Skip navigation
London Review of Books London Review Bookshop

Search the LRB

All the words
Exact phrase

advanced search

SUBSCRIBER REGISTRATION

Subscribers to the LRB currently get free access to the full content of the magazine in an online edition. If you are a subscriber and would like to register for online access click here

If you are already registered you can log in from our login page

If you would like further information about subscribing to the LRB click here.

London Review Bookshop

Multiple Kingdoms subscriber-only content

Linda Colley

  • The Ideological Origins of the British Empire by David Armitage

‘The history of England,’ Sir John Seeley declared in The Expansion of England (1883), ‘is not in England but in America and Asia.’ Like many aphorisms, this was at once consciously perverse and entirely apt. Seeley wrote as a fervid supporter of imperial federation, ‘Greater Britain’, but he was also taking issue, as in a preceding series of lectures delivered at Cambridge, with the introspection that characterised so much contemporary English historical writing. In his opinion, altogether too much attention had been devoted to a Whig narrative of purely domestic constitutional advance, to the story of Parliament, political parties and pieces of statute law, when ‘the great fact of modern English history’ was in reality the evolution of its Empire overseas.

subscriber-only content Subscribers to the print edition can log in to view the entire article. For information about subscribing to the London Review of Books click here. This article is available for purchase online. Buy this article.

Linda Colley is Shelby M.C. Davis 1958 Professor of History at Princeton University. Her latest book is The Ordeal of Elizabeth Marsh: A Woman in World History.

LRB cover artwork

From the archive

Ultimate Choice
Malcolm Bull: Thoughts of Genocide

Stewing Waters
Tim Parks salutes Garibaldi

Smut-Finder General
Colin Kidd: The Dark Side of American Liberalism

Catharama
J.L. Nelson: Heretics

The G-Word
Mark Mazower on the Armenian Massacres