Underground Empire: Charles Warren, William Simpson, and the Archeological Exploration of Palestine

IF 0.7 1区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY Journal of British Studies Pub Date : 2024-02-12 DOI:10.1017/jbr.2023.106
Jeffrey Auerbach
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Abstract

British army officer Charles Warren's archeological excavations in Jerusalem in the late 1860s on behalf of the Palestine Exploration Fund and Scottish artist William Simpson's paintings of those activities articulated a new kind of imperial space: the underground empire. The imperial underground was a place that had not yet been conquered and where the British had limited visibility. In contrast to picturesque and panoramic views that created an illusion of order and omniscience, Simpson's sketches depict an imperial presence that was confined, constrained, and in danger of collapse. Yet as the British began to probe this subterranean frontier, they turned the underground world into a place not just of darkness and danger but of exploration and excitement. In the process, Warren's work and Simpson's portrayal of it helped lay the foundation for Britain's eventual conquest of Palestine during the First World War by burrowing beneath Jerusalem's dilapidated Ottoman present in search of its ancient and Judeo-Christian past. Jerusalem was not the only node in Britain's nascent underground empire—British work there occurred alongside the construction of sewers and railway tunnels in London and the mining of gold and diamonds in Australia and South Africa—but it was in Jerusalem that an imperial underground was first and most fully articulated, a space that embodied both the precariousness and the potential of Britain's embryonic efforts to establish a presence in the Middle East.
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地下帝国查尔斯-沃伦、威廉-辛普森和对巴勒斯坦的考古探索
19 世纪 60 年代末,英国军官查尔斯-沃伦(Charles Warren)代表巴勒斯坦勘探基金在耶路撒冷进行考古发掘,苏格兰艺术家威廉-辛普森(William Simpson)对这些活动进行了描绘,他的作品阐述了一种新的帝国空间:地下帝国。帝国的地下是一个尚未被征服的地方,英国人在这里的能见度有限。风景如画的全景图给人一种秩序井然、无所不知的错觉,与之形成鲜明对比的是,辛普森的素描描绘的是一个封闭、受限、面临崩溃危险的帝国。然而,随着英国人开始探索这片地下疆域,他们将地下世界变成了一个不仅充满黑暗和危险,而且充满探索和刺激的地方。在此过程中,沃伦的作品和辛普森对其的描绘为英国在第一次世界大战期间最终征服巴勒斯坦奠定了基础,他们钻入耶路撒冷破旧的奥斯曼帝国地下,寻找其古老的犹太基督教历史。耶路撒冷并不是英国新生的地下帝国的唯一节点--英国在那里的工作与伦敦的下水道和铁路隧道建设以及澳大利亚和南非的黄金和钻石开采同时进行,但帝国的地下空间正是在耶路撒冷首次得到最全面的阐述,这一空间体现了英国在中东建立存在的萌芽努力的不稳定性和潜力。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
10.00%
发文量
163
期刊介绍: The official publication of the North American Conference on British Studies (NACBS), the Journal of British Studies, has positioned itself as the critical resource for scholars of British culture from the Middle Ages through the present. Drawing on both established and emerging approaches, JBS presents scholarly articles and books reviews from renowned international authors who share their ideas on British society, politics, law, economics, and the arts. In 2005 (Vol. 44), the journal merged with the NACBS publication Albion, creating one journal for NACBS membership. The NACBS also sponsors an annual conference , as well as several academic prizes, graduate fellowships, and undergraduate essay contests .
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