Without the colonies the European history of science would have taken a very different course. Not only was the development of zoology and ethnology closely linked to colonial history, the war staged on many diseases occurring in Europe, such as cholera and malaria, could not have been fought without the insights emerging from colonial life. This book presents a wealth of individual case studies as well as a look at many documents and evidence from colonial history. It shows how knowledge moved its way to Europe and how it eventually greatly influenced the course of progress during the 19th century
Contributions by: Tony Ballantyne, Bettina Brockmeyer, Barbara Buchenau, Stefanie Gänger, Patrick Harries, Richard Hölzl, Sabine Mangold-Will, Kathrin Reinert, Maria Rhode, Kirsten Rüther, Iris Schröder, Holger Stoecker, Ernst-Christian Steinecke, Charlotte Trümpler, Jakob Vogel, Andrew Zimmerman, Ulrich van der Heyden, Christof Dejung