
New Books in Middle Eastern Studies Karl Ittmann, "Fuelling Empire: The British Imperial Oil Complex, 1886-1945" (Oxford UP, 2025)
Oct 14, 2025
Karl Ittmann, a historian of the British Empire and retired professor, dives into the intricate world of the British imperial oil industry during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He reveals how British firms leveraged imperial resources to command a significant share of global oil, manipulating labor dynamics and racial hierarchies. Ittmann also discusses the entwined fates of oil and empire, highlighting the tensions created by worker exploitation, colonial nationalist movements, and the transformation of British geopolitical influence post-WWII.
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Cultural Bias Slowed Technical Capacity
- Britain invested unevenly in petroleum science and valued Oxbridge generalists over technical specialists.
- That cultural preference slowed the rise of domestic oil expertise until late twentieth-century changes.
Welfare Tied To Control
- Oil workers lacked legal rights, could not unionize, and relied on company-provided welfare conditional on employment.
- This coercive dependence discouraged strikes but intensified political grievances feeding nationalist movements.
Managed Migration Fueled Ethnic Tension
- The British encouraged migrant labor flows across the empire to staff oil projects and deliberately isolated migrant groups.
- That strategy produced ethnic tensions and unstable labor hierarchies in oil-producing regions.

