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The British Presence in India in the 18th Century
By Professor Peter Marshall
Last updated 2011-02-17
 
East India Company
British involvement in India during the 18th century can be divided into 
two  phases, one ending and the other beginning at mid-century. In the first 
half of  the century, the British were a trading presence at certain points 
along the  coast; from the 1750s they began to wage war on land in eastern 
and  south-eastern India and to reap the reward of successful warfare, which 
was the  exercise of political power, notably over the rich province of 
Bengal. By the  end of the century British rule had been consolidated over the 
first conquests  and it was being extended up the Ganges valley to Delhi and 
over most of the  peninsula of southern India. By then the British had 
established a military  dominance that would enable them in the next fifty 
years 
to subdue all the  remaining Indian states of any consequence, either 
conquering them or forcing  their rulers to become subordinate allies.
 
At the beginning of the 18th century English commerce with India was nearly 
a  hundred years old. It was transacted by the East India Company, which 
had been  given a monopoly of all English trade to Asia by royal grant at its 
foundation  in 1600. Through many vicissitudes, the Company had evolved into 
a commercial  concern only matched in size by its Dutch rival. Some 3000 
shareholders  subscribed to a stock of £3 200 000; a further £6 million was 
borrowed on  short-term bonds; twenty or thirty ships a year were sent to Asia 
and annual  sales in London were worth up to £2 million. Twenty-four 
directors, elected  annually by the shareholders ran the Company's operations 
from 
its headquarters  in the City of London. 
Towards the end of the 17th century India became the focal point of the  
Company's trade. Cotton cloth woven by Indian weavers was being imported into  
Britain in huge quantities to supply a worldwide demand for cheap, 
washable,  lightweight fabrics for dresses and furnishings. The Company's main 
settlements,  Bombay, Madras and Calcutta were established in the Indian 
provinces where  cotton textiles for export were most readily available. These 
settlements had  evolved from 'factories' or trading posts into major 
commercial 
towns under  British jurisdiction, as Indian merchants and artisans moved in 
to do business  with the Company and with the British inhabitants who lived 
there. 

 
Regional politics
The East India Company's trade was built on a sophisticated Indian economy. 
 India offered foreign traders the skills of its artisans in weaving cloth 
and  winding raw silk, agricultural products for export, such as sugar, the 
indigo  dye or opium, and the services of substantial merchants and rich 
bankers. During  the 17th century at least, the effective rule maintained by 
the Mughal emperors  throughout much of the subcontinent provided a secure 
framework for  trade.

 
 
The Company's Indian trade in the first half of the 18th century seemed to 
be  established on a stable and profitable basis. Those who directed its 
affairs in  London could see no case for military or political intervention to 
try to change  the status quo. The British did, however, start to intervene 
in Indian politics  from the 1750s, and revolutionary changes in their role 
in India were to follow.  This change of course can best be explained partly 
in terms of changed  conditions in India and partly as a consequence of the 
aggressive ambitions of  the local British themselves. 
Conditions in India were certainly changing. The Mughal empire had  
disintegrated and was being replaced by a variety of regional states. This did  
not 
produce a situation of anarchy and chaos, as used once to be assumed. Some  
of the regional states maintained stable rule and there was no marked 
overall  economic decline throughout India.
 
 
There were, however, conflicts within some of the new states. Contestants 
for  power in certain coastal states were willing to seek European support 
for their  ambitions and Europeans were only too willing to give it. In part, 
they acted on  behalf of their companies. By the 1740s rivalry between the 
British and the  French, who were late comers to Indian trade, was becoming 
acute. In southern  India the British and the French allied with opposed 
political factions within  the successor states to the Mughals to extract gains 
for their own companies and  to weaken the position of their opponents. 
Private ambitions were also involved.  Great personal rewards were promised to 
the European commanders who succeeded in  placing their Indian clients on the 
thrones for which they were contending. A  successful kingmaker, like 
Robert Clive, could become prodigiously rich. 

 
A new empire in India


 
 
The Anglo-French conflicts that began in the 1750s ended in 1763 with a  
British ascendancy in the southeast and most significantly in Bengal. There 
the  local ruler actually took the Company's Calcutta settlement in 1756, only 
to be  driven out of it by British troops under Robert Clive, whose victory 
at Plassey  in the following year enabled a new British satellite ruler to 
be installed.  British influence quickly gave way to outright rule over 
Bengal, formally  conceded to Clive in 1765 by the still symbolically 
important, 
if militarily  impotent, Mughal emperor.
 
 
What opinion in Britain came to recognise as a new British empire in India  
remained under the authority of the East India Company, even if the 
importance  of the national concerns now involved meant that the Company had to 
submit to  increasingly close supervision by the British state and to 
periodical inquiries  by parliament. In India, the governors of the Company's 
commercial settlements  became governors of provinces and, although the East 
India 
Company continued to  trade, many of its servants became administrators in 
the new British regimes.  Huge armies were created, largely composed of 
Indian sepoys but with some  regular British regiments. These armies were used 
to 
defend the Company's  territories, to coerce neighbouring Indian states and 
to crush any potential  internal resistance.
 
 
Company government

 
The new Company governments were based on those of the Indian states that  
they had displaced and much of the effective work of administration was  
initially still done by Indians. Collection of taxes was the main function of  
government. About one third of the produce of the land was extracted from 
the  cultivators and passed up to the state through a range of intermediaries, 
who  were entitled to keep a proportion for themselves.  
In addition to enforcing a system whose yield provided the Company with the 
 resources to maintain its armies and finance its trade, British officials 
tried  to fix what seemed to them to be an appropriate balance between the 
rights of  the cultivating peasants and those of the intermediaries, who 
resembled  landlords. British judges also supervised the courts, which applied 
Hindu or  Islamic rather than British law. There was as yet little belief in 
the need for  outright innovation. On the contrary, men like Warren 
Hastings, who ruled  British Bengal from 1772 to 1785, believed that Indian 
institutions were well  adapted to Indian needs and that the new British 
governments 
should try to  restore an 'ancient constitution', which had been subverted 
during the upheavals  of the 18th century. If this were done, provinces like 
Bengal would naturally  recover their legendary past prosperity
 
 
By the end of the century, however, opinions were changing. India seemed to 
 be suffering not merely from an unfortunate recent history but from deeply 
 ingrained backwardness. It needed to be 'improved' by firm, benevolent 
foreign  rule. Various strategies for improvement were being discussed. 
Property  relations should be reformed to give greater security to the 
ownership of 
land.  Laws should be codified on scientific principles. All obstacles to 
free trade  between Britain and India should be removed, thus opening India's 
economy to the  stimulus of an expanding trade with Europe. Education 
should be remodelled. The  ignorance and superstition thought to be inculcated 
by 
Asian religions should be  challenged by missionaries propagating the 
rationality embodied in Christianity.  The implementation of improvement in any 
systematic way lay in the future, but  commitment to governing in Indian ways 
through Indians was waning fast. 

 
Territorial expansion
The conquests that had begun in the 1750s had never been sanctioned in  
Britain and both the national government and the directors of the Company  
insisted that further territorial expansion must be curbed. This proved a vain  
hope. The Company's new domains made it a participant in the complex 
politics of  post-Mughal India. It sought to keep potential enemies at a 
distance 
by forming  alliances with neighbouring states. These alliances led to 
increasing  intervention in the affairs of such states and to wars fought on 
their 
behalf.  In Warren Hastings's period the British were drawn into expensive 
and indecisive  wars on several fronts, which had a dire effect on the 
Company's finances and  were strongly condemned at home. By the end of the 
century, however, the  Company's governor general, Richard Wellesley, soon to 
be 
Marquess Wellesley,  was willing to abandon policies of limited commitment 
and to use war as an  instrument for imposing British hegemony on all the 
major states in the  subcontinent. A series of intermittent wars was beginning 
which would take  British authority over the next fifty years up to the 
mountains of Afghanistan  in the west and into Burma in the east.

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