Summary
Summary
Summary
The Portuguese
Vasco Da Gama discovered sea route to India in 1498. Vasco’s second visit in 1502 led to the
establishment of trading stations at Calicut, Cochin and Cannanore.
Francisco de Almeida (1505-09) First governor, initiated the blue water policy (cartaze system).
Nino da Cunha (1529-38) shifted the capital from Cochin to Goa in 1530. In his rule, Diu and
Bassein came under the Portuguese occupation from Gujarat King Bahadur Shah. Bahadur Shah
got killed in 1537 at Diu while negotiating with the Portuguese.
Portuguese State
Capture of Hooghly
• The United East India Company of the Netherlands (Verehgidge Oost Indische
Compagnie), formed in March1602 by the Charter of Dutch Parliament, had the powers to
wage wars, make treaty and build forts.
• Dutch Factories in India Masulipatnam (1605), Pulicat (1610), Surat (1616), Bimlipatam
(1641), Karikal (1645),Chinsurah (1653), Cassimbazar (Kasimbazar), Baranagore, Patna,
Balasore, Nagapatam (1658) and Cochin (1663).
• Decline in India The defeat of the Dutch in the Anglo-Dutch rivalry and the shifting of Dutch
attention towards the Malay Archipelago.
The English
Factors for Foundation Drake’s voyage round the world, and English victory over the mighty
Spanish Armada leading to great ambitions.
Formation English East India Company was formed on December 31, 1600 by the charter issued
by Queen Elizabeth I, which gave the company monopoly to trade in the East
Indies for 15 years.
Settlements in India
• With Captain Thomas Best’s victory over the Portuguese (1612), the English established
their first factory at Surat (1613). Subsequently Sir Thomas Roe secured permission from
Jehangir to establish factories at Agra, Ahmedabad and Broach.
• Bombay came under the control of the Company, with CharlesII (who received it as a part
of the Portuguese dowry) leasing it out to the English Company for an annual rent of 10
pounds.
• Madras with the Fort St. George replaced Masulipatnam as the English headquarters on
the east coast, when the former was given by the Chandragiri chief to the English in 1639.
• The city of Calcutta grew from the development of three villages Sutanuti, Gobindapur and
Kalikata secured from the Mughal governor of Bengal. The fortified settlement was named
Fort William (1700) and it became the seat of British power in India till 1911.
Farrukhsiyar’s Farmans In 1717, the Mughal Emperor Farrukhsiyar’s farmans, called Magna
Carta of the East India Company, gave significant privileges to the Company in Bengal, Gujarat
and Hyderabad.
Merger of Companies In 1635, a rival company named CourteenAssociation later called the
Assada company, formed by Sir William Courteen, was given license to trade by Charles I.
In 1657, both the companies merged.In 1698, another rival company emerged. In 1702, the rivalry
between the old and the new company came to an end, but their final amalgamation took place in
1708 under the title ‘The United Company of Merchants of England Trading to the East Indies,
after the arbitration of the Earl of Godolphin. This Company ruled in India till 1858.
The French
Foundation
In 1664, Colbert, a minister of Louis XIV, laid the foundations of Compagnie des Indes Orientales.
Settlements in India
Pondicherry, developed as headquarters, was granted to Francois Martin, the director of
Masulipatnam factory, by Valikondapuram governor Sher Khan Lodi in 1673.
Finally incorporated into Indian Union in 1954.
Causes
● For protection and expansion of commercial interests.
● Political developments in the south India and Europe provided pretexts to contest their claims
which culminated in three Carnatic wars.
First Carnatic War (1740-48) It was an extension of the Anglo- French rivalry in Europe and
ended in 1748 with the Treaty of Aix-La Chapelle.
Second Carnatic War (1749-54) Although inconclusive, it undermined the French power in South
India vis-à-vis the English.
Third Carnatic War (1758-63) ● A decisive war, known for the Battle of Wandiwash (1760-61);
● An echo of the Anglo-French struggle in Europe.
● By the Treaty of Paris (1763), the French were allowed to use Indian settlements for
commercial purposes only and fortification of settlements were banned.
The Danes
The Danish East India Company was established in 1616 and,in 1620, they founded a factory at
Tranquebar near Tanjore,on the eastern coast of India. Their principal settlement was at
Serampore near Calcutta. The Danish factories, which were not important at any time, were sold
to the British government in 1845. The Danes are better known for their missionary activities than
for commerce.
The major factors which can be attributed for the success of the English against other
European powers—
Portugal, the Netherlands, France and Denmark—in the world in general and in India in
particular were as follows.
• Industrial Revolution
• Stable Government