Accueil > Actualités ultramarines > Colloque Monarchies & Colonies en Australie en juin 2014

Colloque Monarchies & Colonies en Australie en juin 2014

Le 17 avril 2013 à 22h58

Crowns and Colonies :
Monarchies and Colonial Empires
An international conference convened by
Robert Aldrich and Cindy McCreery

With a keynote address by Professor Miles Taylor,
Director of the Institute for Historical Research, University of London,
on Queen Victoria and India

Department of History, School of Philosophical and Historical Inquiry
University of Sydney

To be held in the week of 9-13 June 2014 (exact dates TBA)
at the University of Sydney

From the time of Alexander the Great and the Roman Caesars down to the empire of Queen Victoria and beyond, monarchism and imperialism have often been linked – indeed, republican colonial empires have been notable exceptions in international history. Napoleon III dreamed of constructing an ‘Arab kingdom’, Victoria was proclaimed Empress of India, King Leopold created his own realm the Congo, and Italy’s King Victor Emmanuel III was named Emperor of Ethiopia. Even today the Commonwealth of Nations is bound together by the figure of the British monarch, and the Danish queen reigns over Greenland and the Faeroe Islands.

Outside of Europe, as well, monarchs ruled over disparate peoples, their hereditary and often sacred positions bringing together under a crown the empires of China, Japan, the Ottoman state and several pre-colonial African empires. Non-Western monarchs – Zulu chieftains, Indian maharajahs, Emperor Haile Selassie, the king of Korea among others – were themselves often displaced by imperial conquest. Nationalist movements sometimes campaigned for the restoration of dynasties, at other times for abandonment of ‘feudal’ rule.

This international conference, and a proposed collection of essays commissioned from participants, explores the links between crowned rulers and their colonial possessions. Paper proposals are invited on any historical period or region.

Themes may include but are not limited to different theories of kingship in relation to colonial empire ; royal initiatives in colonial expansion and patronage of colonial expeditions, chartered companies and learned societies ; the legal position and prerogatives of monarchs in colonial systems ; interventions by monarchs in colonial politics and governance ; royal visits to colonies (and visits by colonial rajas, sultans and other rulers to colonial metropoles) ; royal personages in the colonial military and administration ; representations of monarchs in colonies (statues, buildings, artwork) and commemoration of royal births, anniversaries and deaths ; royal honours, decorations and investitures ; movements for the restoration of indigenous dynasties abolished by colonial authorities ; the repercussions of metropolitan and nationalist republicanism and dissolution of monarchies in the colonial world ; and links between former colonies and monarchies (as in the Commonwealth).

Initial expressions of interest and offers of papers should be sent to Professor Robert Aldrich and Dr Cindy McCreery as soon as possible.