Advent
of Europeans in India: Portuguese, Dutch, British & More
The advent of Europeans
in India marked the beginning of a new era in the country's history. From
humble beginnings as traders seeking profit, the Europeans would soon emerge as
colonial rulers of vast tracts of Indian soil. The Portuguese were the first in
1498, led by Vasco da Gama, who arrived on the Malabar Coast. Trade flourished
between India and European nations before the formal British Empire in India.
India and Europe traded through land routes spanning Syria, Egypt, and the Oxus
Valley. The 15th century marked a period of geographical discoveries, with
Christopher Columbus finding America in 1492 and Vasco da Gama establishing a
new sea route to India in 1498. Following these discoveries, various European
trading companies arrived in India, with the Portuguese being the first,
followed by the British, Dutch, Danes, and French, each eventually aspiring to
become the political masters of India.
The
advent of Europeans in India
The advent of Europeans
in India began in 1498 when Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama reached Calicut
by sea. This opened a direct sea route between Europe and India, marking the
start of European influence. Following Portugal, the Dutch, English, French,
and Danes arrived in India seeking trade dominance. These European powers
established trading posts and later colonised parts of India. This period set
the stage for centuries of European political and economic control in India.
·       
The
arrival of the European people in India turned the pages of the history of
India.
·       
The
landing of Vasco da Gama: He started with the Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama
in 1498, who established a direct waterway between Europe and India. This
turning point started European colonialism and domination of trade in the
sub-continent.
·       
Other
Europeans: The other European powers, with the Portuguese in the lead, wanted
to dominate the profitable spice trade and went on to build trading posts and
fortifications along the Indian coast.
·       
Impact:
They led to cultural interactions, conflicts with local leaders, and the
reformation of the Indian society. This time has formed the background of
centuries of European influence and rule in India.
Timeline
of the Advent of Europeans in India
The table below shows
the series of events during the advent of Europeans in India:
| 
   Year  | 
  
   Event Description  | 
 
| 
   1492  | 
  
   Christopher Columbus discovered America.  | 
 
| 
   1498  | 
  
   Vasco da Gama of Portugal establishes a new sea route from
  Europe to India.  | 
 
| 
   Early 16th  | 
  
   Portuguese traders arrived in India, marking the initial
  European presence.  | 
 
| 
   1600  | 
  
   The British East India Company was established for trade in the
  Indian Ocean region.  | 
 
| 
   Early 17th  | 
  
   Dutch and Danish trading companies establish their presence in
  India.  | 
 
| 
   1664  | 
  
   The French East India Company was formed to participate in the
  Indian trade.  | 
 
| 
   Late 17th  | 
  
   European powers engaged in conflicts known as the Carnatic Wars
  to control South India.  | 
 
| 
   Mid-18th  | 
  
   The Battle of Plassey in 1757 saw the British East India Company
  gain control of Bengal.  | 
 
| 
   1761  | 
  
   The Third Battle of Panipat led to the decline of the Maratha
  Empire, impacting European influence in India.  | 
 
| 
   1818  | 
  
   The British East India Company formally takes control of the
  Maratha territories.  | 
 
| 
   Mid-19th  | 
  
   The Indian Rebellion of 1857 resulted in a power transfer from
  the East India Company to the British Crown.  | 
 
| 
   1947  | 
  
   India gained independence from British rule.  | 
 
Arrival
of the Portuguese in India
·       
The
first Europeans came to India in 1498. Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama came
from Portugal. The Portuguese came by ship. They wanted to trade with India.
·       
Before
the Portuguese came, Arab traders controlled trade with India. The Portuguese
wanted to break Arab control. They tried to sell things made in Portugal and
buy Indian goods like spices.
·       
Vasco
da Gama came to Calicut in India on May 20, 1498. Calicut had a ruler called
the Zamorin. He controlled the spice trade. Vasco da Gama wanted to ask the
Zamorin for permission to trade.
·       
The
coming of the Portuguese to India changed India forever. The Portuguese
conquered parts of India. They made places like Goa, Daman, Diu, and parts of
Kerala part of Portugal.
·       
At
first, trade with the Portuguese helped Portugal a lot. The Portuguese traded
directly with Indian rulers. The Portuguese brought crops like potatoes, chilli
peppers and cashews to India.
·       
But
the Portuguese rulers were cruel to the Indians. They forced many Hindus and
Muslims to become Christians. They took high taxes from Indian traders. They
destroyed Hindu temples.
·       
After
the Portuguese, other Europeans, such as the Dutch, French, and British, came
to India for trade. They competed with the Portuguese for trade and land in
India.
·       
Other
Europeans broke Portuguese control of trade with India. By the late 1700s, the
British had captured most of the Portuguese areas in India.
·       
When
the Europeans came, many new things came to India. Crops, ideas, religions and
goods were exchanged. Indian goods like spices, tea, textiles, and opium became
important in Europe.
·       
The
coming of the Europeans to India marked the time when European countries ruled
India. It changed Indian society in significant ways.
·       
The
trade with Europeans made some Indians very rich, but many Indian traders lost
business. Indian trading on land became less critical.
·       
At
first, the Europeans only wanted to trade. But they slowly wanted more land and
power in India. The Europeans set up local administrations that became colonial
rulers.
·       
The
Portuguese were the first European rulers in India. They made colonies and
traded places on the coast. They captured Goa in 1510 and ruled it for over 450
years.
·       
The
Portuguese showed that Europeans had more powerful weapons than Indian rulers.
This experience helped other European powers conquer more of India later.
·       
In
short, the coming of Europeans to India changed India forever. It connected
India to the world in new ways. But the effect was not good for India at all.
Reasons
that led to the Portuguese Voyage to India
·       
With
the fall of the Roman Empire and Constantinople in 1453, the Arabs gained
control over the trade routes of Egypt and Persia, leading to India. The
Europeans ceased to come into direct contact with India, and the continued easy
availability of Indian goods.
·       
Spirit
of the voyage: Europe of the 15th century had a spirit in the Renaissance and
the improvement of sailing to approach the East, which made voyagers eager to
make expeditions across the ocean.
·       
Division
by non-Christian world: Treaty of Tordesillas (1494) was a treaty between
Portugal and Spain to divide the non-Christian world between the two countries,
where Portugal was given the eastern part of the world and Spain the western on
their part. This paved the way for the Portuguese invasion of Indian waters.
Portuguese
Governors
Vasco
da Gama
·       
Indian
history was seriously affected when Vasco da Gama sailed into Calicut
(present-day Kozhikode) in 1498. The Hindu king of Calicut, the Zamorin,
welcomed him because the wealth of his kingdom was based on trade.
·       
But
the Arab traders who were well established on the Malabar coast were also
worried about the entry of the Portuguese with influence in the region.
·       
Portugal
wanted to monopolise the lucrative eastern trade and keep their rivals,
especially the Arabs, away.
·       
In
1501, Vasco da Gama revisited India but had to contend with the Zamorin, who
did not take lightly when he tried to ban the Arab traders in favour of the
Portuguese.
Francisco
de Almeida (1505-1509) 
·       
Francisco
de Almeida was the next Governor of India and arrived in India in 1505 to not
only consolidate the holdings of the Portuguese but also to destroy the trade
of the Muslims.
·       
The
Zamorin opposed Almeida, and the Mamluk Sultan of Egypt threatened him.
·       
In
1507, a Portuguese naval fleet met with its first defeat at the naval battle of
Diu, but the defeat was avenged in 1508.
·       
In
his Blue Water Policy, Almeida wished to dominate the Indian Ocean by turning
the Portuguese into its masters.
·       
Blue
Water Policy (Cartaze system): The Portuguese empire gave a trading licence or
pass to carry on trading in the Indian Ocean in the sixteenth century. It is
called so because the Portuguese word cartas refers to letters.
Alfonso
de Albuquerque (1509-1515)
·       
Alfonso
de Albuquerque replaced Almeida, and he established Portuguese settlements that
overlooked the gateways of the Indian Ocean.
·       
Albuquerque
obtained permission and control over the main shipbuilding centres.
·       
In
1510, Goa was conquered by the Sultan of Bijapur, and this was the first part
of India to fall under European rule since Alexander the Great.
·       
The
rule of Albuquerque also witnessed Portuguese men settling in India, where they
positioned themselves as landlords, artisans, craftsmen and traders.
·       
The
act, which was quite interesting during his reign, was the abolition of sati.
Nino
de Cunha (1572-1636)
·       
He
shifted the headquarters of Goa to Goa. 
·       
In
1534, the Portuguese captured the island of Bassein and its dependencies from
Bahadur Shah of Gujarat. Still, their relationship went sour when Gujarat was
vacated by the occupation of Humayun, who the Portuguese slew in a fight in
1537.
·       
Moreover,
da Cunha tried to establish greater Portuguese power in Bengal as he brought a
considerable number of Portuguese people to Bengal with Hooghly as the
headquarters of the Portuguese people.
Decline
of the Portuguese
·       
The
concept of the decline of the commercial influence of the Portuguese in India
in the 18th century existed.
·       
Weighty
dynasties rose in Egypt, Persia, and North India, and the Marathas became the
dominant neighbours, and the Portuguese lost their local advantages.
·       
In
1739, the Marathas ousted the Portuguese, conquering Salsette and Bassein.
·       
Political
fears over the Portuguese and Jesuit activities' religious policies were
experienced.
·       
Due
to the antagonism of Hindus towards Muslims and their pursuit to convert them
to Christianity, their conversion efforts to Christianity resulted in resentment
among Hindus.
Significance
of the Portuguese
The Portuguese
contribution to the birth of Europe-India relations can be discussed by
introducing a direct maritime connection between Europe and India, which Vasco
de Gama discovered in 1498. This discovery took away the Arab and Italian
monopoly of land routes that made Europeans travel to the Indian Ocean to find
spices and other goods that Indians offered. It represented an early example of
European colonialism and superiority in the Indian Ocean and secured Portuguese
dominion over strategic ports along the Indian coast, such as Goa. Their
dominance of the seas and their monopoly of trade opened the doors to more
European participation in the Indian trade and politics. They significantly
changed the face of world trade and intercultural interactions.
·       
Emergence
of naval power: The arrival of the Portuguese in India meant the advent of the
navy-powered force, which became known as the European period.
·       
Own
systems: Portuguese did not bother to follow preset rules, but aimed at
ensuring that the Indian trade and the trading system of the Indian Ocean were
under Portuguese domain.
·       
Military
inventions: During the sixteenth century in Malabar, the Portuguese exhibited
military inventions against their opponents through the use of body armour,
matchlock men, and guns that were flown into their vessels.
·       
Sea
Technology: The Portuguese were better at sea technology, and their ships were
sturdily built, multi-decked ships to endure gales of the Atlantic, allowing
them to carry more armaments.
·       
Organisational
ability: The organisation's creation of royal arsenals, dockyards, and a
regular system of pilots and mapping was a noteworthy contribution.
·       
Religious
Policy: The Portuguese came to the East, full of the desire to foster
Christianity and repress Muslims. The intolerance could be tolerated at first
toward Hindus, but with the change of time and the arrival of the Inquisition
in Goa, people became increasingly intolerant.
·       
Agricultural
introductions: In the changing Indian agriculture and food, the Portuguese
introduced many crops into India, such as chillies, potatoes, tomatoes, cashew
nuts, pineapple, papaya, etc. Such crops were so entrenched in the food habits
of Indians and their agricultural processes.
Foothold
in the West and South
·       
The
port of arrival: Captain Hawkins reached the court of Jahangir in search of
opening a factory at Surat in 1609, but it never succeeded because of the
Portuguese.
·       
Trading
started: The English began to trade at Masulipatnam in 1611 and set up a
factory in 1616.
·       
Battle
against the Portuguese: In 1612, Captain Thomas won a sea battle of Surat
against the Portuguese, and as such, Jahangir allowed an English factory in
Surat in 1613.
·       
The
Portuguese were at peace, and an Anglo-Dutch compromise permitted the English
to trade freely.
·       
Gift
of Bombay: Bombay was ceded to King Charles II in 1662 and to the East India
Company in 1668, which in 1687 became its headquarters.
·       
Madras:
The Sultan of Golconda also granted the English trading privileges. In 1639,
the English had a fortified factory at Madras, which would become the
headquarters of the English settlements in South India.
Foothold
in Bengal
·       
The
Mughal Empire was a prosperous and vital province, and Bengal was one of the
provinces to which English merchants flocked because of attractive trade and
business opportunities.
·       
Trade
license: A trading license was granted in 1651 by Shah Shuja, subahdar of
Bengal, agreeing to an annual payment by the English to trade in Bengal.
·       
Fortified
settlement required: Requiring a fortified settlement, William Hedges, the
initial agent and company governor in Bengal, approached the Mughal governor
Shaista Khan; however, this did not go well, and instead hostilities broke out.
·       
The
settlement at Sutanuti: In 1686, the Mughals looted Hooghly, which the English
avenged. Negotiations led to signing of a treaty between Job Charnock and the
Mughals in 1690, which enabled the English to open an English factory at
Sutanuti.
·       
Fort
William: In 1698, the English were granted the right to purchase the zamindari
of Sutanuti, Gobindapur, and Kalikata, and the fortified town went into
existence bearing the name Fort William in 1700, the seat of the eastern
presidency (Calcutta).
Arrival
of the British in India
·       
The
British came to India in the early 1600s. The British East India Company came
first for trade. The advent of Europeans in India started with trade, but later
the British fought Indian rulers and made India a British colony.
·       
In
1600, Queen Elizabeth I of England gave a charter to form the British East
India Company. The company came to India for trade—the British traded cotton,
silk and saltpetre from India for British goods.
·       
The
East India Company first came to Surat in 1608 and got permission from Mughal
emperor Jahangir to trade. The British set up trading posts in Indian coastal
cities. They traded Indian goods like spices, silk, indigo dye and saltpetre.
·       
The
advent of Europeans in India helped the British East India Company. Trade with
India made a lot of profit for the British company and its shareholders.
However, Indian rulers did not allow the British to expand.
·       
The
British used violence to expand their control. In 1757, the East India Company
defeated the Nawab of Bengal and took control of collecting taxes in Bengal.
The company became a ruler in Bengal.
·       
The
British East India Company gradually expanded its control. The company defeated
Indian rulers in battle and captured their lands. The company's army grew
bigger and had modern weapons.
·       
In
1803, the British East India Company defeated the Maratha Empire in western
India, capturing large parts of India. By 1857, almost all of India was under
direct or indirect British control except for some small kingdoms.
·       
How
the British expanded their control changed over time—initially, the British
captured Indian land by fighting Indian rulers. Later, the British used
indirect rule and made Indian rulers act as their local administrators.
·       
The
advent of Europeans in India had both good and bad effects. The British brought
modern infrastructure like railways, roads, canals and ports. New crops, an
education system and a legal system were introduced. But the British exploited
India's resources for their profit.
·       
The
British rule in India was unfair. British officials got high salaries while
Indians suffered poverty. British policies negatively impacted the traditional
Indian economy. The British treated Indians unequally under their laws.
·       
The
direct British rule of India ended in 1947 when India became independent after
the independence movement. However, the impact of the 200 years of British
colonial rule is still seen in India's political system, economy, society, and
culture.
Reasons
for English success against other Europeans
·       
England's
success has been discussed in India against various European powers, and some
of the important reasons are:
·       
Form
and content of trading companies: The English East India Company was unlike
other companies. It was headed by a board of directors elected once a year,
with shareholders that enjoyed significant power over the company's running.
·       
Dominance
at sea: Britain's Royal Navy was the mightiest and best in Europe, with such
achievements as the sinking of the Spanish Armada and the French at Trafalgar.
·       
Industrial
Revolution: England was in charge of the Industrial Revolution, which led to
inventions and technological progress in textiles, metallurgy, steam power, and
agriculture.
·       
Army,
expertise and discipline: British soldiers were disciplined and well-trained.
British commanders proved to be tacticians and used new strategies, which,
together with the developed technology, enabled the small contingents of
British soldiers to overcome superior armies.
·       
Consistent
Government: Britain had a stable government compared to the other European
countries, which experienced political instability, and the monarchs were very
efficient. France was mainly governed by the turbulent French Revolution and
the Napoleonic Wars, which weakened the country and made it side with Britain.
·       
Smaller
religious fervour: The British were not as religiously zealous as Spain,
Portugal, and the Dutch in spreading Christianity. It spreads tolerance and
increases the sense of acceptability of British rule to the locals in India.
·       
Debt
market: Britain was the country that effectively used the debt markets in
financing their wars, especially with the creation of the Bank of England.
Arrival
of the French in India
·       
The
French came to India in the 17th century. Like other Europeans, the French came
for trade at first. The advent of Europeans in India started with the French
East India Company. The company traded with Indian rulers, but it could not
expand much.
·       
In
1604, a French trading company called 'The Company of Merchants of France
Trading to the East Indies' was formed. This became the French East India
Company.
·       
The
company got permission from the Mughal emperor Jahangir to trade in India in
1615. The French set up trading posts in Surat and Masulipatam. They traded
Indian textiles, silk, saltpetre and spices for French wine, metals and luxury
items.
·       
The
French East India Company brought new crops to India, like potatoes,
cauliflower and peas. French missionaries also came and converted some Indians
to Christianity.
·       
However,
the French company could not compete well with the British and Dutch East India
Companies. The French lacked political and military support from the French
government.
·       
The
French formed alliances with Indian rulers to fight the British. In 1746, the
French and the Nizam of Hyderabad fought British forces but lost the battle.
The French could not expand much beyond trading posts.
·       
From
1750, the French tried to expand their power by fighting Indian rulers. In
1759, the French captured Yanam from the Dutch but lost it to the British in
1778.
·       
The
French captured Mahé, Karaikal and Chandernagar from Indian rulers in the 1720s
and 1730s. They ruled these places as French India until Indian independence in
1947.
·       
The
French rule in India was mostly through alliances and intervention, unlike
direct rule by the British. The French helped Indian rulers fight the British
at times.
·       
The
advent of Europeans in India connected India and France. New crops, culture,
words and architecture came to India through the French. However, the French
aimed for profit and political influence, not the welfare of Indians.
Arrival
of the Dutch in India
·       
The
Dutch also came to India for trade during the advent of Europeans in India. The
Dutch East India Company ruled parts of India for almost 200 years.
·       
In
1602, the Dutch formed the Dutch East India Company to trade with Asia,
including India. The company got permission from the Mughal emperor Jahangir to
trade in India in 1605.
·       
The
Dutch East India Company established trading posts in Indian coastal cities.
They traded Indian textiles, spices and saltpetre for Dutch metal wares,
textiles and spices. The company brought new crops like potatoes and tulips to
India.
·       
The
Dutch focused on spices, especially in Indonesia. They captured many Portuguese
trading posts in India and Indonesia from the early 1600s. They broke the
Portuguese monopoly on eastern spices.
·       
The
Dutch used violence to gain a monopoly on the spice trade from India. In 1653,
the Dutch East India Company attacked and conquered the city of Cochin in
Kerala from the Portuguese and local rulers.
·       
The
Dutch captured many Indian ports, including Nagapattinam (1658), Pulicat
(1660), Chinnapatnam (1662), Calicut(1663) and Cochin (1702) by defeating local
Indian rulers and Portuguese forces.
·       
The
Dutch ruled these captured areas as Dutch-India territory. They charged high
taxes on local people. However, the Dutch focused more on capturing Indonesian
islands for spices than ruling India.
·       
The
British East India Company attacked the Dutch areas in India during the 18th
century. In 1795, the British captured all the remaining Dutch possessions in
India and Indonesia.
·       
Though
the Dutch controlled parts of India for almost 200 years, their impact was
limited. They did not transform Indian society like the British. But they
stimulated European competition in India and Southeast Asia.
European
Settlement In India
·       
The
advent of Europeans in India started with trade, but later led to some
permanent European settlements in India. The Portuguese, French and British
established settlements and colonies in India.
·       
The
Portuguese were the first Europeans to settle in India. They established
trading posts that later became permanent colonies. In 1510, they captured Goa
from the ruling Sultanate and made it the capital of Portuguese India.
·       
Goa
became a major centre of Portuguese settlement, culture and governance in
India. The Portuguese ruled Goa and the surrounding areas for over 450 years.
Many Portuguese settled in Goa and married local women.
·       
The
Portuguese also established colonies at Daman, Diu, Mumbai, and Kerala. They intermarried
with local people and settled permanently in these areas. But the permanent
Portuguese population in India remained small.
·       
The
French also established some permanent colonies in India, like Puducherry,
Chandernagar, Mahe and Yanam. The French interacted little with local people
and had separate residential areas. Still, some permanent French settlements
happened in these colonies.
·       
The
British established permanent military stations in India, which later evolved
into civil settlements and towns. Cities like Delhi, Calcutta (Kolkata),
Chennai(Madras), Mumbai(Bombay) and Pune became Anglo-Indian settlements.
·       
Initially,
British soldiers, officials and traders settled down in India. Later, Indian
mixed-race people like Anglo-Indians also emerged. By the early 1900s, many
British civilians had lived in the major cities of British India.
·       
Still,
the permanent European population in India remained tiny compared to the
overall Indian population. Most Europeans came to India for a few years to work
and then returned home.
·       
The
British and other Europeans primarily lived separately in India. They formed
legislative councils with minimum Indian representation. European women and
children began settling in India only after the mid-19th century.
· The permanent European settlements in India ended after Indian independence in 1947. Most Europeans left India, and the Indian government took over their properties. Still, some Anglo-Indians remain in India, especially in the northeast.
Though the advent of Europeans
in India was for trade and power, some permanent European settlements happened
in the colonies of Portugal, France and Britain. Still, the European population
remained small and largely separate from the Indians. After Indian
independence, permanent European settlements in India came to an end. Though
mixed-race populations like Anglo-Indians emerged, cultural interaction between
Europeans and local people was limited during colonial rule.