Three Frenchmen in Bengal. Samuel Charles Hill

Three Frenchmen in Bengal - Samuel Charles Hill


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       Samuel Charles Hill

      Three Frenchmen in Bengal

      The Commercial Ruin of the French Settlements in 1757

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066244927

       CHAPTER I

       THE QUARREL WITH THE ENGLISH

       CHAPTER II

       M. RENAULT, CHIEF OF CHANDERNAGORE

       Notes

       CHAPTER III

       M. LAW, CHIEF OF COSSIMBAZAR

       CHAPTER IV

       M. COURTIN, CHIEF OF DACCA

      

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      Writing in 1725, the French naval commander, the Chevalier d'Albert, tells us that the three most handsome towns on the Ganges were Calcutta, Chandernagore, and Chinsurah, the chief Factories of the English, French, and Dutch. These towns were all situated within thirty miles of each other. Calcutta, the latest founded, was the greatest and the richest, owing partly to its situation, which permitted the largest ships of the time to anchor at its quays, and partly to the privilege enjoyed by the English merchants of trading freely as individuals through the length and breadth of the land. Native merchants and native artisans crowded to Calcutta, and the French and Dutch, less advantageously situated and hampered by restrictions of trade, had no chance of competing with the English on equal terms. The same was of course true of their minor establishments in the interior. All three nations had important Factories at Cossimbazar (in the neighbourhood of Murshidabad, the Capital of Bengal) and at Dacca, and minor Factories at Jugdea or Luckipore, and at Balasore. The French and Dutch had also Factories at Patna. Besides Calcutta, Chandernagore, and Chinsurah, the only Factory which was fortified was the English Factory at Cossimbazar.


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