John M. MacKenzie
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Heroic myths of empire
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This chapter places four major myths, those of Henry Havelock, David Livingstone, Charles Gordon and T. E. Lawrence, within the wider global tradition of heroic myths and the specific culture of nineteenth-century Europe. Lawrence was not a religious figure, and the only martyrdom he achieved was to the technology of speed. But it is the one twentieth century reputation which fits many of the characteristics of the imperial heroic myths. Although the British Empire was more civilian in character than other European empires, its heroic myths were primarily military. The prime Mutiny heroes were figures who had experience of the campaigns in Burma, China, Afghanistan and the North West Frontier, the Punjab and Persia between the 1820s and 1850s or in civil administration in northern India. Havelock was portrayed as a miraculous saviour in many other representations, leading a charge on horseback into the ranks of Indian rebels.

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