HISTORY HOUR * XAVIER CENTRE OF HISTORICAL RESEARCH Cordially invites you to a lecture on
Virtue in Vice: Opium Money and a Tale of Two Cities by Dr. Celsa Pinto at Xavier Centre of Historical Research B. B. Borkar Road Alto Porvorim Thursday, 12th February 2004 5. 30 pm Tel: 2417772; 2414971 [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] Taking a cue from today's global trade in poppies of the golden triangle in the south-east and the golden crescent in the western part of Asia, this lecture seeks to examine the role of Indian opium, known to cause unrelenting damage to Chinese health, which paved the way for the Opium Wars and European imperialism in China, in the making of two colonial cities of Panjim and Bombay. Opium from Malwa was smuggled to Daman, Diu and Goa and exported to Macao and China in the early nineteenth century. But the curious part is that much of the architecture, physical infrastructure and efforts towards improving coastal hygiene in the emerging capital of Panjim were a gift of this drug trade. So also much of the munificence of nineteenth century Parsi philanthropists like Jamshetjee Jeejeebhoy towards pioneering hospitals, colleges and sanitaria in Bombay came from profits earned through the opium trade. Strange indeed is the link which colonial powers and philanthropic traders often found between money from drug trade and efforts to improve society. Dr. Celsa Pinto is Deputy Director of Education at the Directorate of Education, Goa. She is the author of Trade and Finance in Portuguese India (New Delhi, 1994), Goa: Images and Perceptions, Studies in Goan History (Goa, 1996), Situating Indo-Portuguese Trade History, A Commercial Resurgence 1770 - 1830 (Kannur, 2003) and several research papers on the economic history of Portuguese India. ########################################################################## # Send submissions for Goanet to [EMAIL PROTECTED] # # PLEASE remember to stay on-topic (related to Goa), and avoid top-posts # # More details on Goanet at http://joingoanet.shorturl.com/ # # Please keep your discussion/tone polite, to reflect respect to others # ##########################################################################
