from Part I - 1838: The Year of Freedom
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 December 2020
The British Empire of 1838 was transitioning in many ways all at once. The basis of its economy was shifting, from slave-produced tropical commodities towards emigrant-produced temperate products, although opium remained a constant; its geography was shifting, from twin circuits of trade in the West and East Indies towards new centres of gravity in the vast terrains of the southern hemisphere and North America; and its mode of governance was shifting from the autocratic military elite which had violently seized new colonies from Britain’s enemies towards a bureaucracy more accountable to settlers overseas and reformers at home.
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