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HISTORY TODAY: The rise and fall of the East India Company in 18th & 19th Centuries here’s how ?

Flag and illustrations of the British East India Company
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AceHistoryDesk – Today, Walmart is the biggest corporation in the world. Imagine, if you will, that in addition to making money from its global retail operation, Walmart was also the ruler of a country, collected taxes from millions of people and maintained a standing army of a quarter of a million men. The idea is absurd, and yet, that’s exactly the position the East India Company found itself in in the 18th and 19th centuries. But how?

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Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published: Nov.21: 2023: Sky History News: TELEGRAM Ace Daily News Link https://t.me/+PuI36tlDsM7GpOJe

Flag and illustrations of the British East India Company
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Humble beginnings

The year was 1599 and a group of English businessmen and adventurers gathered together in London. They agreed to form a company to exploit the growing demand for goods such as textiles and spices coming from the East Indies, in particular India and parts of Southeast Asia. The aim was to get a royal charter from Queen Elizabeth I that would grant them the exclusive rights to trade with the East. In 1600, the charter was granted and the East India Company came into being. 

Eight years after gaining its charter, the East India Company founded its first permanent settlement in India – Fort St. George on the Bay of Bengal. At the time, England was just one of several European countries vying to dominate trade with the East Indies. England’s main competitors were the Netherlands and France, both of which established trading posts on the subcontinent. It remained to be seen who of the three would win the race to exploit the fabulous wealth of what was then the largest economy in the world.

Expansion

Following the establishment of Fort St. George, the company was keen to expand operations as its coffers began to fill up from its Bengal operation. The turning point came in 1613 when the company obtained a permit from the Mughal Emperor Nur-ud-din Salim Jahangir to open a factory in the Mughal city of Surat. The establishment of this new trading post further cemented the company’s grip on trade in the region. 

After Surat, the East India Company continued to expand its operations across India throughout the 17th century and into the 18th. Times were good and the profits were rolling in, but what turned a trading company into the biggest, most powerful corporation on the planet and a de facto sovereign state? 

Firstly, the company became very adept at forming alliances and backing the right horse. The East India Company started to take sides with one local ruler over another when provinces it was interested in expanding into went to war. In return for their support, the company was rewarded with more contracts and more opportunities. The East India Company had gone into the diplomacy game, and it proved remarkably good at it. 

Secondly, the company’s main rivals, France and the Netherlands, were eventually pushed out of the subcontinent except for a handful of mostly irrelevant trading settlements. The Netherlands pretty much bowed out of India following the Glorious Revolution of 1688 and the appointment of Dutchman William of Orange as the new King of England. Now allies, England focussed its efforts on protecting and exploiting its Indian interests, while the Dutch increasingly turned their attention to exploiting the spice trade of the Far East. England’s only other serious rival, France, was knocked out of the game when she and her ally Spain lost the Seven Years War of the 1750s and 1760s. With no rivals left on the board, the East India Company could now focus on the next phase of their corporate expansion – rule.

Rulers of India

By the 1750s, the East India Company had its own private army, and it was this army, under the command of Robert Clive, that defeated the Nawab of Bengal at the Battle of Plassey in 1757. Following Clive’s victory, Bengal came under company control. It now had the power to raise taxes from millions of people and this marked the start of an expansion that would eventually see the company rule India. 

One by one, the company’s armies – made up of enlisted men from Britain and native regiments known as ‘sepoys’ – scored victory after victory over the country’s network of regional rulers. The four Anglo-Mysore wars during the last three decades of the 18th century saw the company take control of most of the subcontinent, and the Anglo-Sikh wars of the 1840s brought the Punjab and its fearsome warriors under the company’s wing. By the 1850s, the East India Company was the ruler of India. Any threat to the company’s dominance was kept at bay by Britain’s vast, nigh-on unbeatable Royal Navy. It seemed that the company was unstoppable. Trouble, however, was on the horizon. 

Downfall

The end of the East India Company came not from defeat on the battlefield, but from within the ranks of ‘John Company’, its native army of Hindus, Sikhs and Muslims. In 1857, a rumour began doing the rounds that a new type of rifle cartridge was about to be foisted on the troops that were greased with forbidden pork and cow fat. Before long, the company’s troops were in open rebellion, killing British officers and their families, burning their homes to the ground and rampaging across the countryside. The Indian Mutiny could have toppled the company had it not been brutally brought under control by the British. 

After the rebellion was quashed, it was concluded in London that India must come under direct British rule. In 1858, Britain took over the government of the subcontinent, bringing an end to 100 years of company control, and marking the start of the ‘Jewel in the Crown’ of the British Empire – the British Raj. The East India Company limped on for a few more years before finally being wound up on 1st June 1874. 

‘It accomplished a work such as in the whole history of the human race no other trading Company ever attempted,’ said The Times of London as the company was in its death throes, ‘and such as none, surely, is likely to attempt in the years to come.’ 

Facts about the East India Company 

  • The British government granted the company the right to sell Chinese tea in America without paying the same taxes other exporters were forced to pay. The outrage this caused amongst colonists led to the Boston Tea Party, which in turn sparked the American War of Independence. 
  • The company’s involvement in the Chinese opium trade led to the two Opium Wars of the 1830s and the 1850s. When China decided to ban opium and destroy the company’s stocks, the British government sent a naval expedition to force the Chinese to pay reparations and keep the trade open. The second war, waged against China by Britain and France, led to the legalisation of opium – something which China is still understandably angry about to this day. 
  • The biggest blot in the company’s copybook is the Great Bengal Famine of 1770. The company, in charge of Bengal at the time following its victory at Plassey in 1757, bought up most of the region’s rice supplies for its troops and refused to lower taxes, both of which were major contributing factors in the deaths of between eight and ten million people.

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HISTORY TODAY: Orkney’s lost tomb – how the team made the Neolithic discovery

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AceHistoryDesk – Orkney, off the north coast of Scotland, is renowned for its remarkably well-preserved monuments. Many of these are Neolithic (10,000 BC to 2,200 BC) and consist of stone circles and chambered tombs, which are still highly visible in the landscape. Chambered tombs are monuments built of stone with a chamber area designed to hold the remains of the dead.

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Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published: Nov.21: 2023: The Conversation By Published: November 13, 2023 5.33pm GMT: TELEGRAM Ace Daily News Link https://t.me/+PuI36tlDsM7GpOJe

A woman in a beanie hat excavating a skeleton.
National Museums Scotland

In many parts of Britain, chambered tombs have been robbed for stone, and while this was also the case on Orkney, most sites do not seem to have been as badly affected as in other parts of the country.

In 2020 one of my team encountered a series of letters preserved in National Museums Scotland’s library relating to a dispute over some Neolithic objects discovered in Orkney in the 19th century. 

This led us to a newspaper account in the Orkney Herald in 1896, which reported that Orkney antiques specialist James Walls Cursiter had encountered a series of archaeological discoveries made by the son of the landowner at Holm, on the east side of Orkney’s mainland. 

The finds included a mace-head made from gneiss (a metamorphic rock with a distinct banding), a plain stone ball and eight skeletons. They were found within the ruins of a stone mound that had previously supplied stone to build a nearby farmhouse. The surviving stonework was interpreted by Cursiter as the remains of a “chambered burial mound”. 

This discovery was rapidly forgotten. By coincidence, a recently discovered archaeological notebook belonging to Cursiter revealed further details of the finds. This included a sketch of the monument and, most importantly, an approximate location of the discovery. 

All of this appeared to suggest that there may well be an unknown chambered tomb, mostly destroyed, but surviving to some extent nevertheless awaiting rediscovery.

Discovering the tomb

In 2022 a geophysical survey was carried out in the same location as described by Cursiter. Among other features, these surveys located a substantial archaeological anomaly on top of a prominent mound almost precisely in the location described as a position of the monument.

In 2023, we decided to open up a trench to see if anything survived. When we arrived at the site, it did not look promising. All that remained on the ground was a very slight grassy dome which had clearly been ploughed over the years. In a field of many grassy knolls, it was hard to see how this was anything exceptional. Yet, the location was quite prominent, with views out over the landscape in many directions, comparable to other passage tombs in the area. A passage tomb is a type of chambered tomb with a long thin passage leading to a central chamber with smaller cells off the main chamber. 

As we peeled off the turf, we quickly came down onto heavily disturbed soil containing smashed Victorian ceramics and stone rubble. This came from a nearby farmhouse that had robbed stone from the tomb in order to build their barn. There was no rubbish collection then, so their waste went out on to the fields. But scattered among this recent material were small fragments of bone which looked much older. 

As we dug further down, we started to encounter the lower walls of a stone structure, exactly as described by Cursiter. Much of the bone within the stone structure was highly fragmentary, which seemed to reinforce the idea that this monument had been mostly destroyed in the 19th century. 

The team excavate the find.
The team excavate the find. National Museums Scotland

However, in one of the side cells off the main passage – which was largely filled with small stone rubble that accumulated from the dismantling of an intact side cell which would once have had a high roof – we found a perfectly preserved and undisturbed Neolithic tomb deposit.

This consisted of a minimum of 14 burials of seven adults and seven children. The skeletons were placed in a variety of different positions. Two were crouched (knees to chest) and laid on their side, while another was tightly flexed with the knees pulled tight to the chest, and placed face down. Two were placed in the grave embracing one another, with the remains of two young children placed on their heads. 

This level of preservation is remarkable. It is quite unusual to find tomb deposits intact and so well preserved.

In revealing and excavating these remains, we have found a lost passage tomb, but also revealed that these finds will not be preserved forever. The soil added into the monument during the Victorian destruction of the site has been eroding the bones ever since, so it is now a race against time to retrieve what survives. 

The human remains will enable to us discover many different aspects of peoples’ lives in the Neolithic age, including what they ate and how they died. It also shows that in a landscape where many monuments are exceptionally well preserved, there are still new and exciting discoveries to be made.

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HISTORY TODAY: Number of human skeletons unearthed on site of future car park in Ronda rises to 300

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AceHistoryDesk – Archaeological excavations at the site which used to house the town’s cemetery in the Nasrid period will delay the project by about a year

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Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published: Nov.15: 2023: Some of the remains found. SUR: Vanessa Melgar: Ronda: TELEGRAM Ace Daily News Link https://t.me/+PuI36tlDsM7GpOJe

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Hundreds of skeletons have been uncovered at the construction site of a future car park in Ronda.

Ronda town hall said 300 have been located, so far, in the San Francisco neighbourhood where the council is hoping to build a car park, and which used to be the site of the town’s cemetery during the Nasrid period.

Archaeological excavations are taking place and will delay the project by about a year as the site is located in the historic part of the town that was declared an Asset of Cultural Interest (BIC) in the 1960s. The remains date back to the 14th centuries, with the first skeletons unearthed during initial works in July 2022. 

At that time, it was noted that these burials were not in a good condition and that there was a significant representation of children and elderly people. Two types of tombs were found, in simple graves and those built by stone and brick. 

500 parking spaces

The future car park will play a crucial role in the plans of the current council, led by mayor María de la Paz Fernández. It is one of the most important projects, along with the new bus station, as Ronda is currently suffering from a serious lack of parking spaces. The new car park has been designed by the Diputación provincial authority in Malaga. It will be semi-open and take advantage of the slope of the land. It will have about 500 spaces spread across seven levels. The planned investment is about five million euros. The council acquired the land from a private individual for 60,000 euros.

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HISTORY TODAY: Letters from Seven Years’ War opened 250 years later

Undated handout photo issued by the University of Cambridge of a love letter from Anne Le Cerf to her husband Jean Topsent which was part of a collection of love letters that were confiscated by Britain's Royal Navy before they reached French sailors during the Seven Years' War
British Admiralty officials deemed the letters had no military significance.

AceHistoryDesk – Letters confiscated by Britain’s Royal Navy before they reached French sailors during the Seven Years’ War have been opened for the first time.

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Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published: Nov.08: 2023: BBC History News: TELEGRAM Ace Daily News Link https://t.me/+PuI36tlDsM7GpOJe

Undated handout photo issued by the University of Cambridge of a love letter from Anne Le Cerf to her husband Jean Topsent which was part of a collection of love letters that were confiscated by Britain's Royal Navy before they reached French sailors during the Seven Years' War
British Admiralty officials deemed the letters had no military significance.

Written in 1757-8, they were sent by loved ones for crew onboard a French warship, but never reached them.

Prof Renaud Morieux, who discovered the letters, said they were about “universal human experiences”.

The Seven Years’ War was a battle mainly between Britain and France about control of North America and India. 

It ended with the Treaty of Paris, which gave the UK considerable gains. 

Prof Morieux, a University of Cambridge academic, unearthed the collection of 104 letters from the National Archives in Kew, and said it was “agonising how close they got” to reaching their intended recipients onboard the Galatee.

The French postal administration took them to multiple ports in France to attempt delivery, but were unsuccessful. 

The Galatee was captured by the British on its way from Bordeaux to Quebec in 1758. 

Upon learning the ship was in British hands, French authorities forwarded the letters to England, where they were handed to the navy and ended up in storage. 

British Admiralty officials deemed the letters had no military significance.

Prof Morieux said he only asked to look at the box in the archives “out of curiosity” before discovering them.

“I realised I was the first person to read these very personal messages since they were written,” he said. 

“Their intended recipients didn’t get that chance. It was very emotional,” said Prof Morieux, whose findings were published in the journal “Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales”.

Prof Morieux identified every member of the Galatee’s 181-strong crew, with letters addressed to a quarter of them – he also carried out genealogical research into the men and their correspondents.

They include a letter from Marie Dubosc to her husband, the ship’s first lieutenant, Louis Chambrelan. 

She wrote: “I could spend the night writing to you… I am your forever faithful wife.

“Good night, my dear friend. It is midnight. I think it is time for me to rest.”

Researchers say she did not know where her husband was or that his ship had been captured by the British.

He did not receive her letter and they did not meet again, with Dubosc dying the next year in northern France. 

Chambrelan returned to France and remarried in 1761. 

In another letter, Anne Le Cerf told her husband Jean Topsent, a non-commissioned officer: “I cannot wait to possess you.”

“These letters are about universal human experiences, they’re not unique to France or the 18th century,” Prof Morieux said. 

“They reveal how we all cope with major life challenges.”

“When we are separated from loved ones by events beyond our control, like the pandemic or wars, we have to work out how to stay in touch, how to reassure, care for people and keep the passion alive.

“Today we have Zoom and WhatsApp. In the 18th century, people only had letters but what they wrote about feels very familiar.”

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HISTORY TODAY: Tens of thousands of ancient coins found off the coast of Sardinia

hands with coins
A team from the ministry of culture and local authorities worked to uncover the coins. (Supplied: MiC Italia)

AceHistoryDesk – Tens of thousands of ancient bronze coins have been found off the coast of the Italian island of Sardinia.

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Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published: Nov.06: 2023: ABC History News: TELEGRAM Ace Daily News Link https://t.me/+PuI36tlDsM7GpOJe

A bunch of bronze coins
The coins were found buried in seagrass. (AP Photo: Italian Culture Ministry )none

The coins, dating from the first half of the fourth century AD, were found in seagrass not far from the town of Arzachena.

They were first spotted by a diver who saw something metallic out of the corner of their eye.

The diver alerted authorities, who sent divers from an art protection squad along with others from the Italian cultural ministry’s undersea archaeology department.

Three scuba divers search for coins under the sand
The number of large bronze coins would be between 30,000 and 50,000. (Supplied: MiC Italia)

Exactly how many coins have been retrieved has not been determined yet, as they are still being sorted.

A ministry statement estimated that there are at least about 30,000 and possibly as many as 50,000, given their collective weight.

“All the coins were in an excellent and rare state of preservation,” the ministry said.

The few coins that were damaged still had legible inscriptions, it said.

“The treasure found in the waters off Arzachena represent one of the most important coin discoveries,” in recent years, said Luigi La Rocca, a Sardinian archaeology department official.

Mr La Rocca added in a statement that the find was “further evidence of the richness and importance of the archaeological heritage that the seabed of our seas, crossed by men and goods from the most ancient of epochs, still keep and preserve”.

Firefighter divers and border police divers were also involved in locating and retrieving the coins.

hands with coins
A team from the ministry of culture and local authorities worked to uncover the coins. (Supplied: MiC Italia)

The coins were mainly found in a wide area of sand between the underwater seagrass and the beach.

Given the location and shape of the seabed, there could be remains of ship wreckage nearby. 

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