Introduction
Part I: Preparations
1. Some kind of preacher
2. Voyaging: two places at once
3. Networks and precursors
Part II: The flag on the mountain
4. Drawing the frontier
5. The tranquillity of the borders
6. The richest collections
7. Creatures of a day: Christian soldiers
Part III: The work on the Hills
8. The banner of the cross
9. Cultural transactions: the letter and the gift
10. Intimacy and transgression
Part IV: The borderlands of law and belief
11. The pen and the sabre
12. The refulgent cross and the heathen carnival
13. The country is ours
Conclusion
Index
Andrew J. May is Professor of History in the School of Historical and Philosophical Studies at the University of Melbourne
[...] This book is thus an important part of the history of both
missions and empire. It is very carefully put together, with
complexity and nuance—as well as a beautiful writing style that
made it a pleasure to read., Emily Manktelow, Journal of
Colonialism and Colonial History, Journal of Colonialism and
Colonial History, 2013
‘Andrew J. May’s Welsh missionaries and British imperialism
succeeds in terms of originality of topic, excellent methodology,
readability of text, and richness of sources. Researchers and
university students of every level will be able to use this
monograph to develop a thorough idea of missionary history and
colonial experience. Furthermore, his microhistory is both
captivating and illuminating, engaging with broader imperial ideas
of race, religion, and space. May’s work deepens our understanding
of British colonial experience in 19th-century northeast
India.’
Professor Andrew J. Avery, Reviews in History, July 2016
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