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“Applied Orientalism” in British India and Tsarist Turkestan

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 June 2009

Alexander Morrison
Affiliation:
School of History, University of Liverpool

Extract

Writing in 1872, Sir Alfred Lyall, Governor of the North-Western Provinces of British India, was talking about the reluctance amongst many of the old Muslim scholarly class of North India to embrace the modern, enlightened learning of the West. For Lyall, to be an “Orientalist” was to be one of those Anglo-Indian advocates of state support for “Oriental Learning”—the study of Arabic, Persian, and Sanskrit—in the tradition established by Warren Hastings and Sir William Jones, who had been worsted by the “Anglicists” led by Lord Macaulay in 1835. To adopt the meaning popularized by Edward Said, we might say that while Lyall makes a classic “Orientalist” judgment about the value of Eastern civilization, he is also making an observation about the relationship between knowledge and power that still resonates today. Lyall is consciously echoing Macaulay's notorious statement, “A single shelf of a good European Library was worth the whole literature of India and Arabia,” which has often been taken as a byword for the arrogance of Europeans confronted with an Orient to which they felt themselves superior. The obvious point is that Macaulay had no interest in Oriental knowledge or knowledge of the Orient: he was not an Orientalist at all. Perhaps this is why Said dealt with him only tangentially.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 2009

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References

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21 Said, Orientalism, 21, 97.

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23 van der Oie, Devid Skhimmel'pennink, “Mirza Kazem-Bek i Kazanskaya shkola vostokovedeniya,” in V. Gerasimov et al., I., eds., Novaya Imperskaya Istoriya Postsovetskogo Prostranstva (Kazan, 2004), 256–69Google Scholar.

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25 Knight, “Grigor'ev in Orenburg,” 96.

26 Cohn, “The Census,” 248; “Law and the Colonial State,” 66–72, both in An Anthropologist among the Historians.

27 Tod, James, The Annals and Antiquities of Rajasthan, vol. 1, Crooke, W., ed. (Oxford, 1920)Google Scholar, lxii, 23; Ronald Inden, in Imagining India (pp. 172–76), interprets Tod's work as “othering” India through a concept of “Rajput feudalism,” and suggests this is merely a cunning disguise for the usual British beliefs about caste as a uniquely Indian “essence.” In fact, Tod barely mentions caste, and his most elaborate flights of fancy concern the imagined kinship of the Rajputs with the ancient Celts and Scandinavians: Tod, Annals and Antiquities, vol. 1, 73–96. See Peabody, Norbert, “Tod's Rajast'han and the Boundaries of Imperial Rule in Nineteenth-Century India,” Modern Asian Studies 30, 1 (1996): 185220CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

28 Bhattacharya-Panda, Appropriation and Invention of Tradition, 5–10, 238–253. She criticizes the notion that the production of the code of Hindu personal law was a collaborative process, arguing instead that Brahmin pundits were involved only as salaried servants and were distrusted by their British interlocutors.

29 Kejariwal, O. P., The Asiatic Society of Bengal and the Discovery of India's Past (Delhi, 1989), 7879Google Scholar; Bayly, Susan, Caste, Society and Politics in India from the Eighteenth Century to the Modern Age (Cambridge, 1999), 95CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

30 Bayly, Empire and Information, 365–76.

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33 Dodson, Michael, Orientalism, Empire and National Culture (London, 2007), 184–92CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

34 Dirks, Castes of Mind, 105; Inden, Imagining India, 45–46; Said, Orientalism, 78–79.

35 Jones, William, “A Discourse on the Institution of a Society, for Inquiring into the History, Civil and Natural, the Antiquities, Arts, Sciences and Literature of Asia” (address originally given in 1784), Asiatick Researches 1 (1806): ixxviGoogle Scholar.

36 Mitra, R., “History of the Society,” Centenary Review of the Asiatic Society of Bengal from 1784–1883 (Calcutta, 1885), 8Google Scholar.

37 Appendix B, of Centenary Review of the Asiatic Society, 87.

38 “Members,” Asiatic Society of Bengal Proceedings (Jan.–Dec. 1865) (Calcutta, 1866), 17–26.

39 Pandit, Ramalochan, “A Royal Grant Found at Tana,” Asiatick Researches, vol. 1 (London, 1806), 357–67Google Scholar; Kejariwal, Asiatic Society of Bengal, 47.

40 Mitra, “History of the Society,” 59.

41 Ibid., 66. This was an institution established by Warren Hastings for the pursuit of Islamic learning.

42 Appendix B, of Centenary Review of the Asiatic Society, 95, 101–3.

43 Mitra, “History of the Society,” 66.

44 Cohn, “The Census,” 245–46. He describes Mitra as “the outstanding Indian Sanskrit Scholar of the time,” and notes that his ranking system became so controversial that Census Commissioner H. Risley did not use it in his publication on the Tribes and Castes of Bengal (Calcutta, 1891), 2 vols., and listed them alphabetically instead.

45 Journal and Proceedings of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, New Series, vol. 4, 1908 (Calcutta, 1910), iii.

46 Khalid, “Russian History”; and Knight, “On Russian Orientalism,” 691–715; van der Oie, Devid Skhimmel'pennink, “Orientalizm—delo tonkoe,” Ab Imperio 1 (2002): n.pGoogle Scholar.

47 Todorova, Maria, “Does Russian Orientalism Have a Russian Soul?Kritika 1, 4 (2000): 720CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Khalid, “Russian History,” 693. Here Khalid is echoing Said, Orientalism, 56–57. For a critique of Said's ideas on this theme, see Irwin, For Lust of Knowing, 9–18.

48 Harsha Ram suggests that, in the literary sphere, Lomonosov's Khotin ode of 1739 marks the beginning of Russia's sense of superiority over Asia: Imperial Sublime, 23–24, 77–78.

49 Knight, “On Russian Orientalism,” 705; and “Grigor'ev in Orenburg,” 77, 99.

50 Ibid., 96.

51 Zastoupil and Moir, eds., Great Indian Education Debate, 171.

52 Khalid, “Russian History,” 696.

53 Mill's, JamesHistory of British India (3 vols., London, 1817)Google Scholar is thus an ignorant and unpleasant book, but it is not “essentializing.” The claim by Ronald Inden that this was a “hegemonic” text for the British understanding of India in the nineteenth century is hard to sustain in any case, given that in his notes to the fourth and fifth editions (London, 1840 and 1858) H. H. Wilson more or less demolished all of Mill's arguments about the “backwardness” of Hindu culture, something Inden acknowledges merely as another form of “othering,” in Imagining India, 45, 90–93. See Majeed, Javed, Ungoverned Imaginings: James Mill's “The History of British India” and Orientalism (Oxford, 1992), 123–50CrossRefGoogle Scholar, 200, which situates Mill's ideas firmly in the Utilitarian and radical milieu where they belong.

54 Knight, “On Russian Orientalism,” 708; Peabody, “Tod's Rajast'han,” 204–9; Kejariwal, Asiatic Society of Bengal, 232–33.

55 Vasilii Vladimirovich Barthold (1869–1930), known as “the Gibbon of Turkestan,” was the leading Russian Orientalist of his generation. His best-known work is Turkestan v epokhu Mongol'skogo Nashestvie (St. Petersburg, 1897), translated as Turkestan Down to the Mongol Invasion (London, 1928).

56 Tolz, “European, National and (Anti-) Imperial,” 71–73.

57 Knight, “Grigor'ev in Orenburg,” 87.

58 Tod, Annals and Antiquities, vol. 1, 5; Peabody, “Tod's Rajast'han,” 207–8, 216.

59 Irwin, For Lust of Knowing, 206–7; E. Browne, G., The Persian Crisis of December 1911 (Cambridge, 1911)Google Scholar. For more on Browne, see Nash, Geoffrey, From Empire to Orient (London, 2005), 139–68Google Scholar.

60 Grigor'ev, V. V., ed., O nekotorykh sobytiyakh v Bukhare, Khokande i Kashgare (Kazan, 1861)Google Scholar.

61 Khanykov, N. A., Opisanie Bukharskogo Khanstva (St. Petersburg, 1843)Google Scholar. Khanykov was also a product of St. Petersburg University, although he attended it before the Oriental faculty was founded. Lunin, B. V., ed., Istoriografiya obshchestvennykh nauk v Uzbekistane (Tashkent, 1974), 356–63Google Scholar.

62 Grigor'ev, ed. and trans., O nekotorykh sobytiyakh, 29–32.

63 Grigoriev attacked this policy as having led to the Islamization of the Kazakhs, a common Russian misconception. Grigor'ev, V. V., Russkaya Politika v Otnoshenii k Srednei Azii. Istoricheskii Ocherk (St. Petersburg, 1874), 17Google Scholar.

64 Crews, Robert, For Prophet and Tsar. Islam and Empire in Russia and Central Asia (Cambridge, Mass., 2006), 31142Google Scholar.

65 Werth, Paul, At the Margins of Orthodoxy (Ithaca, N.Y., 2001), 180–83Google Scholar.

66 Ishan is a Persian honorific (literally “they”) often applied to Sufi spiritual leaders.

67 Knysh, Alexander, “Sufism as an Explanatory Paradigm,” Die Welt des Islams 42, 2 (2002): 139–73CrossRefGoogle Scholar. I am grateful to Beatrice Penati for this reference.

68 Dov Yaroshevski, “Empire and Citizenship”; Austin Lee Jersild, “From Savagery to Citizenship”; and Brower, Daniel, “Islam and Ethnicity: Russian Colonial Policy in Turkestan,” in Brower, Daniel R. and Lazzerini, Edward, eds., Russia's Orient: Imperial Borderlands and Peoples, 1700–1917 (Bloomington, Ind., 1997), 6970Google Scholar, 101–11, 115–22; Jersild, Orientalism and Empire, 126–28.

69 Gen.-Ad't. K., fon-Kaufman, Proekt Vsepoddanneishego Otcheta Gen.-Ad'yutanta fon-Kaufmana po Grazhdanskomu Upravleniyu (St. Petersburg, 1885), 10; Khalid, Adeeb, The Politics of Muslim Cultural Reform: Jadidism in Central Asia (Berkeley, 1998), 5153Google Scholar.

70 See, for instance, Kostenko, L. F., Srednyaya Aziya i Vodvorenie v nei Russkoi Grazhdanstvennosti (St. Petersburg, 1871), 85Google Scholar.

71 Brower, Daniel, “Russian Roads to Mecca: Religious Tolerance and Muslim Pilgrimage in the Russian Empire,” Slavic Review 55, 3 (1996): 567–84CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

72 I realize that my view of this question is in sharp contrast to that of Crews, who in For Prophet and Tsar (pp. 254–60) argues for the persistence of the “Confessional State” throughout the Empire until 1917. Strangely, on pages 296–316, Crews provides a clear description of just how Russian attitudes towards Islam changed in mid-century, but without making a connection with the Caucasus or allowing it to affect his judgments about the colonial regime in Turkestan.

73 Miropiev, M. A., Religioznoe i politicheskie znachenie khadzha (Kazan, 1877)Google Scholar; and O polozhenii russkikh inorodtsev (St. Petersburg, 1901); Krymskii, A., Musul'manstvo i ego budushchnost' (Moscow, 1899)Google Scholar. On the anti-Islam division of the Kazan theological academy, see Geraci, Window on the East, 47–49, 54–61; see also Batunsky, Mark, “Racism in Russian Islamology: Agafangel Krimsky,” Central Asian Survey 11, 4 (1992): 7578CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Batunskii, M., Rossiya i Islam (Moscow, 2003), vol. 2, 242–60Google Scholar, 323–72 (Miropiev), and vol. 3, 61–112 (Krymskii).

74 Dr. Hunter, W. W., Our Indian Musalmans: Are They Bound in Conscience to Rebel against the Queen? (London, 1871)Google Scholar. Alfred Lyall criticized Hunter, in “Islam in India,” while Khan's, Sir Syed Ahmad influential pamphlet, The Causes of the Indian Revolt (Benares, 1873)Google Scholar, did much to dispel the British belief that there had been a Muslim conspiracy in 1857. See Hardy, Peter, The Muslims of British India (Cambridge, 1972), 6680CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

75 Brower, Daniel, Turkestan and the Fate of the Russian Empire (London, 2003), 2023Google Scholar.

76 “Bezporyadki v Fergane,” Turkestanskiya Vedomosti, 21 May 1898, no. 37; Sal'kov, V., «Andizhanskoe Vozstanie» v 1898 g (Kazan, 1901), 64Google Scholar. See Babajanov, Bakhtiyar, “Dukchi Ishan und der Aufstand von Andijan 1898,” in Kemper, Michael, Kügelgen, Anke von, and Yermakov, Dmitriy, eds., Muslim Culture in Russia and Central Asia from the 18th to the Early 20th Centuries (Berlin, 1998), vol. 2, 167–91Google Scholar; Babadzhanov, B. M., trans. and commentator, Manakib-i Dukchi Ishan (Almaty, 2004)Google Scholar, is a little-known hagiography of the ishan. For a full list of earlier publications relating to the uprising, see Bregel's, YuriBibliography of Islamic Central Asia (Bloomington, Ind., 1995), vol. 1, 620–21Google Scholar.

77 Campbell, Elena, “The Muslim Question in Late Imperial Russia,” in Burbank, Jane, Hagen, Mark von, and Remnev, Anatolyi, eds., Russian Empire: Space, People, Power 1700–1930 (Bloomington, Ind., 2007), 325–26Google Scholar.

78 Sal'kov «Andizhanskoe Vozstanie», 39. A khalat is a robe of honor.

79 Triaud, Jean-Louis, La Légende Noire de la Sanûssiya: Une Confrérie Musulmane sous le regard Français (1840–1930) (Paris, 1995)Google Scholar.

80 The title page of the Bodleian's copy has a label that indicates this.

81 Sal'kov «Andizhanskoe Vozstanie», 32, quote 54.

82 Vladimir Petrovich Nalivkin (1858–1918) was a leading educational bureaucrat, pioneering ethnographer and Orientalist in Turkestan, and perhaps more than any other person the voice of the “Third Element” in that region. From the nobility of the Moscow Province, he was educated at the Pavlovskaya Military Academy and had joined the Orenburg Cossack Brigade in 1871, serving the Turkestan administration as a civilian from 1878. Lukashova, Natal'ya “V. Nalivkin: eshche odna zamechatel'naya zhizn',” in Panarin, S., ed., Evraziya. Lyudi i Mify (Moscow, 2003), 7294Google Scholar; and Baskhanov, M. K., Russkie Voennye Vostokovedy (Moscow, 2005), 170Google Scholar. Valentii Lavrentievich Vyatkin (1869–1932) was then a translator in the Samarkand Chancellery and had founded the first museum there in 1896. In 1908 he discovered the site of Ulugh-Beg's observatory, and he later carried out the first excavations at Afrasiab. Lunin, Istoriografiya, 138–45.

83 “Kratkii obzor sovremennogo sostoyaniya i deyatel'nosti musul'manskogo dukhovenstva,” Yarovoi-Rabskii, V. I., ed., Sbornik Materialov po Musul'manstvu, vol. 1 (St. Petersburg, 1899), 22, 39Google Scholar.

84 Yarovoi-Rabskii, “Kratkii obzor,” 28. The observation on “dervishism” was based upon Louis Rinn's Marabout ef Khuan [sic: Marabouts et Khouan] Etude sur l'Islam en Algerie (Alger, 1884), 62–76. Rinn (1838–1905) served in the Bureaux Arabes in Algeria, and his work examines the threat that Sufi orders posed to French rule in North Africa. Triaud La Légende Noire, vol. 1, 347–61.

85 E. T. Smirnov, “Dervishizm v Turkestane,” and “Dzhikhad i Gazavat,” both in Sbornik Materialov po Musul'manstvu, vol. 1, 49–71, 101–28.

86 Thomas, Martin, Empires of Intelligence: Security Services and Colonial Disorder after 1914 (Berkeley, Calif., 2008), 7478Google Scholar.

87 The unintentionally hilarious narrative of this case is to be found in a file from the Central State Archives of the Republic of Kazakhstan (TsGARKaz), fond 124, “Chimkentskoe Uezdnoe Upravlenie,” opis’ 1, delo. 7, “Materialy doznaniya po voprosu tainogo snabzheniya oruzhiem naseleniya ishanom Kh. Abdurakhmanovym,” esp. 8, 25–29, 41–48, 163–64. It deserves to be analyzed in more depth than I can manage here, and I hope to discuss it in detail in a future article about Lykoshin's career and writings.

88 Lykoshin, N. S., “Pis'ma iz Tuzemnogo Tashkenta,” Turkestanskiya Vedomosti, 13 Feb. 1894, no. 11Google Scholar.

89 Lykoshin, N. S., trans., “Adab-ul'-Salikhyn. Kodeks Prilichii Na Vostoke,” in Nalivkin, V. P., ed., Sbornik Materialov po Musul'manstvu (Tashkent, 1900), vol. 2, 2386Google Scholar; “Khoroshii Ton” na Vostoke (St. Petersburg, 1915). Lykoshin published his memoirs just before the revolution: Pol Zhizni v Turkestane: Ocherki Byta Tuzemnogo Naseleniya (Petrograd, 1916). The copies of his works in the library of the Oriental Institute of St. Petersburg all bear autographs indicating that Lykoshin presented them to V. V. Barthold.

90 Baskhanov, Voennye Vostokovedy, 145–47.

91 N. S. Lykoshin, trans., and Bartol'd, V. V., ed., Istoriya Bukhary Mukhameda Narshakhi (Tashkent, 1897)Google Scholar; Divana-i-Mashrab. Zhizneopisanie populyarneishago predstavitelya mistitsizma v Turkestanskom Krae (Samarkand, 1911).

92 Lykoshin, N. S., O gadanii u Sredneaziatskikh tuzemtsev (Samarkand, 1908)Google Scholar.

93 Lykoshin, N. S., “Kazii (Narodnye Sud'i),” Russkii Turkestan: Sbornik (Tashkent, 1899), vol. 1, 1757Google Scholar; Rezul'taty sblizheniya russkikh s tuzemtsami (Tashkent[?], 1903); Chapkullukskaya Volost' Khodzhentskogo Uezda Samarkandskoi Oblasti (Samarkand, 1905); “K desyatiletiyu Andizhanskoi rezni (1898–1908 g),” Turkestanskiya Vedomosti, 30–31 May 1908, nos. 115–16.

94 Lykoshin, Pol Zhizni v Turkestane, 5–16; Khalid, Politics of Muslim Cultural Reform, 249–50.

95 Tolz, “Orientalism, Nationalism,” 130–31.

96 Sahadeo, Russian Colonial Society, 58–59.

97 Knight, “Grigor'ev in Orenburg,” 87.

98 See Said, Orientalism, 210–54.

99 See Westrate, Bruce, The Arab Bureau: British Policy in the Middle East 1916–1920 (University Park, Pa., 1994)Google Scholar.

100 Snesarev, A. E., Severo-Indiiskii Teatr (Voenno-Geograficheskoe Opisanie) (Tashkent, 1903)Google Scholar; Indiya kak Glavnyi Faktor v Sredne-Aziatskom Voprose (St. Petersburg, 1906); and as editor, Svedeniya kasayushchiyasya Stran, sopredel'nykh s Turkestanskim Voennym Okrugom (Tashkent, 1898–1900), issues 1–19.

101 Marshall, Alexander, The Russian General Staff and Asia (London, 2006), 154–58, 192Google Scholar.

102 Central State Archives of the Republic of Kazakhstan (TsGARKaz), F. 822, “Pantusov, N. N., Orientalist,” Op.1 D.28, “Svedeniya o Kul'tzhinskom raione za 1871–77 god, sobrannye N. N. Pantusovym,” 1–90; Pantusov, N. N., ed., Taarikh Shakhrokhi: Istoriya Vladetelei Fergany (Kazan, 1885)Google Scholar.

103 This can be found at http://www.loc.gov/rr/print/coll/287_turkestan.html. Kun means “backside” or “anus” in Persian/Tajik.

104 Sankt-Peterburgskii Filial Institut Vostokovedenii RAN, Arkhiv Vostokovedov, F. 33, “Kun, Aleksandr Ludvigovich,” Op. 1 D. 33, “Lichnye Dokumenty A. L. Kuna,” 1, 14.

105 Arkhiv Vostokovedov, F. 33, Op. 1 D. 23, “Ocherk Shahrisyabskogo Bekstva.”

106 Arkhiv Vostokovedov, F. 33, Op. 1 D. 6, “Zametka o razlichnykh oblastei russkikh issledovaniya v Turkestanskom Krae,” 15–19.

107 Bregel, Yu. E., Dokumenty Arkhiva Khivinskikh Khanov po Istorii i Etnografii Karakalpakov (Moscow, 1967), 5962Google Scholar. I am grateful to Paolo Sartori both for the reference and for suggesting that Mirza ‘Abd ur-Rahman's role recalls that of Indian informants working with British Orientalists referred to passim.

108 N. A. Maev, “A. L. Kun,” Turkestanskiya Vedomosti, 22 Nov. 1888, no. 46.

109 Arkhiv Vostokovedov, F. 33, Op. 1 D. 20, “Zametki o byvshii bukharskikh poryadkakh vzimaniya pozemel'noi podati v Zaravshanskoi doline,” a version of which was published in Turkestanskiya Vedomosti 1873, no. 32; Arkhiv Vostokovedov, F. 33, Op. 1 D. 25, “Vyborki iz vakufnykh dokumentov, medresya i mechetei, nakhodyashchie v sadakh za gorodom.”

110 Lunin, Istoriografiya, 206, 319; Rostislavov also published on land tenure: Ocherk Vidov Zemelnoi Sobstvennosti i Pozemel'nyi Vopros v Turkestanskom Krae (St. Petersburg, 1879).

111 Gen.-Ad't. K., fon-Kaufman, Proekt Vsepoddanneishego Otcheta, 69–70.

112 Morrison, A. S., Russian Rule in Samarkand 1868–1910: A Comparison with British India (Oxford, 2008), 117–18CrossRefGoogle Scholar, 186–87. Thanks to Paolo Sartori for insisting that I make this point.

113 Ostroumov, N. P., 2-i Turkestanskii General-Gubernator General-Leitenant M. G. Chernyaev (1882–1884gg) (typescript, Navoi State Library, Tashkent, 1930), 67Google Scholar; Nikolai Ivanovich Veselovskii (1848–1918) taught at the Oriental Faculty of St. Petersburg University and produced numerous works on the history, religion, and archaeology of Central Asia. Lunin, Istoriografiya, 126–37.

114 Vyatkin, V. L., O Vakufakh Samarkandskoi Oblasti (Samarkand, 1912), 9596Google Scholar.

115 Sartori, Paolo and Pianciola, Niccolo, “Waqf in Turkestan. The Colonial Legacy and the Fate of an Islamic Institution in Early Soviet Central Asia, 1917–1924,” Central Asian Survey 26, 4 (2007): 475–98Google Scholar.

116 Khalid, “Russian History,” 691; See also Alekseev, I. L., “N. P. Ostroumov o problemakh upravleniya musul'manskim naseleniem Turkestanskogo Kraya,” Sbornik Russkogo Istoricheskogo Obshchestva 5, 153 (Moscow, 2002): 8995Google Scholar.

117 Skhimmel'pennink van der Oie, “Mirza-Kazem-Bek,” 269–70; Geraci, Window on the East, 86–115.

118 Ostroumov, N. P., Kriticheskii Razbor Mukhammedanskogo Ucheniya o Prorokakh (Kazan, 1874), 10, 196236Google Scholar.

119 Ibid., 233.

120 Geraci, Window on the East, 57, 90.

121 Ibid., 90.

122 Turkistan Wilayatining Gazeti (Turkestan native gazette); Ostroumov, N. P., “Turkestanskaya Tuzemnaya Gazeta,” in Sarty—Etnograficheskie Materialy, 3d ed. (Tashkent, 1908), 156205Google Scholar.

123 Lunin, B. V., Srednyaya Aziya v Dorevolyutsionnom i Sovetskom Vostokovedenii (Tashkent, 1965), 35Google Scholar.

124 Quoted in Lunin, B. V., “Turkestan v materialakh Lichnogo Arkhiva V. V. Bartol'da,” Obshchestvennye Nauki v Uzbekistane 6 (1965): 4854Google Scholar.

125 Ostroumov, Sarty (1908, 3d ed.), 90.

126 Lunin, “Turkestan v materialakh,” 54.

127 Nalivkin wrote in 1913: “The knowledge the natives have of us for a long time has extended no further than a belief that all Russians smell of fish. For our part we have grasped no more than the absurd and contradictory pronouncements of self-styled “experts” [perhaps a veiled reference to Ostroumov?] … everything has become more and more confused in the chaos, springing from our own ignorance, lack of culture and self-importance. These have been, in their broad outlines, our relations with the native world.” Nalivkin, V. P., Tuzemtsy, Ran'she i Teper (Tashkent, 1913), 69Google Scholar.

128 For a history of “Jadidism” in Central Asia, see Khalid, Politics of Muslim Cultural Reform.

129 Ostroumov, N. P., Islamovedenie: Vvedenie v Kurs Islamovedeniya (Tashkent, 1914), 1819Google Scholar; Marlène Laruelle, in Mythe aryen et rêve impérial, 173, suggests that Ostroumov had an “aryanist” bias, something which seems to be based on a partial reading of his work.

130 See, by contrast, the ripe abuse in Miropiev, O polozhenii russkikh inorodtsev, 3–7, 43–50.

131 Ostroumov, Islamovedenie, 24–26, 55, 67–68, 77.

132 Ostroumov, N. P., Koran i Progress. Po povodu umstvennogo probuzhdeniya sovremmenykh rossiiskikh musul'man (Tashkent, 1901), 610Google Scholar.

133 Khalid, Politics of Muslim Cultural Reform, 89–91, 180–81; Ostroumov's Fond in the Uzbek archives is No. 1,009, but unfortunately I have not been able to make use of his private papers since I was refused permission to work there on my last trip to Tashkent.

134 Ibid., 87–88. For the reference to poems in praise of Ostroumov I am indebted to a fine paper by Aftandil Erkinov given at a conference on Ostroumov's life and work, held at the Orthodox Eparchate in Tashkent in May 2007.

135 Ostroumov, “Turkestanskaya Tuzemnaya Gazeta,” 172.

136 Khalid, “Russian History,” 691–92.

137 Ostroumov, N., Islamovedenie 4: Shariat po Shkole Abu-Khanify (Tashkent, 1912), 4Google Scholar, 16–19, 24. This was a reprint of pieces that had first appeared in Turkestanskiya Vedomosti in 1909. The Hedaya was originally written in Samarkand by Burhan ud-Din al-Marghinani (d. a.d. 1197), but the English translation that Grodekov used had been made in Calcutta in 1791, from a Persian translation, not the Arabic original, and contained numerous inaccuracies. Hamilton, Charles, trans., The Hedaya, 2d ed. (London, 1870)Google Scholar; Kugle “Framed, Blamed and Renamed,” 272–73.

138 Yagello, I. D., ed., Sbornik Materialov po voprosu ob izuchenii Tuzemnykh yazykov sluzhashchimi po voenno-narodnomu upravleniyu Turkestanskogo kraya (Tashkent, 1905), 109Google Scholar. For a discussion of this episode, see Khalid, Politics of Muslim Cultural Reform, 70–71; and Morrison, Russian Rule in Samarkand, 274–82.

139 Antonovich, M., “Po povodu s”ezda po voprosam pravovogo byta musul'man,” Turkestanskii Kur'er, nos. 113–17, 119, in Turkestanskii Sbornik 508 (1909): 92Google Scholar.

140 Skhimmel'pennink van der Oie, “Mirza Kazem-Bek,” 256–69; Crews, For Prophet and Tsar, 178–89.

141 Ghani, Ashraf, “Disputes in a Court of Sharia, Kunar Valley, Afghanistan, 1885–1890,” International Journal of Middle-East Studies 15 (1983): 356–57CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

142 Riasanovsky, N. A., “Asia through Russian Eyes,” in Vucinich, W. S., ed., Russia and Asia: Essays on the Influence of Russia on the Asian Peoples (Stanford, 1972), 329Google Scholar; Morrison, Alexander, “Russian Rule in Turkestan and the Example of British India,” Slavonic and East European Review 84, 4 (2006): 706–7Google Scholar; Sahadeo, Russian Colonial Society, 5.

143 Bayly, Empire and Information, 315–17, 365–76.

144 Unfortunately there is no space here to expand this point, but the combative responses of Jadid writers to Ostroumov and Miropiev are a clear enough case of this. Whilst the Jadids were also critical of Sufism and ishans as “backward,” their critique was as much social as religious, and this was a common characteristic of modernist Islam and not simply a reflection of a colonial discourse. Khalid, Politics of Muslim Cultural Reform, 51–53, 149–50.

145 Bayly, Empire and Information, 171–73.

146 See Babajanov, Bakhtiyar, “Russian Colonial Power in Central Asia as Seen by Local Muslim Intellectuals,” in Eschment, Beate and Harder, Hans, eds., Looking at the Coloniser. Cross-Cultural Perceptions in Central Asia and the Caucasus, Bengal, and Related Areas (Würzburg, 2004), 7590Google Scholar; and Komatsu, Hisao, “Dar al-Islam under Russian Rule as Understood by Turkestani Muslim Intellectuals,” in Uyama, Tomohiko, ed., Empire, Islam, and Politics in Central Eurasia (Sapporo, 2007), 321Google Scholar. Both make the point that most of the ‘ulama and reformist intellectuals in Turkestan came to characterize the colonial regime as Dar al-Islam.

147 Morrison, Russian Rule in Samarkand, 51–87.

148 Pierce, Richard, Russian Central Asia 1867–1917 (Berkeley, 1960), 273Google Scholar. Brower describes Lykoshin's gloomy verdict on the revolt in some detail: Turkestan, 5–6.

149 Morrison, Russian Rule in Samarkand, 117–18, 186–87. And even then I would cast some doubt on the accuracy of the returns, although Beatrice Penati's ongoing research on the Land and Water Reform in the 1920s suggests that the Soviet Regime made use of the data collected by the late-Tsarist Land Tax Commissions in Turkestan, so I may have underestimated their importance.

150 Hirsch, Francine, Empire of Nations: Ethnographic Knowledge and the Making of the Soviet Union (Ithaca, N.Y., 2005), 3061Google Scholar.

151 Khalid, Politics of Muslim Cultural Reform, 199–209; Brower, Turkestan, 52–53; Ostroumov, N. P., Sarty—Etnograficheskie Materialy, 2d ed. (Tashkent, 1896), 152Google Scholar. Although early Soviet ethnographers believed they had “pinned down” the “Sarts” as “Turkicised Iranians,” the category was nevertheless abolished in the 1920s in response to Jadid demands; Zarubin, I. I., Naselenie Samarkandskoi Oblasti (Leningrad, 1926), 20Google Scholar; Khalid, Adeeb, “Theories and Politics of Central Asian Identities,” Ab Imperio 4 (2005): n.p.Google Scholar; Haugen, Arne, The Establishment of National Republics in Soviet Central Asia (London, 2003), 145–49CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

152 Kaspe, Sviatoslav, “Imperial Political Culture and Modernization in the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century,” in Burbank, Jane, Hagen, Mark von, and Remnev, Anatolyi, eds., Russian Empire: Space, People, Power 1700–1930 (Bloomington, Ind., 2007), 455–89Google Scholar; Brower, Turkestan, ix, 174–75.

153 Baberowski, Jörg, “Law, the Judicial System and the Legal Profession,” Cambridge History of Russia, vol. 2 (Cambridge, 2006), 346–48Google Scholar, 356–59.

154 Cooper, Frederick, Colonialism in Question (Berkeley, 2005), 142–44Google Scholar.