G. A. Bremner
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Foreign mud, home comforts
Taipans, opium, and the remitted wealth of Jardine, Matheson & Co. in Scotland
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The (in)famous Scottish China Trade firm of Jardine, Matheson & Co. has gone down in history as one of the leading dealers in narcotics of the nineteenth century. Indeed, James Matheson on his return to Britain in the 1840s was parodied by Benjamin Disraeli in Sybil as ‘one McDruggy, fresh from Canton, with a million of opium in each pocket’. The sojourning type represented by Jardine and Matheson was relatively common in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Scotland, with family ties and business networks facilitating a system of patronage and investment that deliberately promoted both Scottish and British imperial interests across the globe. As a result, returnees were often eager to plough their profits into purchasing estates and buildings in Scotland. This re-investment of colonial wealth in land and infrastructure had a marked impact on the Scottish landscape, demonstrating in visually conspicuous ways the wider effects of empire and imperial trade on the metropolitan scene. Although a growing literature on the Indian nabob and West Indian absentee planter has sought to reveal these effects in relation to what can be identified as the ‘imperial landscapes’ of England, very little has been done on the impact of China Trade ‘Taipans’, especially in Scotland. This chapter considers the ways in which the wealth of these returnees impacted the landscapes and buildings of post-Union Scotland, arguing that issues of cultural and familial identity played a discernible role in fashioning a particularly Scottish response to the effects of imperial encounter as represented in architecture and the wider built environment.

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Inner empire

Architecture and Imperialism in the British Isles, 1550–1950

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