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Imperial Security and Moslem Militancy, With Special Reference to the Hertogh Riots in Singapore (December 1950)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 August 2009

Extract

In the nineteenth century the British, Dutch, French and Russians bit deep into the Islamic world. European colonial power rested on the active support of Moslem rulers who, as leaders of clearly defined and hierarchical societies possessed of laws and monarchs, were attractive collaborators in the exercise of imperialism. With a pragmatism born of frontier experience, Europeans reached agreements with Islamic regimes throughout Asia and Africa. The dictum of Usuman dan Fodio — “The government of a country is the government of its king. If the king is Moslem, his land is Moslem” — was echoed in many a European statement on the principles and practices of colonial rule. The British, for their part, struck deals with Indian princes and Fulani emirs, with the Egyptian Khedive and the Sultan of Zanzibar, with the royal houses of the Arab world and the rulers of the Malay states.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The National University of Singapore 1986

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References

This article is a version of a paper given at the conference of the Association of South East Asian Studies in the United Kingdom,University of Kent at Canterbury,March 1984Google Scholar.

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