Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Enlightenment, education and India: Sir John Macpherson and King’s College, Aberdeen

View through CrossRef
This article explores the connections between the Scottish politician and colonial administrator Sir John Macpherson (c.1744-1821) and King's College, Aberdeen. A native of the isle of Skye, John entered the English East India Company’s service in 1769. A member of the supreme council of Bengal, he eventually became Governor-general of India in 1785.  Like his friend and kinsman James ‘Ossian’ Macpherson and his own father, the Rev. John Macpherson of Sleat, John was educated at King’s College. The influence of Aberdeen scholars on both men was not only intellectual, but political. Aberdeen provided the Macphersons with powerful networks of Indian patronage. Among John’s friends was Roderick Macleod, philosophy professor and sub-principal of King’s whose correspondence reveals a common range of colonial and antiquarian interests shared with the Macphersons of Sleat. Moreover, the relations between John’s family and subprincipal Dr Hugh Macpherson, also from Skye, exemplify Aberdeen’s pivotal role in providing opportunities abroad for families from the western isles. This article also examines John's neglected role in the foundation of the Inverness Academy. His correspondence contains a real manifesto for exporting human and cultural capital from the Highlands to the East Indies. Partly funded by a group of Highland nabobs in Bengal, the Academy provided education for young Highlanders in a range of topics (language, finance, arts) in order to qualify them for entering universities while offering a secular alternative to the SSPCK. Finally, specific attention is given to John's sponsoring of a scholarship for Gaelic-speaking students at King's, showing the fruitful interactions between Aberdeen, the Gaelic Enlightenment and India in the 1790s and 1800s. Such preoccupations reposition Aberdeen not only as a natural centre for educationbut also as a crucial step towards the participation of the Scottish Highlands to the British Empire in the second half of the 18th century.
Title: Enlightenment, education and India: Sir John Macpherson and King’s College, Aberdeen
Description:
This article explores the connections between the Scottish politician and colonial administrator Sir John Macpherson (c.
1744-1821) and King's College, Aberdeen.
A native of the isle of Skye, John entered the English East India Company’s service in 1769.
A member of the supreme council of Bengal, he eventually became Governor-general of India in 1785.
 Like his friend and kinsman James ‘Ossian’ Macpherson and his own father, the Rev.
John Macpherson of Sleat, John was educated at King’s College.
The influence of Aberdeen scholars on both men was not only intellectual, but political.
Aberdeen provided the Macphersons with powerful networks of Indian patronage.
Among John’s friends was Roderick Macleod, philosophy professor and sub-principal of King’s whose correspondence reveals a common range of colonial and antiquarian interests shared with the Macphersons of Sleat.
Moreover, the relations between John’s family and subprincipal Dr Hugh Macpherson, also from Skye, exemplify Aberdeen’s pivotal role in providing opportunities abroad for families from the western isles.
This article also examines John's neglected role in the foundation of the Inverness Academy.
His correspondence contains a real manifesto for exporting human and cultural capital from the Highlands to the East Indies.
Partly funded by a group of Highland nabobs in Bengal, the Academy provided education for young Highlanders in a range of topics (language, finance, arts) in order to qualify them for entering universities while offering a secular alternative to the SSPCK.
Finally, specific attention is given to John's sponsoring of a scholarship for Gaelic-speaking students at King's, showing the fruitful interactions between Aberdeen, the Gaelic Enlightenment and India in the 1790s and 1800s.
Such preoccupations reposition Aberdeen not only as a natural centre for educationbut also as a crucial step towards the participation of the Scottish Highlands to the British Empire in the second half of the 18th century.

Related Results

Poetry: James Macpherson’s History Writing in The Highlander and Ossian
Poetry: James Macpherson’s History Writing in The Highlander and Ossian
Chapter 2 begins our detailed analysis of Macpherson’s writings with his early poetry: The Highlander (1758); and the Ossianic Collections (1760-1763). The first half of the chapte...
The Return of the Native: James MacPherson, Improving Strategies and Clanship Imagination in Late Eighteenth-century Badenoch
The Return of the Native: James MacPherson, Improving Strategies and Clanship Imagination in Late Eighteenth-century Badenoch
This paper examines a neglected facet of the life of the poet and colonial agent James Macpherson (1736–1796). Better known today as the ‘translator’ of Ossian, James Macpherson wa...
Current Perspectives on Cystic Echinococcosis: A Systematic Review
Current Perspectives on Cystic Echinococcosis: A Systematic Review
Abstract Introduction: Hydatidosis, a zoonotic disease caused by the larval stage of Echinococcus granulosus, is a significant public health concern with notable economic impact. I...
Politics and Empire: James Macpherson’s Political Writings and the Crisis of Empire in the Late 1770s
Politics and Empire: James Macpherson’s Political Writings and the Crisis of Empire in the Late 1770s
Chapter 4 examines Macpherson’s three political book publications of the late 1770s, in which he defends the interests of the British state against the American colonists and the E...
History: James Macpherson’s Narrative Prose Histories
History: James Macpherson’s Narrative Prose Histories
Chapter 3 examines his three major works of history writing from the first half of the 1770s: The Introduction to the History of Great Britain and Ireland (1771); The History of Gr...
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The UP Manila Health Policy Development Hub recognizes the invaluable contribution of the participants in theseries of roundtable discussions listed below: RTD: Beyond Hospit...
Lawyers, Law Professors, and Localities: The Universities of Aberdeen, 1680–1750
Lawyers, Law Professors, and Localities: The Universities of Aberdeen, 1680–1750
This chapter examines the development of law teaching and professional education in the universities and town of Aberdeen during the period 1680–1750. Aberdeen is particularly inte...
Macpherson the Historian
Macpherson the Historian
This is the first book-length study of James Macpherson (1736-1796) that considers him as an historian. From his early poetry, to the Ossianic Collections, his prose histories, and...

Back to Top