The Cambridge History of the British Empire, Volume 4John Holland Rose, Arthur Percival Newton, Ernest Alfred Benians, Henry Dodwell The University Press, 1929 - Great Britain |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 93
Page 88
... already noted that as early as 1611 the English had followed the example of the Dutch in starting a factory at Masulipatam , the chief port of the kingdom of Golconda . The trade here was valuable , particularly in piece - goods for ...
... already noted that as early as 1611 the English had followed the example of the Dutch in starting a factory at Masulipatam , the chief port of the kingdom of Golconda . The trade here was valuable , particularly in piece - goods for ...
Page 446
... already taken place before Cornwallis arrived . Business had been divided between the public , secret and commercial departments , and the secretarial work and correspondence reorganised accordingly . In the secret department there was ...
... already taken place before Cornwallis arrived . Business had been divided between the public , secret and commercial departments , and the secretarial work and correspondence reorganised accordingly . In the secret department there was ...
Page 526
... already , and because , as has been already said , they held releases from tribute given by Shah Shuja . Lord Auckland could , however , only push on . Burnes was sent into Sind to try and arrange matters regarding the passage of the ...
... already , and because , as has been already said , they held releases from tribute given by Shah Shuja . Lord Auckland could , however , only push on . Burnes was sent into Sind to try and arrange matters regarding the passage of the ...
Contents
CHAPTER I | 1 |
Portuguese suzerainty over Ormuz | 12 |
Later governors | 19 |
119 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
administration affairs alliance appointed army arrived attack Batavia Bengal Bombay British Bussy Calcutta capture Carnatic Ceylon Chait Singh chief Clive coast collectors Colonel command Committee Company's servants Cornwallis Coromandel Coromandel Coast council court of directors Deccan declared dispatch district diwanni Dupleix Dutch East India Company enemy England English established European factory favour February fleet force Fort St David French garrison Gleig governor governor-general grant Gujarat Hastings's Holkar Hyder Hyder Ali Idem Impey Ja'far Jang Khan king lakhs land later letter Lord Madras Malabar Maratha March military Mir Kasim Moghul Muhammad Mysore Nana Nana Phadnavis Nandakumar nawab negotiations Nizam officers orders Oudh peace Peshwa political Pondichery Poona Portuguese position possessions president province Raghunath Rao raja reform revenue Rohillas ruler rupees secure sent settlement Shah ships Sindhia success Surat territory Tipu trade treaty troops village Warren Hastings Wellesley zamindars