Three Frenchmen In Bengal
Samuel Charles Hill
6 chapters
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6 chapters
PREFACE
PREFACE
This account of the commercial ruin of the French Settlements, taken almost entirely from hitherto unpublished documents, originated as follows. Whilst engaged in historical research connected with the Government Records in Calcutta, I found many references to the French in Bengal which interested me strongly in the personal side of their quarrel with the English, but the information obtainable from the Indian Records alone was still meagre and incomplete. A few months ago, however, I came acros
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CHAPTER I THE QUARREL WITH THE ENGLISH
CHAPTER I THE QUARREL WITH THE ENGLISH
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
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CHAPTER II M. RENAULT, CHIEF OF CHANDERNAGORE
CHAPTER II M. RENAULT, CHIEF OF CHANDERNAGORE
The French East India Company was founded in 1664, during the ministry of M. Colbert. Chandernagore, on the Ganges, or rather that mouth of it now known as the River Hugli, was founded in 1676; and in 1688 the town and territory were ceded to France by the Emperor Aurengzebe. I know of no plan of Chandernagore in the 17th century, and those of the 18th are extremely rare. Two or three are to be found in Paris, but the destruction of the Fort and many of the buildings by the English after its cap
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Notes:
Notes:
[ 12 : Journal of M. d'Albert.] [ 13 : Evidently the Parish Church of St. Louis. Eyre Coote tells us the French had four guns mounted on its roof.] [ 14 : In early accounts of India the Muhammadans are always called Moors ; the Hindus, Gentoos or Gentiles . The Topasses were Portuguese half-castes, generally employed, even by native princes, as gunners.] [ 15 : Captain Broome says there were fifty European ladies in the Fort. The French accounts say they all retired, previous to the siege, to Ch
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CHAPTER III M. LAW, CHIEF OF COSSIMBAZAR
CHAPTER III M. LAW, CHIEF OF COSSIMBAZAR
A few miles out of Murshidabad, capital of the Nawabs of Bengal since 1704, when Murshid Kuli Khan transferred his residence from Dacca to the ancient town of Muxadabad and renamed it after himself, lay a group of European Factories in the village or suburb of Cossimbazar.[ 65 ] Of these, one only, the English, was fortified; the others, i.e. the French and Dutch, were merely large houses lying in enclosures, the walls of which might keep out cattle and wild animals and even thieves, but were us
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CHAPTER IV M. COURTIN, CHIEF OF DACCA
CHAPTER IV M. COURTIN, CHIEF OF DACCA
Jacques Ignace, son of François Courtin, Chevalier, Seigneur de Nanteuil, and of Catherine Colin, is, I believe, the correct designation of the gentleman who appears in all the records of the French and English East India Companies as M. Courtin, Chief of the French Factory at Dacca. In June 1756, when Siraj-ud-daula marched on Calcutta, he sent word to his representative, the Nawab Jusserat Khan at Dacca, to seize the English Factory, and make prisoners of the Company's servants and soldiers. T
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