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Introduction
What was the East India 
Company? 
East India Company was the name of 
several historical European companies 
chartered with Asia, more specially 
with India. 
• British East India Company, founded 
• in 1600 
• Danish East India Company, founded 
in 1616 
• Dutch East India Company, founded in 
1602 
• French East India Company, founded 
in 1664 
• Swedish East India Company, founded 
in 1731 
• Portuguese East India Company, 
founded in 1628
British East India 
Company 
• First it was called Honorable East India 
Company (HEIC) or often ”John Company”. 
Based in London. 
• An early joint-stock company, which was 
granted an English Royal Charter by 
Elisabeth I. on December 31, 1600. 
• Queen Elisabeth granted the monopoly 
rights to bring goods from India. 
• The Royal Charter gave the newly created 
HEIC a 21 monoply on all trade in the East 
Indies. 
• The Company had 125 shareholders, and a 
capital of ÂŁ72,000
Arrival in India 
• 1612 AD established factories in 
Surat with the permission of 
Emperor Jahangir. 
• They continued their trading 
activity for a few years from here 
and later on expanded their area 
to Chennai, Mumbai and 
Calcutta.
Expansion 
• First Expansion was in 1639 at 
Chennai. 
• Sir Francis Day along with the 
company established a Trading 
Post and St.George fort 
• In 1668 The Islands of Mumbai 
was leased to the British as dowry 
by the Portuguese. 
• Coastal area provided strategic 
importance to the Company’s 
trade.
Events 
• Battle of Plassey 
• Battle of Buxar 
• Revolt of 1857 
• Anglo-Maratha wars.
Commercial 
• The East India Company wasn’t 
concerned about the local needs. 
• It’s main aim was to make profits. 
• A large chunk of the profits went 
to the Queen. 
• Thus it’s commercial motive 
made it a successful business 
enterprise.
Robert Clive 
• The foundations of the British empire in India 
were, it is said, laid by Robert Clive, known to his 
admirers as the "conqueror of India". Clive first 
arrived in India in 1743 as a civil servant of 
the East India Company; he later transferred to 
the military service of the Company and 
returned to England in 1753, where he able to 
follow a comfortable life-style. But his penchant 
for extravagance and ostentatious displays of 
wealth, just as much as his electoral loss in his 
attempt to gain a seat in the House of Commons, 
opened him to the attacks of his creditors and 
political opponents. He arrived in India in 1756 
and at once secured the British forces in Madras. 
He then moved to Calcutta, which had been 
captured by the Nawab of Bengal, Siraj-ud-daulah, 
and early in 1757 he recaptured Bengal. 
Later that year, on June 23rd, he defeated the 
Nawab, largely by means of bribes, at the so-called 
"Battle of Plassey".
Robert Clive
Battle Of Plassey 
• British rule in India is conventionally described as 
having begun in 1757. On June 23rd of that year, at 
the Battle of Plassey, a small village and mango 
grove between Calcutta and Murshidabad, the 
forces of the East India Company underRobert 
Clive defeated the army of Siraj-ud-daulah, the 
Nawab of Bengal. The "battle" lasted no more than 
a few hours, and indeed the outcome of the battle 
had been decided long before the soldiers came to 
the battlefield. The aspirant to the Nawab's throne, 
Mir Jafar, was induced to throw in his lot with Clive, 
and by far the greater number of the Nawab's 
soldiers were bribed to throw away their weapons, 
surrender prematurely, and even turn their arms 
against their own army. 
• Jawaharlal Nehru, in The Discovery of India (1946), 
justly describes Clive as having won the battle "by 
promoting treason and forgery", and pointedly 
notes that British rule in India had "an unsavoury 
beginning and something of that bitter taste has 
clung to it ever since."
Battle Of Plassey
Basis Of Monopoly 
• Colonial Monopoly 
• Military Expansion 
• Opium Trade
Indian Rebellion (Revolt) 
of 1857 
• The Indian Rebellion of 1857 
resulted in widespread devastation 
in India; many condemned the East 
India Company for permitting the 
events to occur. One of the 
consequences of the Indian Mutiny 
was that the British Government 
nationalised the Company. The 
Company lost all its administrative 
powers; the Crown, pursuant to the 
provisions of theGovernment of 
India Act 1858, took over its Indian 
possessions, including its armed 
forces.
British Establishments 
• n 1607, the Company decided to build its own 
ships and leased a yard on the River 
Thames at Deptford. By 1614, the yard having 
become too small, an alternative site was acquired 
at Blackwall: the new yard was fully operational by 
1617. It was sold in 1656, although for some years 
East India Company ships continued to be built and 
repaired there under the new owners. 
• In 1803, an Act of Parliament, promoted by the East 
India Company, established the East India Dock 
Company, with the aim of establishing a new set of 
docks (the East India Docks) primarily for the use 
of ships trading with India. while a new Import 
Dock was built to the north. In 1838 the East India 
Dock Company merged with the West India Dock 
Company. The docks were taken over by the Port of 
London Authorityin 1909, and closed in 1967. 
• The East India Club in London was formed in 1849 
for officers of the Company. The Club still exists 
today as a private Gentlemen's club with its club 
house situated at 16 St. James's Square, London
Flags 
Downman (1685) 
Lens (1700) 
Rees (1820) 
National Geographic (1917) 
Laurie (1842)
Ships 
• Ships of the East India Company were 
called East Indiamen or simply 
"Indiamen Some examples include: 
• Red Dragon (1595) 
• Doddington (East Indiaman) Lost 1755 
• Royal Captain (before 1773) 
• HMS Grosvenor Lost 1782 
• General Goddard (1782) 
• Earl of Abergavenny (1797) 
• Earl of Mornington (1799); packet ship 
• Lord Nelson (1799) 
• Kent (1820): Lost on her third voyage 
• Nemesis (1839): first British built 
ocean-going iron warship 
• Agamemnon (1855)
The End of the East India 
Company and the 1857 
Revolt 
• THE GREAT INDIAN REBELLION of 1857 
and the termination of East India 
Company rule over India just a year later 
thus ushered in a new phase of British 
imperialism in Asia. The end of the 
Company's regime meant that, at last, the 
British state had to accept unequivocal 
responsibility for the governance of 
former Company possessions. 
Consequently, new governing institutions 
were established in Asia which were 
directly answerable to government and 
Parliament in London, through the 
Secretary of State for India and the India 
Office.
• These changes went hand-in-hand with 
a new culture of governance, created by 
the trauma of the Rebellion. Military 
reforms resulted in a shift away from 
Hindustan as the main recruiting 
ground for the Indian army towards the 
Punjab and other regions from which 
troops were perceived to have shown 
greater loyalty to the British. The policy 
of undermining Indian law, culture and 
involvement in the machinery of 
government, which had been applied 
under the last few decades of Company 
rule, was abruptly reversed.
Group Members 
• Drashti 
• Lasya 
• Mariam 
• Aakash 
• Shlomoh 
• Sharik 
• Gaurang 
• Anish 
• Burhan
Thank You :*

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The East India Company

  • 1.
  • 3. What was the East India Company? East India Company was the name of several historical European companies chartered with Asia, more specially with India. • British East India Company, founded • in 1600 • Danish East India Company, founded in 1616 • Dutch East India Company, founded in 1602 • French East India Company, founded in 1664 • Swedish East India Company, founded in 1731 • Portuguese East India Company, founded in 1628
  • 4. British East India Company • First it was called Honorable East India Company (HEIC) or often ”John Company”. Based in London. • An early joint-stock company, which was granted an English Royal Charter by Elisabeth I. on December 31, 1600. • Queen Elisabeth granted the monopoly rights to bring goods from India. • The Royal Charter gave the newly created HEIC a 21 monoply on all trade in the East Indies. • The Company had 125 shareholders, and a capital of ÂŁ72,000
  • 5.
  • 6.
  • 7. Arrival in India • 1612 AD established factories in Surat with the permission of Emperor Jahangir. • They continued their trading activity for a few years from here and later on expanded their area to Chennai, Mumbai and Calcutta.
  • 8. Expansion • First Expansion was in 1639 at Chennai. • Sir Francis Day along with the company established a Trading Post and St.George fort • In 1668 The Islands of Mumbai was leased to the British as dowry by the Portuguese. • Coastal area provided strategic importance to the Company’s trade.
  • 9. Events • Battle of Plassey • Battle of Buxar • Revolt of 1857 • Anglo-Maratha wars.
  • 10. Commercial • The East India Company wasn’t concerned about the local needs. • It’s main aim was to make profits. • A large chunk of the profits went to the Queen. • Thus it’s commercial motive made it a successful business enterprise.
  • 11. Robert Clive • The foundations of the British empire in India were, it is said, laid by Robert Clive, known to his admirers as the "conqueror of India". Clive first arrived in India in 1743 as a civil servant of the East India Company; he later transferred to the military service of the Company and returned to England in 1753, where he able to follow a comfortable life-style. But his penchant for extravagance and ostentatious displays of wealth, just as much as his electoral loss in his attempt to gain a seat in the House of Commons, opened him to the attacks of his creditors and political opponents. He arrived in India in 1756 and at once secured the British forces in Madras. He then moved to Calcutta, which had been captured by the Nawab of Bengal, Siraj-ud-daulah, and early in 1757 he recaptured Bengal. Later that year, on June 23rd, he defeated the Nawab, largely by means of bribes, at the so-called "Battle of Plassey".
  • 13. Battle Of Plassey • British rule in India is conventionally described as having begun in 1757. On June 23rd of that year, at the Battle of Plassey, a small village and mango grove between Calcutta and Murshidabad, the forces of the East India Company underRobert Clive defeated the army of Siraj-ud-daulah, the Nawab of Bengal. The "battle" lasted no more than a few hours, and indeed the outcome of the battle had been decided long before the soldiers came to the battlefield. The aspirant to the Nawab's throne, Mir Jafar, was induced to throw in his lot with Clive, and by far the greater number of the Nawab's soldiers were bribed to throw away their weapons, surrender prematurely, and even turn their arms against their own army. • Jawaharlal Nehru, in The Discovery of India (1946), justly describes Clive as having won the battle "by promoting treason and forgery", and pointedly notes that British rule in India had "an unsavoury beginning and something of that bitter taste has clung to it ever since."
  • 15. Basis Of Monopoly • Colonial Monopoly • Military Expansion • Opium Trade
  • 16. Indian Rebellion (Revolt) of 1857 • The Indian Rebellion of 1857 resulted in widespread devastation in India; many condemned the East India Company for permitting the events to occur. One of the consequences of the Indian Mutiny was that the British Government nationalised the Company. The Company lost all its administrative powers; the Crown, pursuant to the provisions of theGovernment of India Act 1858, took over its Indian possessions, including its armed forces.
  • 17.
  • 18. British Establishments • n 1607, the Company decided to build its own ships and leased a yard on the River Thames at Deptford. By 1614, the yard having become too small, an alternative site was acquired at Blackwall: the new yard was fully operational by 1617. It was sold in 1656, although for some years East India Company ships continued to be built and repaired there under the new owners. • In 1803, an Act of Parliament, promoted by the East India Company, established the East India Dock Company, with the aim of establishing a new set of docks (the East India Docks) primarily for the use of ships trading with India. while a new Import Dock was built to the north. In 1838 the East India Dock Company merged with the West India Dock Company. The docks were taken over by the Port of London Authorityin 1909, and closed in 1967. • The East India Club in London was formed in 1849 for officers of the Company. The Club still exists today as a private Gentlemen's club with its club house situated at 16 St. James's Square, London
  • 19.
  • 20. Flags Downman (1685) Lens (1700) Rees (1820) National Geographic (1917) Laurie (1842)
  • 21. Ships • Ships of the East India Company were called East Indiamen or simply "Indiamen Some examples include: • Red Dragon (1595) • Doddington (East Indiaman) Lost 1755 • Royal Captain (before 1773) • HMS Grosvenor Lost 1782 • General Goddard (1782) • Earl of Abergavenny (1797) • Earl of Mornington (1799); packet ship • Lord Nelson (1799) • Kent (1820): Lost on her third voyage • Nemesis (1839): first British built ocean-going iron warship • Agamemnon (1855)
  • 22.
  • 23. The End of the East India Company and the 1857 Revolt • THE GREAT INDIAN REBELLION of 1857 and the termination of East India Company rule over India just a year later thus ushered in a new phase of British imperialism in Asia. The end of the Company's regime meant that, at last, the British state had to accept unequivocal responsibility for the governance of former Company possessions. Consequently, new governing institutions were established in Asia which were directly answerable to government and Parliament in London, through the Secretary of State for India and the India Office.
  • 24. • These changes went hand-in-hand with a new culture of governance, created by the trauma of the Rebellion. Military reforms resulted in a shift away from Hindustan as the main recruiting ground for the Indian army towards the Punjab and other regions from which troops were perceived to have shown greater loyalty to the British. The policy of undermining Indian law, culture and involvement in the machinery of government, which had been applied under the last few decades of Company rule, was abruptly reversed.
  • 25. Group Members • Drashti • Lasya • Mariam • Aakash • Shlomoh • Sharik • Gaurang • Anish • Burhan