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  1. An experimental community: the East India Company in London, 1600–1800.Anna Winterbottom - 2019 - British Journal for the History of Science 52 (2):323-343.
    The early East India Company (EIC) had a profound effect on London, filling the British capital with new things, ideas and people; altering its streets; and introducing exotic plants and animals. Company commodities – from saltpetre to tea to opium – were natural products and the EIC sought throughout the period to understand how to produce and control them. In doing so, the company amassed information, designed experiments and drew on the expertise of people in the settlements and of individuals (...)
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  • London 1600–1800: communities of natural knowledge and artificial practice.Jim Bennett & Rebekah Higgitt - 2019 - British Journal for the History of Science 52 (2):183-196.
    This essay introduces a special issue of the BJHS on communities of natural knowledge and artificial practice in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century London. In seeking to understand the rise of a learned and technical culture within a growing and changing city, our approach has been inclusive in terms of the activities, people and places we consider worth exploring but shaped by a sense of the importance of collective activity, training, storage of information and identity. London's knowledge culture was formed by the (...)
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