It is curious that
it should have taken imperial proconsul Lord Cromer (1841–1917,
Evelyn Baring until 1892) nearly a century to find a scholarly biographer
worthy of his centrality to British, imperial and Egyptian history
in the Victorian-Edwardian age. The Marquess of Zetland’s
now 72-year-old Lord Cromer (London: Hodder & Stoughton,
1932) displays the frequent defects of official biography. Roger
Owen observes that in contrast to another great proconsular symbol
of Britain’s imperial noon, Lord Curzon, Cromer ‘is
hardly remembered outside the Egyptian context’ and that his
‘once mighty reputation has now almost totally disappeared’
(p. vii). Much of the difference must lie in Curzon’s post-Calcutta
prominence, particularly as foreign secretary in the critical post-war
years from 1919 to 1924.
At a time of intense debate about American empire today, Owen’s
Lord Cromer takes its place alongside the growing number
of books reassessing earlier empires. The author notes that the
current wave of globalisation strikes many of the same chords as
a century ago, when Cromer wrestled with global issues of international
finance, bankruptcy, and economic orthodoxies on fiscal management,
loans and free trade. Late nineteenth-century globalisation was
different, however, in coinciding with the high tide of Western
expansion and in openly using white racial superiority to justify
subjugating others.
This is Owen’s first biography, but it brings his scholarly
work full circle. In 1966 he published his first academic article
on ‘The Influence of Lord Cromer’s Indian Experience
on British Policy in Egypt 1883–1907.’(1)
The subtitle ‘Victorian Imperialist, Edwardian Proconsul’
conveys well the author’s determination to project Cromer’s
image well beyond the Egyptian stage. Owen tracked the residences
and offices of his subject not just to Cairo but also to Malta,
Calcutta, and Simla. He devotes 60-odd pages to a close examination
of Baring’s Indian years – as private secretary to his
cousin Viceroy Lord Northbrook (1872–76) and then as financial
adviser to Viceroy Lord Ripon (1880–83). But before India
and ‘the new empire in Africa’ Baring served ‘in
the old empire of island fortresses like Corfu and Malta’
and even briefly in the West Indian sugar colony of Jamaica. After
leaving Cairo in 1907, Cromer’s writing and his speeches in
the House of Lords engaged issues on both the British domestic and
the imperial scene beyond Egypt.
Owen has exhaustively mined the private papers of Cromer, the Baring-Cromer
family, and their British contemporaries. He draws on some two dozen
sets of papers, many never used before for Cromer’s biography.
Like most men of his time and class, Cromer jealously guarded his
inner life, and the exterior mask hardened as the years went by.
Most of the correspondence of the successive Lady Cromers (née
Ethel Errington and Katherine Thynne) is missing, but a few of his
letters and notes to them have survived and reveal the depth of
his devotion. Losing Ethel to kidney disease in 1898 cast a pall
over the British Residency, which Cromer’s second marriage
in 1901 only partially alleviated. Glimpses of the man’s lighter
side come through in his friendship with Edward Lear, the painter
and nonsense poet whose verse Cromer sometimes imitated. This biography
also uncovers the deepest Victorian secret of all, the illegitimate
daughter Louisa Sophia whom Baring sired, presumably with a Corfiote
mistress, in 1863. Letters from the Catholic Archbishop of Corfu
reveal that Baring supported Louisa with twice-yearly payments and
a final lump sum when she turned eighteen.
Such intimate glimpses aside, Lord Cromer is primarily
the story of a public life. Well-chosen part, chapter, and section
titles usher the reader down a logical chronological-thematic path.
Two of the life’s four parts are preparatory: ‘The training
of an officer and a gentleman, 1841–1872’ and ‘An
apprenticeship in imperial government and international finance,
1872–1883’. The centrepiece is ‘Governing Egypt,
1883–1907’ and the concluding part is ‘Reimmersion
in British political life, 1907–1917’. Slightly more
than half of the 400 pages treat the Egyptian years.
One source of particular interest is the ‘Biographical Notes’,
which Cromer assembled in 1905 with his children and any future
biographer in mind. Here he cast his life as a morality tale of
an indifferently educated and undisciplined young man reformed by
the love of a good woman. The power of this narrative line deeply
affected Zetland’s biography. Owen is careful to keep the
trope at an appropriate critical distance, comparing the Biographical
Notes carefully with contemporary evidence.
In 1762 Evelyn Baring’s paternal grandfather Francis founded
the Baring family’s banking firm in London. Evelyn, who was
the eleventh child of his father Henry, spent his first years on
the family estate in the fishing port of Cromer in Norfolk. Henry
died when Evelyn was seven, and his mother Cecilia packed him off
to boarding school. At eleven he entered a military preparatory
school and at fourteen the Royal Military Academy at Woolwich. He
graduated at seventeen with an artillery commission.
From 1858 to 1867 Baring was aide-de-camp to Sir Henry Storks,
High Commissioner of Corfu and then governor of Malta. Baring enjoyed
hunting and society at the governor’s palace but also began
acquiring on his own the classical education he had missed in military
schools. In 1866 he assisted Stokes on a royal commission of inquiry
into the repression of a rebellion in Jamaica. After two years of
Staff College back in England, Baring helped implement post-Crimean
reforms at the War Office, where his older cousin Lord Northbrook
was under-secretary.
When Northbrook became viceroy of India in 1872, he took Baring
along as private secretary. Here, in the spirit of Gladstonian Liberalism,
Baring crystallised the administrative desiderata for governing
subject peoples which he professed all his life: tight control of
expenditure, a simple and low tax structure, minimal military strength,
concern for peasant welfare, and an eye on the press as a gauge
of local public opinion. Back at the War Office in 1876, 35-year-old
Baring finally married Ethel Errington, the death of her father
having removed his veto over a non-Catholic match.
Retiring from the army in 1877 after twenty years, Baring went
to Cairo as British commissioner on the Caisse de la Dette Publique.
Khedive Ismail had plunged Egypt into bankruptcy, and the Caisse
was set up to protect the interests of European creditors. Owen
devotes 40 pages to Baring’s immersion in the administration
and politics of Egypt’s international debt. Khedive Ismail
was deposed in favour of his docile son Tawfiq, and in 1879–80
Baring became British controller of finances in the Egyptian government.
Like most Europeans, he underestimated Egyptians’ anti-European
feelings and indigenous junior officers’ resentment of the
Turco-Circassians’ monopoly of high army posts. In 1880 Baring
left for three years in India as financial officer under Lord Ripon.
Baring’s Gladstonian Liberalism had its limits: he had to
defend opium exports to China as essential to the Indian budget
and opined ‘we shall not subvert the British Empire by allowing
the Bengali Baboo to discuss his own schools and drains. Rather
we can afford him a safety-valve if we can turn his attentions to
these innocuous subjects’ (p. 168).
Meanwhile in Egypt the Urabi revolution and the ensuing British
occupation unsettled the established order. In September 1883 Baring
arrived back in Cairo as British agent and consul-general with a
mandate for minor reforms and a prompt withdrawal of British troops.
He had the advantage of already knowing Khedive Tawfiq and Riaz,
Nubar and Sharif, the pashas who had lately held the prime ministry.
Baring’s initial request to slash the British garrison from
6,700 to 3,000 and withdraw it from Cairo proves his initial belief
in early evacuation.
The Sudanese Mahdi Muhammad Ahmad’s defeat of a British-officered
Egyptian expedition under Colonel Hicks in November 1883, however,
changed everything. Gladstone’s cabinet ordered Egypt to evacuate
the Sudan to the Egyptian frontier, dispatching Charles ‘Chinese’
Gordon, with Baring’s support, to Khartoum to carry this out.
Gordon’s death in the fall of Khartoum in January 1885 prepared
the ground for the eventual Anglo-Egyptian reconquest of the Sudan
a dozen years later. Baring, Gladstone and Gordon each had their
partisans in distributing blame for the 1885 fiasco, and recriminations
continue to this day.
From 1885 to 1887 Baring ran a ‘race against bankruptcy’
(p. 215) – struggling to find the money to keep up payments
on Egypt’s debt, pay for the occupying army, finance the administration,
and fend off French and British domestic objections to the occupation.
He decided against evacuating Egypt in the foreseeable future. Perhaps
without fully realizing it, he
had helped to place Egypt on a path along which
the only logical destination was not self-government but annexation
… the country would now be subject to the familiar colonial
process by which the more reforms were implemented, the more further
reform was seen as absolutely necessary[.] (p. 233)
For the next decade Baring worked to convince opinion makers back
home, from cabinet ministers to journalists, that Britain must stay
in Egypt. Alfred Milner’s England in Egypt (London:
Edward Arnold, 1891), an unabashed defense of the occupation, was
a powerful weapon in this campaign. Alternating Conservative and
Liberal cabinets under Salisbury and Gladstone complicated his task.
Gradually he came to believe that the Conservatives looked out for
imperial interests better than his own Liberal Party. By the late
1890s few Britons still believed in evacuation. Only Cromer’s
fellow aristocrat and nemesis Wilfrid Blunt kept up a persistent
drumbeat of opposition to Britain’s empire on the Nile right
through Cromer’s tenure and beyond.
For all but his last three years in Cairo, Cromer had to fight
against French resistance to the British occupation of Egypt. He
railed at what he saw as French obstructionism, often expressed
through the Mixed Tribunals or the Caisse de la Dette Publique,
which delayed or hindered reforms he thought necessary. Finally
in 1904, the Anglo-French Entente afforded him a triumph –
a hand for Britain in Egypt in return for one for France in Morocco.
In the late 1890s, Cromer implemented what would now be called
privatisation, circumventing French and other European interests
on the Caisse by raising loans through Ernest Cassel and his local
banking partners in Egypt. Cassel set up the National Bank of Egypt,
which obtained a monopoly on issuing Egyptian banknotes. He also
made immense profits at Egyptian government expense through a concession
to sell off the state lands of the Daira Saniya. Cromer came to
recognise the dangers of permitting such profiteering but had only
limited success in reining it in.
Irrigation improvements inspired by British experience in India
and often supervised by Anglo-Indian engineers were central to Cromer’s
plan to revive Egyptian agriculture and government revenues, benefit
peasant and landlord alike, and reap political support for the occupation.
He repaired the barrage north of Cairo and in 1902 crowned the irrigation
improvements with the Aswan dam. Owen suggests that he thereby
presided over one of the world’s first
modern green revolutions, in which a temporary surge in yields
and outputs based on a combination of extra water and more prolific
strains of cotton was bought at a longer-term cost in terms of
waterlogging and an intensification of pest attacks beginning
in the early 1900s. (p. 397)
With Egypt firmly fixed in his mind as an agricultural country
exporting raw cotton to industrial Britain, Cromer refused tariff
protection to fledgling Egyptian-based textile factories. His educational
policies famously failed to accommodate the demands of the growing
urban middle class. His Indian experience had led him to fear that
underemployed graduates of Western-style schools were likely to
turn to nationalist protest. He starved the several higher professional
schools and the primary and secondary system that fed them, left
the traditional religiously-centred education concentrated on al-Azhar
alone, and offered the masses only a few years of terminal elementary
schooling.
The title of chapter 16, ‘Things fall apart’, aptly
describes the last three years of Cromer’s reign. His cocksure
belief in his own righteousness and the ill will or depravity of
his opponents, the narrow scope of information on public opinion
which filtered to him through Oriental Secretary Boyle, the return
of the Liberals to power back home, and the rapid crystallisation
of Egyptian nationalism all contributed to his undoing. The limited
victory of the Anglo-French Entente in 1904 encouraged his dream
of sweeping away remaining international constraints on British
freedom of action in Egypt. He wanted to abolish the Capitulations
and Mixed Tribunals and set up a European legislative council alongside
the existing Egyptian one. Under benevolent British hegemony, he
even dreamed of ‘fusing together all the races of the Valley
of the Nile’ (p. 332) Owen is on the mark here: ‘it
is difficult to exaggerate the extraordinary, and misguided ambition
behind this exercise in what would now be called “nation-building.”
Even more striking than the unreality of the whole project is the
megalomania involved’ (p. 332).
The outrageous death, prison and flogging sentences handed down
to delta villagers at Dinshway in the summer of 1906 – punishment
for their resistance to British troops shooting pigeons in the neighborhood
– mobilised Cromer’s detractors in Egypt and back home
in parliament. The concessions of Cromer’s last few months,
such as resurrecting the ministry of public instruction under future
national hero Sa‘d Zaghlul, came too little and too late.
Cromer resigned in the spring of 1907.
Back home he nursed his health and published Modern Egypt
(London: Macmillan & Co.) early in 1908. Then he began the final
stage of his career as a politician in the House of Lords and an
essayist. Avoiding public comment on the travails of his hand-picked
successor Sir Eldon Gorst in Egypt, Cromer concluded that the Empire
was in danger from without – the Germans – and within
– from suffragists, the Irish, and socialists. He anguished
over the constitutional crisis of 1909–11 prompted by Lloyd
George’s budget and the powers of the House of Lords but decided
to make the campaign against women’s suffrage his top priority.
In 1910, with Curzon at his side, he presided over the merger of
separate men’s and women’s anti-suffragist leagues into
the National League for Opposing Women’s Suffrage. He was
president; Curzon succeeded him.
Why did the great proconsul focus on votes for women as the most
pressing issue of those unsettling times? He feared that the Empire
might be at stake: ‘As the “German man is manly [and]
the German woman is womanly … can we hope to compete with
such a nation as this if we war against nature and endeavour to
invert the natural role of the sexes?”’ (p. 375) What
of ‘the unsexed woman voting at the polling booth, declaiming
on the platform and in Parliament, and possibly sitting at the desk
of the Cabinet Minister to decide some question affecting the destinies
and interests of her fellow-countrymen and women in the Antipodes?’
(p. 374) Or was the worry closer to home? Cromer’s old enemy
Blunt gleefully gossiped to his diary that ‘Lady Cromer has
become a suffragette in opposition to her Lord’ (p. 375).
Scholars everywhere will be indebted to Owen for this masterful
biography. Thoughtful Egyptians will hardly disagree that ‘For
better, and often worse, Lord Cromer is as much a part of Egypt’s
history as he is of Britain’s’ (p. xii). Owen correctly
reminds us that ‘many of Cromer’s Egyptian contemporaries
were much more ready to acknowledge some of the positive effects
of his rule than most of those who followed’ (p. xiv). Yet
the author is uneasy about how Egyptians will receive his book:
A final word to my Egyptian friends. I am well
aware that by writing about someone as well known and well hated
as Lord Cromer I run the risk of appearing as an apologist of
empire, which I am certainly not. (p. xii)
Indeed, Owen is not an apologist of empire. As illustrated above,
some of his assessments of Cromer’s record are harsh, as they
should be. Yet for all his negative remarks, Owen’s admiration
for the man’s ability, energy, determination, and achievements
shines through. Owen takes most seriously the biographer’s
and historian’s duty of viewing things through the eyes of
the subject and his contemporaries. Yet Owen’s perceptive
reflections keep the reader well aware of twenty-first century perspectives.
This reviewer was frequently reminded of the arrogance, ignorance,
hypocrisy and folly of contemporary American empire in Iraq.
Like all important books, this biography will challenge scholars
to further research, amendment, extension and reinterpretation.
In light of the excesses of many applications of psychological theory
to history, one may feel relieved that Owen sticks close to his
sources on such matters as the paucity of parental warmth and approval
in Baring’s childhood, his austerity and authoritarianism
as an adult, and the fierceness with which he fought women’s
suffrage. Owen does reflect on the corrupting effects of power,
but in light of recent work on masculinity and femininity in relation
to empire, one wishes he had pushed a bit further. Cromer and Curzon
together at the head of the anti-suffrage crusade cries out for
further analysis.
The vantage points of Owen’s Lord Cromer are mainly
the imperial centre and the colonial outpost in the periphery: Whitehall
and ‘the man on the spot’ in the British residency on
the Nile. If the sources are inevitably overwhelmingly British,
at least anti-occupation Gladstonian Liberals and the eccentric
and acerbic Wilfrid Blunt make sure that the views are not monolithic.
But there is room for further inquiry into others’ reactions
to Cromer and his public persona – from the French diplomats
with whom he sparred for so many years and above all from the Egyptians
over whom he ruled.
The subtitle “Victorian Imperialist, Edwardian Proconsul”
is excellent for situating its subject in the British global context
but at the cost of omitting the crucial word that would call this
book up in a title search under ‘Egypt’. Egyptian public
opinion as viewed through the eyes of Boyle, Cromer, and Blunt is
fascinating, but more should be done from Arabic primary and secondary
sources. One wishes for more analyses direct from Arabic sources,
such as the interesting analysis of al-Manar’s review
– presumably by Rashid Rida – of Cromer’s Modern
Egypt and of Ahmad Lutfi al-Sayyid’s balance sheet on
Cromer’s reign in al-Jarida.
In sum, Owen has written a biography of Cromer which no student
of modern Egypt or British imperialism can afford to ignore. It
is unlikely to be superseded for a long time to come.
July 2004
Notes
1. Published in Albert Hourani,
ed., St Antony’s Papers, 17: Middle Eastern Affairs,
4 (London: Oxford University Press, 1965).
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