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Best For The Soul: Empire Daze

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  • Best For The Soul: Empire Daze

    BEST FOR THE SOUL: EMPIRE DAZE
    By Neel Chowdhury

    TIME Magazine
    http://www.time.com/time/specials/package s/article/0,28804,1988463_1989006_1989000,00.html
    May 13 2010

    Before the ascendancy of Singapore and Hong Kong, Penang, a 285-sq-km
    island off Malaysia's northwest coast, was the fulcrum of trade in
    Asia. It was extracted under a spurious offer of military protection
    by Captain Francis Light, a British merchant looking to get rich,
    from the sultan of Kedah in 1786. By the time the sultan realized
    he'd been hustled, it was too late. Penang was declared a British
    crown colony, and some 34 years before modern Singapore was founded
    its harbor was where China clippers could repair their sails, stock
    up on hard tack and grog, and catch the monsoon winds that blew them
    between Calcutta and Canton with hulls full of tea and opium.

    Penang grew so prosperous that in 1885 two Armenian entrepreneurs
    built the luxury Eastern & Oriental Hotel, e-o-hotel.com, along the
    promenade of Georgetown, the state capital. Based on its success,
    the duo founded Raffles in Singapore two years later. In architecture
    and history, the onetime sister properties -- and that other great
    colonial hotel, the Peninsula in Hong Kong -- have much in common,
    but there is one poignant difference. While Raffles and the Peninsula
    are in thriving centers of commerce, by the early 20th century Penang
    had been eclipsed as a trading force. A late burst of investment
    in electronics manufacturing in the early 1980s has also sputtered
    out. For travelers, though, that's a good thing. It means that guests
    of the 101-room E&O can enjoy genteel pleasures, like breakfast on
    the seaward veranda, at prices a fraction of those in hotels that
    are in luckier locations -- and without any diminution of romance.
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