Imperial Entanglements: Transoceanic Basque Networks in British and Spanish Colonialism and their Legacy

Lead Research Organisation: University of Warwick
Department Name: Hispanic Studies

Abstract

In the Museum of Liverpool's 'Global City' gallery, beneath a large Chinese dragon, an illuminated surround of the Shanghai skyline, and a prominent sign thanking Barclays Wealth for their sponsorship, there is a display case entitled 'The Larrinagas - Basque Traders in Liverpool.' In line with the Chinese theme of the gallery, the case is full of early 20th-century Chinese artefacts - a dress, shoes, a fan, a box - and the accompanying text explains that 'with great fortunes to be made from trading with China,' the Larrinaga family 'came to Liverpool to make money'. A visitor to the gallery might briefly remark the adjective 'Basque', but there is no further explanation, as the family's story is absorbed into the wider narrative of Anglo-Chinese history. Across the gallery, it is a similar story. An 1898 painting of the family's Anselma de Larrinaga steamship sits unremarked atop a large panel that contrasts Spanish colonialism in South America, which 'brought disaster for indigenous people and their cultures' with the economic progress brought to the region by the British presence. It is unclear whether the painting is there to represent Spanish destruction or British investment.

The ambiguous presence of the Larrinaga family in the Museum of Liverpool - marked as 'Basque' but absorbed into the interplay between three overarching imperial histories - encapsulates the ambiguity of the Basque interimperial subject that is the focus of this project. The Larrinaga family, like their wealthier (and dirtier) contemporaries the Zuluetas, were simultaneously proud Basques, bourgeois British residents, patriotic Spanish expats and ruthless exploiters of the commercial and maritime networks connecting Liverpool, London, Bilbao, Havana and Manila. Throughout the 19th century, both families built dense networks of transoceanic economic and cultural connections in the triangular space linking the UK, the Basque Country, and Spain's principal remaining colonies in Cuba and the Philippines. Both families were involved in the legitimate business of empire and in its dirty counterpart, the trade in African slaves and, later, Chinese coolies. And both families left a significant cultural, material and - in the descendants of the employees, associates and slaves who, willingly or otherwise, accompanied their transoceanic migrations - human legacy.

This project reconstructs the histories, networks and legacies of these two Basque commercial families. Detailed archival work in institutional, local, regional and informal archives will give rise to two scholarly monographs, at least six journal articles and a portfolio of working papers. These will allow us to understand how the Larrinagas, Zuluetas and their associates crossed imperial, colonial, maritime and linguistic boundaries to operate transoceanic networks that did the work of empire even as they defied imperial sovereignty. Our public engagement activity across all five case study cities will capture the resonances of these networks at the local, community, individual and family level, gathering, recording, and interpreting the stories of the people who inhabited these networks, the places they lived, worked and are remembered, and the traces we can still find of them today. The project web platform, including working papers, a geotagged database and community digital archive, will allow researchers and stakeholders to gain deep and broad insights into the Zuluetas' and Larrinaga's activity and legacy through a range of media, including text, maps, images and podcasts.

Planned Impact

This project's engagement with specific local and individual case studies drawn from five prominent, international port cities as well as with the 'grand narratives' of British and Spanish nation and empire, creates exciting possibilities for impact across a range of audiences. Our four key impact-related objectives are:

1) to promote awareness of the UK's plurilingual, pluricultural Hispanic history and its continued resonances today
2) to bring together a range of stakeholders in the Basque dimension of British and Spanish imperial history, and Cuban and Philippine national and postcolonial history
3) to develop and test innovative methodologies for transnational, community-centred social, local, and family history research and dissemination
4) to facilitate access to academic research and its findings by third-sector and community audiences from both Anglophone and Spanish/Basque-speaking backgrounds who are excluded from traditional venues for scholarly research.

Public engagement and impact activities will be concentrated in the UK and the Basque Country, with occasional activities coinciding with fieldwork in Cuba and the Philippines. The non-academic beneficiaries fall into two primary groups: heritage and knowledge professional s (especially, but not only, archivists, librarians and curators) and family, local and community historians. We have already developed links with individual family historians and heritage groups (e.g. the Hispanic Liverpool user community, London Basque Society, Filipino Home), local and family history organizations (e.g. Liverpool History Society, Liverpool and SW Lancashire Family History Society), archives and museums (e.g. Liverpool Central Library, the Merseyside Maritime Museum, the British Library, Euskal Museoa, the Institute of Philippine Culture). We will access new users and participants, especially in London, Bilbao and Manila, through local and regional media and institutions. The PI will work closely with Warwick's Press Office and Arts Impact Officer to identify new opportunities for media and public engagement.

Beneficiaries will be engaged by a range of methods throughout the life of the project. During the first two years, fieldwork trips to all five locations will permit face-to-face engagement through information sessions, workshops, CPD seminars, and site-specific activities such as co-creation of heritage trails, community soundscapes and digital storytelling. The digital dimension of the project, which includes a community collection, project database, and web platform, will permit digital engagement with researchers beyond our immediate research sites. For example, users will be able to participate in identification, tagging, interpretation and curation of resources within the community collection, repurpose database materials for their own needs, and comment or respond to working papers hosted on the web platform.

We will employ a range of monitoring methods, including questionnaires, post-it boards, follow-up reflection, comment systems, and Google Analytics, all in combination with the oversight of the Advisory Board and our regular milestones.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description The work has uncovered, reconstructed and analysed the archival and material traces and legacies of two Basque commercial families, the Larrinagas and Zuluetas and the networks within which they operated. The work reconstructed and analysed the dense web of transoceanic and translocal economic and cultural connections these two families created in the triangular network linking the UK, the Basque Country, and Spain's principal remaining colonies in Cuba and the Philippines. We have been able to develop a rich and nuanced understanding of the legacies of these networks across oceans and their impact on the entangled relations between the British and Spanish empires during the 19th century. In addition, the work has established a sound understanding of the UK's plurilingual, pluricultural Hispanic hisory and its continued resonances today.
Exploitation Route Our new knowledge of the activities of these families, their networks and their legacies across different cities and languages, as well as the more nuanced understanding of how they operated within plurilingual and pluricultural networks, provide a sound basis for colleagues in education, tourism and heritage to reinterpret British and Spanish imperial, transnational, community-centred, social, local and family history.
Sectors Education,Leisure Activities, including Sports, Recreation and Tourism,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections

 
Description Leverhulme Major Research Fellowship
Amount £172,512 (GBP)
Funding ID MRF-2019-150 
Organisation The Leverhulme Trust 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 09/2020 
End 08/2023
 
Title Imperial Entanglements Database 
Description This database collates data about people, places, ships and events that will enable us to understand the networks within which the Larrinaga and Zulueta families operated. It currently contains 55,293 records, pertaining to 9,201 entities (organised into 32 entity types). User testing has been delayed by the pandemic, but we are currently finalising the geographical visualiser and looking forward to beta testing as soon as circumstances allow. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2018 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact None as yet. 
 
Description 2021 Manuel Irujo Lecture in Basque Studies 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact I was invited to give the 2021 Annual Manuel Irujo Lecture in Basque Studies at the University of Liverpool. Due to current conditions it was presented via Zoom, which permitted an international audience of 54 to join us. There was a lively discussion afterwards with both fellow academics and members of the public; discussions with members of the public have continued through social media.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
 
Description Conference and workshop with Museo Histórico de Acapulco 'Fuerte de San Diego', Acapulco, Mexico 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact We held a conference and workshops in partnership with the Museo Histórico de Acapulco 'Fuerte de San Diego', Acapulco, Mexico. 30 people attended, including museum professionals, civil servants, postgraduate students and academics from the UK, Europe, Mexico and the US. There was much discussion, both of intellectual and academic projects, and of opportunities for raising the profile of Mexico and in particular Acapulco as a location for scholarly and archival research, and the interface between this and museum and curatorial practice.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2018
URL https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/arts/modernlanguages/research/imperialentanglements/2018conference/
 
Description Larrinaga Community Day at Museum of Liverpool 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Thirty members of the public and five museum professionals attended a half-day session at the Museum of Liverpool, which included a talk on the Larrinaga family, a hands-on display of related material from the collections, and opportunities to submit material to the community archive. There was lively discussion afterwards, and both the community and the museum have followed up with additional discussion and interest, including a blog post on the Museum website.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2018
URL https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/arts/modernlanguages/research/imperialentanglements/2018larrinagaday/
 
Description Workshop: Anglo-Spanish Lives in Port Cities at Itsasmuseum, Bilbao, Spain 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact This workshop took place at Bilbao's maritime museum. It featured a roster of international speakers, including postgraduate students, early-career researchers, and museum professionals. It aimed to develop connections between academic researchers, museum practitioners and local and regional public historians, and especially between Anglophone and Hispanophone researchers on the social and cultural history of Anglo-Hispanic maritime and coastal communities.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019