'Remaking Greater Britain': Cecil Rhodes and imperial politics, 1880-1902

This study asks how and why and to what effect Cecil Rhodes operated in British imperial politics from around his formal entry into politics in 1880 to his death in 1902. It shows that Rhodes used a network of ideologically coherent lobbyists operating mainly in London, but also from South Africa,...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hunt, DM
Other Authors: Thompson, A
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
_version_ 1797104082666651648
author Hunt, DM
author2 Thompson, A
author_facet Thompson, A
Hunt, DM
author_sort Hunt, DM
collection OXFORD
description This study asks how and why and to what effect Cecil Rhodes operated in British imperial politics from around his formal entry into politics in 1880 to his death in 1902. It shows that Rhodes used a network of ideologically coherent lobbyists operating mainly in London, but also from South Africa, to influence British imperial policy in Westminster and Whitehall; it examines the techniques that he and this group deployed, including in relation to the press. A detailed analysis of Rhodes’ role in British imperial politics has not yet been undertaken, a gap in the historiography which this study rectifies. Rhodes is positioned as a case study for how settler states and their leaders related to Britain as the centre of imperial power and decision making and shows that Rhodes envisaged a closer constitutional arrangement for the British Empire, based on the principles of ‘Greater Britain’. This brings new emphasis to the political exchange between London and the settler states which has been explored less by the British world school in recent decades than other areas such as culture, identity and migration. ‘Greater Britain’ is used as an interpretive framework for the analysis of the period and its practical counterpart ‘imperial federalism’ is placed in the mainstream of British political debate. I suggest that imperial federalism was closely related to the issue of British unionism, and therefore Irish nationalism, highlighting the presence of unionists, whose careers had been affected by Home Rule, in and around the movement for imperial federation – which shows the importance of Ireland to Rhodes’ career and to British imperial politics more widely during the period.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T06:28:45Z
format Thesis
id oxford-uuid:f53ac3cf-aa58-4e80-bd71-02fdb53bde8f
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T06:28:45Z
publishDate 2021
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:f53ac3cf-aa58-4e80-bd71-02fdb53bde8f2022-03-27T12:25:53Z'Remaking Greater Britain': Cecil Rhodes and imperial politics, 1880-1902Thesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:f53ac3cf-aa58-4e80-bd71-02fdb53bde8fBritish Imperial HistoryGlobal HistoryVictorian Political HistoryEnglishHyrax Deposit2021Hunt, DMThompson, AHawkins, AThis study asks how and why and to what effect Cecil Rhodes operated in British imperial politics from around his formal entry into politics in 1880 to his death in 1902. It shows that Rhodes used a network of ideologically coherent lobbyists operating mainly in London, but also from South Africa, to influence British imperial policy in Westminster and Whitehall; it examines the techniques that he and this group deployed, including in relation to the press. A detailed analysis of Rhodes’ role in British imperial politics has not yet been undertaken, a gap in the historiography which this study rectifies. Rhodes is positioned as a case study for how settler states and their leaders related to Britain as the centre of imperial power and decision making and shows that Rhodes envisaged a closer constitutional arrangement for the British Empire, based on the principles of ‘Greater Britain’. This brings new emphasis to the political exchange between London and the settler states which has been explored less by the British world school in recent decades than other areas such as culture, identity and migration. ‘Greater Britain’ is used as an interpretive framework for the analysis of the period and its practical counterpart ‘imperial federalism’ is placed in the mainstream of British political debate. I suggest that imperial federalism was closely related to the issue of British unionism, and therefore Irish nationalism, highlighting the presence of unionists, whose careers had been affected by Home Rule, in and around the movement for imperial federation – which shows the importance of Ireland to Rhodes’ career and to British imperial politics more widely during the period.
spellingShingle British Imperial History
Global History
Victorian Political History
Hunt, DM
'Remaking Greater Britain': Cecil Rhodes and imperial politics, 1880-1902
title 'Remaking Greater Britain': Cecil Rhodes and imperial politics, 1880-1902
title_full 'Remaking Greater Britain': Cecil Rhodes and imperial politics, 1880-1902
title_fullStr 'Remaking Greater Britain': Cecil Rhodes and imperial politics, 1880-1902
title_full_unstemmed 'Remaking Greater Britain': Cecil Rhodes and imperial politics, 1880-1902
title_short 'Remaking Greater Britain': Cecil Rhodes and imperial politics, 1880-1902
title_sort remaking greater britain cecil rhodes and imperial politics 1880 1902
topic British Imperial History
Global History
Victorian Political History
work_keys_str_mv AT huntdm remakinggreaterbritaincecilrhodesandimperialpolitics18801902