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The Making of Scientific, Industrial and
Arrogant Europe
Rajesh Kochhar
President IAU Commission 41: History of Astronomy
Indian Institute of Science Education and Research, Mohali, Punjab
rkochhar2000@yahoo.com
27 July 2013
Summary
Throughout the 19th
century in its
encounters with the East Europe was
in a learning mode. Cultural
superiority and racial arrogance set
in in England in the 1830s.
It is no more than a coincidence that
the first British ship reached the
Indian coast the same year (1608)
the telescope was invented in The
Netherlands. This numerology
brings home the fact that modern
science
and technology grew hand in hand
with maritime trade, colonial
expansion and dominance over
nature and fellow human beings.
The key developments are these:
(1) For combined reasons of
healthcare, human curiosity and
commerce, medical botany and
natural history of distant lands were
studied through interaction with the
native population.
(2)For the safety of navigation,
scientific instrumentation and exact
sciences were developed as a self-
contained European exercise.
(3) Machinery was developed to
replace the Indian weaver. This was
also a self-contained, British,
exercise.
(4)Europe at large took to
development of dyeing and printing
processes.
In 1676, a 14-year patent was
granted to one William Sherwin
“for the invention of a new and
speedy way for printing broadcloth
which being the old true way of East
India printing and stayning such
kinds of goods”. In 1696, he
however conceded before the House
of Lords that his printed cloth
“would not bear washing”.
Intelligence on natural materials and
their use was indeed required from India.
i) In 1742, on instructions from his
superiors, the South India based
Jesuit Gaston Laurent Coeurdoux
(1691-1779) collected information
from dyers whom he had converted
and sent the account to Europe,
where it was widely read and where
it remained relevant for a long time.
It is a measure of the priorities of the
time that Coeurdoux’s fundamental
work as a pioneering researcher in
philology went unnoticed.
ii)The special process of Turkish red
used the Indian Chaya root and
Kasha leaves. Introduced into France
by an Armenian, it baffled chemists
for a long time until it was cleared
up, in 1902, by a calico-printer at
Leyden, Felix Dreissen, who got the
secret from a native dyer in Madurai
(south India).’2
In their 18th century encounters with
India and the East in general, the
trading nation of British displayed
genuine interest in, respect for, and
desire to benefit and profit from
traditional empirical technologies. In
the industrial Britain of the early
19th century, this admiration was
replaced by openly expressed
disdain. This is understandable. You
cannot lord over people you respect.
There is a persistent pattern in
Britain’s scientific and industrial
discoveries of the early 19th century.
Once a milestone was reached in
Western science, details of the steps
leading to it were obliterated, and
modern science and technology was
presented as a stand-alone, without
any pre-history.
I would like to illustrate this with the
help of 3 examples: zinc, steel, and
vaccination.
India devised zinc metallurgy, before
Alexander’s time, to be able to prepare
high-zinc content gold-like brass for
making Buddha idols.
As late as 1735, the Swedish chemist
Georg Brandt (1694-1768), who
identified cobalt as an element,
believed that ‘zinc could not be
reduced to metal except in the
presence of copper’.6
But, the commercial interests knew
better. In 1738, William Champion
(1709-1789) obtained a patent for
the extraction of pure zinc through
inverse distillation, and set up his
works in 1743.7
The Swedish professor Torbern
Bergman wrote in 1779 that several
years previously ‘A certain
Englishman’ went to China ‘for the
purpose of learning the art, returned
safely home, indeed, and appears to
have been sufficiently instructed in
the secret, but he carefully concealed
it’. A little later, in 1797, the German
professor Johann Bergman asserted
that the Englishman went not to
China but India for the purpose. 9
Seen from Europe it did not quite
matter whether the original home of
metallic zinc was India or China.
Not surprisingly, there is no English
account of any sort.
A 100 years previously, in 1608, the
Dutch optician Hans Lipperhey was
denied a patent on the telescope, ‘on
the ground that it is evident that
several others have knowledge of the
invention’.
Metallic zinc may have been
common knowledge in far off places,
but in a Euro-centric world if a thing
was new for Europe it did not exist
before.
Indian steel
Since pre-Alexandrian times, India
had been producing high quality
steel by melting pure iron in the
presence of carbonaceous material.
Europe already knew about its
cutting-edge properties because the
Damascus swords made out of it
were used against the Christian
Crusaders. Specimens and some
details about the making of Indian
steel reached Europe when the direct
trade began. In 1675 Robert Hooke
noted in his diary: ‘bringing soe as to
melt made the best steel after it had
been wrought over again’. This was
significant because Europe had
earlier associated the properties
of steel not with the process but with
the quality of the ore.
Benjamin Huntsman (1704-1776)
has been invariably described as
‘English inventor of crucible
steelmaking’.
Was he inspired by the Indian
method? No contemporaneous
account would even admit the
question, leave aside discuss it.
James Moore Swank, US expert on
iron and steel, wrote in his 1892
History of the Manufacture of Iron
in All Ages that the details of
manufacture of Indian steel ‘in our
day’ ‘plainly suggest the crucible
process perfected by Huntsman’.
This came not from Britain but from
USA and that too when the 19th
century
was coming to an end.
While discussing its own inventions
and discoveries, Europe did not
consider the Eastern antecedents to
be relevant. But when it came to the
But when it came to the Indian
scientific tradition, the roots, real or
imagined, were considered more
important than the fruits.
Some examples>>
Astronomy
Indian mathematical astronomical
tradition built over a millennium 6th
century CE onwards was dismissed
out of hand as imitative and its
Greek origins emphasized. There
was of course no mention of the
post- Alexandrian Egypt and Iraq
inputs that had gone into making of
the Greek science.
Far greater ingenuity was exercised
in the case of chemistry.
Chemistry
When a 14th century chemistry text
(Rasaratnasamuchchaya) named 41
previous authors, it was declared
with a straight face that the names
were mostly apocryphal .10
Similarly, when the author of
another Sanskrit text Rasasara
explicitly acknowledged his debt to
‘the traditions and opinions of the
Baudhas [ the Buddhists]’,
it was said that ‘ by Baudhas, the
author probably meant the
Muhammadans’.11
Surely Arabs would have liked to
hear that. But it was not considered
necessary to inform them. They in
their place were told that their role in
the world history of science had
been no more than as librarians and
archivists for preserving Greek
science till Europe was in a position
to take its heritage back.
Wootz
In the closing years of the 18th
century, samples of Indian steel
wootz were received in Britain , first
by chance and then on request. They
were investigated thoroughly
under the auspices of the Royal
Society. How significant the
introduction of wootz was can be
seen from the following:
About 1796, a wootz penknife was
presented to King George III.
•Sir Thomas Frankland sealed his letters
to Mushet ‘with the Sanscrit characters
denoting wootz, in full and prominent
display’.
• One of the trade cards of John Stodart
FRS, dated about 1820, carried the
inscription:
J. Stodart, at 401, Strand, London,
Surgeon’s Instruments, Razors and
other Cutlery made from Wootz, a
steel from India, preferred by Mr
Stodart to the best steel in Europe.
• Examination of wootz samples (in UK)
yielded two patents ( Mushet 1800,
Mackintosh 1825) while another ( Heath
1839) resulted from an observation of
steelmaking in South India.
•Heath in turn was at the receiving end
half a century later.
• Heath wrote, referring to the patents of
Mushet and Mackintosh that ‘the Indian
process combines the principles of both
the above described methods’.
•Half a century later, Heath himself was
at the receiving end :
Henry Bessemer (1813-1898) wrote
in his autobiography that Heath
conceived the idea of his ‘invention’
from ‘noticing in the native Wootz
steel-making of India the marvellous
effect of manganese’
•In 1819, Stodart entrusted Michael
Faraday with the task of analysis of
wootz samples. As Faraday wrote in his
diary, he ‘was desirous , among other
researches, to make an experiment, with
a view to imitating Wootz’. Indeed one
of the earliest successes reported in the
paper presented to the Royal Institution
in 1820 was the preparation of a
specimen which had ‘all the appreciable
characteristics of the best Bombay
Wootz’. Faraday wrongly concluded that
the strength of the wootz came from
aluminum. It however was a
‘fruitful error’ because it gave birth to
the new discipline of alloy steels. .
•Faraday (1819) erroneously believed
that the strength of wootz came not from
the process but from the presence of
other materials. This was a fruitful error,
because it opened the new field of alloy
steels.
The influential British metallurgist
John Percy in 1864 called wootz
making the Hindoo process of
steelmaking and its furnace the
Hindoo furnace. The nomenclature is
significant.
.
If it was a Hindu process, it called
for suitable Europeanization without
acknowledgement. ( Note that in
India itself historians used terms like
Hindu chemistry, Hindu
mathematics, Hindu sine.)
Smallpox
Variolation (inoculation with human
pox) was introduced in England in
1721, and vaccination (using
cowpox) in 1799. 20
Variolation continued to be practised
at the smallpox hospital in London
until 1822. It was altogether stopped
by an Act of Parliament in 1840.
In their time both variolation and
vaccination met with great hostility.
A smallpox hospital was opened in
London in 1746. ‘For a long time,
however, the prejudices against the
hospital were so great, that the
patients on leaving it were abused
and insulted in the street;
wherefore they were not suffered to
depart until the darkness of the night
enabled them to do it unobserved by
the populace’ .21
In the 1810s, Norwich city embarked
on a plan of persuading the poor to
get themselves vaccinated by paying
them a cash incentive of half a
crown. The plan in itself was quite a
success, but smallpox was not
extinguished.
Report of the Pauper Vaccination in
Norwich city for 1812–1813 pointed
out that the disease was ‘kept in
existence by unscrupulous
practitioners from London
who travelled to different places to
inoculate people with smallpox.
The only remedy lay, the Report
asserted, ‘in passing a law, imposing
a severe penalty on any one, directly
or indirectly concerned in the act of
variolous inoculation’.
---
Variolation had been practised in the
eastern parts of India since great
antiquity. Vaccination was officially
introduced in India in 1803.
Forgetting the resistance first the
introduction of variolation and then
of vaccination had met with in
Britain, the colonial government
wanted the Indians to overnight
become appreciative of the English
‘spirit of benevolence’ and express
gratitude for being conveyed ‘the
fruits of the happy discovery
[vaccination]’.23
In Calcutta, there were traditional
inoculators who variolated a small
fraction of the population creating an
epidemic. The situation was so
similar to the one that Norwich had
previously faced that paragraphs
from the Norwich Report were
plagiarized in the1831 Calcutta
Report written by Dr William
Cameron, Superintendent-General of
Vaccination, . This Report in turn
was enthusiastically cited in 1850
by the Smallpox Commissioners,
who added some remarks of their
own:
‘in a country where practices such as
Suttee and Infanticide were, until
lately, deemed justifiable on the
score of Religious usage, neither will
there be wanting bigots to mislead
the ignorant Hindoos, and to
prejudice their credulous and simple
minds, against whatever may be
falsely represented to them as an
innovation, or an interference with
their religious privileges’ .24
Note that when variolation is
practised in London even after
vaccination has been introduced,
smallpox inoculators are merely
called immoral and mischievous, and
sought to be dealt with by a strict
law. But when the same
phenomenon is observed in Calcutta,
memories of suttee and infanticide
are revived and the blame placed at
the door of Hindu bigotry, prejudice
and superstition.
Incidentally, if the British in India
had followed the Norwich model and
offered cash incentive to those
opting for vaccination, it is very
likely that prejudices against it
would have disappeared or at least
diminished.
England came a long way in the
period from the start of variolation in
1721 to its abolition in 1840. An
industrialized England was far more
confidant and arrogant than a trading
England had been. The period
around the 1830s was important for
a number of convergent reasons.
In history of technology, grant of a
patent constitutes a landmark; for
growth of industry its expiry.
Cartwright’s patent on power-driven
loom expired in 1801 opening the
field wide open. By this time
navigation had become scientific and
safe, and the deadly scurvy been
controlled.
Merchants- turned -rulers in India
could now forcibly extinguish the
age - old manufacture of fine
textiles. Britain’s industrial progress
can be gauged from the figures of
consumption of cotton.
In 1764 the import was 3.8 million
lb. In 1785 it shot up to 18 million
lb. In 1830 the figure was 265
million lb, and climbing up and up .
Between 1815 and 1832 the value of
cotton goods exported from India
fell from 1.3 million pound sterling
to a mere 1,00,000. In the same
period, the value of English cotton
goods imported into India rose from
a paltry 26,000 pound sterling to
4,00,000.
In 1835, the colonial government
brought its transition from the
Mughal administration to an end by
introducing a new education policy:
i)Persian was banished from office.
ii)Generous and uncritical support to
Sanskrit, Arabic and Persian
learning was discontinued.
iii)English was made the official
language ( Bentinck-Macaulay).
Significantly, the new Government
policy was facilitated by the
successful change in the missionary
position that had just taken place. The
missionaries moved to Calcutta from the
mofussil; targeted elitist sections of the
society rather the marginal; and focused
on English rather than the vernacular.
To sum up, racial arrogance set in
when Britain’s transition from a
trading nation to an industrial power
was completed, that is when British
machines finally made the fine
Indian weaver entirely redundant.
In 1837, a Bengal cavalry officer,
after an exploratory tour of Egypt
and Arabia in connection with steam
navigation, declared in his report: ‘It
seems to be a law of nature that the
civilized nations should conquer and
possess the countries in a state of
barbarianism and by such means,
however unjustifiable it may appear
at first, extend the blessings of
knowledge, industry and commerce
among people hitherto sunk in the
most gloomy depths of superstitious
ignorance. ’26
Interestingly, the 1977 Cambridge
History of Africa, Vol. 5 (p. 495)
quotes this passage, but wrongly
says ‘ It seems to me’ rather than
‘It seems to be’, making the
observation personal rather than
universal.
The 1837 use of the phrase ‘law of
nature’ in the context of human
affairs is significant.
It is as if the authorship of the
powerful knowledge system of
modern science bestowed such
cultural and racial superiority on the
Europeans as to give them a divine
right to rule over others.
THANK YOU
1 Thomas 1924, p. 207.
2 Thomas 1924, p. 211.
3 Hegde 1991, p. 58.
4 Beckmann 1797, p. 75.
5 Beckmann 1814, pp.72-73.
6 Mellor 1957, p.403.
7 Kochhar 1994.
8 Bergman 1788, p.317.
9 Beckmann 1814, p.91.
10 Ray 1918, p. 101.
11 Ray 1918, p. 91.
12 Mushet 1840, pp. 662-663
13 Mushet 1840, p.670.
14 Hadfield 1932, pp.225-226.
15 ‘Give me the fruitful error any time, full of seeds,
bursting with its own correction. You can keep your
sterile truth for yourself’- Vilfredo Pareto 1848-
1923.
16 Hadfield 1932, p.225.
17 Heath however was unable to draw any financial
benefit from his patent, because of its imperfect
wording; see , e.g., Charles Dickens’ Household
Worlds, 1853, Vol. 6, pp. 230-232
18 Van Nostrand’s Eclectic Engineering Magazine,
1870, Vol. 3, No. 21, p. 280.
19 Percy 1864, p. 774.
20 Shoolbred 1805, p. 1.
21 Woodville 1796, p. 238.
22 Shoolbred 1805, p. 9).
23 Brimnes 2004, p. 221.
24 Report of the Smallpox Commissioners, p 54,
(Calcutta: Military Orphan Press).
25 Edinburgh Medical and Surgical Journal 1814,
Vol. 10. p. 124.
26 Mackenzie 1837, p. 490.
References
Bergman, Torbern (1784) Physical and Chemical Essays,
Vol. 2, p. 314 (London: J. Murray).
Brimnes, N. ( 2004) Variolation, vaccination and popular
resistance in early colonial South India. Med. History, Vol.
48, pp. 199–228.
Bronson, Bennet (1986) The making and selling of wootz, a
crucible steel of India. Archaeomaterials, Vol.1, pp. 13-51.
Hadfield, Robert (1933) A research on Faraday’s ‘Steel and
Alloys’. Transactions of the Royal Society of London, Series
A, Vol. 230, pp. 221-292
Hegde, K.T.M.(1991) An Introduction to Ancient Indian
Metallurgy (Bangalore: Geological Society of India).
Beckmann, Johann (1797) A History of Inventions and
Discoveries, Vol. 3, pp. 71-99 (London: J. Bell).
James, C. (1810) Vaccination. In: A New and Enlarged
Military Dictionary, Vol. 2 (London: T Eggerton)
Kochhar, Rajesh (1994) Smelting of ideas [zinc metallurgy].
Economic Times, 20 Aug.
Kochhar, Rajesh (2006) Smallpox in the modern scientific
and colonial contexts 1721–1840. Journal of Biosciences,
Vol. 36, pp. 1–8.
Mackenzie, James (1837) ‘Egypt and Arabia’, The Literary
Gazette; and Journal of Belle Lettre, Arts, Sciences & co.,
No.1072, 5 Aug., pp. 489-492.
Mellor, J. W. (1957) A Comprehensive Treatise on Inorganic
and Theoretical Chemistry, Vol. 4 ( London: Longman,
Green and Co.).
Mushet, David (1840) Papers on Iron and Steel ( London:
John Weale).
Ray, Prafulla Chandra (1918) Essays and Discourses
(Madras: G.A. Natesan)
Shoolbred, J. ( 1805) Report on the Progress of Vaccine
Inoculation in Bengal (London: Blacks and Perry).
Woodville W 1796 The History of Inoculation of the Small-
pox, in Great Britain Vol. 1 (London: James Philips).

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Making of scientific, industrial and arrogant Europe (Paper presented at the 24th International Congress of History of Science, Technology and Medicine, Manchester 2013 July 21-28)

  • 1. The Making of Scientific, Industrial and Arrogant Europe Rajesh Kochhar President IAU Commission 41: History of Astronomy Indian Institute of Science Education and Research, Mohali, Punjab rkochhar2000@yahoo.com 27 July 2013
  • 2. Summary Throughout the 19th century in its encounters with the East Europe was in a learning mode. Cultural superiority and racial arrogance set in in England in the 1830s.
  • 3. It is no more than a coincidence that the first British ship reached the Indian coast the same year (1608) the telescope was invented in The Netherlands. This numerology brings home the fact that modern science
  • 4. and technology grew hand in hand with maritime trade, colonial expansion and dominance over nature and fellow human beings. The key developments are these:
  • 5. (1) For combined reasons of healthcare, human curiosity and commerce, medical botany and natural history of distant lands were studied through interaction with the native population.
  • 6. (2)For the safety of navigation, scientific instrumentation and exact sciences were developed as a self- contained European exercise. (3) Machinery was developed to replace the Indian weaver. This was
  • 7. also a self-contained, British, exercise. (4)Europe at large took to development of dyeing and printing processes.
  • 8. In 1676, a 14-year patent was granted to one William Sherwin “for the invention of a new and speedy way for printing broadcloth which being the old true way of East India printing and stayning such
  • 9. kinds of goods”. In 1696, he however conceded before the House of Lords that his printed cloth “would not bear washing”. Intelligence on natural materials and their use was indeed required from India.
  • 10. i) In 1742, on instructions from his superiors, the South India based Jesuit Gaston Laurent Coeurdoux (1691-1779) collected information from dyers whom he had converted and sent the account to Europe,
  • 11. where it was widely read and where it remained relevant for a long time. It is a measure of the priorities of the time that Coeurdoux’s fundamental work as a pioneering researcher in philology went unnoticed.
  • 12. ii)The special process of Turkish red used the Indian Chaya root and Kasha leaves. Introduced into France by an Armenian, it baffled chemists for a long time until it was cleared up, in 1902, by a calico-printer at
  • 13. Leyden, Felix Dreissen, who got the secret from a native dyer in Madurai (south India).’2 In their 18th century encounters with India and the East in general, the trading nation of British displayed
  • 14. genuine interest in, respect for, and desire to benefit and profit from traditional empirical technologies. In the industrial Britain of the early 19th century, this admiration was replaced by openly expressed
  • 15. disdain. This is understandable. You cannot lord over people you respect. There is a persistent pattern in Britain’s scientific and industrial discoveries of the early 19th century. Once a milestone was reached in
  • 16. Western science, details of the steps leading to it were obliterated, and modern science and technology was presented as a stand-alone, without any pre-history.
  • 17. I would like to illustrate this with the help of 3 examples: zinc, steel, and vaccination. India devised zinc metallurgy, before Alexander’s time, to be able to prepare high-zinc content gold-like brass for making Buddha idols.
  • 18. As late as 1735, the Swedish chemist Georg Brandt (1694-1768), who identified cobalt as an element, believed that ‘zinc could not be reduced to metal except in the presence of copper’.6
  • 19. But, the commercial interests knew better. In 1738, William Champion (1709-1789) obtained a patent for the extraction of pure zinc through inverse distillation, and set up his works in 1743.7
  • 20. The Swedish professor Torbern Bergman wrote in 1779 that several years previously ‘A certain Englishman’ went to China ‘for the purpose of learning the art, returned safely home, indeed, and appears to
  • 21. have been sufficiently instructed in the secret, but he carefully concealed it’. A little later, in 1797, the German professor Johann Bergman asserted that the Englishman went not to China but India for the purpose. 9
  • 22. Seen from Europe it did not quite matter whether the original home of metallic zinc was India or China. Not surprisingly, there is no English account of any sort.
  • 23. A 100 years previously, in 1608, the Dutch optician Hans Lipperhey was denied a patent on the telescope, ‘on the ground that it is evident that several others have knowledge of the invention’.
  • 24. Metallic zinc may have been common knowledge in far off places, but in a Euro-centric world if a thing was new for Europe it did not exist before.
  • 25. Indian steel Since pre-Alexandrian times, India had been producing high quality steel by melting pure iron in the presence of carbonaceous material. Europe already knew about its
  • 26. cutting-edge properties because the Damascus swords made out of it were used against the Christian Crusaders. Specimens and some details about the making of Indian steel reached Europe when the direct
  • 27. trade began. In 1675 Robert Hooke noted in his diary: ‘bringing soe as to melt made the best steel after it had been wrought over again’. This was significant because Europe had earlier associated the properties
  • 28. of steel not with the process but with the quality of the ore. Benjamin Huntsman (1704-1776) has been invariably described as ‘English inventor of crucible steelmaking’.
  • 29. Was he inspired by the Indian method? No contemporaneous account would even admit the question, leave aside discuss it. James Moore Swank, US expert on iron and steel, wrote in his 1892
  • 30. History of the Manufacture of Iron in All Ages that the details of manufacture of Indian steel ‘in our day’ ‘plainly suggest the crucible process perfected by Huntsman’. This came not from Britain but from
  • 31. USA and that too when the 19th century was coming to an end. While discussing its own inventions and discoveries, Europe did not consider the Eastern antecedents to be relevant. But when it came to the
  • 32. But when it came to the Indian scientific tradition, the roots, real or imagined, were considered more important than the fruits. Some examples>>
  • 33. Astronomy Indian mathematical astronomical tradition built over a millennium 6th century CE onwards was dismissed out of hand as imitative and its Greek origins emphasized. There
  • 34. was of course no mention of the post- Alexandrian Egypt and Iraq inputs that had gone into making of the Greek science. Far greater ingenuity was exercised in the case of chemistry.
  • 35. Chemistry When a 14th century chemistry text (Rasaratnasamuchchaya) named 41 previous authors, it was declared with a straight face that the names were mostly apocryphal .10
  • 36. Similarly, when the author of another Sanskrit text Rasasara explicitly acknowledged his debt to ‘the traditions and opinions of the Baudhas [ the Buddhists]’,
  • 37. it was said that ‘ by Baudhas, the author probably meant the Muhammadans’.11 Surely Arabs would have liked to hear that. But it was not considered necessary to inform them. They in
  • 38. their place were told that their role in the world history of science had been no more than as librarians and archivists for preserving Greek science till Europe was in a position to take its heritage back.
  • 39. Wootz In the closing years of the 18th century, samples of Indian steel wootz were received in Britain , first by chance and then on request. They were investigated thoroughly
  • 40. under the auspices of the Royal Society. How significant the introduction of wootz was can be seen from the following: About 1796, a wootz penknife was presented to King George III.
  • 41. •Sir Thomas Frankland sealed his letters to Mushet ‘with the Sanscrit characters denoting wootz, in full and prominent display’. • One of the trade cards of John Stodart FRS, dated about 1820, carried the inscription:
  • 42. J. Stodart, at 401, Strand, London, Surgeon’s Instruments, Razors and other Cutlery made from Wootz, a steel from India, preferred by Mr Stodart to the best steel in Europe.
  • 43. • Examination of wootz samples (in UK) yielded two patents ( Mushet 1800, Mackintosh 1825) while another ( Heath 1839) resulted from an observation of steelmaking in South India. •Heath in turn was at the receiving end half a century later.
  • 44. • Heath wrote, referring to the patents of Mushet and Mackintosh that ‘the Indian process combines the principles of both the above described methods’. •Half a century later, Heath himself was at the receiving end :
  • 45. Henry Bessemer (1813-1898) wrote in his autobiography that Heath conceived the idea of his ‘invention’ from ‘noticing in the native Wootz steel-making of India the marvellous effect of manganese’
  • 46. •In 1819, Stodart entrusted Michael Faraday with the task of analysis of wootz samples. As Faraday wrote in his diary, he ‘was desirous , among other researches, to make an experiment, with a view to imitating Wootz’. Indeed one of the earliest successes reported in the
  • 47. paper presented to the Royal Institution in 1820 was the preparation of a specimen which had ‘all the appreciable characteristics of the best Bombay Wootz’. Faraday wrongly concluded that the strength of the wootz came from aluminum. It however was a
  • 48. ‘fruitful error’ because it gave birth to the new discipline of alloy steels. .
  • 49. •Faraday (1819) erroneously believed that the strength of wootz came not from the process but from the presence of other materials. This was a fruitful error, because it opened the new field of alloy steels.
  • 50. The influential British metallurgist John Percy in 1864 called wootz making the Hindoo process of steelmaking and its furnace the Hindoo furnace. The nomenclature is significant. .
  • 51. If it was a Hindu process, it called for suitable Europeanization without acknowledgement. ( Note that in India itself historians used terms like Hindu chemistry, Hindu mathematics, Hindu sine.)
  • 52. Smallpox Variolation (inoculation with human pox) was introduced in England in 1721, and vaccination (using cowpox) in 1799. 20
  • 53. Variolation continued to be practised at the smallpox hospital in London until 1822. It was altogether stopped by an Act of Parliament in 1840. In their time both variolation and vaccination met with great hostility.
  • 54. A smallpox hospital was opened in London in 1746. ‘For a long time, however, the prejudices against the hospital were so great, that the patients on leaving it were abused and insulted in the street;
  • 55. wherefore they were not suffered to depart until the darkness of the night enabled them to do it unobserved by the populace’ .21
  • 56. In the 1810s, Norwich city embarked on a plan of persuading the poor to get themselves vaccinated by paying them a cash incentive of half a crown. The plan in itself was quite a success, but smallpox was not
  • 57. extinguished. Report of the Pauper Vaccination in Norwich city for 1812–1813 pointed out that the disease was ‘kept in existence by unscrupulous practitioners from London
  • 58. who travelled to different places to inoculate people with smallpox. The only remedy lay, the Report asserted, ‘in passing a law, imposing a severe penalty on any one, directly or indirectly concerned in the act of
  • 59. variolous inoculation’. --- Variolation had been practised in the eastern parts of India since great antiquity. Vaccination was officially introduced in India in 1803.
  • 60. Forgetting the resistance first the introduction of variolation and then of vaccination had met with in Britain, the colonial government wanted the Indians to overnight become appreciative of the English
  • 61. ‘spirit of benevolence’ and express gratitude for being conveyed ‘the fruits of the happy discovery [vaccination]’.23
  • 62. In Calcutta, there were traditional inoculators who variolated a small fraction of the population creating an epidemic. The situation was so similar to the one that Norwich had previously faced that paragraphs
  • 63. from the Norwich Report were plagiarized in the1831 Calcutta Report written by Dr William Cameron, Superintendent-General of Vaccination, . This Report in turn was enthusiastically cited in 1850
  • 64. by the Smallpox Commissioners, who added some remarks of their own:
  • 65. ‘in a country where practices such as Suttee and Infanticide were, until lately, deemed justifiable on the score of Religious usage, neither will there be wanting bigots to mislead the ignorant Hindoos, and to
  • 66. prejudice their credulous and simple minds, against whatever may be falsely represented to them as an innovation, or an interference with their religious privileges’ .24
  • 67. Note that when variolation is practised in London even after vaccination has been introduced, smallpox inoculators are merely called immoral and mischievous, and sought to be dealt with by a strict
  • 68. law. But when the same phenomenon is observed in Calcutta, memories of suttee and infanticide are revived and the blame placed at the door of Hindu bigotry, prejudice and superstition.
  • 69. Incidentally, if the British in India had followed the Norwich model and offered cash incentive to those opting for vaccination, it is very likely that prejudices against it would have disappeared or at least
  • 70. diminished. England came a long way in the period from the start of variolation in 1721 to its abolition in 1840. An industrialized England was far more confidant and arrogant than a trading
  • 71. England had been. The period around the 1830s was important for a number of convergent reasons. In history of technology, grant of a patent constitutes a landmark; for growth of industry its expiry.
  • 72. Cartwright’s patent on power-driven loom expired in 1801 opening the field wide open. By this time navigation had become scientific and safe, and the deadly scurvy been controlled.
  • 73. Merchants- turned -rulers in India could now forcibly extinguish the age - old manufacture of fine textiles. Britain’s industrial progress can be gauged from the figures of consumption of cotton.
  • 74. In 1764 the import was 3.8 million lb. In 1785 it shot up to 18 million lb. In 1830 the figure was 265 million lb, and climbing up and up . Between 1815 and 1832 the value of cotton goods exported from India
  • 75. fell from 1.3 million pound sterling to a mere 1,00,000. In the same period, the value of English cotton goods imported into India rose from a paltry 26,000 pound sterling to 4,00,000.
  • 76. In 1835, the colonial government brought its transition from the Mughal administration to an end by introducing a new education policy: i)Persian was banished from office. ii)Generous and uncritical support to
  • 77. Sanskrit, Arabic and Persian learning was discontinued. iii)English was made the official language ( Bentinck-Macaulay). Significantly, the new Government policy was facilitated by the
  • 78. successful change in the missionary position that had just taken place. The missionaries moved to Calcutta from the mofussil; targeted elitist sections of the society rather the marginal; and focused on English rather than the vernacular.
  • 79. To sum up, racial arrogance set in when Britain’s transition from a trading nation to an industrial power was completed, that is when British machines finally made the fine Indian weaver entirely redundant.
  • 80. In 1837, a Bengal cavalry officer, after an exploratory tour of Egypt and Arabia in connection with steam navigation, declared in his report: ‘It seems to be a law of nature that the civilized nations should conquer and
  • 81. possess the countries in a state of barbarianism and by such means, however unjustifiable it may appear at first, extend the blessings of knowledge, industry and commerce among people hitherto sunk in the
  • 82. most gloomy depths of superstitious ignorance. ’26 Interestingly, the 1977 Cambridge History of Africa, Vol. 5 (p. 495) quotes this passage, but wrongly says ‘ It seems to me’ rather than
  • 83. ‘It seems to be’, making the observation personal rather than universal. The 1837 use of the phrase ‘law of nature’ in the context of human affairs is significant.
  • 84. It is as if the authorship of the powerful knowledge system of modern science bestowed such cultural and racial superiority on the Europeans as to give them a divine right to rule over others.
  • 86. 1 Thomas 1924, p. 207. 2 Thomas 1924, p. 211. 3 Hegde 1991, p. 58. 4 Beckmann 1797, p. 75. 5 Beckmann 1814, pp.72-73. 6 Mellor 1957, p.403. 7 Kochhar 1994. 8 Bergman 1788, p.317. 9 Beckmann 1814, p.91. 10 Ray 1918, p. 101. 11 Ray 1918, p. 91. 12 Mushet 1840, pp. 662-663
  • 87. 13 Mushet 1840, p.670. 14 Hadfield 1932, pp.225-226. 15 ‘Give me the fruitful error any time, full of seeds, bursting with its own correction. You can keep your sterile truth for yourself’- Vilfredo Pareto 1848- 1923. 16 Hadfield 1932, p.225. 17 Heath however was unable to draw any financial benefit from his patent, because of its imperfect wording; see , e.g., Charles Dickens’ Household Worlds, 1853, Vol. 6, pp. 230-232 18 Van Nostrand’s Eclectic Engineering Magazine, 1870, Vol. 3, No. 21, p. 280.
  • 88. 19 Percy 1864, p. 774. 20 Shoolbred 1805, p. 1. 21 Woodville 1796, p. 238. 22 Shoolbred 1805, p. 9). 23 Brimnes 2004, p. 221. 24 Report of the Smallpox Commissioners, p 54, (Calcutta: Military Orphan Press). 25 Edinburgh Medical and Surgical Journal 1814, Vol. 10. p. 124. 26 Mackenzie 1837, p. 490.
  • 89. References Bergman, Torbern (1784) Physical and Chemical Essays, Vol. 2, p. 314 (London: J. Murray). Brimnes, N. ( 2004) Variolation, vaccination and popular resistance in early colonial South India. Med. History, Vol. 48, pp. 199–228. Bronson, Bennet (1986) The making and selling of wootz, a crucible steel of India. Archaeomaterials, Vol.1, pp. 13-51. Hadfield, Robert (1933) A research on Faraday’s ‘Steel and Alloys’. Transactions of the Royal Society of London, Series A, Vol. 230, pp. 221-292
  • 90. Hegde, K.T.M.(1991) An Introduction to Ancient Indian Metallurgy (Bangalore: Geological Society of India). Beckmann, Johann (1797) A History of Inventions and Discoveries, Vol. 3, pp. 71-99 (London: J. Bell). James, C. (1810) Vaccination. In: A New and Enlarged Military Dictionary, Vol. 2 (London: T Eggerton) Kochhar, Rajesh (1994) Smelting of ideas [zinc metallurgy]. Economic Times, 20 Aug. Kochhar, Rajesh (2006) Smallpox in the modern scientific and colonial contexts 1721–1840. Journal of Biosciences, Vol. 36, pp. 1–8.
  • 91. Mackenzie, James (1837) ‘Egypt and Arabia’, The Literary Gazette; and Journal of Belle Lettre, Arts, Sciences & co., No.1072, 5 Aug., pp. 489-492. Mellor, J. W. (1957) A Comprehensive Treatise on Inorganic and Theoretical Chemistry, Vol. 4 ( London: Longman, Green and Co.). Mushet, David (1840) Papers on Iron and Steel ( London: John Weale). Ray, Prafulla Chandra (1918) Essays and Discourses (Madras: G.A. Natesan)
  • 92. Shoolbred, J. ( 1805) Report on the Progress of Vaccine Inoculation in Bengal (London: Blacks and Perry). Woodville W 1796 The History of Inoculation of the Small- pox, in Great Britain Vol. 1 (London: James Philips).

Editor's Notes

  1. , which being the old true way of East India printing and stayning such kinds of goods”. In 1796, Sherwin however conceded before the House of Lords that his printed cloth “would not bear washing”. Thomas 1924,p.209. Thomas 1924,p.209.
  2. In 1676, a fourteen-year patent was granted to one William Sherwin (1607-1687) “for the invention of a new and speedy way for printing broadcloth, which being the old true way of East India printing and stayning such kinds of goods”. In 1796, Sherwin however conceded before the House of Lords that his printed cloth “would not bear washing”. Thomas 1924,p.209. Thomas 1924,p.209.
  3. .
  4. Between 1815 and 1832 the value of exported Indian cotton goods fell from 1.3 million pound sterling to a mere 1,00,000. In the same period, the value of English cotton goods imported into India rose from a paltry 26,000 pound sterling to 4,00,000 pound sterling. Ashworth 1858, p. 256. Dutt 1949, Vol. 2, p. 101.
  5. In the same period, the value of English cotton goods imported into India rose from a paltry 26,000 pound sterling to 4,00,000 pound sterling. Ashworth 1858, p. 256. Dutt 1949, Vol. 2, p. 101.