The British in India
1608 – 1947 • Formation & Early Focus
Initial Objective: Control over the Spice Islands (Indonesia).
Reason for Shift: The Dutch (VOC) dominance in Indonesia forced the English to redirect attention to India.
- Portuguese & Dutch Focus: Spices.
- English Focus: Cotton & Silk textiles, later Indigo and Saltpetre.
- Arrived at Surat aboard the ship Hector (first English ship).
- Welcomed by Jahangir and given Mansabdar rank.
- Failure: Failed to establish a factory due to Portuguese pressure.
- 1608 First trading post established at Surat.
- 1611 First temporary factory at Masulipatnam (Andhra).
- Commanded the ships Red Dragon and Hosiander.
- Battle of Swally (1612): Defeated the Portuguese near Surat.
- Result: Jahangir was impressed and allowed the first permanent English factory at Surat (1613).
- Ambassador of King James I to Jahangir’s court.
- Obtained a Farman permitting English factories across Mughal territory (though no formal treaty).
- New Factories: Agra, Baruch, Ahmedabad.
- 1616: Factory at Masulipatnam established (Identified as the first in South India).
| 1632: Golden Farman | Issued by the Sultan of Golconda. Allowed duty-free trade on an annual payment of 500 pagodas. |
| 1633: East India Entry | Factory at Hariharpur (Balasore, Odisha) — the first in Eastern India. |
| 1639: Madras Foundation | British merchant Francis Day obtained Madras from the Raja of Chandragiri. Built Fort St. George (later Southern Presidency HQ). Madras replaced Masulipatnam as HQ. |
| 1651: Bengal Entry | Factory established at Hugli — the first in Bengal. |
| Bengal Expansion | William Hedges became the first agent and governor in Bengal. Factories soon followed at Kasimbazar, Patna, and Rajmahal. |
- 1661 (The Dowry): King Charles II received Bombay as dowry from Catherine of Braganza (Portuguese princess).
- 1668: Charles II leased Bombay to the EIC for £10 per year in gold.
- 1686 (Anglo-Mughal War): Company was defeated and reverted to diplomacy.
- 1687: Bombay replaced Surat as headquarters of the Western Presidency.
- 1690 (Calcutta Origins): Job Charnock established a trading post at Sutanuti.
- 1690 (Tamil Nadu): Fort Devanampatnam near Madras bought and renamed Fort St. David.
- 1698: Company purchased Sutanuti, Govindapur, and Kalikata.
- 1700: Fort William built — formal foundation of Calcutta (Seat of Eastern Presidency).
Sent by King George I. Secured the Farman of 1717, known as the “Magna Carta of the Company in India.”
- Bengal: Goods duty-free; annual payment of ₹3,000; right to issue dastaks; right to acquire land around Calcutta.
- Gujarat: Complete customs exemption on payment of ₹10,000.
- Hyderabad: Renewal of earlier trade privileges (Golconda).
- Coinage: Bombay-minted coins legalized across Mughal India.
Result: Institutionalized Company’s commercial dominance and weakened Mughal fiscal control.
📉 Conclusion (1600–1717)
The English East India Company evolved from a commercial body to a quasi-political entity.
Aided by royal farmans, fortified settlements, and rival European decline, this marked the transition from trade monopoly to territorial ambition.
