India 1784–1858, Oxford, 1961.Google Scholar
Benton, L., ‘Colonial Law and Cultural Difference: Jurisdictional Politics and the Formation of the Colonial State’, Comparative Studies in Society and History, 41 (1999), pp. 563–88.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bhattacharya, S., The East India Company and the Economy of Bengal, 1704–1740, London, 1954.Google Scholar
Blake, S., ‘The Patrimonial–Bureaucratic Empire of the Mughals’, Journal of Asian Studies, 39 (1979), pp. 77–94.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bose, S., Peasant Labour and Colonial Capital. Rural Bengal Since 1770. New Cambridge History of India, 3.2, Cambridge, 1993.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bose, S. and Jalal, A., Modern South Asia: History, Culture, Political Economy, London, 1998.Google Scholar
Bowen, H. V., ‘A Question of Sovereignty? The Bengal Land Revenue Issue, 1765–7’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 16 (1988), pp. 155–76.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowen, H. V.Revenue and Reform: The Indian Problem in British Politics, 1757–1773, Cambridge, 1991.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowen, H. V.‘British Conceptions of Global Empire, 1756–83’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 26 (1998), pp. 1–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowen, H. V.The Business of Empire. The East India Company in Imperial Britain, 1756–1833, Cambridge, 2006.Google Scholar
Bowen, H. V. ‘British India, 1765–1813: the Metropolitan Context’, in Marshall, P. J. (ed.), The Eighteenth Century. Oxford History of the British Empire, vol. 2, Oxford, 1998, pp. 530–51.Google Scholar
Bowen, H. V. ‘Tea, Tribute and the East India Company, c. 1750–1775’, in Taylor, S., Connors, R. and Jones, C. (eds.), Hanoverian Britain and Empire. Essays in Memory of Philip Lawson, Woodbridge, 1998, pp. 158–76.Google Scholar
Bowen, H. V., Lincoln, M. and Rigby, N. (eds.), The Worlds of the East India Company, Woodbridge, UK, 2002.Google Scholar
Bowyer, T. H., ‘India and the Personal Finances of Philip Francis’, English Historical Review, 110 (1995), pp. 122–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowyer, T. H.‘Junius, Philip Francis, & Parliamentary Reform’, Albion, 27 (1995), pp. 397–418.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Breckenridge, C. and Veer, P. (eds.), Orientalism and the Postcolonial Predicament: Perspectives on South Asia, Philadelphia, 1993.Google Scholar
Brewer, J., Party Ideology and Popular Politics at the Accession of George III, Cambridge, 1976.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brewer, J.The Sinews of Power: War, Money, and the English State, 1688–1783, London, 1989.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burgess, G., The Politics of the Ancient Constitution. An Introduction to English Political Thought 1603–42, London, 1992.Google Scholar
Busteed, H. E., Echoes from Old Calcutta, Being Chiefly Reminiscences from the Days of Warren Hastings, Francis and Impey, Calcutta, 1888.Google Scholar
Cain, P. J. and Hopkins, A. G., British Imperialism: Innovation and Expansion, 1688–1914, London, 1993.Google Scholar
Calkins, P., ‘The Formation of a Regionally Orientated Ruling Group in Bengal’, Journal of Asian Studies, 29 (1970), pp. 799–806.Google Scholar
Cannon, G. H., Oriental Jones: a Biography of Sir William Jones, 1746–1794, Bombay, 1964.Google Scholar
Chakrabarti, S., ‘Intransigent Shroffs and the English East India Company's Currency Reforms, 1757–1800’, Indian Economic and Social History Review, 34 (1997), pp. 69–94.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chatterjee, I., Gender, Slavery, and Law in Colonial India, New Delhi, 1999.
Chatterjee, K., Merchants, Politics, and Society in Early Modern India: Bihar, 1733–1820, Leiden, 1996.Google Scholar
Chatterjee, K.‘History as Self-Representation. The Recasting of a Political Tradition in Bengal and Bihar’, Modern Asian Studies, 32 (1998), pp. 913–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chatterji, N., Verelst's Rule in India, Allahabad, 1939.Google Scholar
Chaudhuri, K. N., The Trading World of Asia and the English East India Company, 1660–1760, Cambridge, 1978.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chaudhuri, S. (ed.), Calcutta: The Living City, 2 vols., Calcutta, 1990.Google Scholar
Chaudhury, S., From Prosperity to Decline: Eighteenth-Century Bengal, New Delhi, 1995.Google Scholar
Chaudhury, S.The Prelude to Empire. Plassey Revolution of 1757, New Delhi, 2001.Google Scholar
Chowdhuri-Zilly, A. N., The Vagrant Peasant: Agrarian Distress in Bengal, 1770–1830, Wiesbaden, 1982.Google Scholar
Cohn, B. S., ‘Political Systems in Eighteenth-Century India’, Journal of American Oriental Society, 82 (1962), pp. 312–20.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cohn, B. S.An Anthropologist Among the Historians and Other Essays, Delhi, 1987.Google Scholar
Cohn, B. S.Colonialism and its Forms of Knowledge: The British in India, Princeton, 1996.Google Scholar
Colley, L., Britons: Forging the Nation, 1707–1837, New Haven, CT, 1992.Google Scholar
Colley, L.Captives: Britain, Empire, and the World, 1600–1850, London, 2002.Google Scholar
Collingham, E. M., Imperial Bodies: The Physical Experience of the Raj, c. 1800–1947, Polity Press, Cambridge, 2001.Google Scholar
Curley, D. L., ‘Maharaja Krisnacandra, Hinduism, and Kingship in the Contact Zone of Bengal’, in Barnett, R. B. (ed.), Rethinking Early Modern India, New Delhi, 2002, pp. 85–118.Google Scholar
Curley, T. M., Sir Robert Chambers. Law, Literature, and Empire in the Age of Johnson, Madison, WI, 1998.Google Scholar
Dalrymple, W., White Mughals: Love and Betrayal in Eighteenth-Century India, London, 2002.Google Scholar
Daniels, C. and Kennedy, M. V., Negotiated Empires: Centers and Peripheries in the Americas, 1500–1820, London, 2002.Google Scholar
Dasgupta, A. K., The Faqir and Sannyasi Uprisings, Calcutta, 1992.Google Scholar
Datta, R., Society, Economy, and the Market: Commercialization in Rural Bengal, c. 1760–1800, New Delhi, 2000.Google Scholar
Davies, C. C., Warren Hastings and Oudh, London, 1939.Google Scholar
Derrett, J. D. M., ‘Nandakumar's Forgery’, English Historical Review, 245 (1960), pp. 223–39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Derrett, J. D. M.Religion, Law and the State in India, London, 1968.Google Scholar
Derrett, J. D. M. ‘Justice, Equity and Good Conscience’, in Anderson, J. N. D. (ed.), Changing Law in Developing Countries, London, 1963, pp. 114–53.Google Scholar
Dewey, C., Anglo-Indian Attitudes: the Mind of the Indian Civil Service, London, 1993.Google Scholar
Dickinson, H. T., Liberty and Property: Political Ideology in Eighteenth-Century Britain, London, 1979.Google Scholar
Dirks, N. B., The Hollow Crown: Ethnohistory of an Indian Kingdom, Cambridge, 1987.Google Scholar
Dirks, N. B.Castes of Mind: Colonialism and the Making of Modern India, Princeton, 2001.Google Scholar
Dirks, N. B.The Scandal of Empire. India and the Creation of Imperial Britain, Cambridge, MA, 2006.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dodwell, H. H., Dupleix and Clive: The Beginning of Empire, London, 1920.
Dodwell, H. H. (ed.), ‘The Development of Sovereignty in British India’, Cambridge History of India, vol. 5: British India, 1497–1858, Cambridge, 1929, pp. 589–608.Google Scholar
Drayton, R., Nature's Government: Science, Imperial Britain and the Improvement of the World, Yale, 2000.Google Scholar
Eaton, R. M., The Rise of Islam on the Bengal Frontier, 1204–1760, Berkeley, CA, 1993.Google Scholar
Ehrman, J., The Younger Pitt, 3 vols., London, 1969–96.Google Scholar
Ellegard, A., Who Was Junius?, Stockholm, 1962.Google Scholar
Embree, A. T., Charles Grant and British Rule in India, New York, 1962.Google Scholar
Evans, E., The Forging of the Modern State, 3rd edn, London, 2003.Google Scholar
Feiling, K., Warren Hastings, London, 1954.Google Scholar
Firminger, W. K., ‘Selections from the Note Books of Justice John Hyde’, Bengal Past and Present, 3 (1909), pp. 27–64.Google Scholar
Firminger, W. K. (ed.), ‘Historical Introduction to the Bengal Portion of the Fifth Report’, The Fifth Report from the Select Committee of the House of Commons on the Affairs of the East India Company, 28 July, 1812, 3 vols., London, 1917–18.Google Scholar
Fisch, J., Cheap Lives and Dear Limbs: The British Transformation of the Bengal Criminal Law, 1769–1877, Wiesbaden, 1983.Google Scholar
Fisher, M. H., A Clash of Cultures. Awadh, the British and the Mughals, Delhi, 1987.Google Scholar
Fisher, M. H.The First Indian Author in English. Dean Mahomed (1759–1851) in India, Ireland and England, Delhi, 1996.Google Scholar
Fisher, M. H.Counterflows to Colonialism: Indian Travellers and Settlers in Britain, 1600–1857, Delhi, 2004.Google Scholar
Fleischer, Cornell., Bureaucrat and Intellectual in the Ottoman Empire. The Historian Mustafa Ali (1541–1600), Princeton, 1986.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fletcher, F. T. H., Montesquieu and English Politics (1750–1800), London, 1939.Google Scholar
Forrest, G. W., The Administration of Warren Hastings, 1772–1785, Calcutta, 1892.Google Scholar
Forrest, G. W.Life of Lord Clive. 2 vols., London, 1918.Google Scholar
Foster, R. F., Modern Ireland, 1600–1972, New York, 1988.Google Scholar
Furber, H., John Company at Work, a Study of European Expansion in India in the Late Eighteenth Century, Cambridge, MA, 1948.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
George, M. D., English Political Caricature; A Study of Opinion and Propaganda, Oxford, 1959.Google Scholar
Ghosh, D., Family, Sex and Intimacy in British India, Cambridge, 2006.Google Scholar
Gordon, S., The Marathas 1600–1818. The New Cambridge History of India, vol. 2.4, Cambridge, 1993.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gould, E., The Persistence of Empire: British Political Culture in the American Revolution, Chapel Hill, NC, 2000.Google Scholar
Greene, J. P., Peripheries and Center: Constitutional Development in the Extended Politics of the British Empire and the United States, 1607–1788, Athens, GA, 1986.Google Scholar
Greene, J. P. ‘Empire and Identity from the Glorious Revolution to the American Revolution’, in Marshall, P. J. (ed.), Oxford History of the British Empire, vol. 2. The Eighteenth Century, Oxford, 1998, pp. 208–31.Google Scholar
Grewal, J. S., Muslim Rule in India: The Assessment of British Historians, Oxford, 1970.Google Scholar
Grover, B. R., ‘Nature of Land Rights in Mughal India’, Indian Economic and Social History Review, 1 (1963), pp. 2–15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guha, R., A Rule of Property for Bengal: An Essay on the Idea of Permanent Settlement, Paris, 1963.Google Scholar
Guha, R.Dominance Without Hegemony. History and Power in Colonial India, Cambridge, MA, 1997.Google Scholar
Guha, S., ‘Wrongs and Rights in the Maratha Country: Antiquity, Custom, and Power in Eighteenth Century India’, in Anderson, M. R. and Guha, S. (eds.), Changing Concepts of Rights & Justice in South Asia, New Delhi, 2000, pp. 14–29.Google Scholar
Gupta, B. K., Sirajudaullah and the East India Company, 1756–7: Background to the Foundation of British Power in India, Leiden, 1966.Google Scholar
Habib, I., The Agrarian System of Mughal India: 1556–1707, 2nd revised edn, Delhi, 1999.Google Scholar
Hampsher-Monk, I., ‘Civic Humanism & Parliamentary Reform; the Case of the Society of the Friends of the People’, Journal of British Studies, 28 (1979), pp. 70–89.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hardy, P., Historians of Medieval India. Studies in Indo-Muslim Historical Writing, London, 1960.Google Scholar
Harling, P., The Waning of ‘Old Corruption’: The Politics of Economical Reform in Britain, 1779–1846, Oxford, 1996.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harling, P.The Modern British State. An Historical Introduction, Polity Press, Cambridge, 2001.Google Scholar
Harlow, V. T., The Founding of the Second British Empire, 1763–1793, 2 vols., London, 1952–64.Google Scholar
Hasan, F., State and Locality in Mughal India. Power Relations in Western India c. 1572–1730, Cambridge, 2004.Google Scholar
Hollingbery, R. H., The Zemindary Settlement of Bengal, Calcutta, 1879.Google Scholar
Holzman, J. M., The Nabobs in England: A Study of the Returned Anglo-Indian, 1760–1785, New York, 1926.Google Scholar
Hunter, W. W., Annals of Rural Bengal, Calcutta, 1868.Google Scholar
Hussain, N., The Jurisprudence of Emergency: Colonialism and the Rule of Law, Ann Arbor, MI, 2003.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Impey, E. B., Memoirs of Sir Elijah Impey, London, 1857.Google Scholar
Irschick, E., Dialogue and History: Constructing South India, 1795–1895, Berkeley, CA, 1994.Google Scholar
Islam, S., The Permanent Settlement in Bengal: A Study of its Local Operation, 1790–1819, Dacca, 1979.Google Scholar
Jain, M. P., Outlines of Indian Legal History, 5th edn, Delhi, 1990.Google Scholar
Jasanoff, M., Edge of Empire: Lives, Culture and Conquest in the East, 1750–1850, New York, 2005.Google Scholar
Kent, S. K., Gender and Power in Britain, 1640–1990, London, 1999.Google Scholar
Khan, A. M., The Transition in Bengal, 1756–75: A study of Muhammad Reza Khan, Cambridge, 1969.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Khan, S., A Biography of Ali Ibrahim Khan (c. 1740–93): A Mughal Noble in the Service of the British East India Company, Patna, 1992.Google Scholar
Kidd, C., British Identities Before Nationalism. Ethnicity and Nationhood in the Atlantic World, Cambridge, 1999.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Koebner, R., ‘Despot and Despotism; Vicissitudes of a Political Term’, Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, 14 (1951), pp. 275–302.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kolff, D. H. A., ‘End of the Ancien Regime: Colonial War in India, 1798–1818’, in Moor, J. A. and Wesseling, H. L. (eds.), Imperialism and War, Leiden, 1989, pp. 22–49.Google Scholar
Kopf, D., British Orientalism and the Bengal Renaissance; the Dynamics of Indian modernization, 1773–1835, Berkeley, CA, 1969.Google Scholar
Kramnick, I., Bolingbroke and His Circle: The Politics of Nostalgia in the Age of Walpole, Cambridge, MA, 1968.Google Scholar
Langford, P., A Polite and Commercial People: England 1727–1783, Oxford, 1989.Google Scholar
Langford, P.Public Life and the Propertied Englishman, Oxford, 1991.Google Scholar
Lawson, P., ‘Parliament and the First East India Inquiry, 1767’, Parliamentary History, 1 (1982), pp. 99–114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lawson, P. and Lenman, B., ‘Robert Clive, the “Black Jagir”, and British Politics’, Historical Journal, 26 (1983), pp. 801–29.Google Scholar
Lawson, P. and Philips, J., ‘Our Execrable Banditti: Perceptions of Nabobs in Mid-Eighteenth-Century Britain’, Albion, 16 (1984), pp. 225–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lieberman, D., The Province of Legislation Determined: Legal Theory in Eighteenth-Century Britain, Cambridge, 1987.Google Scholar
Lobban, M., The Common Law and English Jurisprudence, 1760–1850, Oxford, 1991.Google Scholar
Losty, J. P., Calcutta, City of Palaces. A Survey of the City in the Days of the East India Company, 1690–1858, London, 1990.Google Scholar
McKracken, D., Junius and Philip Francis, Boston, MA, 1979.Google Scholar
McLane, J. R., Land and Local Kingship in Eighteenth-Century Bengal, Cambridge, 1993.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maier, C. S., Among Empires: American Ascendancy and its Predecessors, Cambridge, MA, 2006.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Majumdar, N., Justice and Police in Bengal, 1765–1793: A Study of the Nizamat in Decline, Calcutta, 1960.Google Scholar
Marshall, P., ‘British North America 1760–1815’, in Marshall, P. J. (ed.), The Eighteenth Century. Oxford History of the British Empire, vol. 2, Oxford 1998, pp. 372–93.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, P. J., ‘Nobkissen versus Hastings’, Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 27 (1964), pp. 382–96.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, P. J.The Impeachment of Warren Hastings, London, 1965.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J.‘Indian Officials Under the East India Company in Eighteenth-Century Bengal’, Bengal Past and Present, 84 (1965), pp. 99–102.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J.Problems of Empire: Britain and India, 1757–1813, London, 1968.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J.‘British Expansion in India in the Eighteenth Century: A Historical Revision’, History, 60 (1975), pp. 28–43.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, P. J.East Indian Fortunes: The British in Bengal in the Eighteenth Century, Oxford, 1976.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J.A Free Though Conquering People: Britain and Asia in the Eighteenth Century, An inaugural lecture in the Rhodes Chair of Imperial History delivered at King's College, London, 1981.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J.Bengal: The British Bridgehead, Eastern India, 1740–1828. New Cambridge History of India, 2.2, Cambridge, 1987.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J.‘Empire and Authority in the Later Eighteenth Century’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 15 (1987), pp. 105–23.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, P. J. (ed.), ‘ “Cornwallis Triumphant”: War in India and the British Public in the Late Eighteenth Century’, Trade and Conquest: Studies on the Rise of British Dominance in India, Aldershot, UK, 1993.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J.‘British Society and the East India Company’, Modern Asian Studies, 31 (1997), pp. 89–108.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, P. J. (ed.), ‘The British in Asia: Trade to Dominion, 1700–1765’, The Eighteenth Century. Oxford History of the British Empire, Vol. 2, Oxford, 1998, pp. 487–507.
Marshall, P. J.‘The Making of an Imperial Icon; the Case of Warren Hastings’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 27 (1999), pp. 1–16.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, P. J.‘The White Town of Calcutta Under the Rule of the East India Company’, Modern Asian Studies, 34 (2000), pp. 307–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, P. J.‘Britain and the World in the Eighteenth Century, III: Britain and India’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 6th Series, 10 (2000), pp. 1–16.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, P. J.‘Britain and the World in the Eighteenth Century: IV. The Turning Outwards of Britain’, TRHS, 6th Series, 11 (2001), pp. 1–15.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J. (ed.), The Eighteenth Century in Indian History: Evolution or Revolution?, Delhi, 2003.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J. ‘Warren Hastings as Scholar and Patron’, in Whiteman, A., Bromley, J. S. and Dickson, P. G. M. (eds.), Statesmen, Scholars, and Merchants: Essays Presented to Dame Lucy Sutherland, Oxford, 1973, pp. 242–62.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J. ‘The Moral Swing to the East: British Humanitarianism, India and the West Indies’, in Ballhatchet, K. and Harrison, John (eds.), East India Company Studies. Papers Presented to Professor Sir Cyril Philips, Hong Kong, 1986.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J. ‘Parliament and Property Rights in the Late Eighteenth Century British Empire’, in Brewer, J. and Staves, S. (eds.), Early Modern Conceptions of Property, London, 1995, pp. 530–43.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J. and Williams, G., The Great Map of Mankind. British Perceptions of the World in the Age of Enlightenment, London, 1982.Google Scholar
Mehta, U., Liberalism and Empire. A Study in Nineteenth Century British Liberal Thought, Chicago, 1999.Google Scholar
Metcalf, B. D., ‘Too little, too much: reflections on Muslims in the History of India’, Journal of Asian Studies, 54 (1995), pp. 951–67.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Metcalf, T. R., Ideologies of the Raj. New Cambridge History of India, 3.4, Cambridge, 1994.Google Scholar
Misra, B. B., The Central Administration of the East India Company, 1773–1834, Manchester, 1959.Google Scholar
Misra, B. B.The Judicial Administration of the East India Company in Bengal, 1765–1782, Delhi, 1961.Google Scholar
Monckton-Jones, M. E., Warren Hastings in Bengal, Oxford, 1918.Google Scholar
Moreland, W. H., The Agrarian System of Moslem India, Cambridge, 1929, repr. Delhi, 1994.Google Scholar
Mukhia, H., Perspectives on Medieval History, Delhi, 1993.Google Scholar
Muthu, S., Enlightenment Against Empire, Princeton, 2003, p. 10.Google Scholar
Nandy, S. C., Life and Times of Cantoo Baboo: The Banian of Warren Hastings, 2 vols., Calcutta, 1978.
Nandy, S. C.‘A Second Look at the Notes of Justice John Hyde’, Bengal Past and Present, 97 (1978), pp. 24–34.Google Scholar
O'Brien, P. K., ‘The Political Economy of British Taxation, 1660–1815’, Economic History Review, 2nd series, 41 (1988), pp. 1–32.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O' Brien, P. K. ‘Inseparable Connections: Trade, Economy, Fiscal State, and the Expansion of Empire, 1688–1815’, in Marshall, P. J. (ed.), The Eighteenth Century. Oxford History of the British Empire, vol. 2, Oxford, 1998, pp. 53–77.Google Scholar
O'Gorman, F., The Rise of Party in England. The Rockingham Whigs 1760–82, London, 1975.Google Scholar
O'Gorman, F.The Long Eighteenth Century. British Political and Social History 1688–1832, London, 1997.Google Scholar
O'Malley, L. S. S., Bengal District Gazetteer: Midnapore, Calcutta, 1911.Google Scholar
Pagden, A., Spanish Imperialism and the Political Imagination. Studies in European and Spanish American Social and Political Theory, 1513–1830, New Haven, CT, 1990.Google Scholar
Pagden, A.Lords of All the World: Ideologies of Empire in Spain, Britain and France c. 1500–c. 1800, New Haven, CT, 1995.Google Scholar
Pandey, B. N., The Introduction of English Law into India: The Career of Elijah Impey in Bengal, 1774–1783, Bombay, 1967.Google Scholar
Parkes, J. and Merivale, H., Memoirs of Sir Philip Francis, K. C. B., with Correspondence and Journals, 2 vols., London, 1867.Google Scholar
Parthasarathi, P., ‘Merchants and the Rise of Colonialism’, in Stein, B. and Subramanyam, S. (eds.), Institutions and Economic Change in South Asia, Delhi, 1996, pp. 85–104.Google Scholar
Peers, D. M., Between Mars and Mammon: Colonial Armies and the Garrison State in India, 1819–1835, London, 1995.Google Scholar
Perlin, F., ‘State Formation Reconsidered, part 2’. Modern Asian Studies, 19 (1985), pp. 415–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pitts, J., A Turn to Empire. The Rise of Imperial Liberalism in Britain and France, Princeton, 2005.Google Scholar
Pocock, J. G. A., The Ancient Constitution and the Feudal Law: A Study of English Historical Thought in the Seventeenth Century, Cambridge, 1957, repr. 1987.Google Scholar
Pocock, J. G. A.Politics, Language and Time: Essays on Political Thought and History, New York, 1971.Google Scholar
Pocock, J. G. A.The Machiavellian Moment; Florentine Political Thought and the Atlantic Republican Tradition, Princeton, 1975.Google Scholar
Pocock, J. G. A.Virtue, Commerce, and History: Essays on Political Thought and History, Chiefly in the Eighteenth Century, Cambridge, 1985.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pocock, J. G. A. (ed.), ‘Political Thought in the English Speaking Atlantic, 1760–90; Part I, The Imperial Crisis’, The Varieties of English Political Thought 1500–1800, Cambridge, 1993, pp. 246–82.Google Scholar
Pocock, J. G. A.Barbarism and Religion. Vol. 2. Narratives of Civil Government, Cambridge, 1999.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ramsbotham, R. B., Studies in the Land Revenue History of Bengal, 1767–87, Oxford, 1926.Google Scholar
Ray, Rajat, ‘Colonial Penetration and the Initial Resistance’, Indian Historical Review, 12 (1985), pp. 22–41.Google Scholar
Ray, RajatThe Felt Community: Commonality and Mentality Before the Emergence of Indian Nationalism, Oxford, 2003.Google Scholar
Ray, R., ‘Indian Society and the Establishment of British Supremacy, 1765–1818,’ in Marshall, P. J. (ed.), The Eighteenth Century. Oxford History of the British Empire, vol. 2, Oxford, 1998, pp. 508–29.CrossRef
Ray, Ratnalekha, Change in Bengal Agrarian Society, c. 1760–1850, Calcutta, 1974.Google Scholar
Raychaudhuri, T., Bengal Under Akbar and Jahangir, an Introductory Study in Social History, Calcutta, 1953.Google Scholar
Richards, J. F., Document Forms for Official Orders of Appointment in the Mughal Empire, Cambridge, 1986.Google Scholar
Richards, J. F.The Mughal Empire, New Cambridge History of India, 1.5, Cambridge, 1993.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Richards, J. F. ‘Norms of Comportment Among Mughal Officers’, in Metcalf, B. D. (ed.), Moral Conduct and Authority: The Place of adab in South Asian Islam, Berkeley, CA, 1984, pp. 255–89.Google Scholar
Rocher, R., Orientalism, Poetry, and the Milennium: The Checkered Life of Nathaniel Brassey Halhed, 1751–1830, Delhi, 1987.Google Scholar
Rothschild, E., ‘Global Commerce and the Question of Sovereignty in the Eighteenth Century Provinces’, Modern Intellectual History, 1 (2004), pp. 3–25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roy, B. K., The Career and Achievements of Maharajah Nandakumar, Dewan of Bengal (1705–75), Calcutta, 1969.Google Scholar
Said, E., Orientalism, New York, 1978.Google Scholar
Sanial, S. C., ‘The History of the Calcutta Madrassa (2 Parts)’, Bengal Past and Present, 8 (1914), pp. 83–112, 225–51.Google Scholar
Schwartz, S. B. (ed.), Implicit Understandings. Observing, Reporting and Reflecting on the Encounters Between Europeans and Other Peoples in the Early Modern Era, Cambridge, 1994.Google Scholar
Sen, N., ‘Warren Hastings and British Sovereign Authority in Bengal’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 25 (1997), pp. 59–81.CrossRef
Sen, S., ‘Colonial Frontiers of the Georgian State – East India Company Rule in India’, Journal of Historical Sociology, 7 (1994), pp. 368–92.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sen, S.Empire of Free Trade: The East India Company and the Making of the Colonial Marketplace, Philadelphia, 1998.Google Scholar
Sen, S.Distant Sovereignty: Nationalism, Imperialism, and the Origins of British India, New York, 2002.Google Scholar
Sengupta, J. C., West Bengal District Gazetteers: West Dinajpur, Calcutta, 1965.Google Scholar
Siddiqi, N. A., ‘The Faujdar and Faujdari under the Mughals’, Medieval India Quarterly, 4 (1961), pp. 22–35.Google Scholar
Siddiqi, N. A.Land Revenue Administration Under the Mughals, 1700–1750, Delhi, 1970.Google Scholar
Singha, R., A Despotism of Law: Crime and Justice in Early Colonial India, Delhi, 1998.Google Scholar
Singha, R. ‘Civil Authority and Due Process: Colonial Criminal Justice in the Banaras Zamindari, 1781–95’, in Anderson, M. R. and Guha, S. (eds.), Changing Concepts of Rights and Justice in South Asia, Delhi, 2000, pp. 30–81.Google Scholar
Sinha, N. K., The Economic History of Bengal, 3 vols., Calcutta, 1956–70.
Sinha, S., Pandits in a Changing Environment: Centres of Sanskrit Learning in Nineteenth-Century Bengal, Calcutta, 1993.Google Scholar
Smith, A., in Skinner, A. S. (ed.), The Wealth of Nations, Books IV–V, London, 1999, first edition 1776.Google Scholar
Spear, T. G. P., The Nabobs: A Study of the Social Life of the English in Eighteenth-Century India, London, 1963.Google Scholar
Spear, T. G. P.Master of Bengal: Clive and his India, London, 1975.Google Scholar
Stein, B., ‘State Formation and Economy Reconsidered’, Modern Asian Studies, 19 (1985), pp. 387–413.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stein, B.Thomas Munro: The Origins of the Colonial State and His Vision of Empire, Oxford, 1986.Google Scholar
Stokes, E., The English Utilitarians in India, 1st edn, 1959, repr. New Delhi, 1982.Google Scholar
Stone, L. (ed.), An Imperial State at War: Britain from 1689 to 1815, London, 1994.Google Scholar
Storey, C. A., Persian Literature. A Bio-bibliographical Survey, 3 vols., London, 1927.Google Scholar
Subramanyam, S., ‘Frank Submissions: The Company and the Mughals Between Sir Thomas Roe and Sir William Norris’, in Bowen, , Lincoln, and Rigby, (eds.), The Worlds of the East India Company, Woodbridge, 2002, pp. 69–96.
Suleri, S., The Rhetoric of British India, Chicago, 1992.
Sutherland, L., The East India Company in Eighteenth-Century Politics, Oxford, 1952.Google Scholar
Sutherland, L.‘New Evidence on the Nandakuma Trial’, English Historical Review, 72 (1957), pp. 438–65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Teltscher, K., India Inscribed: European and British Writing on India, 1600–1800, Oxford, 1995.Google Scholar
Tracy, J. D., ‘Asian Despotism? Mughal Government as Seen from the Dutch East India Company Factory in Surat’, Journal of Early Modern History 3, 3 (1999), pp. 256–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Travers, R., ‘ “The Real Value of the Lands.” The British, the Nawabs, and the Land Tax in Bengal’, Modern Asian Studies, 38 (2004), pp. 17–58.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Travers, R.‘Ideology and Expansion in Bengal, 1757–1772’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 33 (2005), pp. 7–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tribe, K., Land, Labour and Economic Discourse, London, 1978.Google Scholar
Washbrook, D. A., ‘Progress and Problems. South Asian Economic and Social History c. 1750–1830’, Modern Asian Studies, (1985), pp. 57–91.Google Scholar
Washbrook, D. A. ‘The Two Faces of Colonialism: India, 1818–1860’, in Porter, A. (ed.), The Nineteenth Century. Oxford History of the British Empire, vol. 3, Oxford, 1999, pp. 395–421.Google Scholar
Weitzman, S., Warren Hastings and Philip Francis, Manchester, 1929.Google Scholar
Whelan, F. G., Edmund Burke and India: Political Morality and Empire, Pittsburgh, PA, 1996.Google Scholar
Wilson, K., The Sense of the People: Politics, Culture and Imperialism in England, 1715–85, Cambridge, 1995.Google Scholar
Wilson, K.The Island Race: Englishness, Empire, and Gender in the Eighteenth Century, London, 2003.Google Scholar
Wink, A., Land and Sovereignty in India: Agrarian Society and Politics Under the Eighteenth-Century Maratha Svarajya, Cambridge, 1986.Google Scholar
Wrightson, K., Earthly Necessities. Economic Lives in Early Modern Britain, 1470–1750, Yale, 2000.Google Scholar
Yang, A., The Limited Raj: Agrarian Relations in Colonial India, Saran District 1793–1920, Berkeley, CA, 1989.Google Scholar
Akhtar, S., ‘The Role of the Zamindars in Bengal, 1707–72’. University of London, 1973.
Gordon-Parker, J., ‘The Directors of the East India Company, 1754–1790’, University of Edinburgh, 1977.
Gurney, J. D., ‘The Debts of the Nawab of Arcot, 1763–1776’, University of Oxford, 1968.
Lehmann, F. L., ‘The Eighteenth-Century Transition in India: Responses of Some Bihar Intellectuals’, University of Wisconsin, Madison, 1967.
Nichol, J. D., ‘The British in India: 1740–63. A Study in Imperial Expansion into Bengal’, University of Cambridge, 1976.
Stern, P., ‘ “One body Corporate and Politick”: the Growth of the East India Company-State in the Later Seventeenth Century’, Columbia University, 2004.
Wilson, J. E., ‘Governing Property, Making Law: Land, Local Society, and Colonial Discourse in Agrarian Bengal, c. 1785–1830’, University of Oxford, 2001.
,Anon., The Importance of British Dominion in India Compared to that in America, London, 1770.Google Scholar
,AnonNarrative of the Proceedings of the Provincial Council at Patna in the suit of Behader Beg against Nadara Begum; & of the Supreme Court of Judicature at Calcutta, In the suit of Nadara Begum against Behader Beg & others. And in the Criminal Prosecution instituted against Nadara Begum and her Accomplices for Forgery – Forming together what is generally called in Bengal THE PATNA CAUSE, London, 1780.Google Scholar
Asiatick Researches, vol. I, Calcutta, 1788, repr. London, 1801.
Blackstone, W., Commentaries on the Laws of England, 4 vols., London, 1826.
Bolts, W., Considerations on Indian Affairs Particularly Respecting the Present State of Bengal and its Dependencies, 3 vols., London, 1772–5.Google Scholar
Cobbett, W., The Parliamentary History of England from the Earliest Period to the year 1803, from which last-mentioned Epoch it is continued downwards in the work entititled, ‘Cobbett’s Parliamentary Debates', 36 vols., London, 1806–20.Google Scholar
Colebrooke, J. E., Digest of the Regulations and Laws, enacted by the Governor-General in Council for the Civil Government of the Territories under the Presidency of Bengal, arranged in alphabetical order, Calcutta, 1807.Google Scholar
Dow, A., The History of Hindostan, from the death of Akbar, to the complete settlement of the empire under Aurungzebe, 3 vols., London, 1768–72.Google Scholar
Francis, P., Original Minutes of the Governor-General and Council of Fort William on the settlement and collection of the Revenues of Bengal with a plan of settlement recommended to the Court of Directors, January 1776, London, 1782.Google Scholar
Ghulam Husain Khan Tabatabai, A Translation of Seir Mutaqherin, Or View of Modern Times, Haji Mustafa, Nota Manus (tr., ed.), 3 vols., Calcutta, 1789, repr. Calcutta, 1902–3.Google Scholar
Gladwin, F.(trans.), Ayeen Akbery, or the Institutes of the Emperor Akber, translated from the original Persian by F. Gladwin, 2 vols., London, 1800.Google Scholar
Gleig, G. R., Memoirs of Warren Hastings, 3 vols., London, 1841.Google Scholar
Halhed, N. B., Code of the Gentoo Laws: or Ordinations of the Pundits, London, 1776.Google Scholar
Hastings, W., in Banerjee, A. C. (ed.), Memoirs Relative to the State of India, Calcutta, 1978.Google Scholar
Hodges, W., Travels to India, During the Years 1780, 1781, 1782, and 1783, 2nd edn, London, 1794.Google Scholar
Howell, T. B., A Complete Collection of State Trials and Proceedings for High Treason and Other Crimes and Misdemeanors from the earliest period to the present time, with notes and other illustrations, 33 vols., London, 1809–26.Google Scholar
Malcolm, J., Life of Robert, Lord Clive, 3 vols., London, 1836.Google Scholar
Mill, J. S., Considerations on Representative Government, London, 1856.Google Scholar
Montesquieu, C. de S. (1st English edn, 1750), in Cohler, A. M., Miller, B. C. and Stone, H. S. (eds.), Spirit of the Laws, Cambridge, 1989.Google Scholar
Patullo, H., An Essay upon the Cultivation of the Lands, and Improvements of the Revenues of Bengal, London, 1772.Google Scholar
Pownall, T., The Right, Interest, and Duty of Government, As Concerned in the Affairs of the East Indies, 1st edn, 1773, 2nd edn, London, 1781.Google Scholar
Scrafton, Luke, Reflections on the Government of Indostan. With a Short Sketch of the History of Bengal, from the years 1739 to 1756, and an Account of the English Affairs to 1758, 1st edn, Edinburgh, 1761, 2nd edn, London, 1763.Google Scholar
Smith, A., in Skinner, A. S. (ed.), The Wealth of Nations, Books IV–V, London, 1999.Google Scholar
Steuart, J., An Inquiry into the Principles of Political Oeconomy (1st edn, 1767), Skinner, A. S. (ed.), 2 vols., Edinburgh, 1966.Google Scholar
Steuart, J.The Principles of Money Applied to the Present State of the Coin in Bengal, London, 1772.Google Scholar
Vansittart, H., Narrative of Transactions in Bengal, London, 1766, Bannerjee, A. C. and Ghosh, B. K. (eds.), repr. Calcutta, 1976.Google Scholar
Verelst, H., View of the Rise, Progress and Present State of the English Government in Bengal, London, 1772.Google Scholar
Watts, W., Memoirs of the Revolution in Bengal, London, 1760, repr. Calcutta, 1988.
Bannerjee, A. C. (ed.), Indian Constitutional Documents, Calcutta, 1945–6.Google Scholar
Burke, E., in Bromwich, D. (ed.), On Empire, Liberty and Reform: Speeches and Letters, New Haven, CT, 2000.Google Scholar
Calendar of Persian Correspondence, 11 vols., Calcutta, 1911–69.
Cannon, J. (ed.), The Letters of Junius, Oxford, 1978.Google Scholar
Eliot, H. M. and Dowson, J. (eds.), History of India by its own Historians. The Muhammadan Period, 8 vols., Calcutta, 1867–77.Google Scholar
Fieldhouse, D. K. and Madden, F. (eds.), The Classical Period of the First British Empire, 1689–1783. Select Documents on the Constitutional History of the British Empire and Commonwealth, 2 vols., London, 1985.Google Scholar
Firminger, W. K. (ed.), Bengal District Records. Midnapur, 1768–70, Calcutta, 1915.Google Scholar
Firminger, W. K. (ed.), ‘Historical Introduction to the Bengal Portion of the Fifth Report’, The Fifth Report from the Select Committee of the House of Commons on the Affairs of the East India Company, 28 July, 1812, 3 vols., London, 1917–18.Google Scholar
Firminger, W. K. (ed.), Proceedings of the Controlling Council of Revenue at Murshidabad, 12 vols., Calcutta, 1919–24.Google Scholar
Forrest, G. W., Selections from the Letters, Dispatches and Other State Papers, Preserved in the Foreign Department of the Government of India, 1772–85, 3 vols., Calcutta, 1890.Google Scholar
Forrest, G. W. (ed.), Historical Documents of British India, Warren Hastings, 2 vols., New Delhi, 1985.Google Scholar
Fort William-India House Correspondence, and Other Contemporary Papers Relating Thereto, 21 vols., National Archives of India, Delhi, 1949–85.
Khan, Shayesta (ed.), Bihar and Bengal in the Eighteenth Century: A Critical Edition and Translation of Muzaffarnama, a Contemporary History, Patna, 1992.Google Scholar
Lambert, S., House of Commons Sessional Papers of the Eighteenth Century, 145 vols., Wilmington, DE, 1975.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J. (ed.), in Langford, P. (gen. ed.), Writings and Speeches of Edmund Burke. Vol. V. India: Madras and Bengal, 1774–1785, Oxford, 1981.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J. (ed.), in Langford, P. (gen. ed.), Writings and Speeches of Edmund Burke. Vol. VI. India: the Launching of the Hastings Impeachment, 1786–8, Oxford, 1991.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J. (ed.), in Langford, P. (gen. ed.), Writings and Speeches of Edmund Burke. Vol. VII. India: The Hastings Trial, 1789–94, Oxford, 2000.Google Scholar
Proceedings of the Committee of Circuit at Krishnanagar, Bengal Record Department, Calcutta, 1915.
Reports from Committees of the House of Commons, 1715—1801, 15 vols., London, 1803.
Sarkar, J. (ed. tr.), Bengal Nawabs, 1st edn, 1952, repr. Calcutta, 1985.Google Scholar
Sinha, N. K. (ed.), Selections from District Records. Midnapur Salt Papers. Hijli and Tamluk, 1781–1807, Calcutta, 1984.Google Scholar
Alam, M., The Crisis of Empire in Mughal North India: Awadh and the Punjab, 1707–48, Delhi, 1986.Google Scholar
Alam, M.The Languages of Political Islam: India, 1200–1800, Chicago, 2004.Google Scholar
Alam, M. and Alavi, S., A European Experience of the Mughal Orient, New Delhi, 2001.Google Scholar
Alam, M. and Subrahmanyam, S. (eds.), The Mughal State, 1526–1750, Delhi, 1998.Google Scholar
Alavi, S., ‘The Company Army and Rural Society: The Invalid thana, 1780–1830’, Modern Asian Studies, 27 (1993), pp. 147–78.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alavi, S.The Sepoys and the Company. Tradition and Transition in Northern India, 1770–1830, Delhi, 1995.Google Scholar
Alavi, S. (ed.), The Eighteenth Century in India, Delhi, 2002.Google Scholar
Armitage, D., The Ideological Origins of the British Empire, Cambridge, 2000.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Armitage, D. and Michael, B. (eds.), The British Atlantic World, 1500–1800, Houndsmill, UK, 2002.Google Scholar
Ascoli, F. D., The Early Revenue History of Bengal and the Fifth Report, Oxford, 1917.Google Scholar
Aspinall, A., Cornwallis in Bengal; the Administrative and Judicial Reforms of Lord Cornwallis in Bengal, Together with Accounts of the Commercial Expansion of the East India Company, 1786–1793, and the Foundation of Penang, 1st edn, 1937, repr. Delhi, 1987.Google Scholar
Athar Ali, M., ‘Recent Theories of Eighteenth Century India’, Indian Historical Review, 13 (1986–7), pp. 102–10.Google Scholar
Athar Ali, M.The Mughal Nobility under Aurangzeb, 2nd edn, New Delhi, 1997.Google Scholar
Bailyn, B., The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution, Cambridge, MA, 1967.Google Scholar
Ballhatchet, K., Race, Sex, and Class under the Raj: Imperial Attitudes and Policies and their Critics, 1793–1905, London, 1980.Google Scholar
Barber, W. J., British Economic Thought and India, 1600–1858: A Study in the History of Development Economics, Oxford, 1975.Google Scholar
Barnett, R., North India Between Empires: Awadh, the Mughals, and the British, 1720–1801, Berkeley, CA, 1980.Google Scholar
Barrow, I. J. and Haynes, D. E., ‘The Colonial Transition: South Asia, 1780–1840’, Modern Asian Studies, 38 (2004), pp. 469–78.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bayly, C. A., Rulers, Townsmen, and Bazaars: North Indian Society in the Age of British Expansion, 1770–1870, Cambridge, 1983.Google Scholar
Bayly, C. A.Indian Society and the Making of the British Empire. New Cambridge History of India, 2.1, Cambridge, 1988.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bayly, C. A.Imperial Meridian: the British Empire and the World, 1780–1830, London, 1989.Google Scholar
Bayly, C. A. (ed.), The Raj: India and the British, 1600–1990, London, 1990.Google Scholar
Bayly, C. A.Empire and Information: Intelligence Gathering and Social Communication in India, 1780–1870, Cambridge, 1997.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bayly, C. A.Origins of Nationality in South Asia: Patriotism and Ethical Government in the Making of Modern India, New Delhi, 1998.Google Scholar
Bayly, C. A.‘The First Age of Global Expansion’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 28 (1998), pp. 29–47.Google Scholar
Bayly, C. A.The Birth of the Modern World, 1780–1914, Oxford, 2004.Google Scholar
Bearce, G. D., British Attitudes to India 1784–1858, Oxford, 1961.Google Scholar
Benton, L., ‘Colonial Law and Cultural Difference: Jurisdictional Politics and the Formation of the Colonial State’, Comparative Studies in Society and History, 41 (1999), pp. 563–88.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bhattacharya, S., The East India Company and the Economy of Bengal, 1704–1740, London, 1954.Google Scholar
Blake, S., ‘The Patrimonial–Bureaucratic Empire of the Mughals’, Journal of Asian Studies, 39 (1979), pp. 77–94.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bose, S., Peasant Labour and Colonial Capital. Rural Bengal Since 1770. New Cambridge History of India, 3.2, Cambridge, 1993.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bose, S. and Jalal, A., Modern South Asia: History, Culture, Political Economy, London, 1998.Google Scholar
Bowen, H. V., ‘A Question of Sovereignty? The Bengal Land Revenue Issue, 1765–7’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 16 (1988), pp. 155–76.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowen, H. V.Revenue and Reform: The Indian Problem in British Politics, 1757–1773, Cambridge, 1991.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowen, H. V.‘British Conceptions of Global Empire, 1756–83’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 26 (1998), pp. 1–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowen, H. V.The Business of Empire. The East India Company in Imperial Britain, 1756–1833, Cambridge, 2006.Google Scholar
Bowen, H. V. ‘British India, 1765–1813: the Metropolitan Context’, in Marshall, P. J. (ed.), The Eighteenth Century. Oxford History of the British Empire, vol. 2, Oxford, 1998, pp. 530–51.Google Scholar
Bowen, H. V. ‘Tea, Tribute and the East India Company, c. 1750–1775’, in Taylor, S., Connors, R. and Jones, C. (eds.), Hanoverian Britain and Empire. Essays in Memory of Philip Lawson, Woodbridge, 1998, pp. 158–76.Google Scholar
Bowen, H. V., Lincoln, M. and Rigby, N. (eds.), The Worlds of the East India Company, Woodbridge, UK, 2002.Google Scholar
Bowyer, T. H., ‘India and the Personal Finances of Philip Francis’, English Historical Review, 110 (1995), pp. 122–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowyer, T. H.‘Junius, Philip Francis, & Parliamentary Reform’, Albion, 27 (1995), pp. 397–418.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Breckenridge, C. and Veer, P. (eds.), Orientalism and the Postcolonial Predicament: Perspectives on South Asia, Philadelphia, 1993.Google Scholar
Brewer, J., Party Ideology and Popular Politics at the Accession of George III, Cambridge, 1976.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brewer, J.The Sinews of Power: War, Money, and the English State, 1688–1783, London, 1989.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burgess, G., The Politics of the Ancient Constitution. An Introduction to English Political Thought 1603–42, London, 1992.Google Scholar
Busteed, H. E., Echoes from Old Calcutta, Being Chiefly Reminiscences from the Days of Warren Hastings, Francis and Impey, Calcutta, 1888.Google Scholar
Cain, P. J. and Hopkins, A. G., British Imperialism: Innovation and Expansion, 1688–1914, London, 1993.Google Scholar
Calkins, P., ‘The Formation of a Regionally Orientated Ruling Group in Bengal’, Journal of Asian Studies, 29 (1970), pp. 799–806.Google Scholar
Cannon, G. H., Oriental Jones: a Biography of Sir William Jones, 1746–1794, Bombay, 1964.Google Scholar
Chakrabarti, S., ‘Intransigent Shroffs and the English East India Company's Currency Reforms, 1757–1800’, Indian Economic and Social History Review, 34 (1997), pp. 69–94.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chatterjee, I., Gender, Slavery, and Law in Colonial India, New Delhi, 1999.
Chatterjee, K., Merchants, Politics, and Society in Early Modern India: Bihar, 1733–1820, Leiden, 1996.Google Scholar
Chatterjee, K.‘History as Self-Representation. The Recasting of a Political Tradition in Bengal and Bihar’, Modern Asian Studies, 32 (1998), pp. 913–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chatterji, N., Verelst's Rule in India, Allahabad, 1939.Google Scholar
Chaudhuri, K. N., The Trading World of Asia and the English East India Company, 1660–1760, Cambridge, 1978.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chaudhuri, S. (ed.), Calcutta: The Living City, 2 vols., Calcutta, 1990.Google Scholar
Chaudhury, S., From Prosperity to Decline: Eighteenth-Century Bengal, New Delhi, 1995.Google Scholar
Chaudhury, S.The Prelude to Empire. Plassey Revolution of 1757, New Delhi, 2001.Google Scholar
Chowdhuri-Zilly, A. N., The Vagrant Peasant: Agrarian Distress in Bengal, 1770–1830, Wiesbaden, 1982.Google Scholar
Cohn, B. S., ‘Political Systems in Eighteenth-Century India’, Journal of American Oriental Society, 82 (1962), pp. 312–20.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cohn, B. S.An Anthropologist Among the Historians and Other Essays, Delhi, 1987.Google Scholar
Cohn, B. S.Colonialism and its Forms of Knowledge: The British in India, Princeton, 1996.Google Scholar
Colley, L., Britons: Forging the Nation, 1707–1837, New Haven, CT, 1992.Google Scholar
Colley, L.Captives: Britain, Empire, and the World, 1600–1850, London, 2002.Google Scholar
Collingham, E. M., Imperial Bodies: The Physical Experience of the Raj, c. 1800–1947, Polity Press, Cambridge, 2001.Google Scholar
Curley, D. L., ‘Maharaja Krisnacandra, Hinduism, and Kingship in the Contact Zone of Bengal’, in Barnett, R. B. (ed.), Rethinking Early Modern India, New Delhi, 2002, pp. 85–118.Google Scholar
Curley, T. M., Sir Robert Chambers. Law, Literature, and Empire in the Age of Johnson, Madison, WI, 1998.Google Scholar
Dalrymple, W., White Mughals: Love and Betrayal in Eighteenth-Century India, London, 2002.Google Scholar
Daniels, C. and Kennedy, M. V., Negotiated Empires: Centers and Peripheries in the Americas, 1500–1820, London, 2002.Google Scholar
Dasgupta, A. K., The Faqir and Sannyasi Uprisings, Calcutta, 1992.Google Scholar
Datta, R., Society, Economy, and the Market: Commercialization in Rural Bengal, c. 1760–1800, New Delhi, 2000.Google Scholar
Davies, C. C., Warren Hastings and Oudh, London, 1939.Google Scholar
Derrett, J. D. M., ‘Nandakumar's Forgery’, English Historical Review, 245 (1960), pp. 223–39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Derrett, J. D. M.Religion, Law and the State in India, London, 1968.Google Scholar
Derrett, J. D. M. ‘Justice, Equity and Good Conscience’, in Anderson, J. N. D. (ed.), Changing Law in Developing Countries, London, 1963, pp. 114–53.Google Scholar
Dewey, C., Anglo-Indian Attitudes: the Mind of the Indian Civil Service, London, 1993.Google Scholar
Dickinson, H. T., Liberty and Property: Political Ideology in Eighteenth-Century Britain, London, 1979.Google Scholar
Dirks, N. B., The Hollow Crown: Ethnohistory of an Indian Kingdom, Cambridge, 1987.Google Scholar
Dirks, N. B.Castes of Mind: Colonialism and the Making of Modern India, Princeton, 2001.Google Scholar
Dirks, N. B.The Scandal of Empire. India and the Creation of Imperial Britain, Cambridge, MA, 2006.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dodwell, H. H., Dupleix and Clive: The Beginning of Empire, London, 1920.
Dodwell, H. H. (ed.), ‘The Development of Sovereignty in British India’, Cambridge History of India, vol. 5: British India, 1497–1858, Cambridge, 1929, pp. 589–608.Google Scholar
Drayton, R., Nature's Government: Science, Imperial Britain and the Improvement of the World, Yale, 2000.Google Scholar
Eaton, R. M., The Rise of Islam on the Bengal Frontier, 1204–1760, Berkeley, CA, 1993.Google Scholar
Ehrman, J., The Younger Pitt, 3 vols., London, 1969–96.Google Scholar
Ellegard, A., Who Was Junius?, Stockholm, 1962.Google Scholar
Embree, A. T., Charles Grant and British Rule in India, New York, 1962.Google Scholar
Evans, E., The Forging of the Modern State, 3rd edn, London, 2003.Google Scholar
Feiling, K., Warren Hastings, London, 1954.Google Scholar
Firminger, W. K., ‘Selections from the Note Books of Justice John Hyde’, Bengal Past and Present, 3 (1909), pp. 27–64.Google Scholar
Firminger, W. K. (ed.), ‘Historical Introduction to the Bengal Portion of the Fifth Report’, The Fifth Report from the Select Committee of the House of Commons on the Affairs of the East India Company, 28 July, 1812, 3 vols., London, 1917–18.Google Scholar
Fisch, J., Cheap Lives and Dear Limbs: The British Transformation of the Bengal Criminal Law, 1769–1877, Wiesbaden, 1983.Google Scholar
Fisher, M. H., A Clash of Cultures. Awadh, the British and the Mughals, Delhi, 1987.Google Scholar
Fisher, M. H.The First Indian Author in English. Dean Mahomed (1759–1851) in India, Ireland and England, Delhi, 1996.Google Scholar
Fisher, M. H.Counterflows to Colonialism: Indian Travellers and Settlers in Britain, 1600–1857, Delhi, 2004.Google Scholar
Fleischer, Cornell., Bureaucrat and Intellectual in the Ottoman Empire. The Historian Mustafa Ali (1541–1600), Princeton, 1986.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fletcher, F. T. H., Montesquieu and English Politics (1750–1800), London, 1939.Google Scholar
Forrest, G. W., The Administration of Warren Hastings, 1772–1785, Calcutta, 1892.Google Scholar
Forrest, G. W.Life of Lord Clive. 2 vols., London, 1918.Google Scholar
Foster, R. F., Modern Ireland, 1600–1972, New York, 1988.Google Scholar
Furber, H., John Company at Work, a Study of European Expansion in India in the Late Eighteenth Century, Cambridge, MA, 1948.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
George, M. D., English Political Caricature; A Study of Opinion and Propaganda, Oxford, 1959.Google Scholar
Ghosh, D., Family, Sex and Intimacy in British India, Cambridge, 2006.Google Scholar
Gordon, S., The Marathas 1600–1818. The New Cambridge History of India, vol. 2.4, Cambridge, 1993.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gould, E., The Persistence of Empire: British Political Culture in the American Revolution, Chapel Hill, NC, 2000.Google Scholar
Greene, J. P., Peripheries and Center: Constitutional Development in the Extended Politics of the British Empire and the United States, 1607–1788, Athens, GA, 1986.Google Scholar
Greene, J. P. ‘Empire and Identity from the Glorious Revolution to the American Revolution’, in Marshall, P. J. (ed.), Oxford History of the British Empire, vol. 2. The Eighteenth Century, Oxford, 1998, pp. 208–31.Google Scholar
Grewal, J. S., Muslim Rule in India: The Assessment of British Historians, Oxford, 1970.Google Scholar
Grover, B. R., ‘Nature of Land Rights in Mughal India’, Indian Economic and Social History Review, 1 (1963), pp. 2–15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guha, R., A Rule of Property for Bengal: An Essay on the Idea of Permanent Settlement, Paris, 1963.Google Scholar
Guha, R.Dominance Without Hegemony. History and Power in Colonial India, Cambridge, MA, 1997.Google Scholar
Guha, S., ‘Wrongs and Rights in the Maratha Country: Antiquity, Custom, and Power in Eighteenth Century India’, in Anderson, M. R. and Guha, S. (eds.), Changing Concepts of Rights & Justice in South Asia, New Delhi, 2000, pp. 14–29.Google Scholar
Gupta, B. K., Sirajudaullah and the East India Company, 1756–7: Background to the Foundation of British Power in India, Leiden, 1966.Google Scholar
Habib, I., The Agrarian System of Mughal India: 1556–1707, 2nd revised edn, Delhi, 1999.Google Scholar
Hampsher-Monk, I., ‘Civic Humanism & Parliamentary Reform; the Case of the Society of the Friends of the People’, Journal of British Studies, 28 (1979), pp. 70–89.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hardy, P., Historians of Medieval India. Studies in Indo-Muslim Historical Writing, London, 1960.Google Scholar
Harling, P., The Waning of ‘Old Corruption’: The Politics of Economical Reform in Britain, 1779–1846, Oxford, 1996.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harling, P.The Modern British State. An Historical Introduction, Polity Press, Cambridge, 2001.Google Scholar
Harlow, V. T., The Founding of the Second British Empire, 1763–1793, 2 vols., London, 1952–64.Google Scholar
Hasan, F., State and Locality in Mughal India. Power Relations in Western India c. 1572–1730, Cambridge, 2004.Google Scholar
Hollingbery, R. H., The Zemindary Settlement of Bengal, Calcutta, 1879.Google Scholar
Holzman, J. M., The Nabobs in England: A Study of the Returned Anglo-Indian, 1760–1785, New York, 1926.Google Scholar
Hunter, W. W., Annals of Rural Bengal, Calcutta, 1868.Google Scholar
Hussain, N., The Jurisprudence of Emergency: Colonialism and the Rule of Law, Ann Arbor, MI, 2003.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Impey, E. B., Memoirs of Sir Elijah Impey, London, 1857.Google Scholar
Irschick, E., Dialogue and History: Constructing South India, 1795–1895, Berkeley, CA, 1994.Google Scholar
Islam, S., The Permanent Settlement in Bengal: A Study of its Local Operation, 1790–1819, Dacca, 1979.Google Scholar
Jain, M. P., Outlines of Indian Legal History, 5th edn, Delhi, 1990.Google Scholar
Jasanoff, M., Edge of Empire: Lives, Culture and Conquest in the East, 1750–1850, New York, 2005.Google Scholar
Kent, S. K., Gender and Power in Britain, 1640–1990, London, 1999.Google Scholar
Khan, A. M., The Transition in Bengal, 1756–75: A study of Muhammad Reza Khan, Cambridge, 1969.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Khan, S., A Biography of Ali Ibrahim Khan (c. 1740–93): A Mughal Noble in the Service of the British East India Company, Patna, 1992.Google Scholar
Kidd, C., British Identities Before Nationalism. Ethnicity and Nationhood in the Atlantic World, Cambridge, 1999.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Koebner, R., ‘Despot and Despotism; Vicissitudes of a Political Term’, Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, 14 (1951), pp. 275–302.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kolff, D. H. A., ‘End of the Ancien Regime: Colonial War in India, 1798–1818’, in Moor, J. A. and Wesseling, H. L. (eds.), Imperialism and War, Leiden, 1989, pp. 22–49.Google Scholar
Kopf, D., British Orientalism and the Bengal Renaissance; the Dynamics of Indian modernization, 1773–1835, Berkeley, CA, 1969.Google Scholar
Kramnick, I., Bolingbroke and His Circle: The Politics of Nostalgia in the Age of Walpole, Cambridge, MA, 1968.Google Scholar
Langford, P., A Polite and Commercial People: England 1727–1783, Oxford, 1989.Google Scholar
Langford, P.Public Life and the Propertied Englishman, Oxford, 1991.Google Scholar
Lawson, P., ‘Parliament and the First East India Inquiry, 1767’, Parliamentary History, 1 (1982), pp. 99–114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lawson, P. and Lenman, B., ‘Robert Clive, the “Black Jagir”, and British Politics’, Historical Journal, 26 (1983), pp. 801–29.Google Scholar
Lawson, P. and Philips, J., ‘Our Execrable Banditti: Perceptions of Nabobs in Mid-Eighteenth-Century Britain’, Albion, 16 (1984), pp. 225–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lieberman, D., The Province of Legislation Determined: Legal Theory in Eighteenth-Century Britain, Cambridge, 1987.Google Scholar
Lobban, M., The Common Law and English Jurisprudence, 1760–1850, Oxford, 1991.Google Scholar
Losty, J. P., Calcutta, City of Palaces. A Survey of the City in the Days of the East India Company, 1690–1858, London, 1990.Google Scholar
McKracken, D., Junius and Philip Francis, Boston, MA, 1979.Google Scholar
McLane, J. R., Land and Local Kingship in Eighteenth-Century Bengal, Cambridge, 1993.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maier, C. S., Among Empires: American Ascendancy and its Predecessors, Cambridge, MA, 2006.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Majumdar, N., Justice and Police in Bengal, 1765–1793: A Study of the Nizamat in Decline, Calcutta, 1960.Google Scholar
Marshall, P., ‘British North America 1760–1815’, in Marshall, P. J. (ed.), The Eighteenth Century. Oxford History of the British Empire, vol. 2, Oxford 1998, pp. 372–93.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, P. J., ‘Nobkissen versus Hastings’, Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 27 (1964), pp. 382–96.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, P. J.The Impeachment of Warren Hastings, London, 1965.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J.‘Indian Officials Under the East India Company in Eighteenth-Century Bengal’, Bengal Past and Present, 84 (1965), pp. 99–102.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J.Problems of Empire: Britain and India, 1757–1813, London, 1968.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J.‘British Expansion in India in the Eighteenth Century: A Historical Revision’, History, 60 (1975), pp. 28–43.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, P. J.East Indian Fortunes: The British in Bengal in the Eighteenth Century, Oxford, 1976.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J.A Free Though Conquering People: Britain and Asia in the Eighteenth Century, An inaugural lecture in the Rhodes Chair of Imperial History delivered at King's College, London, 1981.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J.Bengal: The British Bridgehead, Eastern India, 1740–1828. New Cambridge History of India, 2.2, Cambridge, 1987.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J.‘Empire and Authority in the Later Eighteenth Century’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 15 (1987), pp. 105–23.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, P. J. (ed.), ‘ “Cornwallis Triumphant”: War in India and the British Public in the Late Eighteenth Century’, Trade and Conquest: Studies on the Rise of British Dominance in India, Aldershot, UK, 1993.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J.‘British Society and the East India Company’, Modern Asian Studies, 31 (1997), pp. 89–108.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, P. J. (ed.), ‘The British in Asia: Trade to Dominion, 1700–1765’, The Eighteenth Century. Oxford History of the British Empire, Vol. 2, Oxford, 1998, pp. 487–507.
Marshall, P. J.‘The Making of an Imperial Icon; the Case of Warren Hastings’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 27 (1999), pp. 1–16.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, P. J.‘The White Town of Calcutta Under the Rule of the East India Company’, Modern Asian Studies, 34 (2000), pp. 307–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, P. J.‘Britain and the World in the Eighteenth Century, III: Britain and India’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 6th Series, 10 (2000), pp. 1–16.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, P. J.‘Britain and the World in the Eighteenth Century: IV. The Turning Outwards of Britain’, TRHS, 6th Series, 11 (2001), pp. 1–15.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J. (ed.), The Eighteenth Century in Indian History: Evolution or Revolution?, Delhi, 2003.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J. ‘Warren Hastings as Scholar and Patron’, in Whiteman, A., Bromley, J. S. and Dickson, P. G. M. (eds.), Statesmen, Scholars, and Merchants: Essays Presented to Dame Lucy Sutherland, Oxford, 1973, pp. 242–62.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J. ‘The Moral Swing to the East: British Humanitarianism, India and the West Indies’, in Ballhatchet, K. and Harrison, John (eds.), East India Company Studies. Papers Presented to Professor Sir Cyril Philips, Hong Kong, 1986.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J. ‘Parliament and Property Rights in the Late Eighteenth Century British Empire’, in Brewer, J. and Staves, S. (eds.), Early Modern Conceptions of Property, London, 1995, pp. 530–43.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J. and Williams, G., The Great Map of Mankind. British Perceptions of the World in the Age of Enlightenment, London, 1982.Google Scholar
Mehta, U., Liberalism and Empire. A Study in Nineteenth Century British Liberal Thought, Chicago, 1999.Google Scholar
Metcalf, B. D., ‘Too little, too much: reflections on Muslims in the History of India’, Journal of Asian Studies, 54 (1995), pp. 951–67.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Metcalf, T. R., Ideologies of the Raj. New Cambridge History of India, 3.4, Cambridge, 1994.Google Scholar
Misra, B. B., The Central Administration of the East India Company, 1773–1834, Manchester, 1959.Google Scholar
Misra, B. B.The Judicial Administration of the East India Company in Bengal, 1765–1782, Delhi, 1961.Google Scholar
Monckton-Jones, M. E., Warren Hastings in Bengal, Oxford, 1918.Google Scholar
Moreland, W. H., The Agrarian System of Moslem India, Cambridge, 1929, repr. Delhi, 1994.Google Scholar
Mukhia, H., Perspectives on Medieval History, Delhi, 1993.Google Scholar
Muthu, S., Enlightenment Against Empire, Princeton, 2003, p. 10.Google Scholar
Nandy, S. C., Life and Times of Cantoo Baboo: The Banian of Warren Hastings, 2 vols., Calcutta, 1978.
Nandy, S. C.‘A Second Look at the Notes of Justice John Hyde’, Bengal Past and Present, 97 (1978), pp. 24–34.Google Scholar
O'Brien, P. K., ‘The Political Economy of British Taxation, 1660–1815’, Economic History Review, 2nd series, 41 (1988), pp. 1–32.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O' Brien, P. K. ‘Inseparable Connections: Trade, Economy, Fiscal State, and the Expansion of Empire, 1688–1815’, in Marshall, P. J. (ed.), The Eighteenth Century. Oxford History of the British Empire, vol. 2, Oxford, 1998, pp. 53–77.Google Scholar
O'Gorman, F., The Rise of Party in England. The Rockingham Whigs 1760–82, London, 1975.Google Scholar
O'Gorman, F.The Long Eighteenth Century. British Political and Social History 1688–1832, London, 1997.Google Scholar
O'Malley, L. S. S., Bengal District Gazetteer: Midnapore, Calcutta, 1911.Google Scholar
Pagden, A., Spanish Imperialism and the Political Imagination. Studies in European and Spanish American Social and Political Theory, 1513–1830, New Haven, CT, 1990.Google Scholar
Pagden, A.Lords of All the World: Ideologies of Empire in Spain, Britain and France c. 1500–c. 1800, New Haven, CT, 1995.Google Scholar
Pandey, B. N., The Introduction of English Law into India: The Career of Elijah Impey in Bengal, 1774–1783, Bombay, 1967.Google Scholar
Parkes, J. and Merivale, H., Memoirs of Sir Philip Francis, K. C. B., with Correspondence and Journals, 2 vols., London, 1867.Google Scholar
Parthasarathi, P., ‘Merchants and the Rise of Colonialism’, in Stein, B. and Subramanyam, S. (eds.), Institutions and Economic Change in South Asia, Delhi, 1996, pp. 85–104.Google Scholar
Peers, D. M., Between Mars and Mammon: Colonial Armies and the Garrison State in India, 1819–1835, London, 1995.Google Scholar
Perlin, F., ‘State Formation Reconsidered, part 2’. Modern Asian Studies, 19 (1985), pp. 415–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pitts, J., A Turn to Empire. The Rise of Imperial Liberalism in Britain and France, Princeton, 2005.Google Scholar
Pocock, J. G. A., The Ancient Constitution and the Feudal Law: A Study of English Historical Thought in the Seventeenth Century, Cambridge, 1957, repr. 1987.Google Scholar
Pocock, J. G. A.Politics, Language and Time: Essays on Political Thought and History, New York, 1971.Google Scholar
Pocock, J. G. A.The Machiavellian Moment; Florentine Political Thought and the Atlantic Republican Tradition, Princeton, 1975.Google Scholar
Pocock, J. G. A.Virtue, Commerce, and History: Essays on Political Thought and History, Chiefly in the Eighteenth Century, Cambridge, 1985.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pocock, J. G. A. (ed.), ‘Political Thought in the English Speaking Atlantic, 1760–90; Part I, The Imperial Crisis’, The Varieties of English Political Thought 1500–1800, Cambridge, 1993, pp. 246–82.Google Scholar
Pocock, J. G. A.Barbarism and Religion. Vol. 2. Narratives of Civil Government, Cambridge, 1999.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ramsbotham, R. B., Studies in the Land Revenue History of Bengal, 1767–87, Oxford, 1926.Google Scholar
Ray, Rajat, ‘Colonial Penetration and the Initial Resistance’, Indian Historical Review, 12 (1985), pp. 22–41.Google Scholar
Ray, RajatThe Felt Community: Commonality and Mentality Before the Emergence of Indian Nationalism, Oxford, 2003.Google Scholar
Ray, R., ‘Indian Society and the Establishment of British Supremacy, 1765–1818,’ in Marshall, P. J. (ed.), The Eighteenth Century. Oxford History of the British Empire, vol. 2, Oxford, 1998, pp. 508–29.CrossRef
Ray, Ratnalekha, Change in Bengal Agrarian Society, c. 1760–1850, Calcutta, 1974.Google Scholar
Raychaudhuri, T., Bengal Under Akbar and Jahangir, an Introductory Study in Social History, Calcutta, 1953.Google Scholar
Richards, J. F., Document Forms for Official Orders of Appointment in the Mughal Empire, Cambridge, 1986.Google Scholar
Richards, J. F.The Mughal Empire, New Cambridge History of India, 1.5, Cambridge, 1993.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Richards, J. F. ‘Norms of Comportment Among Mughal Officers’, in Metcalf, B. D. (ed.), Moral Conduct and Authority: The Place of adab in South Asian Islam, Berkeley, CA, 1984, pp. 255–89.Google Scholar
Rocher, R., Orientalism, Poetry, and the Milennium: The Checkered Life of Nathaniel Brassey Halhed, 1751–1830, Delhi, 1987.Google Scholar
Rothschild, E., ‘Global Commerce and the Question of Sovereignty in the Eighteenth Century Provinces’, Modern Intellectual History, 1 (2004), pp. 3–25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roy, B. K., The Career and Achievements of Maharajah Nandakumar, Dewan of Bengal (1705–75), Calcutta, 1969.Google Scholar
Said, E., Orientalism, New York, 1978.Google Scholar
Sanial, S. C., ‘The History of the Calcutta Madrassa (2 Parts)’, Bengal Past and Present, 8 (1914), pp. 83–112, 225–51.Google Scholar
Schwartz, S. B. (ed.), Implicit Understandings. Observing, Reporting and Reflecting on the Encounters Between Europeans and Other Peoples in the Early Modern Era, Cambridge, 1994.Google Scholar
Sen, N., ‘Warren Hastings and British Sovereign Authority in Bengal’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 25 (1997), pp. 59–81.CrossRef
Sen, S., ‘Colonial Frontiers of the Georgian State – East India Company Rule in India’, Journal of Historical Sociology, 7 (1994), pp. 368–92.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sen, S.Empire of Free Trade: The East India Company and the Making of the Colonial Marketplace, Philadelphia, 1998.Google Scholar
Sen, S.Distant Sovereignty: Nationalism, Imperialism, and the Origins of British India, New York, 2002.Google Scholar
Sengupta, J. C., West Bengal District Gazetteers: West Dinajpur, Calcutta, 1965.Google Scholar
Siddiqi, N. A., ‘The Faujdar and Faujdari under the Mughals’, Medieval India Quarterly, 4 (1961), pp. 22–35.Google Scholar
Siddiqi, N. A.Land Revenue Administration Under the Mughals, 1700–1750, Delhi, 1970.Google Scholar
Singha, R., A Despotism of Law: Crime and Justice in Early Colonial India, Delhi, 1998.Google Scholar
Singha, R. ‘Civil Authority and Due Process: Colonial Criminal Justice in the Banaras Zamindari, 1781–95’, in Anderson, M. R. and Guha, S. (eds.), Changing Concepts of Rights and Justice in South Asia, Delhi, 2000, pp. 30–81.Google Scholar
Sinha, N. K., The Economic History of Bengal, 3 vols., Calcutta, 1956–70.
Sinha, S., Pandits in a Changing Environment: Centres of Sanskrit Learning in Nineteenth-Century Bengal, Calcutta, 1993.Google Scholar
Smith, A., in Skinner, A. S. (ed.), The Wealth of Nations, Books IV–V, London, 1999, first edition 1776.Google Scholar
Spear, T. G. P., The Nabobs: A Study of the Social Life of the English in Eighteenth-Century India, London, 1963.Google Scholar
Spear, T. G. P.Master of Bengal: Clive and his India, London, 1975.Google Scholar
Stein, B., ‘State Formation and Economy Reconsidered’, Modern Asian Studies, 19 (1985), pp. 387–413.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stein, B.Thomas Munro: The Origins of the Colonial State and His Vision of Empire, Oxford, 1986.Google Scholar
Stokes, E., The English Utilitarians in India, 1st edn, 1959, repr. New Delhi, 1982.Google Scholar
Stone, L. (ed.), An Imperial State at War: Britain from 1689 to 1815, London, 1994.Google Scholar
Storey, C. A., Persian Literature. A Bio-bibliographical Survey, 3 vols., London, 1927.Google Scholar
Subramanyam, S., ‘Frank Submissions: The Company and the Mughals Between Sir Thomas Roe and Sir William Norris’, in Bowen, , Lincoln, and Rigby, (eds.), The Worlds of the East India Company, Woodbridge, 2002, pp. 69–96.
Suleri, S., The Rhetoric of British India, Chicago, 1992.
Sutherland, L., The East India Company in Eighteenth-Century Politics, Oxford, 1952.Google Scholar
Sutherland, L.‘New Evidence on the Nandakuma Trial’, English Historical Review, 72 (1957), pp. 438–65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Teltscher, K., India Inscribed: European and British Writing on India, 1600–1800, Oxford, 1995.Google Scholar
Tracy, J. D., ‘Asian Despotism? Mughal Government as Seen from the Dutch East India Company Factory in Surat’, Journal of Early Modern History 3, 3 (1999), pp. 256–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Travers, R., ‘ “The Real Value of the Lands.” The British, the Nawabs, and the Land Tax in Bengal’, Modern Asian Studies, 38 (2004), pp. 17–58.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Travers, R.‘Ideology and Expansion in Bengal, 1757–1772’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 33 (2005), pp. 7–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tribe, K., Land, Labour and Economic Discourse, London, 1978.Google Scholar
Washbrook, D. A., ‘Progress and Problems. South Asian Economic and Social History c. 1750–1830’, Modern Asian Studies, (1985), pp. 57–91.Google Scholar
Washbrook, D. A. ‘The Two Faces of Colonialism: India, 1818–1860’, in Porter, A. (ed.), The Nineteenth Century. Oxford History of the British Empire, vol. 3, Oxford, 1999, pp. 395–421.Google Scholar
Weitzman, S., Warren Hastings and Philip Francis, Manchester, 1929.Google Scholar
Whelan, F. G., Edmund Burke and India: Political Morality and Empire, Pittsburgh, PA, 1996.Google Scholar
Wilson, K., The Sense of the People: Politics, Culture and Imperialism in England, 1715–85, Cambridge, 1995.Google Scholar
Wilson, K.The Island Race: Englishness, Empire, and Gender in the Eighteenth Century, London, 2003.Google Scholar
Wink, A., Land and Sovereignty in India: Agrarian Society and Politics Under the Eighteenth-Century Maratha Svarajya, Cambridge, 1986.Google Scholar
Wrightson, K., Earthly Necessities. Economic Lives in Early Modern Britain, 1470–1750, Yale, 2000.Google Scholar
Yang, A., The Limited Raj: Agrarian Relations in Colonial India, Saran District 1793–1920, Berkeley, CA, 1989.Google Scholar
Akhtar, S., ‘The Role of the Zamindars in Bengal, 1707–72’. University of London, 1973.
Gordon-Parker, J., ‘The Directors of the East India Company, 1754–1790’, University of Edinburgh, 1977.
Gurney, J. D., ‘The Debts of the Nawab of Arcot, 1763–1776’, University of Oxford, 1968.
Lehmann, F. L., ‘The Eighteenth-Century Transition in India: Responses of Some Bihar Intellectuals’, University of Wisconsin, Madison, 1967.
Nichol, J. D., ‘The British in India: 1740–63. A Study in Imperial Expansion into Bengal’, University of Cambridge, 1976.
Stern, P., ‘ “One body Corporate and Politick”: the Growth of the East India Company-State in the Later Seventeenth Century’, Columbia University, 2004.
Wilson, J. E., ‘Governing Property, Making Law: Land, Local Society, and Colonial Discourse in Agrarian Bengal, c. 1785–1830’, University of Oxford, 2001.
,Anon., The Importance of British Dominion in India Compared to that in America, London, 1770.Google Scholar
,AnonNarrative of the Proceedings of the Provincial Council at Patna in the suit of Behader Beg against Nadara Begum; & of the Supreme Court of Judicature at Calcutta, In the suit of Nadara Begum against Behader Beg & others. And in the Criminal Prosecution instituted against Nadara Begum and her Accomplices for Forgery – Forming together what is generally called in Bengal THE PATNA CAUSE, London, 1780.Google Scholar
Asiatick Researches, vol. I, Calcutta, 1788, repr. London, 1801.
Blackstone, W., Commentaries on the Laws of England, 4 vols., London, 1826.
Bolts, W., Considerations on Indian Affairs Particularly Respecting the Present State of Bengal and its Dependencies, 3 vols., London, 1772–5.Google Scholar
Cobbett, W., The Parliamentary History of England from the Earliest Period to the year 1803, from which last-mentioned Epoch it is continued downwards in the work entititled, ‘Cobbett’s Parliamentary Debates', 36 vols., London, 1806–20.Google Scholar
Colebrooke, J. E., Digest of the Regulations and Laws, enacted by the Governor-General in Council for the Civil Government of the Territories under the Presidency of Bengal, arranged in alphabetical order, Calcutta, 1807.Google Scholar
Dow, A., The History of Hindostan, from the death of Akbar, to the complete settlement of the empire under Aurungzebe, 3 vols., London, 1768–72.Google Scholar
Francis, P., Original Minutes of the Governor-General and Council of Fort William on the settlement and collection of the Revenues of Bengal with a plan of settlement recommended to the Court of Directors, January 1776, London, 1782.Google Scholar
Ghulam Husain Khan Tabatabai, A Translation of Seir Mutaqherin, Or View of Modern Times, Haji Mustafa, Nota Manus (tr., ed.), 3 vols., Calcutta, 1789, repr. Calcutta, 1902–3.Google Scholar
Gladwin, F.(trans.), Ayeen Akbery, or the Institutes of the Emperor Akber, translated from the original Persian by F. Gladwin, 2 vols., London, 1800.Google Scholar
Gleig, G. R., Memoirs of Warren Hastings, 3 vols., London, 1841.Google Scholar
Halhed, N. B., Code of the Gentoo Laws: or Ordinations of the Pundits, London, 1776.Google Scholar
Hastings, W., in Banerjee, A. C. (ed.), Memoirs Relative to the State of India, Calcutta, 1978.Google Scholar
Hodges, W., Travels to India, During the Years 1780, 1781, 1782, and 1783, 2nd edn, London, 1794.Google Scholar
Howell, T. B., A Complete Collection of State Trials and Proceedings for High Treason and Other Crimes and Misdemeanors from the earliest period to the present time, with notes and other illustrations, 33 vols., London, 1809–26.Google Scholar
Malcolm, J., Life of Robert, Lord Clive, 3 vols., London, 1836.Google Scholar
Mill, J. S., Considerations on Representative Government, London, 1856.Google Scholar
Montesquieu, C. de S. (1st English edn, 1750), in Cohler, A. M., Miller, B. C. and Stone, H. S. (eds.), Spirit of the Laws, Cambridge, 1989.Google Scholar
Patullo, H., An Essay upon the Cultivation of the Lands, and Improvements of the Revenues of Bengal, London, 1772.Google Scholar
Pownall, T., The Right, Interest, and Duty of Government, As Concerned in the Affairs of the East Indies, 1st edn, 1773, 2nd edn, London, 1781.Google Scholar
Scrafton, Luke, Reflections on the Government of Indostan. With a Short Sketch of the History of Bengal, from the years 1739 to 1756, and an Account of the English Affairs to 1758, 1st edn, Edinburgh, 1761, 2nd edn, London, 1763.Google Scholar
Smith, A., in Skinner, A. S. (ed.), The Wealth of Nations, Books IV–V, London, 1999.Google Scholar
Steuart, J., An Inquiry into the Principles of Political Oeconomy (1st edn, 1767), Skinner, A. S. (ed.), 2 vols., Edinburgh, 1966.Google Scholar
Steuart, J.The Principles of Money Applied to the Present State of the Coin in Bengal, London, 1772.Google Scholar
Vansittart, H., Narrative of Transactions in Bengal, London, 1766, Bannerjee, A. C. and Ghosh, B. K. (eds.), repr. Calcutta, 1976.Google Scholar
Verelst, H., View of the Rise, Progress and Present State of the English Government in Bengal, London, 1772.Google Scholar
Watts, W., Memoirs of the Revolution in Bengal, London, 1760, repr. Calcutta, 1988.
Bannerjee, A. C. (ed.), Indian Constitutional Documents, Calcutta, 1945–6.Google Scholar
Burke, E., in Bromwich, D. (ed.), On Empire, Liberty and Reform: Speeches and Letters, New Haven, CT, 2000.Google Scholar
Calendar of Persian Correspondence, 11 vols., Calcutta, 1911–69.
Cannon, J. (ed.), The Letters of Junius, Oxford, 1978.Google Scholar
Eliot, H. M. and Dowson, J. (eds.), History of India by its own Historians. The Muhammadan Period, 8 vols., Calcutta, 1867–77.Google Scholar
Fieldhouse, D. K. and Madden, F. (eds.), The Classical Period of the First British Empire, 1689–1783. Select Documents on the Constitutional History of the British Empire and Commonwealth, 2 vols., London, 1985.Google Scholar
Firminger, W. K. (ed.), Bengal District Records. Midnapur, 1768–70, Calcutta, 1915.Google Scholar
Firminger, W. K. (ed.), ‘Historical Introduction to the Bengal Portion of the Fifth Report’, The Fifth Report from the Select Committee of the House of Commons on the Affairs of the East India Company, 28 July, 1812, 3 vols., London, 1917–18.Google Scholar
Firminger, W. K. (ed.), Proceedings of the Controlling Council of Revenue at Murshidabad, 12 vols., Calcutta, 1919–24.Google Scholar
Forrest, G. W., Selections from the Letters, Dispatches and Other State Papers, Preserved in the Foreign Department of the Government of India, 1772–85, 3 vols., Calcutta, 1890.Google Scholar
Forrest, G. W. (ed.), Historical Documents of British India, Warren Hastings, 2 vols., New Delhi, 1985.Google Scholar
Fort William-India House Correspondence, and Other Contemporary Papers Relating Thereto, 21 vols., National Archives of India, Delhi, 1949–85.
Khan, Shayesta (ed.), Bihar and Bengal in the Eighteenth Century: A Critical Edition and Translation of Muzaffarnama, a Contemporary History, Patna, 1992.Google Scholar
Lambert, S., House of Commons Sessional Papers of the Eighteenth Century, 145 vols., Wilmington, DE, 1975.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J. (ed.), in Langford, P. (gen. ed.), Writings and Speeches of Edmund Burke. Vol. V. India: Madras and Bengal, 1774–1785, Oxford, 1981.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J. (ed.), in Langford, P. (gen. ed.), Writings and Speeches of Edmund Burke. Vol. VI. India: the Launching of the Hastings Impeachment, 1786–8, Oxford, 1991.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J. (ed.), in Langford, P. (gen. ed.), Writings and Speeches of Edmund Burke. Vol. VII. India: The Hastings Trial, 1789–94, Oxford, 2000.Google Scholar
Proceedings of the Committee of Circuit at Krishnanagar, Bengal Record Department, Calcutta, 1915.
Reports from Committees of the House of Commons, 1715—1801, 15 vols., London, 1803.
Sarkar, J. (ed. tr.), Bengal Nawabs, 1st edn, 1952, repr. Calcutta, 1985.Google Scholar
Sinha, N. K. (ed.), Selections from District Records. Midnapur Salt Papers. Hijli and Tamluk, 1781–1807, Calcutta, 1984.Google Scholar
Alam, M., The Crisis of Empire in Mughal North India: Awadh and the Punjab, 1707–48, Delhi, 1986.Google Scholar
Alam, M.The Languages of Political Islam: India, 1200–1800, Chicago, 2004.Google Scholar
Alam, M. and Alavi, S., A European Experience of the Mughal Orient, New Delhi, 2001.Google Scholar
Alam, M. and Subrahmanyam, S. (eds.), The Mughal State, 1526–1750, Delhi, 1998.Google Scholar
Alavi, S., ‘The Company Army and Rural Society: The Invalid thana, 1780–1830’, Modern Asian Studies, 27 (1993), pp. 147–78.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alavi, S.The Sepoys and the Company. Tradition and Transition in Northern India, 1770–1830, Delhi, 1995.Google Scholar
Alavi, S. (ed.), The Eighteenth Century in India, Delhi, 2002.Google Scholar
Armitage, D., The Ideological Origins of the British Empire, Cambridge, 2000.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Armitage, D. and Michael, B. (eds.), The British Atlantic World, 1500–1800, Houndsmill, UK, 2002.Google Scholar
Ascoli, F. D., The Early Revenue History of Bengal and the Fifth Report, Oxford, 1917.Google Scholar
Aspinall, A., Cornwallis in Bengal; the Administrative and Judicial Reforms of Lord Cornwallis in Bengal, Together with Accounts of the Commercial Expansion of the East India Company, 1786–1793, and the Foundation of Penang, 1st edn, 1937, repr. Delhi, 1987.Google Scholar
Athar Ali, M., ‘Recent Theories of Eighteenth Century India’, Indian Historical Review, 13 (1986–7), pp. 102–10.Google Scholar
Athar Ali, M.The Mughal Nobility under Aurangzeb, 2nd edn, New Delhi, 1997.Google Scholar
Bailyn, B., The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution, Cambridge, MA, 1967.Google Scholar
Ballhatchet, K., Race, Sex, and Class under the Raj: Imperial Attitudes and Policies and their Critics, 1793–1905, London, 1980.Google Scholar
Barber, W. J., British Economic Thought and India, 1600–1858: A Study in the History of Development Economics, Oxford, 1975.Google Scholar
Barnett, R., North India Between Empires: Awadh, the Mughals, and the British, 1720–1801, Berkeley, CA, 1980.Google Scholar
Barrow, I. J. and Haynes, D. E., ‘The Colonial Transition: South Asia, 1780–1840’, Modern Asian Studies, 38 (2004), pp. 469–78.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bayly, C. A., Rulers, Townsmen, and Bazaars: North Indian Society in the Age of British Expansion, 1770–1870, Cambridge, 1983.Google Scholar
Bayly, C. A.Indian Society and the Making of the British Empire. New Cambridge History of India, 2.1, Cambridge, 1988.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bayly, C. A.Imperial Meridian: the British Empire and the World, 1780–1830, London, 1989.Google Scholar
Bayly, C. A. (ed.), The Raj: India and the British, 1600–1990, London, 1990.Google Scholar
Bayly, C. A.Empire and Information: Intelligence Gathering and Social Communication in India, 1780–1870, Cambridge, 1997.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bayly, C. A.Origins of Nationality in South Asia: Patriotism and Ethical Government in the Making of Modern India, New Delhi, 1998.Google Scholar
Bayly, C. A.‘The First Age of Global Expansion’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 28 (1998), pp. 29–47.Google Scholar
Bayly, C. A.The Birth of the Modern World, 1780–1914, Oxford, 2004.Google Scholar
Bearce, G. D., British Attitudes to India 1784–1858, Oxford, 1961.Google Scholar
Benton, L., ‘Colonial Law and Cultural Difference: Jurisdictional Politics and the Formation of the Colonial State’, Comparative Studies in Society and History, 41 (1999), pp. 563–88.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bhattacharya, S., The East India Company and the Economy of Bengal, 1704–1740, London, 1954.Google Scholar
Blake, S., ‘The Patrimonial–Bureaucratic Empire of the Mughals’, Journal of Asian Studies, 39 (1979), pp. 77–94.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bose, S., Peasant Labour and Colonial Capital. Rural Bengal Since 1770. New Cambridge History of India, 3.2, Cambridge, 1993.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bose, S. and Jalal, A., Modern South Asia: History, Culture, Political Economy, London, 1998.Google Scholar
Bowen, H. V., ‘A Question of Sovereignty? The Bengal Land Revenue Issue, 1765–7’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 16 (1988), pp. 155–76.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowen, H. V.Revenue and Reform: The Indian Problem in British Politics, 1757–1773, Cambridge, 1991.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowen, H. V.‘British Conceptions of Global Empire, 1756–83’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 26 (1998), pp. 1–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowen, H. V.The Business of Empire. The East India Company in Imperial Britain, 1756–1833, Cambridge, 2006.Google Scholar
Bowen, H. V. ‘British India, 1765–1813: the Metropolitan Context’, in Marshall, P. J. (ed.), The Eighteenth Century. Oxford History of the British Empire, vol. 2, Oxford, 1998, pp. 530–51.Google Scholar
Bowen, H. V. ‘Tea, Tribute and the East India Company, c. 1750–1775’, in Taylor, S., Connors, R. and Jones, C. (eds.), Hanoverian Britain and Empire. Essays in Memory of Philip Lawson, Woodbridge, 1998, pp. 158–76.Google Scholar
Bowen, H. V., Lincoln, M. and Rigby, N. (eds.), The Worlds of the East India Company, Woodbridge, UK, 2002.Google Scholar
Bowyer, T. H., ‘India and the Personal Finances of Philip Francis’, English Historical Review, 110 (1995), pp. 122–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowyer, T. H.‘Junius, Philip Francis, & Parliamentary Reform’, Albion, 27 (1995), pp. 397–418.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Breckenridge, C. and Veer, P. (eds.), Orientalism and the Postcolonial Predicament: Perspectives on South Asia, Philadelphia, 1993.Google Scholar
Brewer, J., Party Ideology and Popular Politics at the Accession of George III, Cambridge, 1976.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brewer, J.The Sinews of Power: War, Money, and the English State, 1688–1783, London, 1989.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burgess, G., The Politics of the Ancient Constitution. An Introduction to English Political Thought 1603–42, London, 1992.Google Scholar
Busteed, H. E., Echoes from Old Calcutta, Being Chiefly Reminiscences from the Days of Warren Hastings, Francis and Impey, Calcutta, 1888.Google Scholar
Cain, P. J. and Hopkins, A. G., British Imperialism: Innovation and Expansion, 1688–1914, London, 1993.Google Scholar
Calkins, P., ‘The Formation of a Regionally Orientated Ruling Group in Bengal’, Journal of Asian Studies, 29 (1970), pp. 799–806.Google Scholar
Cannon, G. H., Oriental Jones: a Biography of Sir William Jones, 1746–1794, Bombay, 1964.Google Scholar
Chakrabarti, S., ‘Intransigent Shroffs and the English East India Company's Currency Reforms, 1757–1800’, Indian Economic and Social History Review, 34 (1997), pp. 69–94.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chatterjee, I., Gender, Slavery, and Law in Colonial India, New Delhi, 1999.
Chatterjee, K., Merchants, Politics, and Society in Early Modern India: Bihar, 1733–1820, Leiden, 1996.Google Scholar
Chatterjee, K.‘History as Self-Representation. The Recasting of a Political Tradition in Bengal and Bihar’, Modern Asian Studies, 32 (1998), pp. 913–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chatterji, N., Verelst's Rule in India, Allahabad, 1939.Google Scholar
Chaudhuri, K. N., The Trading World of Asia and the English East India Company, 1660–1760, Cambridge, 1978.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chaudhuri, S. (ed.), Calcutta: The Living City, 2 vols., Calcutta, 1990.Google Scholar
Chaudhury, S., From Prosperity to Decline: Eighteenth-Century Bengal, New Delhi, 1995.Google Scholar
Chaudhury, S.The Prelude to Empire. Plassey Revolution of 1757, New Delhi, 2001.Google Scholar
Chowdhuri-Zilly, A. N., The Vagrant Peasant: Agrarian Distress in Bengal, 1770–1830, Wiesbaden, 1982.Google Scholar
Cohn, B. S., ‘Political Systems in Eighteenth-Century India’, Journal of American Oriental Society, 82 (1962), pp. 312–20.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cohn, B. S.An Anthropologist Among the Historians and Other Essays, Delhi, 1987.Google Scholar
Cohn, B. S.Colonialism and its Forms of Knowledge: The British in India, Princeton, 1996.Google Scholar
Colley, L., Britons: Forging the Nation, 1707–1837, New Haven, CT, 1992.Google Scholar
Colley, L.Captives: Britain, Empire, and the World, 1600–1850, London, 2002.Google Scholar
Collingham, E. M., Imperial Bodies: The Physical Experience of the Raj, c. 1800–1947, Polity Press, Cambridge, 2001.Google Scholar
Curley, D. L., ‘Maharaja Krisnacandra, Hinduism, and Kingship in the Contact Zone of Bengal’, in Barnett, R. B. (ed.), Rethinking Early Modern India, New Delhi, 2002, pp. 85–118.Google Scholar
Curley, T. M., Sir Robert Chambers. Law, Literature, and Empire in the Age of Johnson, Madison, WI, 1998.Google Scholar
Dalrymple, W., White Mughals: Love and Betrayal in Eighteenth-Century India, London, 2002.Google Scholar
Daniels, C. and Kennedy, M. V., Negotiated Empires: Centers and Peripheries in the Americas, 1500–1820, London, 2002.Google Scholar
Dasgupta, A. K., The Faqir and Sannyasi Uprisings, Calcutta, 1992.Google Scholar
Datta, R., Society, Economy, and the Market: Commercialization in Rural Bengal, c. 1760–1800, New Delhi, 2000.Google Scholar
Davies, C. C., Warren Hastings and Oudh, London, 1939.Google Scholar
Derrett, J. D. M., ‘Nandakumar's Forgery’, English Historical Review, 245 (1960), pp. 223–39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Derrett, J. D. M.Religion, Law and the State in India, London, 1968.Google Scholar
Derrett, J. D. M. ‘Justice, Equity and Good Conscience’, in Anderson, J. N. D. (ed.), Changing Law in Developing Countries, London, 1963, pp. 114–53.Google Scholar
Dewey, C., Anglo-Indian Attitudes: the Mind of the Indian Civil Service, London, 1993.Google Scholar
Dickinson, H. T., Liberty and Property: Political Ideology in Eighteenth-Century Britain, London, 1979.Google Scholar
Dirks, N. B., The Hollow Crown: Ethnohistory of an Indian Kingdom, Cambridge, 1987.Google Scholar
Dirks, N. B.Castes of Mind: Colonialism and the Making of Modern India, Princeton, 2001.Google Scholar
Dirks, N. B.The Scandal of Empire. India and the Creation of Imperial Britain, Cambridge, MA, 2006.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dodwell, H. H., Dupleix and Clive: The Beginning of Empire, London, 1920.
Dodwell, H. H. (ed.), ‘The Development of Sovereignty in British India’, Cambridge History of India, vol. 5: British India, 1497–1858, Cambridge, 1929, pp. 589–608.Google Scholar
Drayton, R., Nature's Government: Science, Imperial Britain and the Improvement of the World, Yale, 2000.Google Scholar
Eaton, R. M., The Rise of Islam on the Bengal Frontier, 1204–1760, Berkeley, CA, 1993.Google Scholar
Ehrman, J., The Younger Pitt, 3 vols., London, 1969–96.Google Scholar
Ellegard, A., Who Was Junius?, Stockholm, 1962.Google Scholar
Embree, A. T., Charles Grant and British Rule in India, New York, 1962.Google Scholar
Evans, E., The Forging of the Modern State, 3rd edn, London, 2003.Google Scholar
Feiling, K., Warren Hastings, London, 1954.Google Scholar
Firminger, W. K., ‘Selections from the Note Books of Justice John Hyde’, Bengal Past and Present, 3 (1909), pp. 27–64.Google Scholar
Firminger, W. K. (ed.), ‘Historical Introduction to the Bengal Portion of the Fifth Report’, The Fifth Report from the Select Committee of the House of Commons on the Affairs of the East India Company, 28 July, 1812, 3 vols., London, 1917–18.Google Scholar
Fisch, J., Cheap Lives and Dear Limbs: The British Transformation of the Bengal Criminal Law, 1769–1877, Wiesbaden, 1983.Google Scholar
Fisher, M. H., A Clash of Cultures. Awadh, the British and the Mughals, Delhi, 1987.Google Scholar
Fisher, M. H.The First Indian Author in English. Dean Mahomed (1759–1851) in India, Ireland and England, Delhi, 1996.Google Scholar
Fisher, M. H.Counterflows to Colonialism: Indian Travellers and Settlers in Britain, 1600–1857, Delhi, 2004.Google Scholar
Fleischer, Cornell., Bureaucrat and Intellectual in the Ottoman Empire. The Historian Mustafa Ali (1541–1600), Princeton, 1986.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fletcher, F. T. H., Montesquieu and English Politics (1750–1800), London, 1939.Google Scholar
Forrest, G. W., The Administration of Warren Hastings, 1772–1785, Calcutta, 1892.Google Scholar
Forrest, G. W.Life of Lord Clive. 2 vols., London, 1918.Google Scholar
Foster, R. F., Modern Ireland, 1600–1972, New York, 1988.Google Scholar
Furber, H., John Company at Work, a Study of European Expansion in India in the Late Eighteenth Century, Cambridge, MA, 1948.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
George, M. D., English Political Caricature; A Study of Opinion and Propaganda, Oxford, 1959.Google Scholar
Ghosh, D., Family, Sex and Intimacy in British India, Cambridge, 2006.Google Scholar
Gordon, S., The Marathas 1600–1818. The New Cambridge History of India, vol. 2.4, Cambridge, 1993.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gould, E., The Persistence of Empire: British Political Culture in the American Revolution, Chapel Hill, NC, 2000.Google Scholar
Greene, J. P., Peripheries and Center: Constitutional Development in the Extended Politics of the British Empire and the United States, 1607–1788, Athens, GA, 1986.Google Scholar
Greene, J. P. ‘Empire and Identity from the Glorious Revolution to the American Revolution’, in Marshall, P. J. (ed.), Oxford History of the British Empire, vol. 2. The Eighteenth Century, Oxford, 1998, pp. 208–31.Google Scholar
Grewal, J. S., Muslim Rule in India: The Assessment of British Historians, Oxford, 1970.Google Scholar
Grover, B. R., ‘Nature of Land Rights in Mughal India’, Indian Economic and Social History Review, 1 (1963), pp. 2–15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guha, R., A Rule of Property for Bengal: An Essay on the Idea of Permanent Settlement, Paris, 1963.Google Scholar
Guha, R.Dominance Without Hegemony. History and Power in Colonial India, Cambridge, MA, 1997.Google Scholar
Guha, S., ‘Wrongs and Rights in the Maratha Country: Antiquity, Custom, and Power in Eighteenth Century India’, in Anderson, M. R. and Guha, S. (eds.), Changing Concepts of Rights & Justice in South Asia, New Delhi, 2000, pp. 14–29.Google Scholar
Gupta, B. K., Sirajudaullah and the East India Company, 1756–7: Background to the Foundation of British Power in India, Leiden, 1966.Google Scholar
Habib, I., The Agrarian System of Mughal India: 1556–1707, 2nd revised edn, Delhi, 1999.Google Scholar
Hampsher-Monk, I., ‘Civic Humanism & Parliamentary Reform; the Case of the Society of the Friends of the People’, Journal of British Studies, 28 (1979), pp. 70–89.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hardy, P., Historians of Medieval India. Studies in Indo-Muslim Historical Writing, London, 1960.Google Scholar
Harling, P., The Waning of ‘Old Corruption’: The Politics of Economical Reform in Britain, 1779–1846, Oxford, 1996.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harling, P.The Modern British State. An Historical Introduction, Polity Press, Cambridge, 2001.Google Scholar
Harlow, V. T., The Founding of the Second British Empire, 1763–1793, 2 vols., London, 1952–64.Google Scholar
Hasan, F., State and Locality in Mughal India. Power Relations in Western India c. 1572–1730, Cambridge, 2004.Google Scholar
Hollingbery, R. H., The Zemindary Settlement of Bengal, Calcutta, 1879.Google Scholar
Holzman, J. M., The Nabobs in England: A Study of the Returned Anglo-Indian, 1760–1785, New York, 1926.Google Scholar
Hunter, W. W., Annals of Rural Bengal, Calcutta, 1868.Google Scholar
Hussain, N., The Jurisprudence of Emergency: Colonialism and the Rule of Law, Ann Arbor, MI, 2003.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Impey, E. B., Memoirs of Sir Elijah Impey, London, 1857.Google Scholar
Irschick, E., Dialogue and History: Constructing South India, 1795–1895, Berkeley, CA, 1994.Google Scholar
Islam, S., The Permanent Settlement in Bengal: A Study of its Local Operation, 1790–1819, Dacca, 1979.Google Scholar
Jain, M. P., Outlines of Indian Legal History, 5th edn, Delhi, 1990.Google Scholar
Jasanoff, M., Edge of Empire: Lives, Culture and Conquest in the East, 1750–1850, New York, 2005.Google Scholar
Kent, S. K., Gender and Power in Britain, 1640–1990, London, 1999.Google Scholar
Khan, A. M., The Transition in Bengal, 1756–75: A study of Muhammad Reza Khan, Cambridge, 1969.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Khan, S., A Biography of Ali Ibrahim Khan (c. 1740–93): A Mughal Noble in the Service of the British East India Company, Patna, 1992.Google Scholar
Kidd, C., British Identities Before Nationalism. Ethnicity and Nationhood in the Atlantic World, Cambridge, 1999.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Koebner, R., ‘Despot and Despotism; Vicissitudes of a Political Term’, Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, 14 (1951), pp. 275–302.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kolff, D. H. A., ‘End of the Ancien Regime: Colonial War in India, 1798–1818’, in Moor, J. A. and Wesseling, H. L. (eds.), Imperialism and War, Leiden, 1989, pp. 22–49.Google Scholar
Kopf, D., British Orientalism and the Bengal Renaissance; the Dynamics of Indian modernization, 1773–1835, Berkeley, CA, 1969.Google Scholar
Kramnick, I., Bolingbroke and His Circle: The Politics of Nostalgia in the Age of Walpole, Cambridge, MA, 1968.Google Scholar
Langford, P., A Polite and Commercial People: England 1727–1783, Oxford, 1989.Google Scholar
Langford, P.Public Life and the Propertied Englishman, Oxford, 1991.Google Scholar
Lawson, P., ‘Parliament and the First East India Inquiry, 1767’, Parliamentary History, 1 (1982), pp. 99–114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lawson, P. and Lenman, B., ‘Robert Clive, the “Black Jagir”, and British Politics’, Historical Journal, 26 (1983), pp. 801–29.Google Scholar
Lawson, P. and Philips, J., ‘Our Execrable Banditti: Perceptions of Nabobs in Mid-Eighteenth-Century Britain’, Albion, 16 (1984), pp. 225–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lieberman, D., The Province of Legislation Determined: Legal Theory in Eighteenth-Century Britain, Cambridge, 1987.Google Scholar
Lobban, M., The Common Law and English Jurisprudence, 1760–1850, Oxford, 1991.Google Scholar
Losty, J. P., Calcutta, City of Palaces. A Survey of the City in the Days of the East India Company, 1690–1858, London, 1990.Google Scholar
McKracken, D., Junius and Philip Francis, Boston, MA, 1979.Google Scholar
McLane, J. R., Land and Local Kingship in Eighteenth-Century Bengal, Cambridge, 1993.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maier, C. S., Among Empires: American Ascendancy and its Predecessors, Cambridge, MA, 2006.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Majumdar, N., Justice and Police in Bengal, 1765–1793: A Study of the Nizamat in Decline, Calcutta, 1960.Google Scholar
Marshall, P., ‘British North America 1760–1815’, in Marshall, P. J. (ed.), The Eighteenth Century. Oxford History of the British Empire, vol. 2, Oxford 1998, pp. 372–93.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, P. J., ‘Nobkissen versus Hastings’, Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 27 (1964), pp. 382–96.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, P. J.The Impeachment of Warren Hastings, London, 1965.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J.‘Indian Officials Under the East India Company in Eighteenth-Century Bengal’, Bengal Past and Present, 84 (1965), pp. 99–102.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J.Problems of Empire: Britain and India, 1757–1813, London, 1968.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J.‘British Expansion in India in the Eighteenth Century: A Historical Revision’, History, 60 (1975), pp. 28–43.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, P. J.East Indian Fortunes: The British in Bengal in the Eighteenth Century, Oxford, 1976.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J.A Free Though Conquering People: Britain and Asia in the Eighteenth Century, An inaugural lecture in the Rhodes Chair of Imperial History delivered at King's College, London, 1981.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J.Bengal: The British Bridgehead, Eastern India, 1740–1828. New Cambridge History of India, 2.2, Cambridge, 1987.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J.‘Empire and Authority in the Later Eighteenth Century’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 15 (1987), pp. 105–23.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, P. J. (ed.), ‘ “Cornwallis Triumphant”: War in India and the British Public in the Late Eighteenth Century’, Trade and Conquest: Studies on the Rise of British Dominance in India, Aldershot, UK, 1993.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J.‘British Society and the East India Company’, Modern Asian Studies, 31 (1997), pp. 89–108.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, P. J. (ed.), ‘The British in Asia: Trade to Dominion, 1700–1765’, The Eighteenth Century. Oxford History of the British Empire, Vol. 2, Oxford, 1998, pp. 487–507.
Marshall, P. J.‘The Making of an Imperial Icon; the Case of Warren Hastings’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 27 (1999), pp. 1–16.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, P. J.‘The White Town of Calcutta Under the Rule of the East India Company’, Modern Asian Studies, 34 (2000), pp. 307–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, P. J.‘Britain and the World in the Eighteenth Century, III: Britain and India’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 6th Series, 10 (2000), pp. 1–16.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, P. J.‘Britain and the World in the Eighteenth Century: IV. The Turning Outwards of Britain’, TRHS, 6th Series, 11 (2001), pp. 1–15.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J. (ed.), The Eighteenth Century in Indian History: Evolution or Revolution?, Delhi, 2003.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J. ‘Warren Hastings as Scholar and Patron’, in Whiteman, A., Bromley, J. S. and Dickson, P. G. M. (eds.), Statesmen, Scholars, and Merchants: Essays Presented to Dame Lucy Sutherland, Oxford, 1973, pp. 242–62.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J. ‘The Moral Swing to the East: British Humanitarianism, India and the West Indies’, in Ballhatchet, K. and Harrison, John (eds.), East India Company Studies. Papers Presented to Professor Sir Cyril Philips, Hong Kong, 1986.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J. ‘Parliament and Property Rights in the Late Eighteenth Century British Empire’, in Brewer, J. and Staves, S. (eds.), Early Modern Conceptions of Property, London, 1995, pp. 530–43.Google Scholar
Marshall, P. J. and Williams, G., The Great Map of Mankind. British Perceptions of the World in the Age of Enlightenment, London, 1982.Google Scholar
Mehta, U., Liberalism and Empire. A Study in Nineteenth Century British Liberal Thought, Chicago, 1999.Google Scholar
Metcalf, B. D., ‘Too little, too much: reflections on Muslims in the History of India’, Journal of Asian Studies, 54 (1995), pp. 951–67.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Metcalf, T. R., Ideologies of the Raj. New Cambridge History of India, 3.4, Cambridge, 1994.Google Scholar
Misra, B. B., The Central Administration of the East India Company, 1773–1834, Manchester, 1959.Google Scholar
Misra, B. B.The Judicial Administration of the East India Company in Bengal, 1765–1782, Delhi, 1961.Google Scholar
Monckton-Jones, M. E., Warren Hastings in Bengal, Oxford, 1918.Google Scholar
Moreland, W. H., The Agrarian System of Moslem India, Cambridge, 1929, repr. Delhi, 1994.Google Scholar
Mukhia, H., Perspectives on Medieval History, Delhi, 1993.Google Scholar
Muthu, S., Enlightenment Against Empire, Princeton, 2003, p. 10.Google Scholar
Nandy, S. C., Life and Times of Cantoo Baboo: The Banian of Warren Hastings, 2 vols., Calcutta, 1978.
Nandy, S. C.‘A Second Look at the Notes of Justice John Hyde’, Bengal Past and Present, 97 (1978), pp. 24–34.Google Scholar
O'Brien, P. K., ‘The Political Economy of British Taxation, 1660–1815’, Economic History Review, 2nd series, 41 (1988), pp. 1–32.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O' Brien, P. K. ‘Inseparable Connections: Trade, Economy, Fiscal State, and the Expansion of Empire, 1688–1815’, in Marshall, P. J. (ed.), The Eighteenth Century. Oxford History of the British Empire, vol. 2, Oxford, 1998, pp. 53–77.Google Scholar
O'Gorman, F., The Rise of Party in England. The Rockingham Whigs 1760–82, London, 1975.Google Scholar
O'Gorman, F.The Long Eighteenth Century. British Political and Social History 1688–1832, London, 1997.Google Scholar
O'Malley, L. S. S., Bengal District Gazetteer: Midnapore, Calcutta, 1911.Google Scholar
Pagden, A., Spanish Imperialism and the Political Imagination. Studies in European and Spanish American Social and Political Theory, 1513–1830, New Haven, CT, 1990.Google Scholar
Pagden, A.Lords of All the World: Ideologies of Empire in Spain, Britain and France c. 1500–c. 1800, New Haven, CT, 1995.Google Scholar
Pandey, B. N., The Introduction of English Law into India: The Career of Elijah Impey in Bengal, 1774–1783, Bombay, 1967.Google Scholar
Parkes, J. and Merivale, H., Memoirs of Sir Philip Francis, K. C. B., with Correspondence and Journals, 2 vols., London, 1867.Google Scholar
Parthasarathi, P., ‘Merchants and the Rise of Colonialism’, in Stein, B. and Subramanyam, S. (eds.), Institutions and Economic Change in South Asia, Delhi, 1996, pp. 85–104.Google Scholar
Peers, D. M., Between Mars and Mammon: Colonial Armies and the Garrison State in India, 1819–1835, London, 1995.Google Scholar
Perlin, F., ‘State Formation Reconsidered, part 2’. Modern Asian Studies, 19 (1985), pp. 415–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pitts, J., A Turn to Empire. The Rise of Imperial Liberalism in Britain and France, Princeton, 2005.Google Scholar
Pocock, J. G. A., The Ancient Constitution and the Feudal Law: A Study of English Historical Thought in the Seventeenth Century, Cambridge, 1957, repr. 1987.Google Scholar
Pocock, J. G. A.Politics, Language and Time: Essays on Political Thought and History, New York, 1971.Google Scholar
Pocock, J. G. A.The Machiavellian Moment; Florentine Political Thought and the Atlantic Republican Tradition, Princeton, 1975.Google Scholar
Pocock, J. G. A.Virtue, Commerce, and History: Essays on Political Thought and History, Chiefly in the Eighteenth Century, Cambridge, 1985.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pocock, J. G. A. (ed.), ‘Political Thought in the English Speaking Atlantic, 1760–90; Part I, The Imperial Crisis’, The Varieties of English Political Thought 1500–1800, Cambridge, 1993, pp. 246–82.Google Scholar
Pocock, J. G. A.Barbarism and Religion. Vol. 2. Narratives of Civil Government, Cambridge, 1999.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ramsbotham, R. B., Studies in the Land Revenue History of Bengal, 1767–87, Oxford, 1926.Google Scholar
Ray, Rajat, ‘Colonial Penetration and the Initial Resistance’, Indian Historical Review, 12 (1985), pp. 22–41.Google Scholar
Ray, RajatThe Felt Community: Commonality and Mentality Before the Emergence of Indian Nationalism, Oxford, 2003.Google Scholar
Ray, R., ‘Indian Society and the Establishment of British Supremacy, 1765–1818,’ in Marshall, P. J. (ed.), The Eighteenth Century. Oxford History of the British Empire, vol. 2, Oxford, 1998, pp. 508–29.CrossRef
Ray, Ratnalekha, Change in Bengal Agrarian Society, c. 1760–1850, Calcutta, 1974.Google Scholar
Raychaudhuri, T., Bengal Under Akbar and Jahangir, an Introductory Study in Social History, Calcutta, 1953.Google Scholar
Richards, J. F., Document Forms for Official Orders of Appointment in the Mughal Empire, Cambridge, 1986.Google Scholar
Richards, J. F.The Mughal Empire, New Cambridge History of India, 1.5, Cambridge, 1993.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Richards, J. F. ‘Norms of Comportment Among Mughal Officers’, in Metcalf, B. D. (ed.), Moral Conduct and Authority: The Place of adab in South Asian Islam, Berkeley, CA, 1984, pp. 255–89.Google Scholar
Rocher, R., Orientalism, Poetry, and the Milennium: The Checkered Life of Nathaniel Brassey Halhed, 1751–1830, Delhi, 1987.Google Scholar
Rothschild, E., ‘Global Commerce and the Question of Sovereignty in the Eighteenth Century Provinces’, Modern Intellectual History, 1 (2004), pp. 3–25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roy, B. K., The Career and Achievements of Maharajah Nandakumar, Dewan of Bengal (1705–75), Calcutta, 1969.Google Scholar
Said, E., Orientalism, New York, 1978.Google Scholar
Sanial, S. C., ‘The History of the Calcutta Madrassa (2 Parts)’, Bengal Past and Present, 8 (1914), pp. 83–112, 225–51.Google Scholar
Schwartz, S. B. (ed.), Implicit Understandings. Observing, Reporting and Reflecting on the Encounters Between Europeans and Other Peoples in the Early Modern Era, Cambridge, 1994.Google Scholar
Sen, N., ‘Warren Hastings and British Sovereign Authority in Bengal’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 25 (1997), pp. 59–81.CrossRef
Sen, S., ‘Colonial Frontiers of the Georgian State – East India Company Rule in India’, Journal of Historical Sociology, 7 (1994), pp. 368–92.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sen, S.Empire of Free Trade: The East India Company and the Making of the Colonial Marketplace, Philadelphia, 1998.Google Scholar
Sen, S.Distant Sovereignty: Nationalism, Imperialism, and the Origins of British India, New York, 2002.Google Scholar
Sengupta, J. C., West Bengal District Gazetteers: West Dinajpur, Calcutta, 1965.Google Scholar
Siddiqi, N. A., ‘The Faujdar and Faujdari under the Mughals’, Medieval India Quarterly, 4 (1961), pp. 22–35.Google Scholar
Siddiqi, N. A.Land Revenue Administration Under the Mughals, 1700–1750, Delhi, 1970.Google Scholar
Singha, R., A Despotism of Law: Crime and Justice in Early Colonial India, Delhi, 1998.Google Scholar
Singha, R. ‘Civil Authority and Due Process: Colonial Criminal Justice in the Banaras Zamindari, 1781–95’, in Anderson, M. R. and Guha, S. (eds.), Changing Concepts of Rights and Justice in South Asia, Delhi, 2000, pp. 30–81.Google Scholar
Sinha, N. K., The Economic History of Bengal, 3 vols., Calcutta, 1956–70.
Sinha, S., Pandits in a Changing Environment: Centres of Sanskrit Learning in Nineteenth-Century Bengal, Calcutta, 1993.Google Scholar
Smith, A., in Skinner, A. S. (ed.), The Wealth of Nations, Books IV–V, London, 1999, first edition 1776.Google Scholar
Spear, T. G. P., The Nabobs: A Study of the Social Life of the English in Eighteenth-Century India, London, 1963.Google Scholar
Spear, T. G. P.Master of Bengal: Clive and his India, London, 1975.Google Scholar
Stein, B., ‘State Formation and Economy Reconsidered’, Modern Asian Studies, 19 (1985), pp. 387–413.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stein, B.Thomas Munro: The Origins of the Colonial State and His Vision of Empire, Oxford, 1986.Google Scholar
Stokes, E., The English Utilitarians in India, 1st edn, 1959, repr. New Delhi, 1982.Google Scholar
Stone, L. (ed.), An Imperial State at War: Britain from 1689 to 1815, London, 1994.Google Scholar
Storey, C. A., Persian Literature. A Bio-bibliographical Survey, 3 vols., London, 1927.Google Scholar
Subramanyam, S., ‘Frank Submissions: The Company and the Mughals Between Sir Thomas Roe and Sir William Norris’, in Bowen, , Lincoln, and Rigby, (eds.), The Worlds of the East India Company, Woodbridge, 2002, pp. 69–96.
Suleri, S., The Rhetoric of British India, Chicago, 1992.
Sutherland, L., The East India Company in Eighteenth-Century Politics, Oxford, 1952.Google Scholar
Sutherland, L.‘New Evidence on the Nandakuma Trial’, English Historical Review, 72 (1957), pp. 438–65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Teltscher, K., India Inscribed: European and British Writing on India, 1600–1800, Oxford, 1995.Google Scholar
Tracy, J. D., ‘Asian Despotism? Mughal Government as Seen from the Dutch East India Company Factory in Surat’, Journal of Early Modern History 3, 3 (1999), pp. 256–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Travers, R., ‘ “The Real Value of the Lands.” The British, the Nawabs, and the Land Tax in Bengal’, Modern Asian Studies, 38 (2004), pp. 17–58.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Travers, R.‘Ideology and Expansion in Bengal, 1757–1772’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 33 (2005), pp. 7–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tribe, K., Land, Labour and Economic Discourse, London, 1978.Google Scholar
Washbrook, D. A., ‘Progress and Problems. South Asian Economic and Social History c. 1750–1830’, Modern Asian Studies, (1985), pp. 57–91.Google Scholar
Washbrook, D. A. ‘The Two Faces of Colonialism: India, 1818–1860’, in Porter, A. (ed.), The Nineteenth Century. Oxford History of the British Empire, vol. 3, Oxford, 1999, pp. 395–421.Google Scholar
Weitzman, S., Warren Hastings and Philip Francis, Manchester, 1929.Google Scholar
Whelan, F. G., Edmund Burke and India: Political Morality and Empire, Pittsburgh, PA, 1996.Google Scholar
Wilson, K., The Sense of the People: Politics, Culture and Imperialism in England, 1715–85, Cambridge, 1995.Google Scholar
Wilson, K.The Island Race: Englishness, Empire, and Gender in the Eighteenth Century, London, 2003.Google Scholar
Wink, A., Land and Sovereignty in India: Agrarian Society and Politics Under the Eighteenth-Century Maratha Svarajya, Cambridge, 1986.Google Scholar
Wrightson, K., Earthly Necessities. Economic Lives in Early Modern Britain, 1470–1750, Yale, 2000.Google Scholar
Yang, A., The Limited Raj: Agrarian Relations in Colonial India, Saran District 1793–1920, Berkeley, CA, 1989.Google Scholar
Akhtar, S., ‘The Role of the Zamindars in Bengal, 1707–72’. University of London, 1973.
Gordon-Parker, J., ‘The Directors of the East India Company, 1754–1790’, University of Edinburgh, 1977.
Gurney, J. D., ‘The Debts of the Nawab of Arcot, 1763–1776’, University of Oxford, 1968.
Lehmann, F. L., ‘The Eighteenth-Century Transition in India: Responses of Some Bihar Intellectuals’, University of Wisconsin, Madison, 1967.
Nichol, J. D., ‘The British in India: 1740–63. A Study in Imperial Expansion into Bengal’, University of Cambridge, 1976.
Stern, P., ‘ “One body Corporate and Politick”: the Growth of the East India Company-State in the Later Seventeenth Century’, Columbia University, 2004.
Wilson, J. E., ‘Governing Property, Making Law: Land, Local Society, and Colonial Discourse in Agrarian Bengal, c. 1785–1830’, University of Oxford, 2001.

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • Robert Travers, Cornell University, New York
  • Book: Ideology and Empire in Eighteenth-Century India
  • Online publication: 18 July 2009
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511497438.012
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • Robert Travers, Cornell University, New York
  • Book: Ideology and Empire in Eighteenth-Century India
  • Online publication: 18 July 2009
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511497438.012
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • Robert Travers, Cornell University, New York
  • Book: Ideology and Empire in Eighteenth-Century India
  • Online publication: 18 July 2009
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511497438.012
Available formats
×